tv Greta Van Susteren FOX News March 7, 2012 10:00pm-11:00pm EST
10:00 pm
santorum is here. we will ask him the question everybody is asking -- is he trying to push speaker newt gingrich out in the battle for the g.o.p. nomination. senator santorum will be here in a few seconds. plus, if you are worried about gas prices, then stay right where you are. speaker of the house john boehner will be here to talk gas prices and the contraception controversy. are both being used as a political prop? and israeli prime minister netanyahu is here, warning america, nuclear weapons in the hands of iran would be catastrophic, not just for israel, but for us. prime minister netanyahu in just a few minutes. but first, kansas, then alabama, hawaii and mississippi. those are the next stops in the g.o.p. race for votes and delegates. senator rick santorum joins us from jackson, mississippi. >> hey, greta. how are you? a great day here. we had a great rally here.
10:01 pm
>> greta: i imagine it is. you have had a great night. first of all, i want to speak to what senator mccain was talking about with sean hannity about syria. he was like with a coalition to do military strikes in syria. if you were president of the united states, tonight, what would you be thinking, saying, what would your position be? >> well, the position i think is first off, i had a lot of respect for john mccain and his sense of what is going on on the ground there. i know he has spent a considerable amount of time and he has been an expert in the area for a longer time. so i would seriously consider his suggestion. i haven't had a chance to read through everything he's laid out. but i would say at a minimum, we should be supporting the -- the revolutionaries in syria with military equipment and any other kind of support that we can give them indirectly. as far as direct support and senator mccain was talking about air support, i am not prepared to go there at this
10:02 pm
point in time. but certainly, someone like senator mccain has put that forward, then i would certainly consider it. >> greta: now to last night's result. razor close in ohio. i wonder, though, does your strategy change at all, based on the results of last night? do you rework where you are going to focus, what you are going to do? >> well, no matter, actually, we were very pleased with last night. the fact we were able to go in to speaker gingrich's back yard and have a decisive victory in tennessee. and having him finish third and same thing in oklahoma, another strong win for us. in a state that i know that, you know, he was considering his southern strategy. the fact that we did very, very well well and we were outspent by everybody. that's the normal thing. we no longer -- we don't see that as necessarily a big issue for us. we have a strong base of support because we are the strong
10:03 pm
conviction conservative in this race. i think that's showing itself, our win in norg dakota was enormous. congressman paul had people up there for months, governor romney had everybody in the establishment up there. no one gave us a chance. we pulled out 40% of the vote. i am looking at places where our message is able to get through. ohio was a great state for us. the fact that we hung in there in spite of the pounding just shows us that our message is resonating. once we believe we can get down this race, eventually to where it's me against governor romney, i like my chances a lot of. >> greta: you think this would be a different race or that it's incons quential, had the iowa race, had the night that the caucus ended, you be declared the winner, instead of waiting 10 days. do you think that has any impact or that's incons quental at this point? >> the answer is that, of course, the narrative was set,
10:04 pm
governor romney was on this historic roll and unbeatable. and that certainly helped him in new hampshire, but it helped him there and finished second in iowa and that's finishing second, not first. you don't get the bump, even though it was only 8 votes, it was 8 votes! and the recount showed it was the another way around. but, you know, greta, i gotta tell you, things have worked out for me. i can't complain too much about how things have happened. we got, you know, we got the notification of the win, the south carolina, didn't help us out much. but it did get us the legitimacy to say, hey, we have won a state. maybe you should listen to our main and the people in missouri and colorado and minnesota did. and that got us going and we have won several states since. >> greta: the super pac, the one that supports you is asking that speaker newt get out.
