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tv   Cavuto Live  FOX News  October 21, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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the rafah border crossing between egypt and gaza, the southern tip of gaza opening briefly and allowing 20 aid trucks into gaza. and after hamas releases two american hostages, more families are awaiting answers. we're talking to a mom and dad pleading for the release of their son, a harrowing tale as israel security officials are signaling readiness for a ground offensive. trey yinst begins the hour. he is in our israel. >> david, good morning. israelis continue to strike targets along the gaza strip as 15 days into this conflict, hamas are firing into central israel. i want to move away so the cameraman can pan the sunset. you can see that's gaza in the distance, you can see the smoke rising in the area and the sun is about to go down.
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this is coming as we're getting new images from the southern border crossing between gaza and egypt. the rafah crossing. i want to show you the aid trucks entering the strip, 20 of them, according to officials, this was all part of a deal that was negotiated to get palestinian civilians inside gaza, much needed food and medicine. remember, last night, we brought to you the update, a small piece of good news amid this horrific story. two american citizens that were released as part of a deal negotiated by the qataris, the first two hostages taken on the october 7th massacre released from captivity inside gaza. certainly, a positive development, but i want you to listen to the father of the young girl who was released. you could hear in his voice, as it was shaking, just a sense of relief following this news. >> can you describe what it's been like to wait and not know? >> it was -- it was a
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situation. i did not sleep at night and my head always been in israel, lots of phone calls to israel. lots of tv's, i've been glued to the tv for two weeks hoping for good news and finally it can. >> and i just want to show you gaza here as the strikes continue at this moment, but you saw the father and the ex-husband of judith and natalie raanan, they were able to get back into israel. they were taken to a base in the southern part of this country. and the qatari foreign ministry released a statement last night, david, they'll work to get all civilians of all nationalities out of gaza. this comes amid a looming ground offensive from the israelis. you can hear another explosion as the sit starts to set and the strikes continue with fighter jets overhead. with this expected ground offensive it could certainly
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complicate the efforts by the international community to free what we understand are now 210 hostages being held inside gaza. david. david: trey, i just have to say looking at the beautiful sunset, it's amazing how so much horror can be housed in an area, the holy lands, that are that beautiful. it's such a contrast. trey, thank you very much and again, my friend, please stay safe. you've been doing an extraordinary job in the middle east. well, when can we expect a ground invasion into gaza? and what might that look like? joining me is an air defenseman, rudy, we hope you're safe over the next few days. did the release of those two hostages, and we always have to say, this is two out of 210 hostages that remain, but did that release affect the plans of the idf at all? >> i can't really comment on
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what the idf plans to do, but you know, one mafamily got closure and there's 200 families that need closure. there are families that are suffering and i can't imagine what the people there are going through. i myself two years ago was part of a film documentary team in nigeria and we were also kidnapped and caged for two weeks. and, but to save them, and take out palestinians, to stop suffering under the oppression of what they're doing. david: rudy, i have to ask about hezbollah. there are questions about, it has the enormous arsenal, very sophisticated weapons and of course, a lot of personnel in hezbollah as well. is israel fully prepared to fight a war on two fronts in the north and the south, if necessary? >> you have to understand that the jewish people are 4,000 years old and great nations that have tried to destroy us
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and in the history books, they know longer exist. we fought all-out wars with countries around us, 1948, jordan, syria, lebanon, all countries attacked us, same thing in '67 and '73. are we prepared? we're prepared. do we want to go to war? no, because we know people will die on both sides, but we have to get rid of hamas and hezbollah for this to stop. david: describe, if you will, rudy, the morale from the fighters? >> you can never remove the morale. we're strong, we're dancing, but for now, we have to focus on the mission, and over 3,000 of our family members were murdered and when we were the ones on the front lines seeing the murders and seeing what they have done and seeing the bodies of men, women and children, so those are images that will live with us forever. although we're putting it to the side and not thinking about it these are ingrained into our
