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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  February 26, 2019 11:00pm-12:00am PST

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. . >> president drive cleared today he believes kim i don't think ion wants to do something great, so are behind stakes in hanoi, a formal end to the korean wore may be coming to a close. also on the table, president trump willing to end angst sanctions that have crippled the economy phone chairman kim agrees to the korean peninsula. john boltons said the president can't make kim walk through the door that the president is holding open. just like the first summit in
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singapore, skepticism remains now. the rogue regime has made many promises before, tome break them will ground be a breakthrough or a bust. good afternoon. i'm ed henry, coming to you from the capital city of hanoi. ing in the next half hour, we will take a look at what could be. >> important for president trump. >> we will hope it will be successful, we'll see what happens, but he wants to do something great, also, something oning the par if you look at what you've done in a short time, can he do it in a very, very rapid time. >> remember, when our team was reporting live from singapore, kim jong un gushed it was a prelead to peace and the president, at that time, promised the world that that's talks would lead to denuclearization in his words, very, very quickly.
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but so far that push for a safer, saner world seems to be at a stalemate. in fact, that's the word, stalemate, that retired general jack keenan has been using, and he knows the area as well as anyone. despite the flowery words back and forth. two men fell in love, the fact remains north korea has not budgeted much at all on its nuclear program that is the assessment of the u.s. intel community and it will be put to the test over the notion days. -- next two-days. >> i'm not push forget speed but we're not removing the sanctions. and we're going to have i think, a very interesting 2 1/2 days in vietnam. >> all right, let's get a look at what we can expect from the second summit between the u.s. and north korea. i'm joined by my colleague here in hanoi. what are we expecting? >> a couple things. i think the political implications are really clear for everybody but i think the real question is whether or not
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the president can leverage the weight of history and maybe a view of the future of north korea to somehow compel and convince the young leader to change course and walk away from this nuclear future. this tweet, the president trys to use the setting here, this beautiful vietnam, saying you can do it because they've done it. here is what he said: >> so, obviously, that's why the talks here in has been oh hanoi are so important, to sea nothing of the fact they have a stable relationship dating back to the
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1950s. you can clearly seven-day as the two leaders made their way here to -- clearly sense, as the two leaders made their way to hanoi, this city could be the way to pave the pathway to peace in the region and perhaps, perhaps, a road map to prosperity. >> i very much appreciate the hospitality. it was a really something special. we got off air force 1 last night and i drove down the boulevards and saw all of the buildings under construction and how vietnam is thriving. >> thriving indeed. so keep this in mind, wear talking about one-on-one, very briefing meeting, a little dinner, a chance to break bread. it is important from my vantage point to stay in the moment, understand not just what is at steak in the conversation between the two leaders but what could be at stake on the globe. >> a lot of firsts in the trump administration, broken a lot of
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norms and new beginnings in this administration. the one idea, the one sound beet you played, my friend, kim jong un. as a dictator, we thought no american president would set down with, he has. they broke the ice in singapore. what can we expect in the days ahead? >> age couple things. i think the president will be cautious, elton sell the idea to not just the american people but the north koreans, this will happen. one way or another, if you stay the course we promised, we will do big things together. by the way, keep this in mind, ed, while democrats were complaining and criticizing this president for not coming back with a specific deliverable following this meeting, i don't think that is necessarily a bad thing. diplomats always tell me, kevin, keep your eye on the long view, that's going to be his message when he comes back and we're all hoping we get maybe a signature to end the war. >> thank you for that report. let's dig a little bit deeper
