tv Hannity FOX News June 12, 2018 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
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that point, you are in trouble. that's it for unight. tune in at 8:00 p.m. for the show that is the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and groupthink. up next is sean hannity. >> sean: welcome to hannity. 9:00 p.m. on the east coast of the united states and 9:00 a.m. tonight we are less than 24 hours out of the president's historic summit with north korean dictator kim jong un. i had the opportunity to sit down with president trump in the very room where he and kim jong un kicked off their bilateral talks. take a look. >> sean: i think most people like me want to know what was going on in that room, one on one-on-one. >> president trump: the big thing is this is not my 20 -- h
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hour of being up and negotiating. we want to denuclearize that whole situat you know what's been happening for years. we had no choice, we had to. >> sean: we have the full interview with the president coming up in toto, including some historic insight. without a doubt, for some i was a tremendous success and complete, verifiable, irreversible, denuclearization of the entire peninsula is in the works, including a safer word to your kids and future generations. plus, we will compare the presidents diplomacy surrounding north korea to that of president reagan's strategy. there were remarkable
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para-parallels there, but no one on the left, no one on the mainstream media, and very few in the democratic party saw this coming. they have blind pathological hatred for the president, and it seemingly knows no bounds. are actively rooting for the president and in the end, try fail on the world stage because it doesn't benefit them. regardless of all the potential danger and the consequences on the road. we will show you the petulant coverage which will probably shock you but not totally surprising. the world is changing for the better, in spite of the predictable, bitter partisans. guess what, it's time to get on board. you want a safer world, you want a better economy, you want jobs? that's tonight. peace on the peninsula, inspiring open monologue from singapore. it happened after months of doubts, speculations and
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first president in history. by all accounts the summit went very well exceeding expectations. the meetings between president trump and kim jong un were reportedly productive. a solid first step in negotiating what is the complete, verifiable, irreversible denuclearization of the korean peninsula. trump and kim even signed a bilateral agreement. the two points agreed to establish new relations. next, the countries promised to work towards peace on the korean peninsula. third, kim jong un reaffirmed his commitment to the complete denuclearization of the korean peninsula. and if this is not really widely reported, north korea agreed to recover and return the remains of american soldiers that were killed during the korean war. president trump and kim jong un had this to say after signing that joint resolution. let's take a look. speak to the letter r goodw proud of wha took much different situation than it has in the past. we both want to do something, special bond.ed a very people will be very impressed, very happy and we are going to take care of a very big and very dangerous problem for the world. >> sean: today the positive reaction continued and the president reported quote the world has taken a big step back from potential nuclear catastrophe and more rocket
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launches, nuclear testing, or research. our day together was historic and at least talks occurred only after the release of three american hoser an agreement from kim jong uno halt nuclear tests and icbm tests and firing missiles over japan. of course north korea's destruction of one of their key missile on sites. all of this is without any concession. in my interview withpresident tn indicated that north koreans concessions will go much deeper than their what they said openl openly. >>nt trump: we look at what he has done, so we got our houses back but we have blown up one of the primary testing sites. some people say their only testing s.
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so it's the process and it's really moving rapidly. >> meanwhile shortly after signing the agreement or wrapping up the talks, president trump held a very lengthy news conference giving immediate reaction to his storic meeting. i got to sit in the second row. ji was seats down. they can news cnn, take a look. >> president trump: chairman kim and i read just completed an agreement in which he r his commitment to complete denuclearization of the korean peninsula. i think you might want to do this as much, if not more than me. we see a very bright future for north korea. the sanctions will come off when we are sure the nukes are no longer effective. the president has agreed to meet, he has given up so much. i give up nothing, i'm here.