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memories and we have to put an end to it. we are strong going into battle and when we come out much stronger. david: rudy, as you know, it will be dangerous missions going into the tunnel system of hamas. you do have-- the idf has some experience dealing with the tunnels in the past? do you feel fully prepare for tunnel warfare? >> the reality is that israel is striking with its air force now in order to get rid of as much as it can, if it were to have a ground invasion, when it would have a ground invasion, minimize the amount of casualties on the israeli side and telling the palestinian, but at the same time, hamas knows they're prepared for us as well. i'm sure snipers in place, booby traps and bombs, but this is what we need to do, we need to be soldiers and strong and doesn't affect the rest of our country anymore. david: a lot of u.s. troops experience in iraq with
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door-to-door fighting which you're likely to encounter in gaza. are you getting-- by the way, my son, i should mention, was one of them as a marine. do you have any help from the u.s. experience helping you to deal with what you expect in the door-to-door fighting? >> well, personally, i grew up in the u.s., but i wouldn't say that growing up in the u.s. gave me any sort of military experience. i left the u.s. age 17 came here and joined the army and today i'm a reservist, i'm not even in the idf. i was called up with another 365,000 reservists who are between ages 30 to 40, who are fathers of families, who are husbands, who are, you know, leaders of businesses, who left everything in order to defend their country and this is not the first war that we've had with gaza. in 2012 we had an operation although we didn't go in. in 2014, a lot of soldiers went into gaza. this is not the first time we're dealing with the situation, hopefully the last time.
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david: hopefully the last time. rudy rochman, can't put it better than that story. best of luck to you. >> thank you. david: two american hostages are free today after being released by hamas yesterday, but there is there are still 10 u.s. citizens and more than 200 israelis still believed to be held in gaza. what can we do to get them home safe and sound. joining me is former u.s. ambassador at large and former state department counterterrorism, nathan sayles. obviously you don't know the negotiations that took place that allowed the two hostages to be released. what do you suspect was happening. who, for example, was there? were third parties involved in these negotiations, et cetera? >> well, david, it's really hard to say, we know that for the united states, nothing is more important than ensuring that any hostages taken by any terrorist group anywhere are brought home safely.
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now, in order to bring that about, you have to have very quiet and very candid conversations behind the scenes. when it comes to hamas and gaza, the united states has been working with the qataris in order to keep a channel open. there's a lot of criticism of qatar light lately and that's understandable for hamas living at the four seasons and life of luxury in doha at the same time they're orchestrating massacring hundreds of thousands of jews in israel, nevertheless, that diplomatic channel is producing, it seems, some good outcomes for american families. we need it to produce some more. not just the 10 americans out before hostilities really amplify in gaza, we need to make sure that all 2010 innocent men, women and children who are there in the terror tunnels underneath gaza are able to be brought home. david: now, i'm sure that the
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qataris are in touch with the iranians. do you think there's any direct contact between american negotiators and the iranians? >> probably not. the iranians don't want to talk to the americans and let's be clear. if there is no contact, it's not because the united states under the biden administration isn't eager to open up a direct channel with the iranians. it's all on the iranian side. look, this administration, since it came into office has been bending over backwards to accommodate iran, to try and entice them back into a nuclear deal. unfortunately, the result of that policy of accommodation and appeasement has been an iran that is today stronger in every way than it was the day the president took office. they're selling more oil, they're closer to a nuclear weapon, they feel emboldened to launch attacks through their proxies on american soldiers in iraq. just the other day an american contractor died of a heart attack as a result of an
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iranian attack on a u.s. military facility in iraq. it's not something the administration wants to talk about, but unless we draw a line in the sand, and project strength to iran, expect to see more attacks like that. david: now, the president did say something about it, about iran specifically in his thursday night address to the nation. some people say, it wasn't enough, but he said something, but-- and we had sanctions, one of way focused on iran with regard to the u.n. sanctions ending and u.s. picking up on some of that. still, they haven't done anything with regard to the sales of iranian oil. putting the sanctions on that we saw on the previous administration. do you expect that to happen? and is the administration -- is there any sign that the administration may do something like that? >> well, this really should be a wake-up call for the administration that iran is our adversary and that iran is not currently deterred. they're not afraid of america. right now when iran looks at