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now since his first meeting with the president in singapore last year, kim jong un has pledged to work towards the complete denuclearsation of the korean peninsula. talks have made little headway since, prompting critics to demand from the president, come home from hanoi with more than just another hand shake. we're joined now by johnson & johnson john jordan. good to see you here. >> good to be here, ed. >> how does the president get kim jong un, this whiley dictator, to follow-up on what they both seeds their names to in singapore. >> two things, i am at know sure how whiley kim jong un is, he is a 30-something who has been abroad to the west only once in high school, and then south korea and singapore. the trick to understanding this is the constraints on kim jong un's behavior by internal north
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korea. their economy is exclusively military for three generations. there is in sayssant propaganda to the idea that the west is their arch enemy to the exclusion of all else. for him all of a sudden to say oh, we're denuclearizing in the state media, because it would get in and all the sudden the west is our friend and we will trust them instantly work almost mean his overthrow and defector testimony tells us. that is beared out by the fact that north korean dictators never leave the country. they're so dismeated by this, they can't even produce an airplane for him to fly in asia yam we have to relay on with a kim jong un can deliver safe re. >> go a little deeper on that. as i understand it, kim jong un has a jet that is soviet era
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technology, has inexperienced pilots and that may have been one factor why he took a train ride here from pyongyang to hanoi. >> yes, i have an and i liar transfer pilot certificate, thousands of hours of flying. it is a 1980s eras main and ited spottily at best. i don't think they could even get it pressurized tomorrow get a jet to fly very far us you have to get it up at altitude. i don't think they can do that and they certainly don't feel comfortable in flying them. they've flown them in local nights in north corps core with you they have -- north korea but haven't got him anywhere else, and i've studied this extensively. there ever constraints what he can and can't do, because of enteral politics so the president has to give hem troop ratchette down the tensions, to acclimate the public and the
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hierarchy that there is possible peace with the u.s. such that he isn't over thrown. >> you mentioned defectors who have given 10 fromty effecters what it is like -- from defectors about what it is lake inside this regime. and how kim jong un has murdered political rivals, one thrown in a room with rabid dogs that haven't evennette for days. what does that tell us about the instability he has and his precarious position. >> you know, one word, ed, fear. leaders that are astute and sure of themselves don't have to do things like that. so that is instructive to us in terms of how we negotiate and interact with them. we have to give them the breathing voom they know that peace is safe, and if can he keep his own house in order. if he just signs something recklessly without ward to his own domestic political position, he could be over thrown and
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replaced by a hard laner and we're way back in the 90s all over again with this. this is a situation that has to be managed thoughtfully and intelligently. >> fear can be very dangerous. if you've got somebody, like kim jong kim jong un, backed into a korner, this old plane, looking over his shoulders, scared to leave the country, he may do desperate things. only the other hand, president trump may be able to exploit that fear, this is your best chance to survive is actually cut a deal. >> that's president trump's it as something to get him to do that. but there may be limits to what kim jong un can do safely, that's where the art of the deal comes in. extract what you can and put them a position where he can verifiably walk back the rhetoric inside the north korean state media. that will be the real tell if after this summit you see a change in tone coming out not just from north korea officially
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but what you see on state media there, because that may be a sign he's preparing the north korean leadership and his own people for a different era. he would have to do that to ensure his own be survival. >> so i've got one minute left. the president is here at his hotel, he had these meetings, he has down time to get ready for tonight. what do you think is going on inside that national security team right now? >> probably a lot of prayer and lot of speculation and lot of reviewing of intelligence from inside of north korea. again, as your previous just guest pointed out, large alley this is up to king john huge. president touch can open the door, will he walk through it. i imagine they're getting ready for dinner and reviewing a lot of notes. >> we appreciate your insight today, very important as we make sense of this sum met. thank you, sir. >> my pleasure.
