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tv   MSNBC Live  MSNBC  June 30, 2016 9:00am-10:01am PDT

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xenophobia. or worse. it's just cynicism. and scare tactics? we'll break down donald trump's isis warning about what would happen if hillary clinton is elected. >> if she gets in, it will be massive and we won't even have a country anymore, we'll be afraid to walk outside. good day, everyone. i'm andrea mitchell in washington. new developments unfolding about the suicide bombers who attacked the istanbul airport. turkish police carrying out multiple raids, arresting at least 13 people in connection with the deadly attack. we're also learning more about the three attackers. a police source telling nbc news they are members of a russian-speaking cell and that at least one of the bombers came from raqqah to turkey, that's the syrian isis headquarters in raqqah to turkey just a month ago. turkish media releasing this
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photo reportedly showing the terror suspects captured on the airport's cc tv camera. this new video posted online by a turkish newspaper taken from another airport secu camera purporting to show one of the attackers shooting a plain-clothed policeman who challenged him in the terminal. the police officers are being hailed as real heroes for their actions to try to stop the attackers. and today an emotional memorial earlier this the morning at theithe i istanbul airport for 44 victims. many people attending were airport employees. joining me is kelly cobiella in istanbul. an ammon mohyeldin in new york. kelly, this investigation moving relatively quickly but break down what you know about the russian-speaking ethnicity, if you will, of the suicide bomb s
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bombers. turkish officials will saying one of these suspected attackers was a russian national from the caucuses region of russia. a chechen jihad if you will. we don't have the exact name of this person or any of these attackers as yet only that this one individual was from the caucuses region and sources tell us had traveled to turkey from raqqah within the last month. the other two attackers according to turkish officials are both from that same general geographic area kyrgyzstan from one and the other from uzbekistan. we're still waiting on official conversation on names of all three and what their travel situations were if all three in fact did come from syria. nearly a dozen arrests between the two separate cities. we're not being told if those
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arrests are directly connected to the three attackers here at the airport. only these these are isis-related arrests and one other interesting note, one of those raids did take place in a neighborhood where turkish media is reporting the three attackers rented an apartment. this apartment rented, paid for in cash about three months ago. neighbors were suspicious because the people renting this apartment they said added extra security. they closed the window, never opened the curtains and they reported smelling a strong chemical odor coming from that apartment but, again, a lot of information we're still waiting for andrea from turkish officials. >> ammon mohyeldin. there's an incredibly dramatic heartbreaking story about a tunisian father who is one of the victims who had gone to turkey to try to stop his son from joining isis. why don't you pick up the story from your reporting. >> andrea, as we were continuing
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to learn more of the profiles of the nationalities of these who were killed outside the airport, ones v one of those stories has been remarkable as we learned and we have the nationalities for you on your screen. because this was the international arrivals all, you can imagine there were a lot of different nationalities, by our accounts there were about 19 foreigners and dual nationals. the other remaining victims of those 43 turkish citizens, many employees at the airport you saw that tribute today at the airport. but this particular story, this tunisian father, confirmed by the tunisian foreign ministry was a military officer who worked at a children's hospital in tunisia. he got word several months ago his son left tunisia, made his way to europe and ultimately to iraq, we've been able to reach a family friend who confirmed the details of the story. among the aspects is that several months ago as his son traveled to iraq and ultimately joining isis he called his father and said he wanted to get