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america, they see a country that is prepared to bend over backwards to accommodate them. and so, what we need to do is cut off the flow of money to this terror regime. iran is the world's worst state sponsor of terrorism and today they're sitting on an enormous mile pile of cash that come in their coffers since january of 2021. iran is estimated to sell 80 billion dollars of oil in the past two and a half years with a lot going to communist china. that money can buy a lot of bombs to kill israelis and americans. david: actually our greatest-- or the idf's greatest fear if they have to fight on two fronts and hezbollah, i think we have a full screen of the amount of weaponry that hezbollah has compared to hamas, as bad as the hamas fighting is and as horrible as it has been for the past two weeks, look at this. hezbollah has many more fighters, has a huge number of
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rockets and missiles which are very much more sophisticated than what hamas has. so, that-- the hezbollah getting fully engaged in this battle would be a nightmare. >> it really would. and that is why it is so important for the biden administration to reestablish deterrents against iran. the last thing anybody wants is a war sweeping across the entire middle east. that is a very dangerous scenario and unless the administration very clearly communicates to iran that such a conflagration would be even worse for iran than for anybody else, we're going to be at the precipice of a major conflict. david: ambassador, thank you for coming in. >> thank you, david. david: three strikes and you're out for jim jordan. now, oklahoma congressman kevin hern is taking a swing at becoming the next house speaker. he'll tell us how and why he wants the job.
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and israelis are protecting not only nem selves, but their pets after the erupting hamas attacks. she had a lot of questions when she came in. i watched my mother go through being a single mom. at the end of the day, my mom raised three children, including myself. and so once the client knew that she was heard. we were able to help her move forward. your client won't care how much you know until they know how much you care. ♪ this is a special alert. israel is under attack and israel's enemies seek our destruction. the people of israel need immediate help. rockets have us squarely in the crosshairs. our people are targets in their own homes. many have lost everything and fear for their lives. the international fellowship of christians and jews has launched an urgent response
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>> the problem is finding one person that can unite the extremes. you know, we've got a centrist group out of new york and down in the u.s., folks very conservative and it's just been very difficult to find folks with such a small majority that knit all that together. hopefully in this group of eight, there's one that could communicate that and put everybody on the same page. david: we have kevin hern coming on, a nominee for that position. would you support him? do you think he's qualified to be speaker? >> i have a lot of faith in many of the folks that are running. i've not made a decision. david: well, that was republican mark green telling me he's still undecided who the next g.o.p. house speaker nominee should be after the
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republicans dropped jim jordan as the nominee after the three failed votes. and my next guest is running, oklahoma congressman kevin hern. you heard mark green make your case that you're the guy. >> mark is a dear friend of mine. we came in together and he's a great leader himself. david: can you make the case that you can unite the various factions that have been come having trouble coming up with a speaker? >> every person running can say they'll do it. the question, can they do it and have they done it. before coming to congress i spent my entire career working alongside other franchisees from mcdonald's, 3,000, coast to coast and border to border and bringing them together to have a functioning organization and now the last 10 months in the majority i've chaired the republican study committee, the conservative conscience of the
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congress. 8 80 who i've had on the policies and politics of what's going on and plus, on top of that, i served on the five families, five caucus leadership group with speaker mccarthy almost the last year working through the policies so i know all of the similar interests, what needs to be done alook forward to doing this as the next speaker of the house. david: you mention your business experience, you're a self-made businessman and i guess you were a manager of an mcdonald's and then you became a franchise owner. so you must have had experience taking over kind of a dysfunctional business and knocking heads together and getting it to work. is that the kind of experience that it's going to take in order to get all of these various sides together? >> david, what i found out, i looked at this and running for the rsc chair and only the members can put you in, the leaders of the conference. and people want to be heard and i spent time listening to people, learning that almost 35