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>> some big news out of washington this hour, democrats along with some republicans setting the stage for a possible presidential veto. the house voting against the president's emergency border declaration on it tuesday, a loss on that may be expected in the senate. mike emanuel tells us where things stand tonight. >> at least three senate republicans are signaling they will join with democrats opposing the president's executive action. >> personally, couldn't handicap the outcome at this point, but we will certainly be voting on it. >> susan collins of main, tom tilli is from north carolina are sending the white house a message. >> everything the president wants to do it with this money, i completely agree with how's going back it with the emergency powers piece is what i have a problem with. >> they sate they will live to
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regret going along now when there is a republican in the white house later. another republican will give 31 votes, enough to embarrass the president. >> the constitution, there is no factual basis. this is unprecedented in our history. >> the issue dominated discussion on the house floor [now president trump is acting like a dictator. >> democrats acted on a measure disapproving president trump's move to build his border wall. >> the president's declaration is a phony, fraudulent and fake national emergency. >> top house republicans tried to keep defections down. >> democratic presidents have used this power because they have the right to use this power. a number of presidents, republican and democrats, have used this power for numerous things and they have the power to do it, congress had voted to allow it. >> and adam kisl inger said whae
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saw at the border is disturbing. >> it is not about the immigration issue, it is about drugs and human trafficking. i saw both of those regularly on every flate. >> it is a steam -- flight. >> thank you, mike company. president trump's former personal lawyer, mike come cohen, returns to the hot seat on capitol hill wednesday, as well. cohen spent more than nine-hours behind closed doors on tuesday, answering questions from the senate intel committee. he's threatening to reveal bombshell information, that's what he says it is, about the president webs when wednesday president wednesday when he testified in public. he says he is, quoting going to let the american people decide
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exactly who is telling the truth. >> the american people deserve to know whether or not donald trump has been functioning as the president of the united states of america or as the equivalent of an organized crime boss. michael cohen can shed some light on that very important question. >> we've talked to over 200 witnesses, we've been having these hearings and interviews for two-years now, and i think between us and the description that we're going to find out just about everything there is to find out about these allegations. >> well, as you can imagine, supporters of the president lashing out at that charge of organized crime, pointing out that cohen is a convicted liar, having complete guilty last year to lying to lawmakers about a real estate project in moscow. he has since turned on the president, cooperated with robert mueller's probe, as well. he is scheduled to begin a
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3-area prison sentence in may. meanwhile, barg gaining chips and demands will kim jong un be willing to trade pieces of his nuclear program to the relief of sanctions that are strangling his committee. we will take you inside negotiations, coming up.
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comcast business. beyond fast. >> welcome back. the u.s. and its allays want to sigh an end to north korea's nuclear programs and north korea wants the strangle hold of sanks to be lifted. how much of its nuclear program be willing to give up to get what it wants from the u.s. in terms of economic aid. joining me is john park, director of the working group at the john f. kennedy's school of government. thank you for being here. >> sure. >> what can we expect in terms whatever they will let news on, because we've heard from some of our previous guests, which don't even have a full accounting of their program. >> sure, ed. one thing to keep in mind is we're in the middle of a process. there is a lot of focus on a
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single event, upcoming is summ. if you look at singapore there was an agreement laid out with four principles, so in many respects, the idea of moving forward with working groups, time table, road map, the different sketches of those, the options for these conversations, that's the base says of the next steps so very much focused on the process opposed to a single event analysis that is important and what the north koreans will put on the table is directly tied to the sanctions relief or exemptions they're looking for. they need that to build up their economy. >> indeed, young bond, one of the nuclear facilities we believe they have, is constituted of something like 300 or so different buildings over several square miles. and that's only one facility. does that give us an idea of how complicated this task may be.
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>> it could be complicated and that is the basis of this business dealing, in many respects. the negotiations are going to look a lot like business deals in the sense of what portions of the complex would be the basis of getting a particular type of sanctions, exemptions or relief and also the idea that the two countries have to establish the means of communication. you are going to get in the weeds on the details. the symbolic value, it is about the day-to-day communications the two sides have to hammer out these day teals. >> let's talk as well about human rights. the human rights record is abysmal, frankly. >> that has been documented by various u.n. committees, most recently the u.s. ip quire rethat did a very -- inquiry that did a very thorough investigation and documenting investigations over all, but the
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key thick here is the thesis in the past has been in building up a relationship, you can bring up the human rights issues. i think, again, this is going to be a part of the relationship building between these two leaders, at the executive level right now, and how they decide tootling to our issues. this is where the liaison's office could be important, as well. >> means stopping short of full embassies and ambassadors, talk about what that might mean to viewers so they understand. there are reports there may be liaison officers, not formal ambassadors that can continue the talks so it is not two leaders every single time getting together every few months but others following up to get this done. >> sure, we're talking about a number of different, very complex memnisms, not only -- mechanisms. be not just denuclearization or
