tv FOX News Sunday FOX News December 8, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PST
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invited. >> we have an opening, i respect your republic -- your opinion in regards to football, i appreciate your texts that you send me, to be frank, i am putting together an early list of names and you are on it. >> no surprise to anyone you are my favorite coach, i am happy for our friends at clemson, they played their way in last night, i are my favorite coach in college football. no surprise you have been as successful as you have been. >> thank you very much, i am surrounded by awesome people at columbia and this university, thank you. >> yes, sir, take care coach. >> thank you for spending part of your sean day with us -- sunday with us, hope you have a great week ahead, until next week you can find us on-line. good night from south carolina
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i am shannon bream at the ronald ragan presidential library in simi valley, california. welcome to a special edition this fox news sunday. meeting with senators on capitol hill. >> i will be standing right here in this fight. >> they are insured they will get a fair process. >> meeting. it doesn't release the remaining hostages. we will talk with h.r. mcmaster. until hamas is destroyed certainly you have to get the hostages back. >> trumps plan for ukraine come into focus. we will discuss the rules of the rankin national survey. all right now as "fox news
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sunday" reports on the state of defense. >> we began with the fox news alert. crowd celebrating in the fox news of damascus. a lightning fast demands. reports that he has fled the capital. besides family has ruled with an iron fist for 50 years. we have team coverage at the white house and fox news chief correspondent in israel. that is where we begin. after 54 years the assad regime in syria has fallen. rebels entered the capital of damascus but opposed thousands of syrian gathered in the city.
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passion civilian stormed the compound. a country that spent billions of dollars. speaking about the future of syria. >> it is a feeling of joy after 13 years of pressure and tragedy the regime pressured and hurt us without any fear or oppression which will be lifted from our hearts. we will return stronger and united. >> the takeover take after a rampant offense before opposition forces worked their way south. the leader insists that there will be an orderly transfer of power. this organization is a terror group in the 42-year-old himself is the founder of in a qaeda
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affiliate. the israeli forces ramping up the posture along the border. sending soldiers into the buffer zone in syria. likely being held by the israelis. with forces now controlling the other side of the border. this afternoon reports do indicate that israeli forces were bombing syria in an effort to target weapons belonging to the assad regime. they don't want some of those weapons to fall in the hands of rebel forces. >> for now here at home going to lucas tom olson. those. >> some quarters of the berlin wall. now that the assad regime has fallen. a spokesman for the national security council says president biden and his team were closely monitoring the extraordinary events in syria.
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president biden has not yet waited. jake sullivan offered his assessment from the reagan national defense forum hours before syrian president bashar al-assad government collapsed. >> assad's backers, iran, russia and hezbollah have all been weakened and distracted. he has not had the support from those three actors that he expected to be able to be count on and has been left. >> president-elect donald trump who now receives intelligence briefing said that assad is gone he has fled his country. russia russia russia led by vladimir putin was not interested in protecting him any longer. no reason for russia to be there in the first place. they lost all interest in syria. soldiers lay wounded or dead. trump went on to call for an immediate cease-fire in ukraine. discussing the unfolding situation.
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the united states should have nothing to do with it. this is not our fight. let it play out. do not get involved. attending the reopening of the notre dame cathedral in paris yesterday. >> going a little crazy right now. >> marco rubio john radcliffe, pete hecht seth as defense secretary. trump says he fully supports hag seth after some republican senators including joni ernst raised concerns. >> it looks like pete is doing well now. people were doing a little bit of concern. >> telling fox that he has a both right now to be confirmed as defense secretary. >> we appreciate that on a noisy morning at the white house. thank you. the washington bureau chief susan page.
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my goal allen former bush national security official. a lot of breaking news overnight what comes next? this group claiming victory, they are classified as a terrorist organization. >> we can take a moment and celebrate that an adversary fell only celebrate for a minute because ungoverned spaces breeds terrorism. it was already at least a
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partially ungoverned state. even though i believe president trump and others want to pivot on and do other things in the world, we may have to keep our boot on the throat of these al qaeda like affiliates, isis like affiliates. the other thing to be concerned about is iran. they have taken hit after hit since october 7. they will make a decision to ramp up the nuclear program because i need some security for their regime. we have a lot to watch where big opportunities there are. a lot of things to worry about as well. >> a new headache for the white house in a region that is really unstable. >> a bigger headache for the white house that is coming in. president-elect trump has not wanted a foreign-policy presidency. he has talked about a domestic agenda. i don't know if you will have the option to do to stay out. he faces a world where there is usually turmoil. ukraine, south korea instability even in france and england. this would be a bigger part of his presidency than he had hoped about what a trump two-point oh administration looks like.