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years in the mcdonald's business and people want to be valued in their opinions and when you come to congress, everybody is the ceo of their own district. and we have it 220 ceo's and somebody is picked to be the class president, if you will, and you've got to listen to people and get together. that's what i've been doing prior to congress and during the last year as rnc chair and i'll do it going forward as speaker of the house. david: i can't understand, why did some people vote for mccarthy after mccarthy put jim jordan in for the nomination and i can't figure that out. explain it quickly. >> i don't know either. certainly i supported jim jordan, i supported whoever won the majority. i think we've got to follow the rules that we have and it's important and pushing as we go forward and i supported jim jordan three times. we've got to move this forward to get a speaker of the house and america needs it. david: a final question. why would you want this job after it's been such heartache for so many people trying to do
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it. >> i came up here not to be something, but to do something and that's important, you know, we've got to get our republican conference back open and going, push back on the democrat policies joe biden, you heard the ambassador say some of the failed policies, that iran is believed to have led and what hezbollah is potentially doing in northern israel. we've got to make sure that the world is secure, we've seen china with taiwan and the war in ukraine, and wore der security, economic security and energy security is important to our american citizens and we need leadership in the house. david: i hope your family is not prepared to see you for a couple of years if you're successful. congressman hern, best of luck. thanks for being here. >> appreciate you having me. david: and we're headed back to israel where a ground offensive in gaza could happen at anytime. how israelis are saving their pets from the fury of war. what is being done and how you can help. that's coming up.
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>> well, aid trucks moving in gaza this morning as israeli forces make last minute preps for a ground offensive to root out hamas in gaza. mike tobin is in southern israel with the very latest. mike. >> and david, a 14th night is now falling since the october 7th massacre. we wait for the rocket fire that comes to just about every night and of course, everyone is waiting to see if the ground offensive will indeed begin tonight. a big development today is that the crossing from gaza into egypt opened for a while today. that's the rafah crossing. some 20 aid trucks got through. israel says that all that was allowed in the aid trucks is food and water, no fuel. keep in mind, that about 450
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aid trucks will cross on a normal day, so 20 trucks coming through really is just a drop in the bucket, but at least the gates were open for a little while. of course, we're watching to see if any of the people with foreign passports were able to get out of the gaza strip and they did not. meantime, the air strikes continue to go in, primarily on the northern end of the gaza strip. israel says the air strikes are only increasing. they also said the number of people that they're estimating evacuated from the north of gaza or from gaza city on the north end of the gaza strip is 700,000 out of 1.1 million people. they had to move south of wadi gaza, translates to gaza valley. it's not a valley, it's more of a dent in the road with a creek that runs through the center of it, but the people are supposed to be safe if they go south of that. so 700,000 people, really trapped there hoping for the best. meantime, back here on the israeli side of the border, you can see the house behind me, that took a direct hit from the
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rockets last night and we're waiting to see. usually, about an hour after nightfall we see the flurries of rocket fire coming out of the gaza strip. david. david: mike tobin reporting from southern israel. thank you very much. more now on israel's expected ground invasion into gaza. what is that going to look like? what are the dangers? joining me now to discuss it, retired lieutenant general, and just about every danger you could imagine for the idf soldiers going there. it's going to be tough. first i want to ask you about the hostage situation and whether or not-- i've been asking some people who don't want to comment on it, did the fact that two hostages were released delay the idf plans at all? >> well, david, it depends. you know, it depends upon what ultimately israeli defense force operations are and certainly, i think that the whole issue of the hostages and