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out. so his father traveled to turkey and worked with tunisian officials at the embassy to get his son out of syria, turn himself over to turkish authorities and that's where he's been for the past several weeks. the father was on his way to the airport to pick up the mother who was landing at the time of the attack. he was at the airport, the mother was still on the plane, the explosion happened and the tunisian father, that military officer identified as dr. bayoud, was killed in the attack. we don't know the fate of his son. we understand he is still being held by turkish authorities because he was a member of isis. the mother is as well in istanbul, we're working on trying to get ahold of her. all we have confirm is this father going to save his son from isis ended up being killed in this attack that is believed to have been carried out by isis. >> the human tragedies that are a part of this horror story is just extraordinary. thank you. thanks to kelly, thanks to you,
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ammon. today homeland security secretary jeh johnson testified the istanbul attack had the hallmarks of isis. he addressed the heightened alert ahead of the upcoming holiday weekend. >> the american public should expect to see this july 4 weekend an enhanced security presence at airport, train stations and other transit centers across the country by tsa and state and local law enforcement as well as security personnel. we should not focus our attention on things like airports to the exclusion of other public places. is we're concerned and focused on public events and places across the nation. >> nbc news justice correspondent pete williams in the newsroom. people, what jeh johnson is saying, it's not just airports, there are a lot of soft targets, parades, sporting events and that they want everyone to be alert but we don't know of
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actionable intelligence no warnings at this stage. remember the brussels attack involved not only the airport but a subway station and we know what happened in paris. so they're well aware of this. airport security, the perimeter, is not the responsibility of the federal government it's the responsibility of the people who run the airports. the federal responsibility comes when you get to the checkpoint. so it's a shared responsibility but there's obvious concern because of ramadan because of what just happened in turkey and the previous attacks. >> and pete i wanted to ask you about what happened because many of our viewers may have watched earlier today when there was an alarm at joint base andrews, andrews air force base which you and i have flown in and out of countless times over the years. it's the size of a city in suburban maryland and there was an active shooter warning but it turned out to be a false alarm, bring us up to date.
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>> it couldn't have happened at a worse time. there was a drill going on that involved a security situation at the medical center someone inside the medical center who was unaware there was a drill going on looked out the window and saw two men with rifles who were part of the security drill. not knowing that, this person called 911. our understanding is the 911 call went to the local maryland prince georges county maryland police. so now andrews doesn't know whether it's part of the drill or whether it's something unrelated. they had to treat it seriously. the base was put on lockdown, vice president biden was supposed to go to the airport to the joint base to go to ohio. he was delayed. but it's over now and they all understand it was a mixed signal. no shots were fired. >> just underscores, we all react because when we're told by the military there's an active shooter situation we would want
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to communicate to our viewers, our readers immediately but everyone is on a hair-trigger. post san bernardino, post brussels and paris, post orlando that we are in a very tense climate in the states. >> and have been for years, andrea. and the message has been if you see something, say something. that's what the person inside did. saw people with rifles, made a call that's what we're urged to do, thin the base is in a tough situation and not knowing whether it's the real thing or not they had to treat it as though it was and you saw what happened. >> pete williams, always the voice of reason, pete, thank you so much. our daily reality check with pete williams. and donald trump is back in new hampshire today his winning streak last winter, he's igniting a firestorm afterboawa.
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kristen welker is with me now. hallie jackson in new hampshire donald trump, there's so much backlash after his speech yesterday, interviews he's done. let's talk about what he's said and are republicans chiming in and saying not so much? >> including mitt romney, but let's start with something trump has said in the last hour or so on the radio going after senator elizabeth warren. obviously she's been on the campaign trail for hillary clinton and she has come under fire from trump who has repeatedly gone after her on accusations she exaggerated her native american heritage. this is something trump has not let up on for weeks now and he doubled down on this line of attack. i think we have the soundbite we can play. let's roll it and talk about it on the other side. >> we don't have it yet. why don't you characterize it.