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i haven't slept in 25 hours but i thought it was appropriate to do since we have been negotiating literally around the clock. otto warmbier is a very special person and he will be in a long time -- for a longime in my life. parents are very good friends of mine. he did not die in vain, he had a lot to do with why we are here today. >> of the president had more to say about otto warmbier in our interview. it's a strategy of peace through strength and a strategy of bribery and appeasement through bowing through dictators. now tonight the similarities between former president reagan and president trump are now coming into the floor. the weak and feckless leadership, they were left to deal with a world and the same can be said of obama's people of
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earth's that give the opportunity to usher in trump. ragan is calling the former soviet union and evil empire with many in the media freaking out that the california ragan, was leang us toward a let's go thrgh history. >> they have preached the supremacy of the state. and th domination of all oples on the earth. they are the focus of evil on the modern world. so in your discussions, i urg you to be aware of the temptation of pride and temptation of lively declaring yourselves above it allnd equally at fault. thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong
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and good and evil. >> tucker: just months ago president trump also engaged in tough rhetoric calling kim jong un, little rocket man. just like reagan, he went into a complete meltdown once again predicting a nuclear meltdown. >> president trump: north korea does not make any threats toward the united states, they will be met with fire, fur and power, the likes of which the world has never seen before. frankly, the people w were questioning that statement, maybe it wasn't tough enough. they have been doing this to our country for a long time for many years and it's about time that people suck up to the country and other countries. what they have been getting away with is a tragedy and can't be allowed. if anything hpens inuam, there will be big, big trouble in north korea.
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he does ith respect to mama or anyplace else that is an american territory or american ally, he will regret it. >> tucker: they ramped up military spending, military drills and military presence and reaffirmed commitments to shid our allies from hostile adversaries. one way or similarity comes from the two presidents' willingness to walk away from the table. and before ultimately negotiating the end of the cold war, president walked away from talks with mikal gorbachev. a few weeks ago president trump canceled the summit over a dispute and has frequently asserted his willingness to walk away from a bad deal. and a bonus, both reagan and trump oversaw a booming economies, both implementing significant tax reform, tax
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cuts, removing birding some regular regulations. the media saw this coming, we shouldn't have been surprised. but these were the same people. they were wrong about donald trump winning the republican primary and laughing when he got into the race. and at the same people who were wrong about trump and russia collusion in the so-called scandal. it turns out that the only one colluding with t russians was hillary clinton. of course they are completely obsessed with anything tabloid. >> this could be the last nail in the coffin. >> stormy daniels claims president trump broke the law and had her bowling to. >> does stormy daniels have the president's number? it seems that way. >> how his stormy weathering
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this? >> stormy speaks. >> are you shocked or surprised by this? >> i'm not surprised, in one way i am proud of. >> we are not all created equal, at least not if you are born in as the president put it, a [bleep] country. >>s there different, if the president said lp hole andleap ? >> apparently not. listen to how the cnn fake news panel covered the summit. >> i want to bring it back to the menu not because i'm hungry but because typically the white house releases this kind of details after for example the french president comes to the white house or another head of state comes for a state visit. so by releasing the details of the menu, this is a legitimizing
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kim jong un. >> one particular thing, the north korean people, if they knew what was being dishe out there, they can't eve imagine the types ofds that you have rolled off of your tongue. >> right. it's a poor country, because of kim jong un, himself and his country. but you are right, beef short ribs, a combination of crispy pork, i mean, that is -- it souny yummy and very expensive. >> it sounds yummy and expensive. that's news? and of course, that's only the tip of the iceberg. >> and some it is not a major accomplishment. the spectacle of seeing this american flags is really jarring actually to see and witness. in fact i would say it's
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somewhat disgusting and it's a debasement of the american flag. this is a despotic regime that murders its own citizens and so we are putting them on the same stage as the american preside realizing thatk wehould -- countries have interest. kim jong un did a very good job of representing the interests of his nation and his own personal interest and he snickered donald trump. >> he may be okay in the real estate business but it's odious and disgusting when he's fawning over one of the most vicious dictators on the planet. >> when you look at the poll, the less we are talking about russia. the less we are talking about issues at home. >> tucker: this hatred clearly borders on psychosis. every anchor would be here 24/7
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and they would all be -- they would travel 50 hours in the air for that. by the way, you can always count on msnbc. they weren't here. rachel maddow, chris hayes, jolie mika? too long on the plane for you. plus it doesn't fit faults narrative, your caricature and theufacture every single day. meanwhile, the president and his push for peace in north korea a few years ago, they were stepping all over themselves to praise president obama and his horribly flawed and defunct iranian deal, which is the dumbest deal in world history. $150 billion to radical mullahs in iran, and chanting death to america, death to israel? it doesn't get any dumber than this. but they all in the media love it. take a look. >> of the u.s. and world power is reaching a major agreement with iran.