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how to approach them may factor into the timeline of ground operations and what form they might take, but i really don't think it's going to be the overarching driver. david: okay, one thing that's happening right now that idf has to balance with many, many other things is whether or not hezbollah gets fully engaged and unleashing their fury in the north white the idf is occupied in the south. of course the idf can do many things at the same time do you think that hezbollah and hamas is coordinating their strategy as the idf gets ready to move into gaza? >> i don't know. it's an interesting question, which also moves toward the issue of what role is iran playing in all of this in coordinating those operations. i would suspect that there is some coordination that's going on, but as you indicated, the
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israeli defense forces are very capable and while it is certainly-- would compound the situation, they would be able to handle both. furthermore, part of the reason that the united states has moved forces into the region is to deter hezbollah actions and for that to work, we also have to be willing to employ these forces if and when they're requested and needed by israel. david: now, that's a very intriguing question because, of course, we don't want to -- we obviously don't want to get drawn into a middle eastern war directly, but you're suggesting that that could happen. >> well, yeah, i mean, the whole purpose of deterrence is to induce uncertainty in the mind of your adversary that if, in fact, they take a particular action that you're trying to deter, that there will be direct consequences. so, it needs to be made pretty
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explicit other than just simply a comment, don't, that the u.s. is willing to apply those forces that they've moved into the region. david: so, general, you're obviously making reference to the president who used that word don't towards iran, whether they get involved or not. what kind of more explicit warning to iran would you like to hear from the president? >> well, actually i was thinking of the secretary of defense, but, yeah, it applies to the president as well. they need to be pretty clear, do not allow hezbollah to unleash any attack against israel from the north or you will subject yourself to direct application of force from u.s. forces. david: now, that goes beyond, i assume, hezbollah itself, that it should go directly to the source of funding for hezbollah and the command and control of hezbollah, that would be iran.
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>> that's exactly right, david. that's what deterrence is all about. david: wow. general, we thank you very much for being here on a saturday, appreciate your perspective. thanks a million. >> have a great day. david: you, too. while one american family celebrates the release of their two loved ones from hamas' grasp, many other families, many other familiar less are still waiting on answers from their loved ones. we're going to be talking to a mom and dad pleading for their son's release after hamas captured him two weeks ago today.
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>> the white house just releasing the call between president biden and the two freed hostages from hamas yesterday. take a listen. >> hey, judith. >> hello, president. >> i'm so glad you're home, but not home, but you're out. >> thank you so very much. >> and nat, how are you, god love you. >> i just want to say thanks for your support for israel. >> and working on it for a long time and get them all out god willing. i hope you're both feeling good, but in good health as well. >> yes, sir. yes, we are. and thank you very much, god bless you. >> well, god bless you guys.
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david: wow, of course, we celebrate these two hostages who were freed. we should remind everybody, there are still more than 200 hostages in gaza. as many as 210. this, as israel strikes more terror hubs in gaza and lebanon. fox's greg palkot is near the israeli-lebanon border. greg, what's the latest there? >> david, the latest, we hear another jet fighter overhead and watching another exchange of gunfire between hezbollah and israelis along the border with us, which is where israel's defense minister yoav gallant was earlier today meeting with the troops. his message was pretty strong. he claims that the iranian backed hezbollah has decided to get into the fight and he says they'll pay a heavy price. in fact, for the past week since we've been here, hezbollah and related groups have been shooting tanks,
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mortars and israel has been responding with anti-tanks and 40 related hezbollah fighters killed, six israeli soldiers have been killed and the latest one an american, 22-year-old omer balva. he was shot dead by a militant at a mountain near us. as civilians clear out, they're ordering people from the important border town to leave for their own safety and most left, there were casualties there. on the other side in lebanon residents have been clearing out and there have been casualties and damages and sheltering in a lebanon coastal city. another point, as an israeli source has told us, hezbollah so far have been holding back at full force and frankly, so has israel, but a lot of people agree, it won't take much to turn this front into yet another major war.
