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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  March 29, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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early, the mediterranean diet right? all right. thanks dr. mark. get back to new york. we're jealous you're in l.a. thank you, dr. somati, dr. segel. >> we're here every sunday to make you healthier. 48 hours before the deadline to hammer out a deal on iran's nuclear program. the newly elected prime minister calls the deal worse than he thought and called iran's involvement in the war with yemen a disaster and it has to stop. we'll have this debate. this landing did not go as planned. the pilots of a canadian flight have a lot of questions to answer. their plane careened off the runway leaving passengers hanging on for dear life. we'll tell you what the plane hit on the bay weighway down. plus millions of christians
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celebrating palm sunday as we start the holy week. i'm leland vittert. nice to be with you. welcome to america's news headquarters. >> i'm shannon bream. diplomats in switzerland continue to burn the midnight oil hoping to get a nuclear deal with iran before tuesday. in jerusalem today, a fiery israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu addressed his cabinet saying, quote, this deal, as it appears to be emerging, bears out all of our fears and even more than that. never mind though secretary of state john kerry is undeterred. as we speak he's in and out of meetings with foreign ministers throughout the world trying to hammer out details with the iranians.
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and this morning lawmakers in washington and the white house were out in full force to put their spin on the negotiations and a potential deal. doug mcelway has been watching the talks unfold and joins us live. doug? >> hi leland. administrative and domestic pressure is leaning on them to reach negotiations in the talks. as you said, benjamin netanyahu said, quote, corroborate all our concerns and then some. those concerns are domestically where the lessening of sanctions against the israeli regime has been a thorn in the side of many doubters. >> the sanctions were working. they would have never come to the table. and frankly we should have kept the sanctions in place so that we could have gotten to a real agreement. >> those doubters include many arab partners like saudi arabia, which just this week launched attacks against itthe iranian proxy war in and is said to concoct a new bomb
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program of its own and says yemen won't keep them from making a bomb. >> we have been assured by the united states, by secretary kerry, when he met with foreign ministers of the gcc, that the deal they intend to negotiate would prevent iran from acquiring anatomic bomb. it would close all paths leading to an atomic bomb but we really will not know until we see the details. white house press secretary josh ernest tried to assure the public that the administration and its partners are driving a hard bargain. >> no deal is done right now, so once a deal has been reached if one is reached by the end of this month, then we'll present it to the world for the world to see and to take a close look at whether or not we've been able to reach an agreement that does succeed in preventing iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. >> officials at the talks in switzerland denied reports that the u.s. is frantic to get a deal, saying instead that the talks have reached a focal stage
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involving critical issues, those issues being iran's deal in the next 16 to 18 years and sanctions if they are not in compliance. >> doug mcelway we appreciate it. you heard from doug, you heard from lawmakers, you heard from the prime minister. now we'd like to hear from you. given what we know so far about the nuclear talks in iran, is the u.s. willing to give up too much in these negotiations to get a deal? you can send us your tweet tweet @shannon breenbream @leland vittert. leaders wrapped up the summit in egypt with a warning to rebels in yemen. they said saudi arabian airstrikes will continue until rebels withdraw and surrender their weapons. they also want to create a joint
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military force. so there are not yet many details on how the force would operate. iraqi army commanders said they hope to enter the town of decrete sometime today, though their battlefield predictions have often proven to be a little eroding. they want to take their hometown back from islamic state militants. the operations on the ground are being supported by u.s. airstrikes, but without the help of iranian-backed fighters. the u.s. agreed on airstrikes earlier this week, but only on the condition that iranian militias pull back. bergdahl was accused of leaving his post in 2009. he was freed from the taliban but only if they released five
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from guantanamo bay. sir, tlau forhank you for joining us today. >> thank you. >> i have to ask you as a veteran yourself and who has had to count on the men and women alongside you, what do you make of this bergdahl case? >> i've also sat on military tribunals before and for there to be charges levied, there is sufficient evidence for the army to move forward. >> he is facing deserted charges and what some are saying is he's been through enough, and he may lose if he is forced out of the service in a less than honorable way. what do you make of that? >> i think it's important that we move forward with justice to look to see what did he do. you have the soldiers that were in his unit that have claimed that he abandoned his post, that he left behind his equipment and weapon. you have an awful lot of things that seem to run counter to what
