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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  January 10, 2015 3:00pm-4:01pm PST

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here soon. france on high alert for more possible terrorist attacks as authorities double down to find this woman here. there are reports tonight she may have already fled to syria. welcome to a brand-new hour inside of america's news headquarters. i'm arthel neville. >> i'm eric shaun. she's considered armed and dangerous and a possible key to helping authorities dismantle a possible terrorist network. she's the common law wife of one of the gunmen in the socialer store stand-off. >> we've got fox team coverage with rick leventhal live in
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paris, peter doocy tracking the latest in washington. first, we begin with amy kellogg who is standing by with the latest on the investigation. what's the latest from your vantage point? >> reporter: arthel, one woman told me today that she hopes tomorrow's massive unity rally will be the beginning of closure for a country that has been so shocked, traumatized horrified this week or at least at the very least, the beginning of the healing process. but of course the story is not over with france's most wanted woman who is the wife of the common law wife of one of the three terrorists who wreaked havoc on this city last week apparently fled into the black hole that is isis-controlled syria. meanwhile, the people of this country have been very keen all day to memorialize those killed in the line of duty, from
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fearless satirists, to police officers, 700,000 people came out today and seoul it's expected that there will be a million in this unity rally that will include dozens of heads of state. you can only imagine what a security operation now is being put in place. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu among those planning to attend. he just put out a tweet saying he's decided to fly to paris tomorrow to show support for the jewish community the french people and the people of the free world. arthel? >> very important because as you know, the shops and synagogues in the jewish quarter yesterday they were told to close after the kosher market was attacked and i want you to fill us in on the latest on that situation. >> reporter: yeah. we don't know whether the police had any specific intel on specific threats to shops or to the grand synagogue, which apparently for the first time in decades was for prayers on a sabbath eve.
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but anyway, that was the precautionary measure and certainly there have been issues in france over the years concerns about anti-semitism and jews here leaving for israel for among other reasons the concerns that they're not all together safe here. on israeli tv, two of the survivors of that siege in the kosher grocery store were saying that they planned to leave france now and move to israel. but in the moreay, which is the oldest and most well-known jewish district of paris, things were very much full of energy and vitality. but people say they worry the values of french civilization are being eroded by nefarious forces. however, one woman told us she is heartened by the sense of solidarity here. >> i find this unity and patriotism to see all the french of all backgrounds protesting against this terrorism, i find this formidable. i am proud to be french.
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>> reporter: and the french prime minister tonight said that he doesn't want people to be afraid to be citizens, afraid to be police officers, afraid to be journalists, afraid to be screws. he said today we are all charlie, we are all police officers, we are all jews. arthel. >> amy kellogg thank you very much. officials in turkey saying that the female suspect flew to istanbul just days after these attacks. investigators then lost track of where she was and they say she disappeared near the syrian border earlier this week. she is the common law wife of one of the gunmen, of course. >> any human being that's penalty on killing is a deadly creature and they need to go after her and find her and either stop her just like they did a good job of eliminating the threat yesterday but they can also get her, interrogate her and find out what other links that they may have.
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>> disappearance raises the possibility that she knew about the attacks and fled before them. a little later on, we'll be joined by jonathan gilliam a former member of the f.b.i. joint terrorism task force and navy seal, about 30 minutes to talk about strategies for tracking her down. first let's go to rick leventhal with the very latest on that in paris. hi rick. >> reporter: if she's not here it's certainly a bit of relief for this weary city that's been under siege for several days and a bit of comfort for the thousands of police and security officers who have been searching intensely for this woman who has been considered armed and dangerous. it's puzzling because french authorities seemed convinced she was with her common law husband on thursday when he killed an unarmed french policewoman and said she was with him friday when he walked into that jewish grocery in east paris and opened fire killing four and holding several others hostage until authorities stormed the store killing him and then freeing the survivors. the police said they think she
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may have slipped away in the confusion after that siege, but new reports from french and turkish intelligence say that she may have actually left this country days before the shooting. these new reports suggest she traveled from france to spain and then flew from madrid to istanbul turkey on january 2 spent a couple nights in istanbul, and then traveled to a small town near the syrian border. tonight we're hearing that authorities tracked her mobile phone signal on january 8 to a location near syria. officials say they think that tonight she may actually be in syria and certainly no longer in france. that said, security officials remain on the highest state of alert here in france and in paris fearing more possible attacks from radical islamist sympathizers or possibly from other terror cells and we expect thousands of police and heavily armed swat teams and soldiers on the streets tomorrow for that huge rally where there could be as many as a million people in the city of lights along with a number of european officials.