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back to you. david: greg palkot on the lebanese border with israel. thank you very much, greg. stay safe. here now with more on what israel's planning is israeli defense spokesperson, colonel peter lerner. thank you for being here, you heard our reporter, i assume, just then suggesting that hezbollah is geared up, if not at least gearing up to fight on the northern side of israel, as you're going in in the south, into gaza. are you prepared for a two-front battle? >> neil, good evening. we are on day 15 here of our war against hamas. hamas is the-- i would say the most important enemy that we have currently and the focal point of our efforts over the last 15 days. to your question, indeed, we're concerned that hezbollah will try and escalate the situation further. try and divert our attention from the south to the north. we understand that iran is
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operating in order to try to escalate the situation via hezbollah and indeed, we've seen anti-tank guided missiles. we've seen sniper fire, machine gunfire. we've seen mortar rounds fired at us. including deaths on our side and we are responding, responding in force in order to defend the people of israel, defend our frontier on the border with lebanon, and i'd say, this is happening from sovereign lebanese territory. the government of lebanon need to take care of this, make sure that attacks don't happen because that would be very bad for them. and a message to hezbollah would be look how we're dismantling hamas step by step. they should watch very carefully how we're doing it or they could be in the same situation if they cross that threshold, neil. david: colonel, this is david. >> oh. david: we just had a three-star general on, general deptula
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suggesting that the message has to be made to iran. hezbollah would not exist were it not for iran. many say the government of lebanon is really a puppet of iran itself. is enough being done directly towards iran? is enough being said directly toward iran to warn them not to become fully engaged if they're not already? >> so, as i said, we're trying to focus our efforts on dismantling hamas, that's the immediate threat they have taken 100-- over 210 israelis hostage, israelis and foreign nationals as you rightly reported and we need to be focused very clearly on that at this time. we are prepared, if required, to mobilize on two or multi-fronts. we have the capabilities, we have the operational capabilities. we have the forces to do so. we have, david, recruited some
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300,000 reservists. many of those on the south, but also, many of them positioned on the north and when you see them striking back against hezbollah positions and capabilities, we're sending a message that they should be refrained from an in i-- attacking us and indeed, eiran should understand as well. david: are you concerned that iran would get involved? >> we're watching and i would be cautious in determining beyond that. is it a possibility? of course there's a possibility there, but they have enough proxies in our region, in gaza and in lebanon in order to conduct their attacks without getting involved. we need to be very, very cautious. we need to have enough forces. we need to make sure the operational plans on how to respond and retaliate and
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strike and initiate are ready to go. david: colonel, i have to ask finally, no one really expected the horror of october 7th. it was only two weeks ago. it seems like so much longer, so much has happened in those short two weeks, but is israel itself completely mobilized now? i know that they're the-- everybody's working together, but is the military wing of israel completely mobilized? >> i would say israeli society as a whole is mobilized and the military is reflection of israeli society. we have, you know, we have our political differences in society, but this attack, this assault on our sovereignty, this assault on our families, there's nobody that can go to sleep at night and say, this could have happened to my family. it doesn't matter who you vote for. it doesn't matter where you came from, they came for
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everybody, they came for women, and children and people working in israel and they came for people, natalie and judith raanan that you aired their conversation with president biden, they're here on a vacation. they're here to see grandma and so this terrorist organization has brought israeli society together and this huge mobilization of our reservists is a very good reflection of that because this is the largest mobilization of reserve forces of the idf in the history of the idf. so, yes, indeed, a huge challenge, but when we are faced with challenge, you know, it says that we are a stiff-necked people and i would say they haven't seen anything yet. david: colonel lerner, we thank you very much. best of luck in the coming days. stay safe. you saw two american hostages freed yesterday by hamas. and i want you to meet a