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his defense attorney is suggesting. and so that will be important for the military panel to take a look at the charges and determine whether or not he left his post. >> we are hearing a bit of a defense floated. it sound as if -- it's clear the record shows he had problems with some of the way things were operating, some of the leadership where he was serving. but now this claim being floated that he was going to walk to another nearby u.s. post so he could lodge his complaints with a different set of commanders. your reaction? >> well based upon the preliminary information that we all received as the general public it seems odd because he shipped a lot of his goods home to include his laptop was an initial report. he left behind key essential pieces of gear that you would need to survive outside the installation. these are the types of questions that i think anyone will ask. and i think that will be something that they need to dig
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into during the trial. >> i want to ask you about decrete, because you served our country as a commander in operational rocky freedom in the early 2000s in that area. what do you make of what is playing out there now, talks about the battle to retake it from isis and what you've seen happen in iraq since the days you served there? >> it has to be a sunni arab solution in decrete. it's about 90% sunni. i know the city very well. i know every street, much of the infrastructure. i know many of the people to include some of the tribunal leaders launching the attacks against isis. and the iranian-backed myilitias are a concern and the airstrikes coming in have been at the hand of the official forces. but it has to be with a little bit of grit to get into that town. i've had to do some difficult things with my soldiers and it can be done. my heart goes out to the people
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there. >> if you would be so bold as to have any advice for our commander in chief with regard to what's happening in iraq, what would you think is a clear passable word if there is one? >> we can't go in just half-hearted. either we go in in tandem with diplomatic and economic and informational efforts as we look for military options and then we have to have longevity. when we offer military solutions and we get a pause and some stability we have to go in with these other factors and a commitment from the united states, or like we've seen now we'll just be back in a few years when we a ban don the place. >> thank you for your service and for seeing us right now. >> thank you. possible republican presidential candidate governor scott walker of wisconsin continues to try and clarify his
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stance on the topic of immigration. according to the wall street journal, walker said behind closed doors he supported a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. but here's what the governor said in houston on saturday night. >> in terms of sitcitizenship, if someone wants to have citizenship, they need to go to the country of origin and get in line like everybody else would. there are things in terms of voting and things, but for things beyond that, we need to tackle this first and get a president reasonable in congress. >> walker's latest congress comes just one day after he visited the southern border with texas governor greg abbott. a spring break trip took a violent turn after a man shot seven people including three college students. in happened in panama city early saturday morning. three victims are in critical condition three other or stable
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stable. one had to undergo surgery. now they're looking for a motive for this. >> it is complete chaos here. we have a hundred witnesses we're trying to separate, trying to interview. we have a mess. that's pretty much what we've got right now. >> the suspect is charged with seven counts of attempted murder. a veteran boston police officer is in a medically induced coma today after being shot in the line of duty. officer john moynihan was shot in the face friday night after a driver in a traffic stop. he shot at other officers as he tried to get away, but was killed by an officer's fire. >> here, clearly unprovoked one of our officers shot point blank in the face. it's a terrible tragedy and all we're doing is helping them.
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>> moynihe was at boston medical center. officer moynihan received an award of being one of the first responders in the gun battle with the boston marathon bombers. we are learning more about what was said and done in the cockpit of germanwings flight before the crash. the black box reportedly shows the pilot pleading with the co-pilot to let him back in and trying to break down the door in the minutes before the plane crashed in the french alps. also on the tape the screams of passengers who watched the pilot yelling through the closed door helpless. greg is here with more in deus serks ldorf germany. >> just behind us is the apartment where co-pilot andreya
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andreas lubitz lived. the big news is that reported transcript portraying the final minutes of that deadly crash. french authorities can't confirm to fox that it's the real thing, but the german newspaper is pretty reliable. the first thing that we hear is lubitz basically encouraging the captain to take a bathroom break. then as lubitz locks the door with the captain outside, we hear the captain screaming to him. one of the things he says, for god's sake open the door. we hear pounding then we hear metal. that is an ax being used to try to get the door open. and we have been to the passengers were unaware of this deadly descent up until the last minute or so but from this alleged reported transcript, it seems like they knew from the very beginning it was going to be eight minutes of hell. today, too shannon, we're learning more about the health
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of andreas lubitz perhaps a contributing factor to all of this. he had a torn retina. that would limit his eyesight and surely lose that job he said to have loved so much and depression, all of this allegedly hidden from his employers. also we're getting new details from the crash site itself, officials saying something remarkable in just the four days or so they've been working. they've been able to identify body parts of 75 of the crash victims, and they say within a week they'll be able to identify body parts of all 150. when you see that site that's really remarkable. one final note, shannon. more news today about lubitz's personal life. it turns out the girlfriend he lived with in the apartment behind us here on this street was pregnant. they had wanted to be married and then they broke up.
