tv Americas News HQ FOX News August 23, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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other day. >> not here, please. ♪ ♪ >> by the way, it doesn't hurt the patient and they go back to work. >> no. no. >> please. >> it heals for sure. >> soothing. >> thanks. >> takes care. the three most popular americans in france speak out together for the first time in their own humble words describing the incredible fight to subdue the shooter aboard a speeding train. plus, what counter terrorism agents are learning about the gunman's ties to radical islam. >> growing outrage after the army orders this decorated afghan vet involuntarily discharged for his reaction to a shocking crime. we're going to talk to the congressman who says he should stay in the army. and hillary clinton's e-mail controversy dominating the air waives again today. >> we're talking about information that went to the secretary of state who is the highest foreign relations
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officer. >> congressman mike pompeo on how all of this affects his search for answers on the benghazi select committee. thank you for spending your sunday with us. i'm elizabeth prann in for shannon breen. i'm leland vittert. welcome to "america's news headquarters" from washington. >> it feels pretty crazy. i never thought i would be here in this position so it's unreal, like i said before. >> my personally, i'm still waiting to wait up. this seems like a movie theater or something. >> a very real movie, indeed. those words from the three americans who hog tied a terrorist and saved countless lives aboard a pair rid bound
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train. this is the first time we've heard from airman, spencer stone, the man credited for charging a shooter and saved the lives of the passenger. spencer thanked the team that reattached his thumb. the americans are basking in the international glory, hard questions are now being asked about the moroccan gunman. he was on the radar of several european countries yet still managed to board a train with an ak-47, pistol, multiple magazines of ammunition and a box cutter. will carr joins us with what has become an international investigation. hi, will. >> reporter: high, leland. all three came out and were quite humbled. very inspiring. the u.s. ambassador there in paris said their actions demonstrated the very best of americans. now these three guys are childhood friends. they were traveling. they were vacationing in europe.
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spencer stone who's on the left there, u.s. air man, at the press conference, black eye, his arm in a sling. anthony sadler is a senior in college and then alex skarlatos, a specialist in the national guard returning from a deployment in afghanistan. all say seconds after the shots were fired, they saw a suspect shirtless and cocking an ak-47. it looked like it was jammed. stone who loves martial arts tackled him. the suspect slashed stone. he picked up the ak-47 and hit the suspect in the head with a gun. he put him in a chokehold until he passed out. a passenger took off his tie and hog tied him. even though stone was badly
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injured went over to the man who was shot in the struggle and ultimately may have saved his life. >> i went over, saw that he was squirting blood out of the left or right side of his neck. i was going to use my shirt but i realized that wouldn't have worked. i stuck two of my fingers in the hole, found what i thought to be the artery, pushed down and the bleeding stopped. i said thank god. i stayed in that position until the paramedics got there. that man that was shot was from virginia. we learned he is going to be okay. stone says that he was simply thinking about survival and making sure that everybody on the train survived. ironically, the three men didn't even start out on that train car. they were in another one which they say had bad wi-fi. they moved to first class where the attack occurred. all three took a phone call from president obama yesterday where he recognized their extraordinary courage. after the suspect have identified him as ayoub e
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ayoub el khazzani. he was known by his ties for radical islam in france, belgium and spain. there are some discrepancies from authorities in spain and france about his recent travel although it is believed he did spend time recently in syria. he's being questioned in france where his attorney has come out and said he's dumfounded he's being treated as a terrorist. he simply wanted to rob the train. as anthony sadler said in the press conference, you don't need eight or nine magazines to rob a train. >> yeah i'm not sure anyone than his lawyer might have believed it. wonder if his lawyer believes it as well. will carr following this from l.a. thanks, will. it is physically impossible to move things from the classified system to the unclassified system. we are only talking about the classified system -- unclassified system. everything on the classified system is where it belongs and there is no question about that. the federal records act makes very clear the person that
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transits the information is responsible for the classified -- classification of the information. >> and that was hillary clinton's campaign surrogate, congressman ellen tauscher suspending the presidential candidate over government e-mails. she's expected to testify before the house benghazi committee in mid october. joining us now a member of that committee, congressman mike pompeo. thank you for joining us. >> great to be with you, elizabeth. >> may i please get your reaction to ellen there? she said the classified material was on a classified server. what is your reaction to na? >> well, from the committee's perspective, trying to get access to state department materials, including former secretary clinton's materials has been a nightmare. they have stone walled us. the private home brewed system we now know not exactly where the servers even were at this late time. there were thumb drives, we have a wiped server. our capacity to answer to the