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>> all right. thank you. the rally tomorrow is a massive show of defiance against these terrorists. >> meanwhile, president obama getting ready to host british prime minister david cameron at the white house next week. the two leaders expected to talk about a number of issues, including the attacks in france. we go to peter doocy in washington. what is being done to protected americans abroad? tell us more about that. >> reporter: there is a scary sounding new warning coming from the state department notifying americans that al-qaeda could look to kidnap them and use ransom money to bank roll other operations, or that isis could look to carry out some sort of a violent attack as a way to get even with americans who have been striking islamic state interests in the middle east since the fall. here is that part of this new world wide caution. quote, authorities believe there is an increased likelihood of reprisal attacks against u.s., western and coalition partner
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interests throughout the world especially in the middle east north african, europe and asia. but there are not a whole lot of specifics other than that coming from foggy bottom. >> the u.s. embassy in paris did issue a security message today advising that the government of fans extended the heightened terror alert to parts of northern france, international schools and other institutions are reviewing their security posture and make changes as appropriate. this is passing on what the government there had provided. nothing has changed in terms of our posture otherwise and our embassies and consulates remain up and running. >> reporter: and the chairman of the joint chiefs is emphasizing that the u.s. has been using intel to put pressure on terror networks and says there is still more we can be doing. arthel? >> peter, what more are we learning about attorney general eric holder's trip to paris tomorrow? >> reporter: we know that this sunday sit down was organized by
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french officials to talk about the evolving threat and different options for confronting foreign fighters with western passports. but some here in the states are already skeptical about the selection of holder to represent the u.s. at this meeting. >> so many of the things that this administration does wrong in regards to islamic terror come out of the eric holder. he wants to try islamic terrorists like tax cheats or counterfeiters in courts in new york city. he wants to close down gitmo. he wants to give battlefield captures their miranda rights. this is exactly the wrong guy leading the fight against evil. >> reporter: now we wait to see which, if any recommendations made by this group of international leaders in paris tomorrow are implemented here in the united states. arthel. >> peter, thanks a lot. eric? >> the paris attacks just the latest in a generation now of radical islamic terrorism targeting the west. did you know the first shot was
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fired 25 years ago this year right here in the u.s. in new york city on november 5, 1990. that's when one was gunned down bay jihadi assassin. the killer was convicted of being part of the islamic terrorist cell that three years later went on to bomb the world trade center in 1993. they were all led by the firey blind sheik who is now serving life in prison. how do we stop this continuing threat that's only grown over the last two decades? lisa, it seems to me that bombs, missiles, throwing them in the clinic isn't going to do it. the religion itself has to turn on the radical extremist elements and say enough. is that even possible? >> it's absolutely possible. what these events have done is divided the world into two. those who want to live and those
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who want to take their lives. you have to remember, the jews and christians are not the only victims of radical islam. muslims themselves, living in countries like saudi arabia where yesterday a blogger was flogged for putting his opinions on line, or iran where you can't practice freely in any religion, or dress as you would like, boko haram, where only 2,000 innocent people were killed over the last three days. we are not connecting the dots on this threat that has remained with the same ideology the ideology remained consistent b but the way they maneuver has evolved and we have not caught up to this evolution. what the president can do and the west can do to understand this is to look at president sisi in egypt, for example. he came to the podium on new year's day and he called for the islamic world to reform itself. he said, do not let these headlines define who we are in the islamic world.