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some of the personal travail people are saying might have been a factor in this, but really, kill 149 people over the breakup of a relationship. this is tough and weird stuff. back to you. >> greg, thank you very much. let's bring in former faa official aviation attorney mark dumbraugh for an analysis. appreciate you joining us. the more we learn the more horrific this story seems to get. you must know what the passengers in those first few rows were going through watching the pilot trying to break down the door. >> i'm not sure any of us know what happened in that cabin with the passengers. it allows us to conjure up in our own imaginations the horrible nature of the event. >> as we're watching what was going on here and we have pictures of what happened here from while they were out at the crash, and i think we have video from the crash site there. they were trying to work and retrieve some of the evidence there.
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one of the big things they're going to be going through is looking back into this co-pilot's history. we have a lot of history so far in terms of the drugs that were there in his apartment, those kinds of things, and a lot of people have made an issue over whether or not it was possible for this to have happened in the united states in the sense that the rules are essentially the same, that the airlines are relying on pilots to essentially self-report whether or not they're using psychiatric drugs whether they're depressed and those kinds of things. >> i think one of the things we have to recognize about the system in the united states is we've got an extensive medical system in the context of aviation. we have aviation medical examiners who are specified by the faa in terms of performing these examinations. now airline pilots, those who work for the type of airline that germanwings are, typically have to go through at least one, and frequently, depending upon their age if they're over 40 two physicals each year to maintain their medical
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certificates. we're talking about a relatively close community a small number of doctors that these pilots go to. >> but still, if i'm a pilot and i'm taking some kind of drug or i'm depressed or something like that, they're relying on me to tell these doctors oh by the way i'm taking these drugs or i'm depressed. there is no automatic reporting. >> i think that's correct. if the doctor observes a problem, the doctor, because he's a designated aviation medical examiner is going to report it. but we also have to recognize that these pilots are operating in very closed environments in the sense of traveling two or three days with crew members, and they're self-checking one another. but to say that something is possible, yes, something is possible. i think we have to note that something like this has never happened in the context of the u.s. system. >> you're an attorney, and obviously the big question after what caused the crash is the issue of liability. this has got to be a nightmare in that sense for lufthansa in the sense that this guy washed out of flight school because of depression. there are other red flags and
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all of a sudden you have a guy who very clearly the airline could have known or maybe should have known had a problem. >> i'm not sure i would necessarily agree that they should have known. i think the airline from certainly everything i've heard has done everything properly. the liability issues are determined by international convention, and they're actually relatively straightforward. >> all right. in going forward, is there any way to prevent this? it's one of those things that after the crash everyone starts talking about cameras in the cockpit, and auto pilot that can take over from the ground, all these ideas. in a sense on one level when you get on an airplane you have to at least accept some risk. there's no way to make it perfectly risk free. >> i think that's exactly right. so long as you have human beings in the system, there is always going to be the possibility of something like this occurring. let's look back at captain sullenberger in the hudson river. i think had captain sullenberger not been in that cockpit it's
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likely that plane would have crashed had it been an auto pilot or ground-based landing. i think a big change we've seen in the past few days is the fact that the europeans have gone to having two people in the cockpit at all times. we've always within this country, had that rule. >> mark dombroff, we appreciate your time. >> thank you. much more to come on america's news headquarters. capturing their pastors, burning their churches, selling their children. ousting christians out of their ancient homeland. it's time for the west to wake up. a religious governor fights the nation's new law. accusations of poor management and poor care. are our returning servicemen and women getting the treatment they deserve? >> when they get out and they're trying to prove some of these
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things that happened, they face a very unfriendly system that sort of makes you prove it instead of saying, hey, these are some of the symptoms that i face and now i'm looking to get help for it.
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thanks for staying with us. five people are still in the
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hospital after an aircanada flight made a hard landing and skidded off the runway aircanada said the plane touched down in stormy conditions early this morning. some passengers say the plane hit power lines and that one of its engines was ripped off during the landing. this is some nighttime video you can see from the scene itself. the halifax region where the plane landed was under a snowfall warning, but air canada isn't sure if runway conditions possibly played a role. the rough landing sent 23 people to the hospital. we're told all were non-life-threatening injuries. a little more than a decade ago, thousands of christians called mosul iraq home. that is no longer the case. isil militants took over the city and wiped out the christian population. it's something they're doing with this brutal action all over the country.