10:05 pm
that in some ways allows you to not take any fingerprints on the issue. why should speaker gingrich get out? why would the super pac want him out? shouldn't he stay in if he wants to stay in? >> of course, he should stay in if he wants to stay n. i have said that from the beginning. i am saying that the best chance foritous nominate a conservative is to get in a one-on-one match with governor romney. and we are in the process of proving we are the right person, not just to beat governor romney, but to defeat barack obama. we have won in the upper midwest and in the south and in the west. we have won, really, you know, throughout the heartland of the country. i think, if you look at the close races, we could have won a lot more. i think that people are looking at that saying that this is the guy who has the message that is connecting and has the connection with the people generally, as a person that we
10:06 pm
need and tomorrow, speaker gingrich is going to stake this claim here. we are going to do battle here in the southern states, we feel like we have a great chance of winning kansas. i feel very, very good about this, this saturday, going into the southern super tuesday, if you will. so i feel very -- i feel good. the direction i am getting here in mississippi gives me a lot of encouragement. >> greta: i don't count anybody out. i lich to other people, but i don't count anybody out, not at this point. let me ask you a question in a different way. if you are the nominee, if you are the -- if you are the nominee of the republican party, who would be more likely to get a v.p. call from you -- speaker gingrich or governor romney? and the reason i ask you, i think it reflects on strategy, numbers and compatibility. what would be more likely?
10:07 pm
>> i would just say this -- the answer to the question, on vice-president, i will choose somebody, if i am so blessed to have gotten this nomination, i will choose someone who i believe will do and carry on the duties of president in conformity with, with the way that i promise the american public i would do so. that's at this time test. it is not compatibility. it is not what state they come from or -- it's -- i want to keep faith with the american public, if i am going to go out and campaign this way, if something should happen to me and whoever fills in will do their best to fill in and -- and follow through with what i say. and pick someone who shares those values with and you the same commitment. >> greta: all right. well, there seem to be two very spate issues, one is the social issues. i think most people would mutt your campaign has run on the social issues and the other on the economic issues.
10:08 pm
it seems that the romney campaign, for whatever reason gets more attention on the economic issues. how do you get off your political tombstone that you are the social-issue guy so you can reach the american people on the economic issues about gasoline prices and debt and all of those things? because there seems to be one narrative about you right now? >> well, you know, i can't stop what the media wants to do. they love to paint caricatures of people. but i am traveling the country with a hunk of shale rock from north dakota and talking about how we need to build a keystone pipeline and extract scpoil fight the radical environmentalists. i got in trouble for -- for the language i used on that. i am the guy talking about manufacturing jobs and went to steubenville, ohio. i wasn't in boston. i wasn't in atlanta. i was in the heart of blue-collar america, talking about the jobs and the tunes for
10:09 pm
those river towns and the mill towns in america. you know, that's the message i have been out there with. i have been talking about freedom and the president with obamacare and the -- really the fact that governor romney now not only has -- and did a bad job in massachusetts by imposing obamacare -- excuse me, romneycare, the model for obamacare. but we now found out that he was an advocate at heart of the time when the debate was going on, he was advocating for pretty much what president obama put into place and then told the american public that he wasn't doing that. you know, i think we need someone who is willing to be honest about what you believe in. hold the beliefs for a couple of years and then go out and try to fight to make the country more free. >> greta: i realize that you said that you think we should have a candidate who is honest. what i read is that you are saying that governor romney is not honest on those issues -- i
10:10 pm
don't mean to seize upon a single word. but that is what it seems to me you sadism it's very clear that governor romney didn't come clean in the debates about his -- advocating for a mandated, federal mandate for health insurance and taxing people who didn't buy health insurance at the federal level. on repeated occasions, we found out that he did just that. he has maintained throughout the coirs of the race that he didn't do it. he was not coming clean with the american public. i think that's a very important issue that we have someone that we can trust to at least say what they believe in and what they have done. >> greta: senator, thank you, sir. hope you will join us again soon. it will be an interesting race. thank you, sir. >> thank you. >> greta: straight ahead, nutrisystem says he can get gas prices down to $2.50 a gallon. what does the current speaker of the house, john boehner, think
10:11 pm
about that? speaker boehner will tell you himself. is war with iran coming and coming soon? israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu will tell you, as he goes "on the record." oh! [ baby crying ] ♪ what started as a whisper ♪ every day, millions of people choose to do the right thing. ♪ slowly turned to a scream ♪ there's an insurance company that does that, to liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? ♪ amen, omen
10:12 pm
chocolate lemonade ? susie's lemonade... the movie. or... we make it pink ! with these 4g lte tablets, you can do business at lightning-fast spes. we'll take all the strawberries, dave. you got it, kid. we have a winner. we're definitely gonna need another one. small sinesses that want to grow use 4g lte technology from verizon. i wonder how she does it. that's why she's the boss. because the small business with the best tecology rules. contact the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 1-800-974-6006. oh there's tons. french presses, espresso tampers, filters. it can get really complicated. not nearly as complicated as shipping it though. i mean shipping is a hassle. not with priority mail flat rate boxes from the postal service. if it fits it ships, anywhere in the country for a low flat rate. that is easy. best news i've heard all day! i'm soooo amped! i mean not amped. excited. well, sort of amped.