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american people as we've been tasked to do about four dead americans three weeks and three years ago remains. the way former secretary clinton handled her e-mails has been an incredible impediment to do that. the intelligence community i.g. believes there was classified information there. we'll let them resolve that. >> you said it's been three weeks and three years but we did just learn some new information, that there's a possibility of yet another server that has not been uncovered. what do you make of those developments? >> that's right. we're three weeks short of three years. the idea that there might be another server out there is indicative of the very problems our committee has had. the stonewalling they have engaged in which has prevented us from completing the task. there may well be other servers out there. we have subpoenaed information. secretary clinton said we did not, we did in march. we are still struggling to get straight answers from this
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administration about the whole record. that's our mission, to get a complete record of what took place so we can answer the questions that we've been charged with answering about the four brave americans. >> and you have said in the past that former secretary of state hillary clinton has been m misleading with the public. we are going to hear from her. you specifically will be talking to her in front of the committee on october 22nd. what do you hope to accomplish during that hearing? >> well, we've got lots of questions that remain. they begin with why on earth we had such inadequate security on the anniversary of september 11th. how it was the case that america responded inadequately that night and how it is the case in the immediate after math that the administration's position was this wasn't a purposeful attack but the response to a video. we have lots of questions. we'll ask lots of questions. it will include questions of storage of state department materials on a private server that appear to be classified.
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many, many questions. we look forward for the opportunity for secretary clinton to clarify that for the american people. they deserve it. >> this is something we've been talking about a lot here, congressman. obviously this was broken by our lucas tomlinson over at the pentagon. it's getting traction on capitol hill. it revolves around a u.s. army decorated green beret. charles martlin stood up to an afghan police commander. may have accused him of roughing him up. duncan hunter is asking defense secretary ash carter to change the decision the army has made. congressman, you're a west point graduate. is this the army you signed up for that, that would pick out a green beret because he punched a child rapist? >> yeah, he's a hero. i'm glad congressman hunter wrote that letter. i fully expect the army to
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re-evaluate their decision to make sure they have their facts right. we have moved a long way from where a brave soldier does his best to protect the very afghan people that he is tasked with protecting and has to mover in a way that some might find offensive but i find deeply consistent with making sure a young boy wasn't raped in afghanistan and they kick a hero out of the military. that's simply not right. >> goes to an interesting question, when you talk to a lot of rank and file officers in the military about and they say in some ways the army has lost its way, upper level management and the command staff is more interested in being politically correct, perhaps, than doing what used to be called doing the right thing. do you agree with that? >> leland, the army has certainly got to make sure that it is reinforcing the right values, honesty, duty, bravery. all of those things. and doesn't get hung up with the social experiment and become part of moving away from the corset of values that has kept
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americans safe for centuries. we have to keep the army in that place where it upholds those core traditional values and if we do that, we'll have an army that is strong as general rodereno talked about in his departure. if we don't, we'll end up with an army which can no longer perform its functions, go out, deter, break things and kill people. >> see if your colleagues on the hill can help out this sergeant here. congressman pompeo, we appreciate obviously your service. >> thank you very much. >> joining us today. we'll be talking to you. keep us up to date. >> thank you, leland. you heard from the congressman how he felt there about this sergeant matland in his case involving the army. now we want to hear from you. send us your thoughts on ott green beret who the army is kicking out for standing up to a rapist who preyed on a little boy and beat up his mother. you can send us your twe tweet @elizabeth pran. we'll have some of your
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responses later in the show. well, day two of high level talks between north and south korea and top officials. the talks are aimed at diffusing growing tensions between the two rival nations. hours after those discussions many south koreans near the dmz left emergency shelters and returned home despite the fact evacuation notices have not been lifted in some areas. the south korean military is maintaining tight security at border areas. coming up later in our show we'll sit down with captain chuck nash to dive into how this affects our troops in the region. >> thousands of migrants fleeing war zones all over the middle east are once again on the move again. one day after barbed wire and police stun grenades fail to stop this mass migration in macedonia, there was an orderly procession as they crowded on trains bound for hungary. you see the trains there.