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johnny, always good to have you with us. >> thanks, shannon. good to be with you. >> you have been hammering on the subject a long time. you've seen it firsthand and it seems a lot of people are just now waking up to something that appears to be a genocide. you have talked with the leaders there who are watching their churches burn down, their parisioners kidnapped raped, killed sold into slavery. why do you think it's taking so long for the message to get through to the west? >> i think it's two things. first of all, i think people just didn't know it was happening because they couldn't believe it was true. these stories are just horrific beyond belief. children being killed for their faith, women being sold by the thousands in slave markets, churches who had churches of 16 years being destroyed. it's just incomprehensible. you and i sitting on this program a year and a half ago talking about what was coming, and it came. here we are in the holiest week of christianity for 2 billion christians around the world and
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we're witnessing a once in a thousand-year crisis that seemed a total elimination from some of the ancient christian populations in the middle east, christian populations who got the gospel first from the apostles themselves. there is no time left. we have to rush, we have to do it quickly, we have to rescue these people and stop it from continuing. >> and there are millions of refugees who are flooding now into surrounding countries. that is enormously taxing on their region, their governments. i know they're trying their best, but the numbers can be overwhelming. isis, obviously, has been very specific in targeting specific populations populations, but also the churches, the artwork, the sacred text. they very much want to wipe out any religion that doesn't agree with their own. >> yeah. i mean, the world watched in horror as isis destroyed the ruins of these ancient cities, as they broke down the crosses on ancient churches.
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even the last week they've done it again. they destroyed a fourth century monastery just outside mosul. nobody really paid attention to it, but after that they destroyed the christians' houses in town. there weren't any christians left worshipping in those churches anymore. so they don't have anyone left to kill. they don't have anyone left to imprison. so now they're destroying their history and that is why it's genocide. by the way, there are a few fledgling populations that we still could rescue. they're the displaced ones living in refugee camps in deplorable conditions without the aid they need and there is still those under isis' influence and control. the united states and other western powers and countries with influence aren't doing enough. just about 14 days ago, isis kidnapped 300 christians along the cabo river. they did it in a convoy of 40 clearly marked isis vehicles going to 10 unarmed christian villages. yet there wasn't a single airstrike, there wasn't a single
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attempt to push them back. the 300 christians who were kidnapped there, we haven't a clue what happened to them. all we know is they've been paying the isis tax for the last year. now isis said okay, we're done with that. now we're going to take you and imprison you, and god knows what will happen to them. the question i'm asking, all over planet earth over and over again, just how many christians are going to be imprisoned? how many children are going to be killed? how many women are going to be enslaved and raped? when is this go to end because we're not doing enough. we're only doing seven airstrikes a day. during the bosnian complicate it was 140 a day. we're not taking it seriously enough. >> while there are christians being specifically targeted, and as you mentioned for genocide, we know others of the islamic faith who don't necessarily agree with what islam is promoting and what they adhere to, all of them are in danger. johnny, thank you for the awareness you're bringing to this. you're doing a lot of important
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writing, too. thank you for being with us today. >> thanks for having me. >> leland? still to come shannon -- ♪ -- just as johnny was talking about, pope francis ushers in the start of holy week. we're going to tell you the message at the heart of his palm sunday mass. plus, with a deadline just two days away on the iranian nuclear talks, is perhaps the u.s. giving away too much of the negotiations? we've got a fair and balanced debate from our political panel, coming up after the break. if you're running a business legalzoom has your back. over the last 10 years we've helped one million business owners get started. visit legalzoom today for the legal help you need to start
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cancer treatment centers of america. care that never quits. appointments available now. secretary of state john kerry canceled his plans to come back to the united states. he's staying in switzerland for the next couple days to try to hammer out a nuclear deal with a iran before tuesday's deadline.
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there are still numerous talks on both sides including iran's nuclear program. critics charge that in a rush to reach an agreement obama is giving in to too many of iran's demands. here we have pete snider and chuck rocha. pete first to you. is it too close to make a deal? >> absolutely. i come from the bill clinton school of formal policy in iran. in two years ago, he said to cnn, what iran is really saying, despite the fact we denied the holocaust, we threatened israel we demonize the u.s., we want you to trust us. less than two years ago, bill clinton. >> chuck, my dad used to always say, you can have a bad deal with good people. you can never have a good deal with bad people. there are not many people who would argue that the iranians are good people.