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>> well, you all saw the terror caused by hamas at the music festival just two weeks ago. now meet hirsh goldberg poland he was taken hostage, but not before having his arm blown off by grenades. his parents are pleading for his release. and his mom, rachel goldberg joins me now. we're all praying-- i've seen you before in several interviews and we're amazed at your strength and composure, it's extraordinary, but also, the incredible bravery of your son, hearing what he did to bandage himself up before he was captured. he's an amazing young man. just tell us a little about h him. >> well, a little bit about him
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before this whole thing? >> yes. >> hirsh is just an incredibly curious, bright, gentle, smart, funny with like a sharp good sarcastic, but not mean sense of humor and he just has a real curiosity for life and he's obsessed with geography and travel and he loves music and music festivals and that's why he was there two weeks ago with his best friend. just going to have a good time at a music festival, out camping for the night together. david: now, the rollercoaster that you've been through must be continuing with the release of-- i mean, it's wonderful that we had two hostages released, i'm sure you agree with that, but at the same time it continues with that emotional
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rollercoaster that you've been through. are you encouraged by that? >> you know, we were obviously so relieved last night when we saw natalie and judith released and because we know exactly what their family is going through. you know, we're living in this alternate universe now that nobody can begin to imagine. i'm in it and i can't imagine it and so seeing them released and that they're okay was a tremendous, you know, moment of a whisper of breath for us after two weeks. and i pray that the, you know, the powers that be keep doing what they need to do to bring the rest of these hostages home. you know, hirsh is an american citizen. he was at a music festival. he was, you know, we know for sure that his left arm right
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above the elbow was blown off. we know for sure he needs or you know, needed immediate medical attention and we have not heard anything from him since, you know, that morning when he was last seen being put on a truck by hamas and driving toward gaza and we found out from police, 10:25 in the morning was the last time his phone signal was detected and that's it, that's two weeks and we have been living in this, i don't know what to describe it as because it's not a nightmare, it's so much worse. david: rachel, i'm sure you know this, but there are millions, literally millions of people that are praying for you and for hirsh and we continue to pray. so, we'll continue to do so until this is resolved. thank you so much for being here. best to you and your family. >> thank you so much, we really appreciate it, thank you. david: all right, we'll have more for you right after this.
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>> this just came to us and i want to show you what they showed us. this is a little puppy that they found in one of the communities along the border and he's very, very sweet and he's shy, but he's very scared because there's a lot of noises here, but they found him in a small village near the gaza border and they said the family that had this puppy was killed during the attack on saturday morning. and just this puppy survived. david: that is was our own trey yinst introducing you to a puppy stranded after the brutal hamas attack and now i want to introduce you to a men rescuing her pets in need like those. and along with yoki, just
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adopted. give us a history of yoki. we don't have much time. >> i found him in one of the kibbutz that got invaded by the hamas terrorists and he was afraid and very scared while i was there missile attacks on the place. as you can see he's very, very small and peaceful dog and we got lucky that we could get him out. david: it's amazing how dogs are able to recover from these traumas in they're in the right hands. obviously, yoki is in the right hands right now. and something else we've got to emphasize the lives of animals are not as important as the men, women and children brutalized by the terrorists, but it does-- it's important for the morale of the people who have survived to see animals and to deal with animals like this, no? >> yeah, like i was lucky getting outside three dogs and two of them, the owners the
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family was evacuated and the dogs ran and when they got reunited it was amazing and it brought everybody together very happy and i'm going to say bluntly, like the terrorists also shot some dogs over there, and it was very cruel and very hideous to see and we -- it lucky that we could survive as many dogs as we could. david: and it is important for the morale of the nation. barak, thanks for the work you're doing and stay safe, my friend, thank you very much. thank you to everyone at home for watching and please keep your prayers coming for the horrible situation in the middle east. and a whole lot more coming up with griff jenkins and gillian turner. stay with fox. re to find the cheapest gas in town. and which supermarket gives you the most bang for your buck. something else that's good to know? if you have medicare and
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