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the world is very different than it was. you think about the non-enemies up there. she was very close. she was making the use of chemical weapons even doubting that it had occurred. now you have this week national security officials writing and saying that they do not want her confirmed because they feel that our allies will not be willing to share intelligence with the incoming administration. so that is a challenge for president trump right here on capitol hill at this moment. then you go overseas and you go into -- i think part of the challenges they are, again, america first, how do you properly say we are not involved
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i think michael was picking up on this. it will impact the entire region including our ally israel and we have been tremendously supportive, but there is no getting away from this at the moment. as the incoming president just said, the world is acting crazy right now. >> she could be the next trump nominee to come under fire in the senate. the senate staffers saying the best thing she has going for her as the other trump nominees that are blowing themselves up. eventually getting two visits on the hill and closer to hearings. what about what was mentioned here. her history of relationships with syria russia and other places. >> the same crowd that had told us that interventionism. coming from neoconservatism needs to continue.
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675 military leaders since thursday have signed a letter defeating pete hegseth. i think you will see the same sort of defense. one of the reasons syria has fallen is because of the world's clarity that donald trump brings to this picture. i think all of the hotspots that susan touches on coming into focus. we will have a lot of priorities and a lot of leaders in these key positions. god bless donald trump for having the willingness to break the backs of not just these evil people abroad but the washington establishment. >> don't you think that joe biden deserves a little credit? for taking on iran and strongly backing israel to the point that iran is now in decline. unable to support.
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suffering tremendous loss. >> that is fantasyland. >> the president for the last four years and we've seen our enemies decline. >> i travel the world for my job we want moral clarity from the president of the united states. all due respect offering joe biden and moral clarity. donald trump has done more to bring peace to this world. >> he is not in office. going through the election with you, you know that president biden has paid a huge price. the support of israel and willingness to go after iran. >> over the objections of lighted. >> that is just one of the many places that has not settled yet.
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the clock is ticking on whether or not there will be the release of the hostages. working around the clock and saying it is a legacy. to the issue of these nominees, republicans that are supporting president trump to say you need to get in line. why do republicans insist on snatching through the jaws of victory. he went on to say what do we see in the swampy is of american political swamps. republican senators scuttling some of the cabinet nominees. all kinds of threats that they will be primary from the right if they do not vote yes on these nominees. >> i thought pete hegseth was a goner and that is not true anymore. following the brett kavanaugh playbook of when you are in real trouble. fight back hard, that is something you want to see. we have not heard from republican members of the intelligence community. kind of a bipartisan body. i think what is happened in
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syria makes it harder to get over the finish line. >> we have president trump out there on the world stage behaving as if he is the world president. you saw the visuals of him with world leaders in notre dame with president macaroni and zelensky. former house speaker said this. trump is a presumptive president certainly foreign governments are treating them that way. >> i think so. the democrats have not gotten into their opposition rhetoric yet. many of the world leaders want to meet with donald trump as
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soon as possible because he holds all the cards. we know that he will back israel , he wants to end the war in ukraine. a bunch of tariffs are on the way. so many of these world leaders want to get with him so fast to be able to discuss these. hightailing it down tomorrow lago. i know that everyone in notre dame last night was interested in talking with trump as soon as possible. he is a man in full right now. he has a lot of big decisions to make coming soon. >> yes, he does and this includes these confirmation battles, too. thank you very much for being with us on a busy news morning. our special coverage of the state of defense including the conversations and simi valley california. the incoming administration, a slew of foreign policy crisis. national security advisor h.r. mcmaster shares his insight on how he thinks president trump may tackle them.
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ronald ragan on his favorite horse welcoming you to his library he and simi valley, california. the statue has a secret fireproof compartment inside containing one of reagan's prized belt buckles and a piece of the berlin wall. groundbreaking for the library began before reagan left office in november of 1988. open to the public three years later fundraising and construction costs privately.