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peace or check, but this necessitates this channel of communication. rather than a reward or symbolic value of it, it is the nitty-gritty of having those regular discussions. lots of explanations and lot going back and forth. to have the delegations to fly from washington to north core corps that aspect of it, if there is this road map coming out of this process. >> i don't want to get in you in trouble with the president, he tweeted he was tired of the armchair quarterbacking going on and think says taking the process further without what the outside analysts have to say. with the risk much getting in the middle of that would you be telling him if he's in his hotel room in hanoi, he has a few hours of down time before he sits down again kim jong un. >> it is interesting the formal title is chairman kim, so this
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is a business deal so carve it out in specific portions of that deal, you can have the task specific working groups put in the benchmarks and eventually produce the tangible results so this idea of the nuclear complex, carving out which portions there are dismantled and having a full inspection of those areas can be momentum building. so a deal-make process, if you're going to stick to that line, there is a lot to be said about this young, north corps corpsian leader with internal expectations he built. a lot of coverage from the north korea state media is happening now in real time. this is not being speed fen to the north korean people so this idea of delivering creates a basis-for-keel make going forward five' got 30 seconds. talk about his youth and how that may play into these talks. >> in asian culture there is a sense the first generation makes the money, the second trys to manage and it the third squanders it. he is the third generation of
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this kim family but he is acting a lot like the founder. a lot of the break through in the nuclear weapons program happened on his watch and with what will i call the north korea corporate, the trading companies that did a lot of the sourcing for the components that led to the technological break throughs so given how his mindset different and he's leading a different type of structure. he has anen terrage that is serious about deal making and not just window dressing, so there is an opportunity here. >> john park, not squandering any time and giving us wonderful insights tonight. we appreciate your time. >> my pleasure. >> the president striking a cautious leap optimistic tone in the early hours as he gets ready for the summit. another high-profile set down with the north korean leader. ahead, we will look at what is at stake in the next 24-hours.
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>> the president and north korean dictator kim jong un set to meat at the historic hotel here in hanoi, just hours from now. the evening will begin with a 20-minute conversation before a dinner scheduled to last just over an hour and a half. democrats have been warning that this latest sit down will just be more photo ops. that's their opinion. the president is trying to strike what seems like a cautiously optimistic tone. what will be the format for tonight's dinner? what are white house officials hoping to get out of it? >> well, ed, the way it is going to start, first it is going to be about 20-minutes of one-on-one time for president
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trump and north korean leader kim jong un. then, they will bring this a few more dinner guests. they've each been allowed two guests. president trump has selected mike pompeo and nick mull rain . >> i look forward to the meeting went to chairman kim and hopefully it is going to be successful. we'll see what happens, but he wants to do something great also and i think he wants to do something that would be on a par, if you look at what you've done in a short time, he can do it in a he will have a very, ve north korea a great economic power. >> north korea is one of the fastest-growing economies in the world but have continued to engage in what president trump has described as unfair trade
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practices in the united states. today they decided to change that by signing an agreement for $21 million in boeing planes and ge engines. >> we greatly appreciate, we're reducing the deficit very substantially as are many countries but i very much appreciate the hospitality, it was a really something special. >> as for north korean leader, kim jong un, we have not seen him yet today. yesterday he stopped by the north korea i can't be embassy in hand -- north korean embassy in hanoi. we don't know where they will be tomorrow, where if any major deals are going to be struck, that is likely where it is going to take place. ed, i know you've been all over hanoi. s ago around hanoi, you can't help but see the big signs that say the city for peace we should get our first case of would those signs are a little bit
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closer to coming true for north korea and the united states in just a few hours, ed. everybody is going to be watching this dinner starts at 6:15 eastern time. >> that's right. >> kristen fisher, she has been all over this story, and she will be this week. we appreciate that, kristen. in the meantime, we will go from substance to the fun details about the menu at lunch today for the president with the prime minister of vietnam. it was a five-course meal we're told. they just put out the menu. first course, fresh shredded green manage oh salad with sal lops. course two, deep fried spring rolls, follow id about kick crab in a broth. medallions with rice and shrimp in a lotus leaf. a traditional vietnamese dish
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with lotus seeds, longans and white wood-ear mushrooms in a light sugary syrup. we will be sure to have fun with that one. in the meantime, some serious business. once mortal enemies, the u.s. now basking in close ties with vietnam. when we come back, the vietnamese welcome the american president to their home land with open arms. a look back at how the diplomat he can landscape has changed, so much.