10:13 pm
10:15 pm
92 speaker of the house, john boehner, we ask him about the nail biter in ohio and the skyrocketing price of gas and the contraception controversy. nice to see you, sir. >> greta, good to be with you. gas prices, they are jumping up about 48 cents a gallon since the beginning of january. americans are hurting and they are worried. what can do you about gas prices? >> well, i think what we need to do is open up more to america for american-made oil and gas. listen, the president's policies -- are not only want helping the economy, they have made it worse. and the president says he's for an all of the above energy strategy. but his rhetoric does not match his actions and the facts are that they have closed down most of the gulf. they have closed down all the public land. if we are going to bring gas prices down, we need to have all of the above, we need more oil
10:16 pm
and gas production and renewables. we need nuclear energy. until we do all of the above, we will be subject to these -- these big fluctuations. >> greta: have you had any conversations with him about it -- i can't imagine an electric year, the president wants the gas prices to go up because that can be politically fatal. i am sure he wants to get the prices down. >> last week, we were at the white house, had lunch with the president and the vice-president. he made some overtures to some of our energy proposals. because if you look at what the epa is doing, they are shutting down a lot of american-made energy with the proposals coming out of their administration. and he seemed somewhat open to considering some of them. he didn't say specifically which ones? did he say anything at all? people are focused on the price of gas, but it has an anchor on
10:17 pm
the economy as we try to rev up the economy because it's higher food prices and a lot of things. >> it is want just the price of gas, it's the price of energy, across the board. whether you are a service company, a manufacturing company, everybody pace more. and if you are spending that much more on energy, you are not buying other goods and services that are available in our economy. and it will slow the economy down. the president's energy policies have led to a more than doubling of gas prices over the 3 years of this presidency. it's time for the president to take real action and work with congress in a bipartisan way to deal with this problem. >> greta: speaker gingrich says he can get gas to $2.50, is that campaign rhetoric or do you think that's realistic? >> over the next 10 years, we move americans very close to energy self-sufficiency. keeping that $500 billion that we are shipping overseas here in
10:18 pm
america. we can do tbut tell take a concerted effort. >> greta: last night in ohio, all eyes on ohio, two republican candidates lost. but it was a very close race between governor romney and senator santorum. what do you make of the race last night? >> you have all tried to get me to talk about presidential race over the course of this year. i have a big job here. and in addition, i am chairman of the republican convention. i am not going to get in the middle of the race-- it will mean the turnout, how many people turn out in november and that may impact how many rather republicans are re-. >> it does. this is an incredibly important year for our country. i would hope that our candidates continue to focus on -- on the real issue here. and that's the president's policies. they have not helped. they have made our economy worse. they have made it harder for job creators to create jobs. and because the president
10:19 pm
doesn't want to talk about his economic policies, he's turned toward the politics of enry and divide. listen, republicans have a plan for america's job fairs. we have had it since last may. 30 bills we have pass in the senate, in the united states senate. the president really wants to help get the economy moving, call up harry reid and say, hey, these are some good bills. tomorrow, we are going to pass the jobs act. the president said nights things about t. it would help small companies have better access to capital and to grow. if the president is serious about helping the economy, he ought to pick up the phone and call harry reid and say, hey, time to get moving. >> greta: well, the president couldn't get senator reid to get the budget going in the senate. he couldn't get his own budget considered. it doesn't seem like there is a lot of give and take there towards getting things considered. >> we are moving our budget here
10:20 pm