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and we have to seize this opportunity. the president has to call upon leaders, both of nations and of communities to come together and really unite because we do have the manpower to do so. >> do you think that's even possible? al sisi, is that even possible? critics would say it's not possible to reform. >> it's not possible to reform because they're not backing down. based on this week's events in paris, we know that they're ahead. and they're targeting us and we're still stuck in a post9-11 mentality and you have to fight ideology with ideology. they have evolved. if we look at al-qaeda, the arabian peninsula, the headquarters in yemen that are basically guiding and focusing their efforts on the west, their leaders spoke english. we have to take terms like home grown terrorism, lone wolf attacks out of our vocabulary and understand that this is all a part of the same plan, of the same agenda.
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we can call it hamas, hezbollah al-qaeda isis, we can call it whatever we want. the ideology is the same. >> it seems that they're outpacing us in a sense. you've got a string of attacks. you've got the french they dropped surveillance on the kourachi brothers a few months later because they were laying low. maybe they were a sleeper cell. i want to show you a list of the attacks here against us americans, in our country. just astounding. there was the world trade center brooklyn bridge shooting, a young boy shot to death, new york landmark plot, empire shooting. 9-11, los angeles, subway plot in new york city times square car bomb. boston bombings and the new york at this police hatchet attack. sadly, do you fear this will just continue? >> absolutely. why wouldn't it? why would they back down? each instance, we come up with some sort of excuse to white wash the whole thing away.
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we can talk about workplace violence. we can talk about police violence videos cartoons. this case, they talked about these two young men as poverty and unemployment playing a role in their movement towards radicalism and towards jihad. i assure you eric, we can eradicate all the poverty and alt unemployment in the world and we will not eradicate terrorism. >> that is stunning chilling and sad. >> absolutely. >> thank you so much. >> of course. okay. turkish police acting quickly to defuse two bombs in separate malls. the dramatic details next. then how the terrorist attacks in france could become something that could really influence and perhaps change that immigration showdown on capitol hill. plus, reaction from the hill after federal prosecutors recommended felony charges against former c.i.a. chief general david petraeus
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quick check of the headlines. the u.s. launching new air strikes against isis. coalition forces conducting a dozen strikes in syria and three in iraq. the attacks come as part of the operation of inherent resolve to
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try and blunt the advances of isis. another terrorist attack in lebanon. at least seven people were killed and dozens more wounded after a homicide bomb went off at a coffee shop in the northern part of the country. no one has claimed responsibility, but that area has seen a violence spillover from the conflict in syria. in turkey police there defuse ago home made bomb at a mall in istanbul. officers detonating the canisters as you can see at a second mall nearby. the area had been rocked by attacks in recent days including a homicide bombing that killed a police officer. bolstered by the newly sworn in majority republican in congress, boehner announced plans to counters president obama's executive actions on immigration. house republicans want to deploy the power of the purse to defund the president's plan by focusing on a funding bill for the department of homeland security. but now in the wake of this
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week's terrorist attacks in france, the plan got a little more tricky. tammy bruce is a radio talk show host and fox news contributor. doug thornell is a former specs mon for the democratic supporter. tammy, you're going to go first. how do the terrorist attacks in france affect the republican plans to attach the president's immigration plans to funding the department of homeland security, which as you know, runs out of funding february 27? >> right. look, i think it makes it even more important to deal with the issue of immigration and the chaos that we've experienced in this country. a leaked customs and border protection report last year indicated that people from 75 different countries were using the southern border to gain access to this country. and it is a preferred route for the majority of syrians who sneak into this country. they move into central america and up through the border. so what i think does is it adds much more of an urgency.