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hungary is building a razor wire fence to keep them from entering. germany may be the ultimate destination for migrants in syria and libya. thousands of antiislam protesters swarmed. in dresden protestors clashed in a building that will be used to house as many as 600 refugees. >> if this story isn't confusing enough, the italian navy is trying to rescue libyans. this summer a number of refugees have died. they're willing to brave what can be a harrowing and treacherous journey. more than 110,000 people have made it to southern italy just this year. and it's happened again. this time in china's shengdong province. a chemical plant producing a liquid used in nylon and other products exploded and caught fire. one employee was killed and nine
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others injured. officials say there has been no environmental contamination. two weeks ago an exploigs in the city of ptiangin killed people. we're learning new information about the spill that dumped millions of gallons of toxic waste into a colorado river earlier this month. internal documents show the environmental protection agency knew the gold king mine was vulnerable to catastrophic failure but they didn't have a clear plan to deal with the crisis. the epa is confessing there could be blockages that could cause future sludge surges. the wastewater that was accidentally released by an epa team early this month turned the river mustard yellow. states were furious about this during tur rimp season. epa testing shows contamination levels returning to pre-spill levels. some of the contaminants likely
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sunk and some day could be stirred back up. puerto ricoians thirsty for rain may get some relief from tropical storm danny. it will bring rain to parts of puerto rico but not enough to end water rationing that's been in effect since may. danny is expected to miss the water over the ocean. you at home are safe. a day after iran revealed a brand-new missile, critics say it's another example of not being able to trust the islamic regime to honor its nuclear deal with the united states. >> you don't capitulate to the worst instincts of this terrorist state, iran, whose weaponry and financing has killed americans, kidnapped americans and maimed a lot of americans fighting in iraq and afghanistan. >> coming up, we're going to go
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to israel and find out what prime minister netanyahu is doing to fight the deal. plus, we'll go on the 2016 presidential campaign trail and look what the gop candidates are trying to do as they break through the trump media juggernaut. and pandemonium as washington celebrates the birth of not one but two very cute yet very tiny little panda cubs. ♪ they say it's your birthday ♪ it's my birthday, too ♪ they say it's your birthday defiance is in our bones. new citracal pearls. delicious berries and cream. soft, chewable, calcium plus vitamin d. only from citracal.
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the british flag is waving in tehran today, four years after an attack on the embassy there. british secretary phillip hammond was on hand there. and in london, senior officials from both countries were spotted at the iranian embassy. it's not clear if it's officially reopened quite yet. >> no one has been a more vocal or consistent critic of the
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nuclear deal with iran than israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. he said it was a roadmap for an iranian nuclear weapon. israeli officials are also lobbying members of congress to vote against it. joe rosenberg joins us from tel aviv. good saturday evening to you. one thing that's broken over the past couple of days is a report out of israel that a hood barack told his biographer that prime minister netanyahu on three separate occasions wanted to attack iran and did not. is this as big of a deal as it seems on paper? and what's the reaction to israel to this news? >> very interesting, lee laland. >> he shouldn't have talked to this at all, to a biographer or later. this is a very sensitive issue.