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watching one of our biggest rivals from developing a nuclear weapon. >> the president is about to deliver a statement on this historic nuclear deal reached with iran overnight. disagreement isupposed to freeze that country's pursuit of a nuclear weapon. >> has the u.s. and its allies successfully blocked the nuclear bomb for now? >> ink it begins to change the dynamics of a tense relationship of 36 years between washington and tehran. i think the deal provides more than the united states anticipated and it could prevent an arms race in the region that would be detrimental to not just of the least but the whole world. >> tucker: it seems like they all had that chris matthews thrill running up and down her leg. obviously this media is incapable of covering this president, president trump in any fair and unbiased way. and in that sense, his success was their failure. he would have to admit they were
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wrong. in doing so, if they were correct, the world would be left faith. so far, betting against president trump has not been working out particularly well for any of them. they are getting everything wrong. maybe it's time for them to start asking themselves, what is in the best interest of the people of the united states andp pushing their radical leftist agenda. trump would be an unmitigated disaster. look at your screen, and as we pointed out many times this was especially true on the economy. they generated wealth like never before and that is why tonight we are hopeful that progress will happen on theorean peninsula. it's good for everybody and good for the world. progress must have been on the korean peninsula. look at the map right there on your screen.
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it merely tops 10 million people making it more populous than even new york city. soul is only located 35 miles away from the dmz, well within striking distance of kim jong un ousands ierses away from of who were tasked with protecting south korea. one nuclear weapon could wipe it off the face of the planet. it's a worthy cause, necessary cause and, a few hours ago i had the opportunity to sit down with the president. >> it's a historic day. i think most people likely want to know what was going on in that room, 101. speak to the big thing is, this is not my 25th hour of being up
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and negotiating and we have been negotiating very hard. >> this is about the complete verifiable irreversible denuclearization of the entire peninsula. though without that, we could not have had a deal. we want to do you nuke the entire peninsula, we want that whole situation which is a hotbed. and the relationship was really good. it was built. i talked about early on in the relationship and the feeling, we had a really good feel right from the beginning and we were able to get something very important done and actually some things happened after that was signed, where we are getting rid of certain missile research areas and certain missile testing sites, we are getting rid of a lot. >> in the lead up to this, and this is amazing.
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a lot had happened. he had dismantled a nuclear test site. he crossed over the dmz, three hostages were released, the missile stopped being fired he would not have come here if he was not willing to talk about the denuclearization. now i don't remember that he sent cargo planes of cash or did anything before the lead up. why do you think he's interested in doing this? >> i'm interested because i noticed some of the press. and some of the press would say, he's meeting with them, and he's got a major loss. i said it, since when? others want to do and it never worked out, it probably never could have worked out. we really have gotten a lot. you haven't seen missiles going up in seven or eight months,
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an there was a period of time going over the middle of japan. we got our hostages back and you are right, we didn't pay for that. he did such a smart thing, and i feel so badly about otto warmbier, that was the one thin thing. he did not die in vain. i actually believed, and i've gotten very friendly with his parents. they are incredible people, devastated as you can imagine. i think without him, this whole thing wouldn't have happened because it crystallized when he came back in that condition. it crystallized so much to so many people will come maybe even to the other side, quite frankly. i think that he truly did not die in vain. >> tucker: i've known you for a lot of years and ihink one trait that i coulday is a
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brutal honesty. the room alone and subsequent talks between your team and their team. we got along very well, we got along from the beginning and we started off. he and myself, , and two interpreters. from the beginni we got along. i made the statement, and i've said it before, you can almost tell right at the beginning. >> i felt very good at the beginning. i talked about, we have two denuclearize that. we are doing some great things for his country, and south korea will be involved very much in helping and japan will be involved and president xi of china has been really terrific on the border. i think less of the last couple of months, unfortunately.
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>> tucker: is a big part of these meetings, which was scheduled as i recall for like 15 minutes, didn't some of them go on for four hours? >> he wanted to meet mar-a-lago, and he had a 15 minute schedule. we were going to to go into breakout rooms and had many people waiting for us, and it ended up lasting four hours. 15 minutes, president of china, great guy, it ended up lasting for four hours. i wanted to treat us better in trade. >> it's one of those things, it's a tough thing. they are doing so well and have made so much progress against us. for so many years it's awfully tough for them to bring it back. we will see how that all works out. we will do something, definitely do something. they offered us $80 billion purchases of agricultural products but there is not enough.