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>> well, this fox news alert just coming in to us. breaking news out of pakistan at this hour while we're live here in hand i, a military spokesman reports that pakistan's air force has shot down two indian warplanes. a big story breaking this hour. pakistan claims the planes crossed the boundary between the disputed territory of kashmir. one indian pay pay lot has reportedly been -- pilot has reportedly been captured. another went down in the indian-controlled section of that region. now, pakistan is launching air strikes, we're told, from pakistani airspace in a the disputed area. this is getting hot pretty
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quick. all this comes only hours after pakistan said that mortar shells fired by indian troupes across the frontier, dividing the section of kashmir, killed six civilians and wounded several others. so far there has been no comment. we're seeking it from indian military officials confirming these initial reports. as you can imagine, while we're keeping a close eye on hanoi, we will also be watching a close, keeping a close eye on this story as will undoubtedly the president and his security team. in the meantime, vietnam and u.s. u.s.ation relations are maybe better than they have been before. that has not always been the case. jennifer griffin takes a look back at the changing and complicated relationship.
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>> more than 40-years after the fall of saigon, the country will serve as a peaceful background for the hanoi summit. president donald trump and north core corpsian leader kim jong un will hold the second summit in the capital nicknamed "city for peace." the city in the 1970s was anything about. in 1961, president kennedy announced america was sending a small number of specialized advisers to assist the south vietnamese against the communist north. it would result in the okayest and hottest balance the in the war. the number of troops would swell to 17,000. >> able to make it late today so will miss some of the morning edition. i don't know whether that will minimize the announcement. >> a year later the fear grew about the southest ability to limit the war.
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johnson authorized a dramatic increase. >> we cannot be defeated by force of arms. we will stand in vietnam. >> by december of 1966, there were almost half a million american forces in vietnam. over the kohrs course of the wy fought in places shedding broad over patches of earth named ham burger hell and fire base rip cord. in the air, they fought missions with names like rolling thunderstormser, line backer and operation bolo. by 1968, the american troop total reached 537,000. even at those levels, the war for many reasons was not being won. >> good evening, my fellow americans. >> in november of 1969, president mix on who had taken office that january, announced a new policy vietnamizateon.
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>> it is not the easy way, it is the right way. with the. >> the weakens of morale from the u.s. public, he left them to feet and win on their own. at this point over 40,000 americans were already dead. the last u.s. combat troops left vietnam in 1973, among the bright moments in this time, the return of american p.o.w.es. one of them young pilot what would become a senator and play an instrumental role in reestablishing u.s. vietnamese relations in the decades to come. the south would fall to the north in 1975. the vietnamese losses from the north and south, civilian and military are estimated in the millions. in total, 2.7 million americans served in vietnam.
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58,thousand 220 died. >> today i am announcing the normalization of dim diplomatic relationships with vietnam. >> in 1985, the two nations said set a new course. but, for nations and individuals, old wounds take time to heal. >> i think the wrong guys won. >> senator john mccain that young naval i have a yatesser held captive and tortured during the war went back to vietnam to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of saigon. >> hundreds of thousands who went to reeducation camps. >> he came to help normalize relations with the country, instead the senator was met by heavy criticism by vietnamese officials who said he lied about being torture ed. >> i am tonight in heal the wounds, particularly amongst our
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veterans and move forward with a positive relationship. ' parentally, some in the vietnamese government don't want to do that, and that's their decision. >> it is a critical country and a very critical time. >> over a decade after mccain's trip, then secretary of defend leon panetta traveled to a major navy u.s. port during the war. >> it was a difficult time for our nation. >> it really is an interesting mark of history that we are a part of right now. we recognized the 50th anniversary of the war in vietnam, and that now here i am, cam ran daez, the first defense secretary to visit six the war. >> now, four decades late, the relationship with vietnam have vastly approved. the two country have come together in trade and defense and now a place to talk peace with north korea.
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jennifer griffin, fox news. >> thank you, jennifer. it is, indeed, a new day in southeast asia where former foes are coming together. ahead, the president and kim jong un get ready to meet. take a page from vietnam's book of reinvention.