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>> he basically said, hey i have more native american blood than she does, basically going after her again on this idea that she is exaggerating her heritage. this is something that has not been seen as a step forward by trump for some in his party the latest of his controversial comments and that's why you're seeing republican leaders refuse to get behind trump. we talked about mitt romney reiterated the fact that he won't vote for donald trump and said his family wanted him to run this year in 2016. we've also got utah senator mike lee out today with a diatribe against donald trump and why he won't support him right now. >> i wanted to play what howie car, who is introducing trump yesterday up there in maine and mocking elizabeth warren for the whole controversy over her having said years ago when she was applying for a faculty
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position that she had native american blood and listing herself as a minority and this is what -- it was an issue when she ran for senate and didn't resonate with the voters. this was howie carr, a conservative radio host, introducing donald trump yesterday. >> i heard hillary clinton and elizabeth warren campaigning. [ boos ] you know elizabeth warren, right? >> and andrea -- >> go ahead. >> in the room yesterday -- so you know how the media sits in the back of the room and after that moment from howie carr you heard people behind us yelling "pocahont "pocahontas" which is the nickname that donald trump calls elizabeth warren, which many find offensive and several others echoing that war whoop as well. something picked up by members of the audience. >> now on top of all of this as though there weren't enough
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conspiracy theories out there already, let me give the backdrop here. donald trump was on a radio interview today with mike gallagher and he talked about this. former president bill clinton was in arizona flying on a private jet, private airport, so was loretta lynch, the attorney general, she flies on a small government plane, they both have secret service security details and it is, we are told, traditional that when bill clinton knows that a cabinet secretary or another protectee like ted cruz during the campaign is in the area, he'll say "let me say hello" because the secret service details talk to each other and say another unit is about to arrive. so he did say hello to loretta lynch, met with her for about 30 minutes, she said it was completely social, they talked about grandchildren but this has led to a lot of conspiracy theories that even before hillary clinton has been interviewed by the fbi to our knowledge that somehow this is bill clinton talking to loretta lynch about clearing hillary
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clinton of the e-mail investigation. so a lot of stuff out there and this is what donald trump had to say today on the radio interview. >> it was really a sneak. it was really a -- you know it was really something that they didn't want publicized as i understand. isn't that correct? i think it's so terrible. so horrible. i think it's the biggest story -- one of the big stories of this week of this month of this year. i've been talking about the rigged system, how it's rigged and this is terrible. >> there's your example. >> you can understand why nothing has happened and you see a thing like this and even in terms of judgment, how bad a judgment is it for him or for her to do this? who would do this? it's a massive story now, it's all over. >> well, kristen welker, as a white house correspondent, you know how this kind of thing can happen. it does i guess fuel the spearsy theorists and shows it wasn't
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smart of either of them to have had a private meeting. >> there's no doubt the optics aren't great. i was speaking with an official moments ago who stressed the fact this wasn't set up. part of what you're hearing from republicans is that this was in some way arranged beforehand. it wasn't. as you pointed out, they happened to be at the same tarmac at the same time. it's protocol for former president clinton to greet someone like this, they talked about grand kids, that's what we're hearing from the clinton side but the optics aren't great, the fbi investigation obviously getting a lot of attention right now. secretary clinton having to answer a lot of questions about that on the campaign trail and even a democratic senator said this doesn't look right. so it's a problem of optics. now secretary clinton is off the campaign trail today but there's no doubt donald trump and the republicans will try to keep the story alive. >> thanks so much to kristen welker. hallie jackson, you'll have an interesting day up there.
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we all wish we were in new hampshire where it started so many months ago. coming up next major developments in the coalition's fight against isis in iraq. that's next right here on andrea mitchell reports on msnbc. now you can't spell nutriam i right?t nut, i mean whose to say it's pronounced nu-triton, anyway? my mixes contain delicious nuts, specially blended for your optimal nut-rition. that's right, i just changed a word in the english dictionary, forever. planters. nutrition starts with nut.
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breaking news, major developments in the iraqi coalition fight to retake fallujah. nbc news reports coalition air strikes destroyed nearly 200 vehicles believed to be carrying isis fighters who were trying to flee west to safety. a spokesman for joint operation command tells nbc news all of the militants traveling in that convoy were killed joichk me on the combined joint task force is colonel chris carver. thank you very much. what can you tell us.
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these are suspected militants, these trucks traveling out of fallujah looking as though they're trying to escape west. does it seem to be a significant air strike? >> thank you for having me, andr andrea we've been watching these trucks. we watched them with intelligence and iraqis were watching them as well and as they gathered into these big convoys to try to escape, one convoy got into a fire fight with the iraqis. the air force came in and hit it and coalition air came in afterwards. we had multiple types of aircraft striking these targets over source so we the coalition know we destroyed 55 vehicles south of fallujah and east of ramadi we know we killed 120 vehicles, including three vehicle born ieds, the truck bombs they use to attack iraqi security forces.