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evolved and how important a role that rhetoric played it. take a look. >> this goes to the beginning. there were lots of people, critics, quickly sg when you set up a little rocket man or a fire andury, or, when he said, i have a red button on my desk, he said, my it's bigger and it works better than yours. how did it evolve from that, to this? that has been building behind the scenes. hout rhetoric we wouldn't have been here, i really believe that. we did sanctions and all the things that we would do but i think without the rhetoric, other administrations, i don't want to get specific on that. but they had a policy of silence. if they said something very bad, very threatening and horrible, just don't answer. that's not the answer. that's not what you have to do.
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i think that rhetoric, i hated to do it. it. sometimes i felt foolish doing it. but we had no choice. >> so strategically you were doing it? >> yes. and i think he gave respect. he was a strong guy, he has a very good personality, he's funny and he's very, very smart. he is a eat negotiator and a very strategic kind of guy. >> one of the things i think that surprised everybody, i think every american should be very happy about this. the korean war which has gone on for so long, more importantly, there are still american remains there, and they will be reiated? >> president tru: coming back. we have some things that aren't even in the report, that we signed. missile sites that they use for the launching of missiles and missile research areas, that will be gone. we made a lot of progress, a
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tremendous amount of progress. so one of the things that i'm happy about, we will not play the war games anymore. you know how expensive that is when we have farmers in your practice from guam? i said it, how far away is that? six hours sir. that's a longime. so we are not going to be doing the war games as long as we are negotiating in good faith. so that is good for a number of reasons, in addition to which we save a tremendous amount of money. i hate to sound like a businessman, but i kept saying, what is this costing? i look at them coming in from the sea and bombs exploding, and i said what does this cost? i don't want to tell you, but it's a lot. as long as we are negotiating in good faith, which i think we will be. >> sean: so you thought coming in here you would sign an agreement is that it might take
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more or five meetings but you are open to going as fast or slow as you wanted. >> president trump: got along better than i assumed we would at the beginning, and we got more done together than i ever thought possible. he's going back to get this done, he wants to get it done. you are the whole thing about his father and other constrictions for his grandfather, but the fact is, and he brings that up. nobody has ever come close. >> talk about the difference between past administrations and yours? >> president trump: i can't say that at some point i'm sure he will say it, but they never got it done. he was never to a point where they were like he they are. is there a history lesson to learn here? i think in one since we could talk about past administrations rate, the evil empire, mr. gorbachev carried out his wallet, his own advisors wanted
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to take the boys out of that speech. and, that was the worst deal i have ever seen. worse than the wto, the wto. and that is in addition to the money that we have given all the time. i would say that the iran deal was one of the worst i've ever seen. we never had it approved by congress. >> sean: it must be approved by congress. >> president trump: i wanted approved by congress, otherwise it doesn't mean very much. since we took out of that deal, i think iran is a much different place.
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i i don't think they are looking so much to the mediterranean and syria and yemen, they are starting to pull people out of yemen. they are starting to pull people out of syria, it's a whole different thing. i did it for a nuclear but one of the side benefits, you take a serious look and certainly sanctions played a big part. i think at a certain point honestly, i know the iranian people. i reallyve at some point they will come back and want to negotiate a deal. >> sean: it when we come back, much more to get to with president trump. and let not your heart be troubled, we have some deep a state breaking, a showdown between the doj and some icans are trying to do their constitutional oversight. this is getting interesting in the lead up to the ig report released on thursday. we will have the latest.
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hannity from singapore, the final part of my interview with president trump and talked about the likelihood that kim jong un would visit the white house, or maybe mar-aago. take a look. did reunification come up, did humanitarian issues come up in the meeting? >> president trump: yes it did, and one of the things that i will to you that i'm most happy about, and as you know is a big sticking point, it's bringing back the remains of thousands of soldiers that were killed. and this was sort of last minute. i said, would itossible? i get letters all the time from families who lost a son, lost a brother, lots of father in korea. that was a rough fight. they were buried along the roadways, they were buried as
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soldiers went back and forth into battle, and bearing them along with the roadways. i get so many letters from people who lost ane in north korea, and i would say, i will try. and i brought it up. i tell you what, it was almost diate. now in the past, you couldn't even talk about it. but it was really a nice response. >> sean: how quickly did you talk about a trip to the united states? >> president trump: i think at the right time he will absolutely be coming to the white house. it has been a very intense relationship. intense, and of course before that, it was pretty rhetorical. it was not a pretty thing. without that, i don't think we would have been here today. he wants to get something done, i want to get something done and it started off a strong document.