in the next couple of weeks. it's been almost 3 years since the senate move aid budget resolution. at a time when we have a trillion-dollar budget deficit, how do you -- how do you deal with a budget deficit when you won't do a budget? elections are important. you have heard politicians say, how important this next election is. guess what? some of them are important. some of them aren't. i'll tell you. what the most important election of my life is this one in november because i don't think america can sustain four more years of the policies coming out of this administration. >> greta: do you think there is a controversy over the republicans saying that it's a question of religious freedom and the democrats say it's a war on women, the issue of contraception -- has this issue, more from a legitimate issue from people talking about, into a political weapon, almost a campaign prop -- for both parties? itch it's pretty clear that our
10:21 pm
friends on the left had turned this whole debate over contraception. this is nothing to do with contraception. for 220 years, our government here in washington has respected the rights of religious organizations to their own beliefs. and there has always been a conscience exception for religious organizations so that government doesn't -- isn't in position of coercing them to do things they they don't believe in. i think -- i think some in this debate have decided to use this for the political i think that's unfortunate. >> greta: how did we get there? these are not -- >> let's remember-- whether it's women's rights and now it's a big i. remember how we got there. this is obamacare. this is just another example of the federal government going to tell everyone in america that
10:22 pm
you are going to do it our way. remember, when the president said, if you like the health insurance policy that you have, you can keep it. not anymore. because this policy will require everybody in america to have at least one -- this is the first step. one exception, based on what the government in washington wants. >> greta: mr. speaker, thank you, sir. >> thank you. >> greta: up next, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu in the united states, talking only here "on the record." prime minister netanyahu is next. also, tom hanks delivered that famous movie line, "there is no crying in baseball. well, is there a reason hanks left out football? we know think so. peyton manning gets all choked up. see for yourself, coming up.
10:23 pm
10:24 pm
let me get that door for you... [ man ] i loved my first car... sometimes the door gets stuck... oh sure. ooh! [ man ] ...and then, i didn't. um... [ sighs ] [ man ] so, i got a car i can love a really, really long time. [ malannouncer ] for the road ahead, the a-new subaru impreza. ♪ experience love that lasts. in here, the landscaping business grows with snow. to keep big winter job on track, at&t provided a mobile solution that lets everyone from field workers to accounting, initiate, bill, and track work in real time. you can't live under a dome in minnesota,
10:25 pm
10:26 pm
>> it is no secret, nations are terrify that iran is working on a nuclear weapon, including a threat to wipe israel off the map. is israel going to do anything about it? prime minister benjamin netanyahu, here in washington, meeting with president obama and then going "on the record." mr. prime minister, sir, thank you. nice to see you. >> thank you. >> greta: welcome back to the united states. i enjoyed talking to you last fall when you were here.
10:27 pm
>> indeed. >> greta: last night, i liived very carefully to your speech, very carefully. in fact, i have a transcript of it in front of me. it says that the international community's tried diplomacy that. hasn't worked. that the community has supplied sanctions. that hasn't worked, there are effortses to impose stiffer sarvegzs, but you said that iran's goal is to develop nuclear weapons and as prime minister you will never gamble with the security of israel t. sounds like war is inevitable. >> oh, i don't think so. we have seen, in fact, that iran backed off from its nuclear program, tts its nuclear weapons program, really only once in the 15, 16 years that i have been... warning the world about the dangers of a nuclear-armed iran. the only time they backed away was in 2003 when they thought there would be a credible military threat against them. so in fact, the paradox is that
10:28 pm
if they actually believe that they are going to face the military option, you probably won't need the military option? i guess -- i suppose that's why secretary defense panetta's statements that military options are on the table and why president obama's comments are important. >> i think this is important. i think the idea that containment of a nuclear iran is want an option. remember what it means, you try to contain a regime, fostering terror worldwide that could use nuclear terror at any city, any port. that's a very dubious proposition. all of these things are important, as was the president's statement of something that is very true about the ethos of what israel is all about. israel is a sovereign country, must have the ability to defend itself, by itself against any threat. and as a sovereign country, we have the right to decide to act on our own defense.