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>> have you been able to do an assessment on the ground to make sure these were indeed isis convoy and not civilians? >> well, we watched with our intelligence platforms for a long time to make sure that those indeed were isis fighters. in fact, there was one portion of convoy that we were concerned that that there may be families involved and we didn't strike that portion of the convoy. we isolated that and shot at the vehicles where people had weapons, you could see military age males farmed in uniforms with weapons so we watched carefully to do that and the iraqis have been involved? the ground fight against these forces as well. to the fight outside of ramadi the soldiers got -- the isil fighters got out of their vehicles and ran away so we were destroying vehicles just parked on the road. it was a significant strike
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against them for their mobility and now iraqi security forces will hunt those isil fighters down across the desert. >> there was one report from an ngo, a non-governmental organization, preemptive love. that coalition says their team was caught in this air strike. do you know anything about that? >> yes and i have communicated with the director of that organization. he had a team that was out and it got close to where the isil convoy got in the fire fight with the iraqi security forces. the air strikes the coalition was bringing in were not near where this team was. but at night if you're an ngo worker trying to provide aid to the iraqi citizens and there are explosions going off and you hear aircraft you may not know where the strikes were coming in. but our strikes didn't come near where his team was and the most important thing is those individuals were policed up by anbari tribal fighters and no one was hurt from that group.
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that's a good thing. >> colonel to what extent is fallujah under iraqi, coalition control at this stage? >> well, the iraqis are firmly in control of the city of fallujah itself there's still fighting to the south of fallujah. they're fighting isil fighters in that area but the city itself is under control and we've started to bring in what we call the hold force which will be the police and local tribal fighters who help security fallujah so if isis tries to come back the city will be defended and the iraqi army will move to its next target which as everyone knows is mosul. >> thank you so much, stay safe, thanks to the report from the field. >> thank you, andrea. >> coming up, the moon shot. vice president joe biden opening up about his son's battle with cancer. more of tom brokaw's exclusive interview with the vice president coming up next on andrea mitchell reports. after a long day,
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>> i firmly believe we can do in the next five years what will ordinarily take 10. think of what that will mean. think of how many people you know who are saying, you doc who are saying doc, i want to make it one more month to see my daughter get married. >> vice president joe biden at his cancer moon shot event thinking about the efforts to break down barriers that slow research development and limit access to care. the vice president spoke exclusively and candidly with tom brokaw who is thankfully in remission after two years of treatment for multiple myeloma. 40 years after the u.s. first declared a campaign to cure cancer they hoped within a decade. >> everybody is calling this a moon shot but a moon shot means it's a singular effort.
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i think as you're discovering as you did wibaux, it's a moment. >> this is a moment. >> it could a b a unifier at a time when the country needs unifying. >> i hope so. >> what my family learned is we were always sympathetic to people who had cancer but we couldn't be empathetic until it invaded our family. i know you went through the same thing with beau. >> there's nothing worse than a spouse of child or parent being helpless and being able to deal with whatever that problem is.
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i often say there's a difference between understanding and empathy and it's hard to -- and people mean well. i don't know how many people say "tom, i know what you're going through. >> how are you doing? >> how are you doing. after a while you feel like saying you have no idea what i'm going through. i know you're trying to be nice. but unfortunately there's probably more people who when they say "i know what you're going through" in cancer mean it. >> but there's a lot to be said about what it made you able to do given your position and personality for others who were going through this because it was added incentive, however painful it was, and it was terrible painful. >> reality has a different way of intruding but when it intruded with you you had a value set, a family, you had
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something there the people i feel so badly for are the people who get confronted with this and don't have real support. they're just putting one foot in front of the other and nobody to turn to. . i think about them all the time. as we stand here, 1600 people are dying in america today. >> right now. >> and the projections are that if we don't get a handle on this we're talking about going to 12 million people this is a position where they contracted cancer. we're going to stop it. we're going to change it. i really believe it. i really, really believe. >> it joe biden and tom brokaw at memorial sloan sketerring last week in advance of the cancer moon shot events. tom said today on mo"morning jo that he has interviewed joe biden 2340r years and when he watched that tape today he realized he has as he knows well
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and talks about lost two inches in height because of the multiple myeloma but is still fighting strength and still everyday om a different location is shooting his stories as special correspondent for nbc news. up next, no holds barred. the president unloads on donald trump, that's next on msnbc.