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it makes the point about needing to get control of the chaotic border situation and immigration under control, to know who we're allowing in the country who we are giitizenship to, who we're giving driver's licenses and social security cards to. and the solution is very easy. they can certainly fund the department of homeland security with one simple adjustment which is making it not possible to fund obama's amnesty with fees and changing it to an appropriations dynamic which then the congress can control. so they can have it both ways. they can govern and we can make sure that the dhs is funded. >> doug, do you agree with that? >> well, i think that a lot of what tammy said could be handled if the house and senate tackled comprehensive immigration reform. that's what the public wants. we actually put out a poll, the end of december, which asked the public a question: should congress refight this issue of executive order by hamstringing the president's hand or should they move on to doing
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comprehensive immigration reform? by over 69% of the public 72% of independents and 50% of republicans want washington to move on to tackling comprehensive immigration reform. there is a reason to do that. i think that the republicans are playing with fire here and that's not something that i -- that's something that trey gowdy, a south carolina congressman told fox news, that this is a real optically and timing, a real problem given what happened with france. >> doug, let me stay with you for a moment because the train has left the station, so to speak the house rules committee has added an emergency meeting for late monday to consider the bill to fund dhs spending bill and to hamstring president obama's executive orders on immigration. so if the republicans don't alter their plan, could they face some sort of political derailment doug? >> i think so. first of all, i don't think that the votes are there in the senate. we've seen a couple senate
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republicans who have also voiced concern about this approach. there are no votes from any senate democrats who are going to support this. so they aren't going to have 60 votes to stop a filibuster. so this seems like it's an exercise in futility for house republicans and ultimately they can have -- i understand why they're doing this. they've got some base politics that they're dealing with. but i just think tactically and politically, this is one of the first major things this congress is doing. this is not what the american people want this congress to do. they want them to focus on the economy and it doesn't really make a lot of political sense to me. >> tammy, you just heard doug say that the republicans have some base politics to deal with and you're probably going to say so does the president. >> look, last november actually happened. and the republicans do need to act as though they won because they did. they need to stop acting as though they either have something to be afraid of. the american people made something very clear in november and that hasn't changed.
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to behave as though that didn't happen or ignore it is a mistake. and immigration was one of those issues in which the american people gave the congress and the senate to the republicans. now look, we all agree, when it comes to this amnesty dynamic and when people say they want reform, it's because they want the chaos to stop. we want to have control over who we allow into this country who we give citizenship to, who we give access to everything in this nation, and the parachutings, i don't know when it comes to what republicans are afraid of, it reinforces the importance of stopping the chaos that obama has sewn with this remarkable dynamic of amnesty for millions of people who we do not know where they came from or who they are. so if paris shows us anything, it means republicans have a chance to govern and show the american people that they have certainly at least homeland security in mind and are ready to do what's right for the american people. >> arthel quickly.
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>> if you look at exit polling from the last election, 57% of voters in a midterm want the congress to provide a pathway to legalization for folks here illegally, but are working. this location was not about amnesty. >> i got your point. but i would imagine this recent terrorist attack in france is going to definitely change the conversation a bit in dc. >> i'm not sure about immigration. >> it's all about immigration. >> i'm not saying which side will change, i'm saying it should be considered. tammy, doug, thanks to both of you. >> thank you. >> thank you. you heard about this? revelations are shocking some people. david petraeus could potentially be in legal hot water. the former c.i.a. chief could face charges, they say, for allegedly revealing confidential information to his mistress. this investigation being slammed by some critics. senators john mccain and lindsey graham issuing this statement saying quote, no american deserves such callus treatment let alone one of america's
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finest military leaderses who selfless service has inspired young americans in uniform and likely saved many of their lives. doug mcwe will kay has the details on this controversial move by the obama administration. >> reporter: an american war hero is facing the blockbuster threat of potential felony charges. the "new york times" reported late yesterday that justice department prosecutors have recommended criminal charges against general david petraeus for allegedly leaking classified c.i.a. material to his former mistress and biographer, paula broadwell. the paper says it's up to eric holder to decide whether to seek an indictment of petraeus the argue effect of the surge in iraq who later served as director of the c.i.a. he resigned after admit to go an affair with broadwell. on december 2 senator income wrote holder, expressing concern about the foot drag over its petraeus investigation. quote, i can conclude this is a circumstance in which the principle of justice delayed is justice denied is certainly at