10:29 pm
>> greta: is there anyone that disputes that, that israel doesn't have a right to defend itself, to its soff sovereignty -- obviously the sovereignty. but the right to defend yourself. >> it's the question of when have you to activate that right. i think that's the real important thing. i think the reiteration of that basic proposition was important. you can't repeat that too often. >> greta: that means a little bit in terms of preemptive, whether you preempt iran, building a bomb, whether you go in there ahead of time, is that what you mean? >> i mean that -- i mean when the jewish people are faced often in our history in the situation that people try to destroy us. in fact, they did destroy millions of jews in the last century. we could do nothing about it because we had no sovereign state. now, they still threat tone destroy us, but this time, there is a state of israel and this time, we'll act in our own
10:30 pm
defense. i think it's time to repeat that clearly and obviously, this is something that is the primary, supreme responsibility that i, as the prime minister of israel, have to -- to guarantee that the future of the jewish state, the jewish future is secure. >> greta: you talk about the jewish future and you talktached on, if iran gets a nuclear weapon, obviously, you are in the direct line of fire and ahmadinejad has made very derogatory marks and ugly intentions towards israel i. now you are being a difficulty he said that israel should be wiped off the face of the earth and they are developing nuclear weapons to do it. and they could shut down the strait of hormuz. they are threatening. you are worried about the price of oil today. you think about what it would mean if iran is a radical regime that chants death to america! death to israel! they have their hands on atomic bombs. they could use it against any
10:31 pm
one of us. they could give it to their terrorist proxies to use against any one of us. they could threaten credibly to block the strait of hormuz, which would send the price of oil skyrocketing, not anything that remotely resembles what we have now and they will pocket the dough. these are things that could change the world, like a hinge of history. we could live in another time. we have never had, since the advent of nudlear weapons, a regime that could act with such -- irresponsibility, having those weapons of mass death. i think this is something that we should -- we should talk b. everybody talks about the -- you know, the costs of taking action, to stop iran. i think it's important to start on the cost of not acting to stop iran na world in which the ayatollahs would have atomic bombs, i think that would be
10:32 pm
catastrophic. >> greta: do you have a sense that other nations have that sense of seriousness that you have about this issue? or do you think many nations think we can talk our wiout of this, eighths bit? >> i think they would like it see iran agree to the dismantling nuclear program. they are trying to pressure them to do that. the pressure hasn't been applied. the economic sanctions hurt iran, economically, no question about that. but so far, it hasn't -- these sanctions haven't achieved the one goal they have, which is to make iran stop their nuclear weapons program. >> greta: do you have any doubt they have a nuclear weapons program? >> god, i said yesterday, what do you think iran is doing all of this -- developing these underground halls with thousands of centrifuges to enrich ujaneium, underground nuclear facility and intercontinental ballistic missiles, to carry, what? medical isotopes?
10:33 pm
they are absorbing crippling sanctions. if it looks like a duck, if it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck... it's a duck! it's a nuclear duck. so i don't think anyone seriously thinks that iran is doing all of this, going through all of this huge investment, taking huge risks for anything but a nuclear program. i think we should recognize that. the second thing is that so far, we have not been able to stop their nuclear program, notwithstanding the tough sanctions that have been applied. they are still going away. and by the way, that's not what i am saying, that's what the international atomic energy agency just said yesterday. they published a report and said that iran is continuing and in fact accelerating its program. for god's sakes ahmadinejad is taking people on guided tours of these facilities, the
10:34 pm
international inspectors are saying there is material near low enriched uranium for five bombs and they are enriching uranium now at a higher level to give them their nuclear weapons. i think there is no question. >> greta: i guess i asked because, one of the things that the more we talk and have diplomacy, there is more of a chance to build more, develop more. so diplomacy does have its drawback, spending a lot of time talking if they don't stop the program. and in 2003, with weapons of mass destruction in iraq, there was so much certainty and it turned out, our intelligence was wrong on that. so i am trying to balance the two? >> first of all, there is no comparison. in the case of iraq, i was on the israeli cabinet when we discussed this issue. we didn't know. we couldn't say that they didn't have a nuclear weapons program, we couldn't say if they d. in the case of iran, there is
10:35 pm
absolutely evidence. we share all of that information, we know the stockpiling of enriched uranium. we know the development of icbms, we know a lot more. we share this information. i don't think that's comparable? -- what's the timeline. >> every day is closer and closer? weeks, months or years? >> it was a lot further away 15 years ago when i started talking about t. it was a lot further away 10 years ago, it was a lot further away 5 years. it was a lot further away five months ago. could they use the talks to deceive and delay? you bet. that's what they have been up to. they have had talks to do this or to do that. but effectively, they continue to go through -- the only way you get a result if you got them to agree to take out all the enriched uranium that they have enriched, take it out of iran, the stuff that can make bombs.