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how does the administration try to make this case that we can have a deal with iran and trust them? >> i think american people are tired of war. think they've seen thousands of our sons and daughters killed in war and i for one would say we should avoid everything we can to get in a war. i want to do everything i can after 15 years of war if there's a way. if there's not a way, let's do what we have to do and at all costs protect our country. >> when you talk about protecting the country and what the administration's goals are, it's interesting. this is from a british newspaper. they said there is an iranian defector who defected and he said to the telegraph the u.s. negotiating team are mainly there, meaning these talks in switzerland to speak on iran's behalf with other members of the 5 plus 1 countries and convince them to make a deal.
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does the country so badly need a win because of foreign policy that they'll make a deal at whatever cost? >> i think you can ask osama bin laden if he's tough enough. that's right there is no osama bin laden because he was tough enough. someone needs to take the lead on negotiations and that's where we are because someone needs to be a leader on this. >> you have a point. president obama is good when he doesn't have to negotiate meaning killing osama bin laden. as soon as he gets to the negotiating table, the whole thing folds. he is seen as the weakest negotiator. putin has been digging on him year after year after year. they think they will get hands off after 10 years, meaning we'll negotiate for 10 years and we can do whatever we want with nukes? that's going to be no more israel. >> i thought that was an interesting point when it comes to u.s. policy towards iran. look at a map of the middle east and where it stand right now and where there is iranian influence. you have iranian influence with
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hezbollah hezbollah. they are fighting with iran who is against isis. in iraq the united states is fighting with iranian militias against isis. in yemen u.s. allies are bombing iranian-backed militias and the u.s. is providing support for this. at the same time we're negotiating with iran for a nuclear deal. in any way is that a coherent policy? >> no, and if you ask an old redneck like me or half the people watching this program, they couldn't find half the people on that map fussed where is iraq? that's the political problem here today. people at the end of the day don't understand this. they want to make it quick and simple. what are you doing to protect us? are you doing everything you can so our sons and daughters don't have to die for our country? even me living in this town looking at that beautiful capitol, i don't even understand. how are the american people supposed to understand such negotiations? >> are the republicans doing a good enough job selling their message to the american people, or does it all kind of get lost in the wind?
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>> i think actually having benjamin netanyahu come and make the case directly to congress, i thought that was brilliant. and you know what, it paid off for him in israel and also here in america. if you look, the amount of americans who want to deal with iran right now is under 20%. this is a crazy policy that the president, to your point, leland, is pursuing at all costs. i guarantee you we get a deal because he'll sign onto anything that comes out of those talks. >> we'll see. two days to the deadline, pete. chuck we appreciate you guys' insights insights. thank you for being here. shannon? leland thousands of christians gathering in st. peter square to celebrate palm sunday this morning. pope francis and a dozen cardinals carried palm fronds to celebrate jesus' crucifixion before his arrest. this marks the beginning of holy week which ends on easter sunday. still to come, some good news for america's military vets
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we've gone from serving just a couple thousand with comprehensive services. >> were you surprised at how much you were able to do because otherwise it wouldn't get done? >> when we designed the program, many of us found it had been working in other veterans groups, we had seen system support in the va, and we knew there were gaps. that's one of the reasons we
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started the wounded warrior project. but there are hundreds of thousands of warriors that need mental health services that still struggle to find them. >> 10 years ago, it was right at the height of the afghanistan war, you had the iraq war continuing. in ten years the american public in some ways moves on. there's ain't war going on in iraq, there's a very small war going on in afghanistan and all of a sudden you have 65000 people who now need care. have you found the american public has forgotten and moved on a little bit out of sight out of mind, or are they still ready and willing to help? >> so far the american public has stayed with us. they've enabled us to grow at a 50% increase in our programs year after year, ask we'rend we're hopeful that as we keep hearing the wars are winding down that they won't pick up on future conflicts that they stay with us more, because there are going to be warriors that need help for a lifetime. >> that's the thing steve
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about these recent conflicts that are different is that people are surviving. they have, in many cases, horrific injuries, but because medicine has advanced enough, many of them do survive, so they come home with different needs and very long-term needs. >> that's a great point. we have warriors that right now multiple kbu tragsamputations severe traumatic brain injuries injuries they would have passed away on the battlefield in korea. while there are great medical advances in med, we now have a commitment to take care of them, to keep them out of nursing homes, to keep them in their homes with their families and communities. >> as we watch some of the video of some of the services you provide and some of the warriors doing their rehab, we're putting up a website for people to be able to go to to help in the wounded warrior project. are you finding as you're able to not only help with the recreation side of things but also getting veterans back up on their feet to the point where they can go back to jobs and that the therapies are actually working over the years and years of hard work? >> yeah. the good news is that you see
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more and more often warriors who, with the right amount of support, with the right treatment with the right mental health interventions with the right physical health interventions, they're able to thrive. they're able to have families. they're able to go back and have careers and that's an important message for all americans, that we need to remember that our veterans can be successful after injury. they should be there to support them in their communities, help hire them and help them pursue their american dreams. >> and you're there to help them from the very beginning. thank you for all you do. incredible work. >> thank you. >> we'll make sure the information stays out so people can get involved. coming up governor mark pence pushing back his critics. his state's new religious freedom law. we'll have a live report on that. plus, live dramaum llama drama. the llamas that escaped. they're being forced to go back. >> i love llamas.