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but barack's own mission, he was supportive of these attacks but the cabinet didn't feel the time was right. what this shows is how serious both netanyahu and barack and most of the cabinets not all believe this issue is. remember, we're dealing with iran, not a moderate regime trying to find its way into a community. you're dealing with an a p apocalyptic genocidal group. they say the 12th amam is coming to rein over the world and that they need nuclear weapons for the little satin and the great satin, the united states. the issue of unilateral development is one netanyahu has
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been incredibly coy over and over and over again. it's one card he's been used to press the obama administration hard to try to have some leverage on capitol hill. what i'm wondering is now that this news is out the three times he said let's go and his cabinet said no and there wasn't an attack, doesn't it all of a sudden weaken the israeli position internationally and make the threat of unilateral positioning moot? >> no. it's a very difficult situation, but the prime minister and much of his cabinet, the question was can we build up more capacity to strike iran when the time is right? it's capacity and timing. part of the timing issue, leland, was would the united states under president obama keep its word which said the goal of the negotiations was to end, not legalize and extend, but end the iran nuclear
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program? so you wanted to wait to see, okay, maybe the president will keep his word on this. that has not been the case. now eight in tennis rail lis believes this deal threatens the very security not only of israel but of our ally, the united states. and more than half the israelis believe the president should be doing everything he can. and a war if needed. >> that's what i wanted to sort of talk to you a little bit about. there's an old joke when i lived in israel there was, if you want four opinions, ask two israelis. the question being going forward, every israeli i've talked to is pretty universal in their opinion that this is a bad deal and makes iran a much greater threat to israel. what they're not necessarily all in lock step about is whether or not israel should take unilateral military action. what i'm wondering is when you're on the street there, do
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people seem coal lesced around e idea that they should play around a little or is now a go time? >> the only person who can decide if it's go time or the people is the cabinet. they have the intelligence in front of them to show them do they have to go? is there no other option? or are there other ways to slow down or neutralize the threat. nobody here wants to go to war if it's not necessary, but everyone's ready to go to war if it is necessary. one of the questions now is could israel hold on until the next election in the united states to see if a president who is more sympathetic to its most favored and fateful ally in the middle east, israel, as well as our arab allies, would have a change of policy from president obama. >> look, you also have democrats emerging right now. senator menendez, senator schumer are putting national
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security above their own political fortunes so there is -- i don't think this is the moment to strike. it's the moment to try to get congress to go against the deal. >> well, there's obviously a lot of lobbying going on on capitol hill. as you pointed out, israel and the iran deal is a big deal. appreciate your insights. joe rosen from tel aviv. >> my pleasure. donald trump is dominating in the polls and packing supporters. this as other gop hopefuls hit the campaign trying to catch up. we'll have the latest on the 2016 race. plus, north korea prepares for war. more than 1 million people pledging to help the hermit kingdom. how will this scary story play out? we'll see. >> translator: we the young men who grew up under the roof of our great leader are boiling blood in our hearts of the spirit of national defense.