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and then, add some more things that we got after that. >> sean: could you give us a glimpse into what you are referring to, things that may be coming? >> president trump: i think that we are now going to start the process of denuclearization of north korea. i believe he is going back and will start virtually immediatel immediately. he has already indicated that and, you look at what he has done. and, some people say they are only testing site for getting rid of a missile, which wasn't in the document, this was done afterwards, it would be getting rid of a missile testing site. so it's the process and it's really moving rapidly. >> sean: last question, i know you have lots to do. obviously he wants something on his end, he wants the sanctions lifted, he wants economic
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opportunity. his people need it desperately, there are people starving there. so i guess my question is, the order. what would he have to do to get the sanctions lifted to get the economic opportunity opened up for people? >> president trump: what he wants his security, and i understand that and he will get that. it's incredible, it's between china and south korea. think about that, i'm in the real estate business. how good of a location is that? you have china and south korea, and he is right and the middle of both of them surrounded by water. okay. there couldn't be anything better than that. it's also beautiful land. incredible land. i think he understands that, i told him about that today and i think he really understands it. >> i think -- china can't be thrilled about a very strong
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group of people with great capability right next to him. i do believe they are. they were very, very helpful nothing is going to interfere with my relationship with president xi, because i have great respect for him. he's a great man, in a true sense. >> that's one of the best stories you tell, and it's an interesting story historically speaking. you are having dessert with him. >> president trump: that's right, at mar-a-lago, chocolate cake. >> sean: and >> sean: and this was after has not had used chemical weapons on his own people, and you had launched the first strike? >> >> president trump: and he said, they are hitting a certain target. and he said, please say it again, through his interpreter. every one of those missiles from 700 miles away, shifts in the
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ocean. 58 missiles, 58 hits, it's incredible technology. not that we want to do it, but it was so lethal. that was done because syria to use chemical gases on children, and we had to do that. at president obama got over the, i think you may be would have had a different story ie middle east, i really believe that. but he didn't do that. but we did. so i told him sitting at mar-a-lago at dinner, i said either he will leave or he will be friends. but he did understand. i think he really did because he really did a lot of people and a lot of children were killed by gas. and he fully understood. i know you have a lot to do, mr. president, thank you for your time.
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>> president trump: thanks, i appreciate it. >> tucker: still to come, henry, daniel kaufman, and sebastian gorka. and a showdown emerging between rob rosenstein, the doj and freedom caucus members, and devin nunes. it's getting ugly. we will tell you all about it coming up we had to deal with spam, fake news, and data misuse. that's going to change. from now on, facebook will do more to keep you safe and protect your privacy. because when this place does what it was built for, then we all get a little closer. non-drowsy children's claritin allergy relief. the #1 pediatrician recommended non-drowsy brand. because to a kid a grassy hill is irresistible. children's claritin.
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>> tucker: at moments ago, president trump responding to those rooting for failure in north korea. this is what he tweeted. one year ago, the pundits, the talking heads come of the people who couldn't do the job before were begging for reconciliation and peace. please meet, don't go to war. now that we meet and have a great relationship, the same
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haters are shouting, you shouldn't meet, don't meet. also we are following developing story according to a report from catheri herridge. back in january, the deputy ag, the one i say is conflicted, rob rosenstein, actually threatened to subpoena documents and emails from the house intel committee members. really? it's actually the opposite way around. continue in singapore with reaction to all of this. fox news' chief correspondent ed henry, former deputy at, dr. sebastian gorka. fox news contributor, investigative reporter sara carter. retired cia 30 plus years and senior intelligence officer, patrick hoffman. let's get to the president and then breaking news. it is ironic, there is no winning if you are a democrat. no winning if you are the left-wing media. you don't want the president to succeed. the media looks bad and democrats have no shot at 2018.