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amid 100 acres of pristine land on top of the hill and simi valley next to thousand oaks california. the library holds more than 63 million pages of documents. more than 670,000 feet of film and 46,000 video and audio recordings. >> doing less for america's. >> as well as a recreation of the oval office during reagan's time in the office. seeing our nation through historically tense moments in the world stage. the final days of the cold war. a new administration preparing to face several critical foreign-policy tests with some of the same adversaries. former national security advisor to president trump and author of at war with ourselves general h.r. mcmaster. the senior fellow with the hoover institution out here in california. thank you for joining us. great to see you. >> thank you for having me. a lot of challenges awaiting the
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incoming trump administration. you said you liked trump's disruptive nature. >> at factors and considerably. that was the best lead in for a story and thank you for that. the same kind of complexities. i took on the job as national security advisor in 2017 soon after the president was inaugurated, there was a lot that needed to be disrupted in washington. again, president trump because of his disruptive nature, like reagan was, a washington outsider had the challenge for that conventional wisdom and put in place some major shifts in u.s. foreign policy. especially in the middle east at this moment. >> i do have this from him. he has issued a warning on trump on true social with the post there. if the hostages are not released prior to january 2025, there will be all hell to pay in the
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middle east. he says he wants those hostages home before he is sworn in. how do you think the policy should happen in that situation? >> i love it. we need to cease fire in gaza. no. until hamas is destroyed, you cannot have any better life for the palestinians. you have to get the hostages back. i would like to see them working more actively with the israelis and others to get the hostages back, but also to make iran pay the price for their terrorist and proxy network across the region. there is a huge opportunity at this moment. really, because of what the as -- israelis have done. now you see how they were in syria on has below. the regime is collapsing. what you are seeing is those external arms of iran really countered in such a way that it clears an opportunity.
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they have always been very weak. we act like they are strong and have all of this sort of language about de-escalation. i think president trump understands. everywhere i look, there's a problem, there is iran and he is right about that. >> he uses these words, all hell to pay. what are the practical things that he would do to handle this situation? >> some things will absolutely happen right away. that is to tighten the grip from a financial perspective. from an interdiction of a ghost fleet and so forth. secondary sanctions. china buys 97% of iran's oil. they are feeding so they can continue these proxy wars against us, they are arab neighbors and israel and employ this strategy of spending every area of life to accomplish of
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kicking us out of the middle east and destroying israel and killing all the jews. financial pressure, but i also think you will see military actions against these iranian proxy forces and may be against iran itself. iran has conducted hundreds of attacks against u.s. forces and locations in the middle east since the october 7 mass murder attacks against israel. we have only really responded to very few of those. i think imposing costs on iran, isolating them financially and economically, i think that that will happen immediately in the trump administration.
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>> asking a lot of questions about how people are feeling about these different challenges enormous concern about this grouping of iran, russia, north korea and china. that seems to have beefed up, if anything, those alliances over the last few years. how does president trump, how does his defense team began to dismantle the power they found in working together. >> i would take an opposite view of this. you should try to separate them. i think you should glue them together. whenever we act like they are separate they get to cover for each other. it is kind of crazy when you think about it. the first major land war in europe since world war ii and north koreans are joining the russians. now there is the battalion going to ukraine. you have the drones from the iranians. millions of artillery rounds. six-8 million from north korea transferred to the russians. i believe they are getting assistance for their missile program. probably their nuclear programs. it has to be dealt with together this is why think president trump will come to the conclusion that it is important to support ukraine in this fight not just for ukraine, which is important for itself, but because it is connected to the cascading crisis in the middle east and looming crisis in the
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indo pacific where china is becoming much more aggressive. >> there is a lot to unpack there because there are so many different fronts. reuters says this. he has repeatedly pledged during his election campaign to end the nearly 3-year-old conflict within 24 hours of his january 20 inauguration. he has yet to say how. i know you were critical of the quick six in afghanistan and how that fell apart. are you worried about how this is potentially going to come together? do you think he has a plan for something that is long-standing in respect to that conflict in getting it done? >> what i'm worried about is this kind of flawed idea that putin can be placated. coming as some kind of deal. he is determined to restore
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russia to national greatness and do that by assuming all of ukraine and by subverting the united states. look at what they are doing from the cyber naval disinformation case from us all the time. it is consistent with reagan. putin, i will not do it to an acceptable resettlement until he believes he is losing. i would say step a, provide the kind of support that ukraine has always needed. waiting out the assistance little by little. tags, no tags, missile by missile. how about give them what they need to defend themselves. you will lose this war. >> i want to make sure that we get to china, to. the number one concern that americans think that. that is our biggest adversary.