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new reports of a secret saturday meeting between vice president joe biden and senator elizabeth warren raised a lot of eyebrows here in washington. many say it's a possible sign biden is seriously considering a run for the big job. speculation comes as hillary clinton took hits this morning over new details surrounding her e-mail scandal. kristen fisher is in washington following this all. hi, kristen. >> hey, leland. this is the first week where the clinton campaigns went on the offensive and tried to get ahead of the e-mail issue. this is the first sunday where the clinton supporters mounted a full court press on the e-mail issue. they say she's done nothing wrong and it's the government's dysfunctional classification
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system for information. judge michael mccasey says this is not a political witch hunt, this is a criminal investigation. let's listen as both sides have it out on fox news sunday. >> to say that the investigation is not of someone personally is ridiculous. the fbi does not investigate machines, it investigates people and she's certainly one of the people who's being investigated. >> this is not a criminal investigation. this is about the loci computer system at the state department which is unsecure which only carries unclassified e-mail. that's what we're talking about. >> now we may be talking about not one but two private servers. the clinton camp is trying to talk about anything but e-mail gate but it's not going away any time soon. and on the republican side it's donald trump. this week he made the cover with the headline deal with it. chris christie is dealing with
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it. >> why be frustrated about the fact that there are people who will do well at times and not do well. focus on yourself. i'm focusing on the fact that i'm the guy who's vetoed more tax increases than any governor in american history. >> no matter what they say, you know it has to be tough for all the gop candidates to watch trump attract the crowd that he did on friday. about 30,000 people turned out for that rally in a football stadium in alabama. elizabeth? >> thank you, kristin. of course, let's get right to our fair and balanced debate. amos sneed is partner at bryant roe and former secretary of the house republican whip roy blunt. and we have the president of the patriot majority. thank you both for joining us. i appreciate it. >> thank you. >> amos, i want to start with you. we saw in kristin's piece, the trump flair. the 30,000 people in the stadium, still doing phoners on sunday political shows.
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is it still working? >> i think it's still working for donald trump. i think he's having a blast up there. if you really look at his campaign compared to all the other campaigns on the right and left, it's the only one out there who's saying what he's for. he wants to make america great again. if you look at that, the last time we had a slogan that simple for people to rally around, it was president obama's first campaign. trum is causing fits out there but he's having a blast. i don't see him going away. >> you don't see him going away. craig, what do you see? >> if i worked at the rnc i would consider hiring a hostage negotiator to try to get the guy to leave the building. >> you think he's causing damage to the republican party? >> i think he's causing significant damage. i think he's damaging the overall process. where we're -- the president -- running for the president should be a serious matter and not bomb bass stick and filled with insults. what we're seeing is a style that's resonating but content and character which is lacking. >> you probably agree to
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disagree that you think he's causing damage to the republican party? >> yes. >> okay. , absolutely. >> i want to seg gau into the fact you disagree. do you think he's changing the rhetoric? jeb bush was using stronger language, coming across more forceful than he has in years past especially when he was running for governor. do you think trump has impacted the republican party and now we're seeing tougher rhetoric? >> i don't know if it's tougher rhetoric but he has impacted the debate. say what you will about donald trump, he knows how to stay in the news. all the other candidates are trying their best to break through and get a mention of their name. that is the trump impact. >> pushings the bar a little higher. >> can i add something? >> of course. >> i think he's making the other candidates look weak. i think that they're struggling to try to figure out how to respond to it. >> you don't think they look stronger because they're coming out more forcefully. >> if i were a republican, and i'm not, i would ask the question, what would richard
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nixon do or what would ronald regan do confronted with a challenge like this? i think they would be tougher and stronger. >> i want to switch to the democratic side to give equal time to both sides. we heard there was a meeting between vice president joe biden and senator elizabeth warren. i want to start with you. do you feel hillary clinton should feel threatened right now? >> i think there are two things that aren't going away in this election so far, one's donald trump and the other is stories about hillary clinton's e-mails. i would be concerned about it. i wouldn't panic. if i were in her campaign i would say get rid of this story and flush it as quickly as possible. >> how do you get rid of the story? it's the gift that will not stop. >> i don't know the specifics of everything that's there and i don't think everybody outside of hillary clinton and a few others do. i think they should flush this story as expeditiously as possible. it is doing damage. think of the fact that there has not been a single ad so far done about this. it's become a major news story that won't go away. >> it's a major news story
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because the fbi is involved. this is a major news story. they want to know. they want transparency. do you think they should be worried about the meeting between vice president joe biden and elizabeth warren? >> absolutely. he's the democratic party's insurance policy. the timing is working out really well for vice president biden. he gets to come in and look like the party savior. if i was the clinton campaign, i would be worried. >> who gets the nomination between hillary clinton and vice president -- >> i think hillary clinton remains the favorite, however, the one thing i would say is when there is a large field, a lot of times there are candidates who blink and imagine themselves being a member of the cabinet or being a running mate. joe biden will never blink because he's already been there. >> you get the final word because we're out of time. >> thank you so much. >> appreciate it. on the brink of the most fortified border in the world. talks between north and south
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korea continue this weekend to avert an all out war. our own fox news analyst will be joining us with what's at stake at the korean peninsula where thousands of troops are based. plus, it is the elephant in the room. literally. how did this little guy get stuck in a well and why it took a village to help get him out? we'll have that story up next. 73% of americans try... ...to cook healthy meals. yet up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more... ...add one a day men's 50+. complete with key nutrients we may need. plus it helps support healthy blood pressure with vitamin d and magnesium. that detergand we'll have to like half thuse like double! maybe more! i'm going back to the store? yes you are. dish issues? get cascade complete. one pac cleans tough food better than 6 pacs of the bargain brand combined. cascade.