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play. and that this matter needs to be brought to resolution. some have suggested the petraeus investigation is political intended to silence him for what he may know on the terrorist attack on the benghazi compound. neither f.b.i. nor doj have ever offered comment. eric? >> doug in washington thanks. there are new developments in the search for air asia flight 8501 as crews lifting a key piece of wreckage from the java sea. the latest in a live report coming up. and they are defiant. gathering for freedom and life. the rallies across france with hundreds of thousands standing tall against terror and there is an even larger protest planned for tomorrow
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the terrorist attacks in france sparking rallies across the globe. take a look at new york city today where hundreds braved the cold. many holding signs that read, i am charlie. the reference to charlie hebdo magazine where those terrorists gunned down the 12 employees editors and cartoonists. in paris hundreds of thousands took to the streets there and all across france in a brazen defiant message to the terrorists, including this in the city of orleans. people releasing balloons into the air. are the gatherings and the images of hope enough? what will it take to turn the tide against the terrorists? jonathan gilliam is a form f.b.i. special agent on the joint terrorism task force, as well as a former navy seal and federal air marshal. jonathan, welcome to fox news channel. one million strong tomorrow, going to gather in paris and that's a lot of territory. but at the same time we're getting disturbing reports that the two brothers have been under surveillance and that surveillance dropped just in the
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past few months. what does that tell you? >> it tells me that they're making the same mistakes over there that we made with the boston bombers. information was passed and it was dropped and they were on different types of databases that nobody really followed up on. and when they did interview them, they were kind of let go. the same thing is happening here, almost to the letter. i don't want to see france make another mistake that they made in boston which is as soon as the two guys one was dead and one was caught, they just started celebrating. there is no way to really know until you do the proper investigation if there is other people involved with this and what just happened in france was so professionally done by these terrorists that they really need to take a pause for a moment and not put themselves out there. a million people would be very easy to kill a lot of people. >> certainly we hope that doesn't happen tomorrow. but you raise a good point.
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they talk about potential new attacks that they expect to happen. so what do investigators doing right now? you got the common law wife, she fled. she obviously, it seems knew this was going to happen. so she leaves. is probably going into syria. you're going to get a tape of her sooner or later in yemen maybe celebrating what happened. what do investigators do to get her? what do they do to try to stop another attack is this. >> first of all, you have one person that you know is bent on killing and she's nowhere to be found. so that, to me is a good example of why not to go out and celebrate tomorrow. but what police are doing now is they're scrubbing databases. they're looking at her passport and her past. her past can tell a lot about what she's going to do in the future. but i'm telling you that she is a source of intelligence that is remarkable because of where they think she fled, that goes even further into telling us who is involved. we know al-qaeda and yemen was
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most likely involved, but now she fled to syria where al-qaeda is at, but also isis. the reality is these are all basically one big group. but different individuals operate differently. we know, because we've seen that isis is very brutal in what they do, i think that her associations are going to start to tell a lot about the picture of what happened and who else may be involved. >> what about who else may be involved in the associations may go through her phone, go through a computer. can they do that without her to try to find out -- they talked about 500 phone calls between her and the wives of one of the suspects. so can they then expose a much broader network of radical islamic sleeper cells, so to speak, who are there in those no go zones? they're astounding that they have no go zones outside of paris. >> well, that's where a true sleeper cell could exist. a lot of times like in this case, people may use the term sleeper cell, but how much -- how can they really be a sleeper
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cell if they already knew about them? who was asleep was the authorities. that's a problem because that is a sickness that's across the board in almost every country, including our own. and an investigation, we have to look at it like a big pie and you have different pieces of that pie. once you get a piece, then you work that piece until you get another part of the puzzle that brings it to where you have an entire pie that you can go on and make arrests and assaults. we've had several times where we've had -- we've just been given a huge slice of this pie and ignored it and that's what happened over there and when you have zones where police authorities cannot go in and it's a closed society, the only way they're going to get information is through sources and some type of electronic data collection and the data collection is probably a little bit more difficult than the sources. but if you're not willing to act on the intelligence that you get, it's not going to do you any good.
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>> sadly, it came far too late this time. hopefully they can stop the next one. thank you so much. >> thank you. horrific reports on a deadly massacre in nigeria claiming up to 2,000 people have been killed by boko haram during its six-day rampage. it apparently happened in the northeast town of baga, located on the border with chad. a district official there says most of the victims were women, children and elderly people who could not run fast enough when boko haram launched its attack. amnesty international is suggesting this is the deadliest massacre in the terror group's history. teams in indonesia taking advantage of a break in the weather, lifting the tail sex of air -- tail section of the air asia flight. it was pulled to the surface louising inflatable balloons. so far they say they have not recovered the black box.