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on this issue of whether or not we should be helping taiwan, 61% said they support increasing in the region and 55% say they are for increased armed sales by the u.s. to taiwan. we know that there are billions of dollars in outstanding sales that, you know, taiwan has made a contract. how does he come in and manage that situation. >> president trump was pretty darn consistent. sometimes you do not know. what will happen in ukraine. some things are really clear. he understands the need to build up our defense space. increasing our military capabilities. i think on taiwan, that would be very attractive to him. i think that it is $22 billion of backlog from the united states. also, it is a heck of a lot cheaper to prevent a war than have to fight one. i think they will do that not only from massive investments in defense which we need the supply chains. many of which are vulnerable to china. >> there is a lot for the new
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>> former congressman working on what he likes to see a new defense secretary to do to inform the military. joining me now our own panel of experts chief national security correspondent jennifer griffin. carl rove and the director of the ronald ragan institute. thank you for joining us in this special conversation. how do you see the defense posture shifting or changing under a second trump administration? >> the reagan foundation did an excellent poll which helps guides them. the american people deeply concerned today. supporting additional spending. they want america to lead and be involved in the world. 50% said they want america to be more involved in the world. maintain basis overseas.
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sixty-two americans said they were in favor. 62% of trump voters. there is a natural feeling that america is moving at a dangerous rate in the way to bring about peace and prosperity is strength >> people think we need better defense production. do we need a lot more 40%. you are at 70% of the people who think we have to ramp it up. our resources are being tied across many different battlefield at this point. >> congressman gallagher is right. we need to perform in more production. the american people are comfortable with investing in national defense. concerned the national debt will come at the cost of national defense. an overwhelming number, 79% said
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we need to make investment national defense. donald trump ran on the possibility of peace through strength since president reagan did that. the things that he cannot do. >> to that point, he comes into office with whole slates of major policy changes. it is a whole new front. >> what is really different from when he left offices there are a lot of changes. you look at iran and it is new terms in a nuclear weapon. you look at china, president xi has told his military to be ready to take taiwan in 2027. he may not do it, but he told his military to be ready. as you mentioned, syria is falling apart as we speak.
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once al qaeda affiliated group. a huge problem. a huge problem for israel. 900 u.s. troops in eastern syria they are concerned. they were guarding 45,000 families and fighters. it has very serious implications for the region. >> asking people about what the biggest threats are, china, clearly, at the top of the list. only 50% feel confident that if the u.s. got in a conflict with china, we would win. >> barely the majority think they could unveil a conflict with china. they are engaged in the most dramatic military buildup and generations. seeing a buildup of this nature. the american people are actually right. the indo pacific region, the
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chinese are on par with the u.s. military. their industrial capacity really outperforms. one of the surveys was also related to russia. the american people know who the adversaries are. they know who the good guys are and bad guys are. russia 80% view as an adversary. ukraine are on par with japan. the policy will come out in the trump administration. wanting the american people to support and recognize the adversary, russia, iran, syria. shannon: the survey asks about expectations. how does this thing wrap up? the biggest chunk of folks, 33% think russia will take over some territory. the next say the world will drag on indefinitely. some think ukraine will express
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-- expel russia from their territory. trump has set high bars on how he will handle this and how quickly it will wrap up. >> i suspect he will regret raising those expectations. i think this is generally a well held view. give the ukrainians what they need to prevail in the battlefield. already indicating that he is willing to give up territory. the only way to do that it make it stable. though paul points out something interesting. much different than four years ago. one of the biggest problems is we have an effort among the greatest adversaries. russia, iran and north korea are