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a south korean defense official says it appears north korea is, quote, pursuing dialogue on one side and preparing for battle on another side. he says the south korean military has detected unusual troop and submarine movements in the north. the communist regime claims 1 million plus young people are vowing to join their army. >> translator: as the enemy's declared a surprise attack on us, we should bear truth to the entire world. thinking that the time has come to show that our guns know no mercy makes my heart boil and the voice of the destruction of these sons of [ bleep ] and teaching them a lesson is ringing out endlessly from my heart. >> one has to wonder what they're thinking in north korea. what does this mean for the 28,000 troops stationed at the bases on the korean peninsula. retired navy captain chuck nash joins us.
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now it seems at least for the time being we've stepped back from the brink where 36 hours ago there was the possibility of a war. >> yeah, there's been no firing back and forth sings the events of thursday and friday. they're in high level talks and some of the people representing the north are actually from king jong-un's inner circle. they've sent a high level delegation. the national security adviser from south korea is participating from their side. the fact that the talks have gone on this long, it appears that this is being defused. >> everyone takes a breath. we saw the propaganda coming out of north korea, nothing new, very color full language although sometimes it scares you. when you listen to that language, you do get the feeling that not only is there a sense of deja vu because this seems to happen every year, but there is room for pretty serious miscalculation on both sides but certainly on the sides of the north koreans, especially
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unpredictability. >> any time you have military forces in a heightened state of alert -- >> kim jong-un said my troops are ready -- >> absolutely. and so did south korea. an inadvertent round misfired and the next thing you know things can escalate and they can escalate quickly. >> one of the things that means they can escalate quickly, not only do they have an enormous army in terms of numbers, that part is largely antiquated. what they have is nuclear weapons. that makes things a little bit trickier. >> yeah, there are experts that believe they have 10 to 15 nukes. they're working on ballistic missile technology. they've miniature rised the nuclear weapons so that they could fit on to ballistic missiles. it's not going to take too much longer, i'm afraid, before these
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things that we see as provocations north to south and threatening our 28,000 troops that are there now all of a sudden takes on an intercontinental threat posture where they can start talking about lobbing nukes into the hawaii or the west coast of the u.s. >> they've made no bones about the fact they want that kind of technology. is there anything preventing them from getting it? other than they seem relatively incompetent on building new missiles? >> it's time and money and iran has been financing a lot of the north korean nuclear work and ballistic missile work. i'm sure they're going to share in the results, in the fruits of that labor. so iran is about to get $150 billion released to it as the sanctions are lifted and funds are released. >> i can't imagine they're going to use all of that to clothe their women and children and buy them sesame street clothes.