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>> i cannot support him after what he said about the judge. that was too racist for me. >> do you hope other members of your party do what you're doing now. >> i do. i think we should send a strong message to donald that racism and bigotry are not going to be tolerated in the party of lincoln. >> critic have come out and said this is a political move by you.
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>> r. >> i think i've made myself clear, setting aside whatever the candidates are saying that america is a nation of immigrants. that's our strength. let's just be clear that somebody who labels us versus them engages in rhetoric about how we're going to look after
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ourselves and take it to the other guy that's not the definition of populism. president obama was hitting back at donald trump's divisive rhetoric, in their view, and disputing the idea that trump is a real populist. joining me now for our daily fix, chris sill liz a and sam stein. chris, it's working for him, though, is it not? this is his calling card. >> i mean, it -- let's say this. it has worked. that much we know. it quite clearly -- his appeal to be the anti-elites candidate, the guy telling it like it is, the guy not afraid of being politically incorrect that worked in the primary. there's no question that was at the heart of his appeal. i think it's an open question whether it might work in a general election with early results trending toward it's
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not. just a different electorate, andrea. the republican primary electorate in retrospect was prime for a message like this. tough on the military, tough on immigration, touting himself as a conservative. the general electorate that message isn't as naturally ready to sell. >> and while this is happening, people are beginning to dig more deeply into donald trump's promises. the winnipesaukee review of the millions he has promised to charity and they found less than $10,000 over seven years, sam that's heartily what far more modest incomed people would be given to charity. >> that was an incredible bit of reporting by the "post." it's not just charitable giving. even the trade stuff, the fact that he manufactures his ties and shirts overseas in china has
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complicated the message. but the bio graphical details are distractions but if you think about it, the if you step back. the platform he's running on as a populist is premised solely on being against free trade deals. it doesn't include stuff liked a justing the tax code to help people at lower brackets, doesn't include the raising of the federal minimum wage, things that complement a traditional populist platform are absent from trumps. and that is also problematic in addition to the biographical stuff and inflammatory rhetoric. >> also i also wanted to play the radio interview with mike gallagher. this is trump on elizabeth elizabeth warren. >> she's a total do-nothing. she hasn't done anything. she talks a good game and she used her native american -- so-called phony native american status to get into institutions and to help her career and and i
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always say i have more native american blood in me than she does and i bet you do, too >> [laughter]. probably so. >> it's a total ruse. and she kept native americans out of the colleges and places that she -- >> legitimate native americans who couldn't get a job because she had the position. that's amazing. >> she kept somebody out but she claimed she was native american and had she not have been she would haven't gotten into those institutions. >> there's a lot to unpack there, chris cillizza, first of all, she was a credentialed person applying for a faculty position at harvard. who knows why she got accepted or who else might have been applying but -- >> that's right. >> he has been going after one by one anybody who seems to be on the list of people that hillary clinton is vetting for vice president so you can see this is going to be attack and counterattack. >> you never know with trump whether this is a strategy or something he does but if it is a strategy it's a good one in that
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what does trump need to do before anything else? he needs to find a way to as much as he can unite the republican party behind him. that's not going to be everybody. what's your best path to doing that? attack the other guys who you know your party doesn't like. hillary clinton, elizabeth warren, those are right at the top of the list and so, again, if it's a strategy, i actually think it's probably smart and he should keep doing in the the runup to the republican convention next month. >> and we have this from mitt romney at the aspen ideas festival. sam stein, i want you to listen to this. mitt romney talking about woulda coulda shouldas. >> my wife and kids wanted me to run again this time, interestingly enough. i gotten a e-mail from one of my son's yesterday saying "you've got to get in, dad. you've got to get in." which is kind of a strange thing to me that -- because running