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working together. they are providing russian drones. providing a revenue by buying the oil. tens of thousands of their soldiers and russia in order to fight ukraine. this is something we did not have before. in the survey, 86% are concerned about it. they asked the question two different ways. here are the things they're doing and 86% of the people say they were concerned about that. >> so many places the u.s. has to counter what is happening. president biden was there this weekend. that feels like it's gotten overshadowed a little bit. china has already spent decades finding products around the continent leaving some to wonder
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whether they can compete with the arrival. >> president biden opening at 1200-mile corridor that the u.s. had paid a billion dollars between four countries from congo to tanzania basically sailed the u.s. could have access to critical minerals like cobalt which are needed for ev and smartphones. china, as you mentioned, in africa, we have been asleep at the -- asleep at the wheel for years. the largest cobalt supply in the world. it left the congo in 2020. this was a significant trip via an american president. a pittance compared to what china has spelt in africa. >> the feeling about all that is
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waiting for the next president. >> a lot of anticipation. a lot of speculation. on a deeper level, what will that military strategy be in president trump second administration? they can operate and deal with the challenge. they can deal in europe and the middle east. that needs to be the core part of the strategy. >> roger, jen, carl, thank you all very much. >> thank you. shannon: the vast majority of americans favor spending more on defense. they also worry about how it can collid
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welcome to the flying white house. the actual boeing 707 from richard nixon to george w bush 1973-2001. this is the actual entrance the president would use and stop on his way to wave to reporters. president reagan flew more than three inserted 60,000 miles visited 46 u.s. states in this aircraft. president reagan did a lot of work here. you can see his jar of jellybeans here, his notes, he often handwrote many important
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speeches. he talked to world leaders, legislators, reporters, he even started the daytona beach nascar race tail number 2700 now accepts millions of visitors to get their own in-person tour of history here at the reagan library. >> air force one. definitely worth a visit if you are ever in this part of the country. two veterans serving their country in congress, cory mills and a marine veteran both on the house armed committee. great to have you both today. >> thank you for having us. shannon: you have a lot going on including funding the government will me run out of money if we get to that cliff again. some have raised more funding for ukraine. reagan national defense does a survey and they ask about this defense. the number has been dropping. where do you think that goes?
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>> one thing that you see is people are really concerned about the pacific, about china. what message does this send in china about starting a war of aggression if we let putin get away with this. if we all agree that we want putin to lussier, we want ukraine to win, at the same time , we don't want this to go on forever. shannon: what is the hope for resolution? maybe there will be a conversation about some of this territory. does that only incentivize putin to do this again. >> i think this has been handled wrong since it originally kicked off. we had a nuclear agreement that was called to budapest memorandum. the idea was recognizing the sovereignty. the federation of russia. the uk and northern ireland. they are in direct violation and the treaty in which they signed the issues we have not tried to enforce this or put teeth around
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it when it comes to the international buy in. we slow walked this. we understand we do not want putin to win this, but we don't want to continue to spend where originally they wanted these forms and then we finally give them and then we finally give them this. kind of drawn out. that is not the way this is supposed to be when it comes to winning a war. >> we don't think putin cares about these agreements. there been a lot of decisions when there've been decisions a few months late. we want to win the war, it is different than just prolonging it. new information to make some changes. we cannot just give it to putin. that is what you hear based on trumps decisions in the past. >> the survey here asked about this.
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79% say they favor spending more , increasing military spending. 69% concerned the national debt will force cuts. we should be more concerned about the national debt. we should be talking about it more than we are. >> this year, to moment which is the one we will spend more in servicing interest payments. that is a very, very key thing. our greatest is our national debt. there are other areas of government in which we can get rid of some of the frivolous spending. elon musk and vivek ribbon swami getting it in place. increasing the quality of life and prioritizing. now prioritizing things that may be divisive in impacting our recruitment efforts.