10:36 pm
if they want to make medical isotopes, you can give them back -- uranium that can serve that purpose, a peaceful purpose. they can dismantle any facility they have, in an underground nuclear bunker. they could do all of that. then you would have an indication that the talks have done something. but personally, i'm skeptical. i think they have bamboozled the west. they think they can get away with it. >> greta: that goes back to my first question. i don't see anything to indication that ahmadinejad wants to did anything but give lots of trouble to israel -- >> no. not only to us-- it's a big i. to you. >> greta: it's a big problem. weapons of mass destruction, a nuclear bomb is a big problem for all of us. not just israel. so it seems -- i guess i am trying to figure out, how is it -- how is war not inevitable
10:37 pm
or military academies not inevitable, and if the increased sanctions effective, we would have to other countries not cheating and violating the sanctions. >> that's one of the problems to get, so far, we haven't gotten all the countries, buying uranium and some large companies haven't. again, they haven't actually -- it's hurt their economy. but it has not stopped their program by one wit. that's a fact. it hurs their economy, but hasn't stopped the program? anything to brighten about that? >> so far thasn't. you know, i think that the only way that very strong sanctions would work if they were coupled with a clear military option that the uraniums would be applied to. that's the acid test. they believe that there is a credible military oping if they don't top the program.
10:38 pm
that's the sure-fire test. we had that in 2003, but we haven't had it since. >> greta: a warning that the mideast could turn into a nuclear tinder box. it is not just israel that is in deep trouble if iran gets a nuclear weapon. we will hear from prime minister net net next. on a much lighter note, check the tags on your laundry, could the instructions be sexist? you have to see this. ♪ our machines help identify
10:39 pm
early stages of cancer and it's something that we're extremely proud of. you see someone who is saved because of this technology, you know that the things that you do in your life, matte if i did have an opportunity to meet a cancer survivor, i'm sure i could take something positive away from that. [ jocelyn ] my name is jocelyn, and i'm a cancer survivor. [ mimi ] i had cancer. i have no evidence of disease now. [ erica ] i would love to meet the people that made the machines. i had such an amazing group of doctors and nurses, it would just make such a complete picture of why i'm sitting here today. ♪ [ herb ] from the moment we walked in the front door, just to see me -- not as a cancer patient, but as a person that had been helped by their work. i was just blown away. life's been good to me. i feel like one of the luckiest guys in the world. ♪
10:40 pm
we believe the more you know, the better you trade. so we have ongoing webinars and interactive learning, plus, in-branch seminars at over 500 locations, where our dedicated support teams help you know more so your money can do more. [ rodger ] at scottrade, seven dollar trades are just the start. our teams have the information you want when you need it. it's another reason more investors are saying... [ all ] i'm with scottrade. introducing gold choice. the freedom you can only get from hertz to keep the car you reserved or simply choose another. and it's free. ya know, for whoever you are that day. it's just another way you'll be traveling at the speed of hertz. you can't argue with nutrition you can see. great grains. great grains cereal starts whole and stays whole. see the seam? more pcessed flakes look nothing like natural grains. i'm eating what i kn is better nutrition. mmmm. great grains. search great grains and see for yourself.