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>> the streets of hanoi vietnam, filled it with fanfare, excited for this second summit between president trump and kim jong un. he they didn't always have the best ties but could be a role model in how to improve some once very much difficult relations. we're joined from judith, a pulitzer prizewinning author and journalist. we talked earlier how one could not even expect a year and a half ago president trump and kim jong un would have not just one but two summits actually sitting at the same table together. i suspect if you and i were having this conversation 20,
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25-years ago, we wouldn't expect to see the vietnamese committee where it is and the president signing a new trade deal with. they either. >> absolutely. that's why the choice of hanoi and street signal a powerful symbol and hopefully a lesson for kim jong un this is what you can have if you deknew collar ice. you see country that is now friendly in what was an enemy afternoon communist country that embraced capitalism and is now one of the most dynamic economies in asia. now everything that is here, you are looking at, and including the hotel where i stayed several years ago should be a lesson and a kind of indicator to kim jong un, we simply colt know how he's reacting to what he's seeing.
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>> yeah, absolutely, judith. what do you think about president trump's claim that this will be a model that this is the -- the door is open now for kim jong un to see how he can rebuild his economy. you have a communist government here just like he does in northh korea but moves to market reforms not just in vietnam by china, as well. >> it is not only vietnam but it is also south corps core. they should be obvious examples whatever can happen if you embrace capitalism, if you end refryings, if you open your doors to economic ties with the world and you are no longer a political and economic more rye i can't. i mean, south core corps, its neighbor, 50 million people, $1.3 trillion economy, 10, 13 times the size of north korea with its 25 million people, so you know, the issue is what's more important to kim jong un,
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does he think that survival depends on having a nuclear weapon that he'll never be able to use against anybody, or that his survival depends on delivers the check progress he's promised his people. i would hope he would choose the latter, but we don't know which way he will go. >> and we've heard about the potential reopening railways between the north and south korea. we have more than 28,000 u.s. troops there. let's not forget, and certainly, the south koreans are watching all this very closely because they've got millions of people in their capital city of seoul that would be caught in the cross fire if, god forbid, there was a nuclear conflict. >> absolutely that's why i can it is so important the united states not agree to withdraw some of those forces until we see some concrete steps, real concrete steps, towards
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denuclearization and that includes, as you and i have discussed already, ed, a definition of denuclearization, a real accounting of what they have in their nuclear arsenal and the material they have, and an agreement to allow inspeckers to verify any agreement that's made. anything short of that, any decision to remove troops will be very dangerous and i feel premature. >> all right. judith miller, we appreciate your time. certainly, we will be looking for you in the days ahead as we continue to sort through what is a remarkable story playing out before our eyes. thank you, judeist. now, kim jong un may have had a hard time celebrating the outcome of this summit before it even started because some of his, you might call them party favors, are not going to be making it into his country. we've learned that dutch customs agents in the port of roderdam intercepted, yes, 90,000 bottles of vodka.
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that's 90,000 bottles of vodka huddle in a shipping container that intelligence officials say was destined for north korea. international sanctions, of course, prohibit the importation of luxury goods into north korea. you can see they still try to get them in any way. a dutch newspaper says the vodka was meant for kim jong un himself and his army chiefs. customs official december kleined to comment only the specific intend red sip cent. we will be watching that story, as well, in the hours ahead that will do it for the special coverage of the vietnam summit for now, but we will be back here at the very same time tomorrow for two-hours, as well. fox and friends starting an hour early today, as is fox and friends, they will be starting at 5:00 a.m. eastern. and in just a couple moments, fox and friends with heather is up next. i'm ed henry, i will be seeing
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you throughout the day. thank you for joining us. >> it's time get your free trial of fox streaming, featuring exclusive shops from me, plus all your favorite fox news >> fox nation features exclusive shows from me and all your favorite fox news personalities. here's a preview of the shocking story of susan smith part one. check it out. >> this whole family. >> michael and alex, we are doing everything we can. >> we have no reason to believe
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it is anything but what it is reported to be. >> we are okay. >> i don't think old people but her tone of voice. >> have a talked about taking polygraphs? >> i don't know. >> question the responses were indicative, the story did not seem truthful.
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that's why tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites to find the lowest price on the hotel you want. your perfect hotel room for the perfect price! >> we don't feel good about having this important summit in vietnam because you're an example as to what can happen with good thinking. jillian: it is wednesday, february 27th. happening right now at 3:00 :00 am, an hour earlier on the east coast. you had me at hanoi. donald trump's high-stakes summit with kim jong un. we have the progress expected and what it means for denuclearization. here at home michael cohen in the hot seat, donald trump's

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