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for president is a great and thrill i thrilling experience if you do it yourself. >> sam, it's not going to happen but it's interesting that they're still talking about it within the family. >> it always seems like a great idea until you do it and i don't think that -- you know, mitt romney is obviously coming off as a statesman right now but that's in the context of this current campaign. if he were to jump into the campaign itself, you wonder how his image would be tarnished by it. certainly donald trump is not going to let him have a free ride. if anything he'd treat him like he treated jeb bush during the primary. so there's reasons why mitt is staying on the sidelines. i would just want to go back very quickly to the elizabeth warren stuff because i think it says a lot about trump's weaknesses as a candidate, in fact. i don't see how this actually helps him. it makes him seem petty. makes him seem like he can't handle criticism and in the broad strokes he's attacking a surrogate, not even a vice
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presidential candidate. which is sort of against the cardinal rule of campaigns. you never want to hit down. so i think he's wasting his time on it and he should be focusing his attention on his opponent, who is hillary clinton. >> and just for fun before i let you guys go, we wanted to show you yet another awkward hand shake. i don't know why these leaders can't figure out -- that was ottawa. >> it's tough! >> you think when you're commander-in-chief. this was the most walk ward embrace. but there have been -- they can't seem to get it right. >> it's the three-person hand shake. >> and i would say -- i spent most of my college years thinking someone was waving to me when they were waving to the person behind me so i'm not ready to condemn anyone for awkward hand motions. >> without any hand motions, sending big hugs to both of you, thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. >> coming up, another big surprise in the brexit aftermath. more on that next on msnbc.
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. boris johnson, a presumed run front-runner to replace david cameron has dropped out of the race. >> i must tell you my friends, you who have waited faithfully for the punch line of this speech that having consulted colleagues and in view of the circumstances in n parliament i have concluded that person cannot be me. >> joining me to talk about what's next, dan balz is just back if lon donald. he was supposedly going to it can be tory leader because of his celebrity coming out of that
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brexit vote and now what? we what do we know about why he is not going to run for the office and stay as a member of the parliament. >> this is a little bit like shakespeare meeting "house of cards" the amount of treachery and deceit over the last few days over this leadership. the conservative party, it's astonishing. this topped it all when boris johnson announced right at the moment when he was supposed to get in that he wasn't going to. a couple things happened. one is that michael gove, who was an ally in the leave campaign with him and had been expected to be kind of his campaign manager or certainly his strongest ally surprised everybody today and said he was going to stand for leader of the party and that split the leave portion of the conservative party and johnson decided at that moment not to get in. that leaves it at this point as a fight between gove and theresa may, the home secretary and she
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was in favor of staying in the european union but in some ways i think he now emerges as the front-runner but this is a terribly, terribly, terribly messy situation that they've gotten themselves into and the recriminations since johnson made his announcement have been unbelievable in what's going on within the party there. >> can i say we've spent two years trying to come up with our nominees. they've done it in 48 hours and this is it. those who have not yet announced won't be in the race so it's interesting how quickly the britts brith -- brits do all of this. this is david cameron, i think he's a little unleashed now going after the labor leader who has been disavowed by the labor troops but is still hanging in. this is cameron blasting corbin on the house. >> we all have to reflect on our role in the referendum campaign.
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i know the honorable gentleman said he'd put his back into it. i'd hate to see what happens when he's not trying. it might be in my party's interest for him to sit there. it's not the national interest and i would say for heaven's sake, man, go. >> >> wouldn't you love to have somebody in american politics just say "for heaven's sakes, man, go." >> it hasn't come to that here but within the republican party there are a number of people who would like to see donald trump go but donald trump is standing strong. but this is one more extraordinary moment. jeremy corbyn, the leader of the labour party is under attack from his parliamentary colleagues but continues to say i'm going stay where i am and stand firm. so both parties are just in terrible turmoil. >> and of course there's no redo on the vote. thanks for being with us today as you arrive safely home. coming up, the cia director
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trolling for a gig with can't blame you. it's a drone you control with your brain, which controls your thumbs, which control this joystick. no, i'm actually over at the ge booth. we're creating the operating system for industry. it's called predix. it's gonna change the way the world works. ok, i'm telling my brain to tell the drone to get you a copy of my resume. umm, maybe keep your hands on the controller. look out!! ohhhhhhhhhh... you know what, i'm just gonna email it to you. yeah that's probably safer. ok, cool.