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>> shovel ready jobs. >> appreciate you connecting the dots for us on that. thank you. >> a pleasure, leland. >> all the best. coming up after friday's whiplash on wall street, is the worst over? we'll have a story on stocks coming up. and from pt 109 to an aircraft carrier in his name, the latest tribute to j.f.k. >> hey, david, can you hear me? >> yes, sir. good morning. i copy you loud and clear. we are standing by. >> okay. t a biologic, this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me reach for more. doctors have been prescribing humira for more than 10 years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contrubutes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal
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ayoub. can you hear me? >> yes, sir. good morning. i got you loud and clear. we're standing by. >> well, they've authorized me to give you an order. and that is to move this unit into the dry dock. get going. >> copy that. >> you're looking at the dedication of a brand new aircraft carrier. a little work to be done, but will be named in honor of former president john f. kennedy. the traditional key laying ceremony is the symbolic
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beginning of the construction. the official construction of jfk started back in 2010 to build the initial structures. kennedy's daughter caroline joined by a video conference from japan where she currently serves as the u.s. ambassador. and from the smallest 401(k) owners to edge fund operators, investors are fastening their seat belts ahead of tomorrow's opening bell. brian guiness joins us now with a look ahead. >> the dow george dropping 540 points friday, the year's worst week for the market and it's all due to kbroeing concerns about a slowdown in china. for years the u.s. stock market has been successfully betting on china and its growth as the second largest economy in the world. this last week, new indications that economy is contracting, following chinese demand for commodities like iron, copper
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and oil negatively affecting markets worldwide. meantime china devalued their currency. chinese people to import and buy u.s. less likely in. >> we're going start pushing the yuan lower. that means all chinese products coming into the u.s. are much cheaper than u.s. products. as americans, we're going to want to find the value. when we go shopping, we're going to want to buy the cheaper item from china as opposed to an american-made product. >> this week will give us a better idea of just how much chinese economic problems are affecting our economy here at home. gdp numbers, durable good orders and home sales will be coming out this week. many experts expect the market volatility to continue at least shower or thunderstorm perhaps with the nasdaq and s&p 500
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entering a correction. >> i think we probably have another five or six or 7% to go. i would say as a long-term investor, you certainly want to know that we are going to likely see more losses. >> stock market corrections historically every 18 months. the fact is the u.s. market has gone nearly four years without one, but all eyes remain on china. >> bryan, thank you so much. much more ahead on america's news headquarters including an update on what you might call pandemonium over these little guys at the national zoo. it is evidently the third panda in america to give birth. >> a sound she made earlier in the day before she gave birth. sort of a grunting sound. i looked over at the camera and out popped a cub. 16 grams of protein
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in a take time for sunday.d... just know that your truck... has a little thing for monday. we asked you to send us your thoughts on the green beret who the army wants to kick out for standing up for an afghan rape victim. randy says the army is send ag very bad message if it forces a sergeant out. he is what i would expect from our service members. jessica writes, those in the military are trained to protect the country and the vulnerable. to punish them for doing so is hypocritical. kimberly writes it is
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unfathomable that a decorated soldier would be punished for standing up to a bully. isn't that what we teach our children to do? >> there was a lot more responses. we read all of them. you want to try in a case like this to have both sides represented here, a fair and balanced view of it. we tried to find someone supporting the army's position on this in a twitter response and couldn't find any. keep the responses coming. sergeant maitland is supposed to be discharged by april. we'll see if the army goes through with that or if it listens to congress, many of whose members want him to stay in the military. moving on. panda-monium. the national zoo is welcoming two giant panda cubs this weekend, although they don't look giant in this case. the birth came days after mei xiang was announced pregnant. the twins will take turns
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spending time with their mom, while the other is cared for by panda experts at that time zoo. no word yet on exactly on who the panda daddy is. plus, we can't forget to wish big sister bao bao happy birthday, celebrating with a frozen fruit sickle case. i'm shannon green in for chris wallace. the controversy over hillary clinton's grows. can her presidential campaign recover? >> in retrospect, this didn't turn out to be convenient at all. >> we'll talk to one of clinton's biggest critics, former attorney general michael mukasey. >> did you wipe the ser sfler. >> with a cloth or something? >> i recently launched a snap chat account. >> i love it. those messages disappear all by themselves. >> reporter: is the former secretary of state taking the
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