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childcare five days a week, not two days a week. increasing the amount of houses on bases and equality of our soldiers and armed forces. the recruitment. ensuring our priorities are right on the prioritization of our military service members and what the transition is later on. >> i feel that we do need to prioritize. they serve right along with them >> it will increase military pay lock. trying to invest in the troops and families. here is a problem, trumps economic plans will decrease the deficit dramatically. for or five times more. i do not know how this will work out. you cannot extract the savings you need to balance a budget just from government efficiency. if we really want to invest more we have to talk about how we will pay for that. not just expenses, but revenues,
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too. if trump does that he will not have enough money for defense. that is a real trade-off. >> is already shaking his head over there. >> we received more revenue of $5 trillion and we ever have before. the idea of sunsetting a policy that allows 21% of corporations go to 40 plus% -- revenue speaks for itself. the dollar speaks for itself. all because of trump. >> going dramatically up because of trumps tax cuts. >> we have to be serious. shannon: let's talk about this, too. the pentagon has failed its seventh audit in a row. we know there's a problem there. if a private company failed its financial audits year after year with only vague assurances that
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it would keep things under control in a few more years, shareholders would revolt and heads would roll. >> i agree. we have to have some accountability. invest in the advanced autonomous ai enabled drones and things like that. systems of the future as opposed to the big heavy manpower intensive systems from the past. we need a lot more drones. we need a lot more missiles. they do not like to hear that kind of talk. if you are serious about investing in the future of our military, also making sound financial decisions, those are the changes we need to see. >> i agree with that. we know what it can do on a battlefield. however, looking at the pay, strategy, the actual capabilities, i don't think that
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that will be the answer. especially looking at taiwan. i think that there are smart ways to do it. seven audits have been failed. how they cannot come up with a simple solution is troubling for me. that is where potentially something has an external audit. coming in to be able to do a more thorough investigation of this. holding them accountable so if you have a certain amount of assets under and you can account for that, why should you be deserving of a posting. shannon: they say they will look everywhere. every possible expenditure. do you think there will be bipartisan support? it is up to congress ultimately. >> that is right.
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finding efficiencies and cutting waste. just wanting government dollars to be wasted. i think it comes down to the details of what they will do. dramatically cutting programs and investing in our troops. invest in the kinds of things that working families need right here at home, that will not get through congress. >> we didn't on a moment of agreed nests. >> we have to get cuts, they have to be efficient. we have to return power to the states and the individuals. the federal government needs to be limited in our government as well. shannon: thank you for your time in uniform and now a different kind.
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ronald ragan belongs to the ages now. >> on june 11, 2004, president ronald reagan was laid to rest here at the ronald ragan library with a heartbreaking kiss goodbye from his wife nancy. 2016, the former first lady laid to rest by her husband's side. personally chosen by our president with the headstone at the center of a 20-foot wide horse shoe shaped memorable. dedicating the library i know in my heart that man is good. >> what is right will always eventually triumph. purpose and worth to each and every life. shannon: moving words from our nations president. another exhibit making its home this month. a memorial using art to tell a
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route and moving story about the actual toll of war to remind americans what true courage looks like. it is our sunday special. february will mark 20 years since a marines of ohio-based company deployed to the province in iraq and al qaeda stronghold. of the 184 marines of lima, a staggering 23 killed in action barking some of the heaviest casualties of the entire war. two decades later the eyes of freedom making its home here at the reagan library. a one-of-a-kind tribute to the fallen heroes. >> it is so personal. freedom is not free. seeing the faces of the fallen. real men that had their whole lives ahead of them. it is tragic, but also inspiring >> life-size portraits of the
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fallen service members. each now adorned with mementos left behind by loved ones. >> you can see a photographed left on the boots. you see a dog tag there. it is incredibly incredible. >> facing a different kind of battle when they got home. the artist added this sculpture. >> why did it become a big part of what you had already done? >> suicide, mental health for veterans became the elephant in the room that needed addressing. making the issue front and center and visible. >> the latest stop for the traveling memorial. >> what has the reaction been like when you take this place to place? >> something magical that happens. the spirit of the ones they
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loved and lost is what they are beginning to feel. these are 23. they stand for thousands of every conflict. >> we are grateful for the sacrifice of all our nations heroes. that exhibit is heading to some of the small towns beginning in montana this february. be sure to check out fox nation. the fourth and final episode out today. focusing on the wife known as the patron saint of prisoners. he became a martyr for his faith after being held as a prisoner at auschwitz. you can watch all four episodes on fox nation.com. that is it for us today. thank you for join week ♪ ♪
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