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bryan llenas live with the latest. >> reporter: hi. indonesian authorities believe the cockpit voice and flight data recorders detach or separated from the tail section of the flight on impact. search boats have now detected several pings believed to be coming from the black boxes about a half mile away from where they located and recovered the tail today. strong winds and high waves have made the search for the plane difficult. it's soon to be morning there. if currents are good, they'll look to confirm the pings and the location. but now timing is a concern in the search for the boxes. the batteries on the beacons emitting the pings only last about 30 days, which means divers have about two weeks left to locate them. still authorities are confident they'll find them, saying, look, air france flight 447's boxes were found two years after it crashed into the atlantic ocean. the black boxes hold the key to what happened to the flight which crashed about halfway into
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its two-hour flight from indonesia to singapore. pilots asked to climb to a higher altitude to avoid storm clouds burks were not given permission because of heavy air traffic. four minutes later t disappeared. no distress call was given. authorities are continuing to search and identify the remains the 162 passengers who were on board. so far only 48 bodies have been found. >> very concerned that we didn't find the main body of the plane because i believe the bodies of the majority of the victims are trapped in there. >> reporter: in a statement on facebook today, air asia said the indonesian government met with family members and assured them they will not stop operations until all remains are found and sent home. arthel. >> bryan llenas thanks. the keystone pipeline passed the house yesterday and will head to the senate. it faces major hurdle especially the threat of a
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north korea says now it's willing to temporarily suspend nukecally testing if the u.s. cancels joint military drills with south korea. this according to the state run news agency. the u.s. says the software is a quote, implicit threat but says we are open to dialogue with the north, but will not link our military exercises with any deal. the new republican controlled house hitting the ground running with yesterday's keystone vote. the members voting 266-153 in favor of a bill to expedite construction with no republicans voting against it. controversial pipeline would
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carry crude oil from canada to refineries along the texas gulf coast. but will the senate and the president stop this renewed keystone push in its tracks? joining me chief congressional correspondent at the washington examiner. good to see you. >> hi, arthel. >> so does friday's vote force the president's hand to do something? >> it sends a signal. he's got democrats who he's going to have to contend on this. the house bill garnered more than two dozen democratic votes. so now it heads to the u.s. senate, which as you mentioned, is republican-controlled. already the legislation in that body has 60 co-sponsors. as you may know, in order to beat a filibuster in the senate you need 60 votes. so they already have the votes there to move this bill forward and send it to the president's desk. but will it become law? that's the big question. the president has signaled that he will veto this legislation and what happens then is if the
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congress can't come up with a super majority in both chambers to override that veto the keystone pipeline bill does not become law. so in a sense the president really hold the power here because republicans in congress don't have enough of a majority to beat back president obama's veto. >> and susan, if it does come down to a presidential veto, does president obama have to submit an argument for his decision? >> well, yes. indeed he will. he can just say no to any bill he wants and not sign the bill and just stamp it with a veto stamp. but the president has already signaled that this is an issue he feels is not yet resolved, even though the supreme court of nebraska ruled on friday that the governor has a right to order construction of the pipeline through the state. the president has said that the state department is not done reviewing the ruling and there are other unknown entities that they need to examine when it comes to building the pipeline and its environmental impact. so he's going to have no trouble
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coming up with reasons why he's not signing this bill. and what will happen is republicans will have to say hey, look we're trying to distinguish ourselves from the president. we've got bipartisan support here and the president is vetoing it and it's an infrastructure and jobs bill. the president will have to make his case against that and it will be mostly on environmental grounds and he will make the argument that there needs to be more green energy advancement in the united states. that's where the argument lays right now. >> so is it possible that republicans might allow the state department more time for the review process? >> i think what will happen is the democrats and republicans in the senate will begin debating the legislation this week. it will move forward on monday, a procedural hurdle will easily be crossed. and for the next few weeks we'll hear lots of debate on the senate floor and we'll hear democrats proposing various amendments to the bill and republicans as well. this will carry on for perhaps weeks and perhaps after the