10:42 pm
10:43 pm
version of the ipad. it has yet to be named bump cook said at the event in san francisco, that itville a speedier processor and sharper screen and faster wireless broad band access. and american airlines will freeze tensions for most workers, instead of terminating them as they reorganize under bankruptcy protection. they said they would drop pension plans and hand over assets and obligations to future payments to a government agency. fox business network gives you the power to prosper. >> greta: israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. i suppose you saw the article the last couple of weeks and there are leaks to the american press that it would be an extraordinary military challenge to take these out. can you do it? >> you know, i never talk about
10:44 pm
that. everybody else talks about it. every day. how about every hour? i open the pair paper and therea new assessment of what israel can and can't do, and the operational timeline, all of that, in great detail. well, you know, not from me. i don't talk about it. i will say that israel has great concerns. we don't have the capabilities of the united states. but we are a capable country. >> greta: you spent a long time with president obama in the oval office. what can you tell me about that conversation? >> i thought it was a very good conversation because it was open. it was honest between two leaders of two allies, great allies. i think, you know, i think that israel's alliance with the united states is of profound importance to everyone in israel. i think -- i think america's alliance with israel is important to the united states because when you look at the middle east, what do you have?
10:45 pm
you don't have that many reliable allies, solid democracy that is unabashedly pro-american. doesn't make any excuses for it. cuts across the entire population. you don't have people chanting death to america in israel. you don't have people saying we want to move away from america. on the contrary, that's an island of stability and reliability in the heart of the middle-east, which is a very unstable, unreliable region for the united states. and one is very dangerous. these terrorists, iran has slaughtered and arranged to slaughter hundreds, if not more, americans. it's helped kill american soldiers in afghanistan, in iraq. it has tried to assassinate the saudi ambassador -- in washington. it's [inaudible] in lebanon. god forbid that such, such a
10:46 pm
regime would have atomic bombs? that would be a great threat to the united states. to american lives, to israel, certainly. to america's alallies, to the supply of oil. it would spark a mad nuclear arms race, that could turn israel into a nuclear tinder box. this is a tremendous threat to the world. to the security of my country? certainly. but to the security of your country and to the peace to the world, i think it's something that must be stopped. i can't stress that. even though people don't see that, sometimes -- sometimes people don't see a danger coming at them until it materializes. churchill called it the slumber of democracies. he said, democracies tend to sleep and they are woken sort of at the last mome by the jarring gong of danger.
10:47 pm
well, if i could start sounding the jarring gong of danger, not to disregard all the dangers that are fought, we are trying to stop this danger from materializing, but also understanding the enormous consequences of not topping it. this could be -- not stopping it. this could be a different world, one that you regret that we allowed to happen. as we have had happen before. >> what about senator mccain, suggesting that we should have military intervention or some assistance in syria. obviously, syria's the gateway from iran to syria to hezbollah. what's your view on that? >> first of all, there is a slaughter going on in syria which is... despicable. i mean, there is daily carnage. there is tanks. machine guns. i mean, it's terrible. there is mass laughter and it's
10:48 pm
abominable. i am not sure it makes sense for me as the prime minister of israel to actual what we should do or not do to stop this. certainly, what we should do, because i am not sure if by saying that, i will be helping the very people who are trying to help. so i will just say that i think what is going on there is abominable. syria, does syria help iran? yeah. and iran is propping up its own people there. it's a proxy for hezbollah there, helping the slaughter. so obviously, there is this connection. but if the syrian regime changes and falls -- and it might -- and i won't get into saying more than that, that's not necessarily going to stop the centrifuges from spinning in iran. in fact, it might -- not do interesting. >> greta: prime minister, thank you, sir. nice to see you, sir. >> thank you. >> greta: dramatic pauses and pierce. no, it's not a soap opera, it's
10:49 pm
football. it's the nfl. peyton manning's emotional goodbye. that's next. impact wool exports from new zealand, textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 1year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospecs or summary prctus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. chocolate lemonade ? susie's lemonade... the movie. or... we make it pink ! with these 4g lte tablets, you can do business at lightning-fast spes. we'll take all the strawberries, dave. you got it, kid. we have a winner. we're definitely gonna need another one. small sinesses that want to grow use 4g lte technology from verizon. i wonder how she does it. that's why she's the boss. because the small business with the best tecology rules.