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it would be surprising to me that ie similar is not trying to hit us both in the region as well as in our homeland. if anybody here believes that the u.s. homoland is is hermetically sealed and that daesh or isil would not consider that i think i would guard against that. >> cia director john brennan in an interview with pbs hour in anchor judy woodruff at the council on foreign relations warning isis could attack us here in the u.s. joining me now is malcolm nantz. thanks for being with us. what john bren nonsaid seems self-evidence but it's
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surprising and shocking to a lot of people that, yes, they could come here. we only have an ocean between us and hem. >> it's a little surprising that most people have sort of forgotten the lessons of september 11, 2001. we have been in a war with terrorism certainly before that date but clearly throughout the entire iraq war, afghanistan, the american public needs to understand that they are not immune to individuals who are self-radicalized and who may carry out a terrorist operation. we have been much better against groups that are organized, that have been infiltrated to come into the united states, isis aspires to do that. our law enforcement intelligence agencies have managed to stop that, you can't stop what's in a person's those go buy a gun and carry out the attack. >> we here in the middle of a political campaign where facts don't seem to be observed very closely.
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we know what donald trump has been saying, talking about i'll fight fire with fire. they can chop off heads, why aren't we using watt wither boarding? this is what john mccain had to say about that. >> according to the geneva conventions, it's a war crime. but perhaps more importantly than that if you're not into academics and history is it doesn't work. in summary, it's not the united states of america, it's not what we are all about. it's not what we are. it's not about them. it's about us. >> that's john mccain saying first it's illegally, secondly it doesn't work and third it's against american values. your comments as a professional on this issue. >> i absolutely agree with john mccain. i thought at the school that had the only authorized waterboard in the department of defense in mccain boulevard in coronado, california, which was named after him, his father and grandfather, all great naval
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aviators. john mccain went through torture in the hanoi hilton. he knows torture. it does not work. we teach thousands of people every year it does not work. it is just sadism that is satisfied that people who think it works, this is not an american value. we are not just having a debate about torture and what satisfies us. this is an honor crisis we're going through, when a presidential candidate believes george washington's own standing orders about the ethical treatment of prisoners is going to be violated we will throw away 240 years of our values. no one in the military, no one in government should ever believe that and if they do believe it they need go out and read some books. . i don't think i can add anything to that, michael nance, thanks for being with us. more here on msnbc. stay with us. getting faster. huh?
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don't call it a comeback. michael phelps does it again, breaking another record as he becomes the first male swimmer to qualify for five straight olympics. at last night's trials in omaha, he won the 200 meter butterfly event, sending them to rio. the baltimore native has two more events as he looks to add to his 22 olympic medals. that was 22, 18 of them gold. that does it for us for this edition of "andrea mitchell reports." peter alexander picks it up next here on msnbc. good afternoon, i'm peter alexander here in washington, d.c. right now on msnbc live, a false alarm in joint base andrews near washington highlighting the tension over terror heading into this fourth of july week end. >> we do have, as reflected on the news, an unfolding situation at andrews air base which may require that i take a break from
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this session. >> homeland security secretary jeh johnson responding to this morning's temporary lockdown at the military base used by president of the u.s. and so many american troops headed overseas and returning home. the u.s. on alert after the attack on turkey's airport. turkish media is reporting closed-circuit tv images purportly of the terrorists. there they are on your screen. nbc news not yet verifying these images. the death toll has risen to 44. secretary johnson saying among the 250 injured was one american who suffered only minor injuries. the nationalities of the three attackers are russian, uzbek and kyrgyz. turkish authorities arresting 22 people in isis-related raids, 13 in istanbul. we have reports from istanbul from new york a

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