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president's state of the union address. then i think we might see toward the end of the month passage of this legislation out of the senate. they're not going to wait anymore for the president. the argument republicans make is that it's been six years. this project has been under consideration. the canadians are getting restless and look for other options and that they should get moving on this important jobs bill now. democrats don't buy that argument one bit. they think that this isn't gog produce as many permanent jobs as republicans claim. they want the president to hold back this project that they think will hurt the environment and only encourage more dependence on fossil fuels rather than promoting green energy p green energy projects. >> do you think this could be put on hold and wait for another president in office or will can did say forget you usa i'm going to go somewhere else? >> the u.s. is uniquely equip to do refine the type of oil that comes from canada. in some ways they really need us but they have made threats of using other options and
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that's part of the rush here to get this project going. >> okay. we shall see. susan, always good to talk to you. >> thank you. >> thanks. green bay football fans would be on shuttle duty despite the cold weather. how long will the deep freeze last that has us in its grip? we will have the latest ahead of tomorrow's big game i'm louis, and i quit smoking with chantix. i told myself for so long that i needed to quit smoking. i would quit then i'd go right back to it. chantix absolutely helped me quit smoking. along with support, chantix (varenicline)
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is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix helped reduce my urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. some people had seizures while taking chantix. if you have any of these stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix or history of seizures. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these stop chantix and see your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems or develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. i'm not worried about smoking my next cigarette. to me that feels great. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you.
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>> space x successfully launching a cargo capsule in space. >> 3, 2, 1, 0 and liftoff on the space x. >> the capsule carrying more than 5000 pounds of food, experiments and other supplies to the international space station. the attempt to land the reusable rocket booster failed. it hit the target but came down too hard and broke apart. >> well, we have to tell you this, extreme cold air blasting the country. in michigan sections of i- 94 remain closed because of the
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massive pile up. 200 vehicles, and one truck with a load of four works were involved in that. >> and in green bay, they are helping the packers shovel out the snow that landed in lambieu fold. janice dean is with us with the fox extreme weather center. >> they are hardy people out there, right? but the temperature for tomorrow's game 20 degrees and wind chill 5- 10. does that mean the packers or the dallas cowboy win? we'll have to find out. the key word is cold. teens in the northern plains and the wind chill feels colder than that. and it feels like 0 in cleveland. we are head nothing the weekend and another one early next week and things will improve and
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there is a silver lining here. texas up to mississippi river valley and ohio river valley a threat for freezing rain and or sleet because of the shallow layer of freezing air and the moisture that comes down could freeze on contact with the roads and bridges. really dangerous and freezing rain advisory posting as it lifts north ward over the ohio and mississippi. it is on the woke woke and hopefully people are staying indoors and not on the rod way. there in the purple are the freezing rain advisery in the ohio and tennessee river valley. and relief here. another splash of cold air moves in, in the arctic. the pink cold air it retreats north ward and we could so above average temperatures this time
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next weekend. >> that is amazing. and people have to watch out for black ice. what is the coldest place in the country? >> the international falls and it is all the icebox of the region. minus 20. >> that is not even the wind chill. >> i can't even compreend that. seriously, that is way too cold for me. >> minus 20. >> that's going to do it for us. we'll be back tomorrow, right? >> and we'll have the latest on the hunt for the suspect. last one in the the paris terrorist attack. and a major rally of people standing up for people. rrn so ally bank really has no hidden fees on savings accounts? that's right. it's just that i'm worried about you know "hidden things..."
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ok, why's that? no hidden fees from the bank where no branches equals great rates.
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>> security in the highest level in parts of france amid growing fierce of new terrorist attacks. i am patty ann browne. the nationwide search for the remaining deadly suspect. but there is word she may have travelled to syria before the stand off that left three other suspects dead. the man was killed after taking hostages in a kosher grocery store in paris. four innocents were killed. the hostage taker and his wife plotted the soej together. he murdered's female police officer on thursday.

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