10:50 pm
contact the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 1-800-974-6006. the passat is one of nine volkswagen models named a 2012 iihs top safety pick. not that we'd ever brag about it. [ chuckles ] turn right. come on -- nine. turn lt. hit the brakes. huh. how'd that get there? [ male announcer ] we can't hide how proud we are to have nine 2012 iihs top safety picks, so we're celebrating with our safety in numbers event. that's the power of german engineering. right now, lease the 2012 passat for $219 a month.
10:52 pm
10:53 pm
>> we finally got a man who will stand for what is right! game on! victory's in sight. we have a man who understands that god gave the bill of rights...? >> the stars of the music video are camille and halley harris, the daughters of an oklahoma pastor. they formed a band after singing for their church. a pair of pants, spark a big debate. the label inside gives basic washing instructions, but it also gives an alternative washing tip saying, or give it to your woman. it's her job. an annoyed woman tweet aid photo of the pants. the manufacturer apologized saying, it was meant to be a joke. and star quarterback peyton manning says a tearful goodbye to the colts. >> it truly has been an honor to play in indianapolis. i do love it here. i love the fans. and i will always enjoy having
10:54 pm
played for such a great team. >> greta: today, manning's 14-year run with the colts coming to an end, he was released rather than paying a whopping $28 million bonus. he is a four-time mvp, but he missed last season, due to a neck injury. both say that money had nothing to do with the release. a few hours later, he was seen landing in a private jet in miami. is it hello dolphins? >> greta: if you thought super tuesday was the big story yesterday. well, think again. there may be something bigger. you don't want to miss this. we also have zero free time, and my dad moving in. so we went to fidelity. we looked at our family's goals and some ways to help us get there. they helped me fix my economy, the one in my house. now they're managing my investments for me. and with fidelity, getting back on track was easier than i thought.
10:55 pm
call or come in today to take control of your personal economy. get one-on-one help from america's retirement leader. oh there's tons. french presses, espresso tampers, filters. it can get really complicated. not nearly as complicated as shipping it though. i mean shipping is a hassle. not with priority mail flat rate boxes from the postal service. if it fits it ships, anywhere in the country for a low flat rate. that is easy. best news i've heard all day! i'm soooo amped! i mean not amped. excited. well, sort of amped. really kind of in between. have you ever thought about decaf? do you think that would help? yeah. priority mail flat rate shipping starts at just $5.15, only from the postal service. a simpler way to ship. >>. >> eden prairie, minnesota.
10:56 pm
10:57 pm
[ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ when we were determined to see it through. helping you do what you do... even better. here's an update on the progress. we're paying for all spill related clean-up costs. bp findings supports independent scientists studying the gulf's environment. thousas of environmental samples have been tested and all beaches and waters are open. anthe tourists are back. i was born here, i'm still here and so is bp. [ speaking in japanese ] yeah, do you have anything for a headache... like excedrin, ohhh, bayer aspirin... ohh, no no no. i'm not having a heart attack, it's my head. no, bayer advanced aspirin, this is made for pain. [ male announcer ] bayer advanced aspirin has microparticles, enters the bloodstream fast, and safely rushes extra strength relief
10:58 pm
to the sight of your tough pain. feel better? yeah...thanks for the tip! [ male announcer ] for fast powerful pain relief, use bayer advanced aspirin. >>. >> bhap >> greta: last call it doesn't matter why you live this is news is big, very big. >> people think super tuesday is the big story of the day. would you look at the newspaper, super tuesday, super tuesday, judging by local news, there is a bigger
10:59 pm
story. it's sweeping the nation now. here is a look at the real top story. >> if your e mail inbox is out of control, our company thinks there is a solution for you. could this be the end of e mail overload? >> could this be the end of e mail overload? >> could this be the end of the e mail overload? >> could this be the end of the e mail overload? >> could this be the end of e mail overload? >> could this be the end of overload? >> could this be the end of e mail overload? >> could this be the end of e mail overlord? overload? >> they never answered the question. >> i know. >> that is your last call. thank you for being with us tonight. good night from washington go
129 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Fox News Television Archive Television Archive News Search Service The Chin Grimes TV News ArchiveUploaded by TV Archive on