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. indiana governor mike pence is pushing back against a fire storm of criticism.
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he said he won't change a newly signed religion freedom law but will consider clarifying it. he said state law is to stop government overreach but critics say it opened the door against gays and lesbians. we have the story. >> amidst criticism the governor said he is holding his ground here. we can tell you that he signed the bill on thursday and then turned around on saturday and told the indianapolis star that he wants to support legislation that clarifies that the law does not discriminate against lays and lesbians but this morning he doubled down, defending his decision. >> i'm just determined to clarify this. this is about protecting the religious liberty of people of faith and families of faith across this country. that is what it has been for more than 20 years and that is what it is now as the law in
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indiana. >> while pence was on the national news today, and thousands of people protested in indianapolis. yesterday some businesses across the country said they will stop sending money in indiana until the law is repealed. he signed the legislation in the wake of the hobby lobby case last week and after some christians have been sued or fines after refusing to do business with gay couples getting married. >> yes or no, if a florist in indiana refuses to serve a gay couple at their wedding, is that legal now in indiana? >> well, george, this is where this debate has gone with misinformation and -- >> i asked you a question sir, yes or no? >> well there has been shameless rhetoric about my state and about this law and about its intention all over the internet. people are trying to make it about one particular issue and now you are doing that as well. >> one big concern comes from
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some indiana business owners. they say they are worried about the economic impact with all of the backlash we've seen in the last couple of days. >> will carr reporting live. we'll follow the story. thanks. and coming up a dog suffering from frost bite. here he is. he had to have all of his feet amputated. that is the bad part of the story. the good part, is how a lot of tlc from notern technology -- modern technology is giving him a leg up or more accurately, four legs up. that is coming up.
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all right. we asked for your thoughts earlier, given what we know about the ongoing nuclear talks with iran is the u.s. given up too much? david tweets yes. if this deal goes through yes i feel if this deal goes through, it will be one of the worst decisions in the history. >> and ron said two words from the united states, should be no nukes. >> and this is robo dogs. thanks to -- count them, four prosthetic limbs. he is a rottweiler and lost all four paws after getting frost bite. a breeder tried to amputate the frost bite himself and now brutus is walking again after
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getting all of the artificial limbs from a denver company. he is only the second dog ever to get four complete artificial limbs and he looks pretty happy. >> i love it. oh, precious. remember the llamas on the lamb? it became a media sensation when they went on run in phoenix. and it was narrated by us. and the llamas shown for educational and therapy purposes made the last public appearance. the u.s. department of agriculture shut them down because they lacked the proper permits to be showing the animals. >> it is sad because they do help out a lot of special needs people and kids and the elderly. everybody responds to them so well. it would be a shame to have them shut down. >> they have not commented on the llama drama. i guess they were service llamas. >> and this is my question.
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there is an agency that permit people to show a llama. evidently there is something for everything here in washington. with that, have a great sunday. >> >> have a great sunday. see you next weekend. i'm chris wallace. the latest on the german plane crash. and iran's influence spreads across the middle east. but is the obama administration fighting against iran or alongside it? >> we have put intense pressure on extremists inside of yemen. and it has mitigated the threat they pose to the u.s. and the west. >> our closest allies in the region no longer trust us. they believe that we are siding with iran. >> as the white house presses for a nuclear deal with iran, is the middle east on the brink of regional war? and what is the u.s. strategy? we'll ask the former director of the defense intelligence agency lieutenant general michael flynn.

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