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>> in north korea, diplomacy is engaged and tension is down. i'm not sure what there is not to like. it's not following the traditional script from which we might negotiate for months and months, then put a briefing package together and sign loads and loads of duments, but in this case, the president had to have that initial meeting to set the stage for everything else. >> it was b all of these concessions on his part. he broke down the nuclear test site. and the hostages. >> that is so important. the administration has taken such a dramatic turn from the obama administration, i think it wa significant. syria was a lesson to the whole world, it was a lesson to iran and korea. he was making a statement saying, when i draw a line, i mean it. and the rest of the world knows that. >> i think that's the great
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point about iran. the world is watching. look, the president said i'm going to get out of this bad iranian deal, and he did. he is also very smartly saying it will go through congress and proper channels. so the next president can't wipe it out with a wave of the pen. >> everything the president has done in just over 500 days is bigger than the specific events. so the crew was missile engagement in syria, that sends a message for the racemic. if that's the reassertion of american leadership and that sends a message to north korea and iran, even to other countries such as russia. so every single act has a large strategic message to the world and that's why this presidency with his team, let's not forget. it's a pale and bolton. >> the president, you called last night, the speed of >> the speed of trump.
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but let's remind ourselves, he's been in office less than six months. these results, you would be proud of these at the end of your second term as president. he has not even halfway through his first term. >> i would argue that there is a mome in history emerging to the middle east, also. the jordanians, egyptians, saudis, emirates and is real, and the u.s. >> if i may come all of this is the geopolitical restructuring globally, whether it's the middle east, here in asia or europe. and america leading the front. because what is the key message? for eight years the white house. and what happened to come up the world was in flames. one data point under obama, thanks to the syria and everything else, we have 65 million displaced people. >> we have our own catherine herridge reporting,
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and rosenstein, on january 18th, a closed-door meeting involving the senior fbi direct director, literally talking about subpoenaing them. the site is now getting real. >> yes, it is. i have talked to senior people in the house intel committee previously that have told me that yes, rob rosenstein was threatening a senior aide to devin nunes, the chair of the committee and he was going after his ema on his text messages and his phone cal, which would violate the separation of powers and sort of turns on its head the idea that the house intel committee and other panels in congress have oversight power over the justi department and the executive branch. so this is remarkable. it comes in the context of the president trying to change the narrative frankly and saying we should also be looking not just a similar investigation and what we are looking at with the trump campaign and the trump
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administration, but the investigation of the investigator is, whether it's just us or fbi. andrew mccabe is in hot water as. >> tucker: i've got reports that rosenstein has a vicious temper behind the scenes. you know the source of catherine herridge, you think you know where it is? >> of course, and they have outed him now. these are links coming from the department of justice obviously from robert rosenstein. he has the leadnvestigator for the house intelligence committee, and this is how vicious rob rosenstein is, is threatening him over and over again. >> tucker: we will have a lot a lot more tomorrow and we will have more from singapo tomorrow. we will have a lot more hannity, after this break. the lincoln mkx, more horsepower than the lexus rx350. and a quiet interior from which to admire them.
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-brahms' "lullaby," or "wiegenlied." -when will it end? [ ding ] -not today, ron. here's something you should know. there's a serious virus out there that 1 in 30 boomers has, yet most donve it. a virus that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. hep c can hide in the body for years without symptoms. left untreated it can lead to liver damage, even liver cancer. the only way to know if you have hep c is to ask your healthcare provider for the simple blood test. if you have hep c, it can be cured. for us, it's time to get tested. it's the only way to know for sure. benjamin franklin capturedkey lightening in a bottle. over 260 years later, with a little resourcefulness, ingenuity, and grit, we're not only capturing energy from the sun and wind, we're storing it. as the nation's leader in energy storage,
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but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. >> sean: quick programming note. we'll be back here in singapore. between my radio show and tv show, i am not missing the ig report coming out thursday. we will be here until the end of
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the week. just to let you know. we also have follow-up of the big summit. we hope you will be joining us. ig on thursday. we will give you a preview tomorrow in the fight emerging. let not your heart be troubled. standingn washington, d.c., our nation's capital. she takes it away, laura ingraham. >> laura: hannity, nice job. you don't look jet-lagged. you look likeou've been going over runs, getting sleep, mixed martial arts. i saw that. >> sean: i am doing my mixed martial arts. i am working out. there's a pool right behind me on the roof of the building. 3 miles before the show every day. lra great interview, great guests. i'm very jealous but i love you so i'm rooting for you. >> sean: you could have flown 22 hours with us. i can't get home till
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