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tv   Jose Diaz- Balart Reports  MSNBC  September 19, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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pointed to what they describe as a massive amount of evidence including text messages read in court from women accusing combs of physical and sexual violence that went on for decades and vast efforts to cover it up. adding witnesses universally share an extreme fear of the defendant. ana, there is going to be a hearing coming up in just a couple of weeks, but again, this is something that can continue to appeal, when it game to gill lane maxwell, she continued to appeal her bond but obviously she wasn't successful. this is now the second federal judge that says that combs is a threat to society and should remain behind bars as to not tamper with witnesses. thank you. that does it for us today, i'll be back at 3:00 p.m. eastern, for katy tur reporting in washington. jose diaz-balart picks up the coverage. good morning, 8:00 a.m.
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pacific, israeli forces say its military forces are carrying out new strikes against targets in southern lebanon. it follows two straight days of surprise explosions of pagers and walkty talkies targeting members of the iran-backed militia hezbollah. lebanese health officials say 37 people were killed and nearly 3,000 were injured. just the last hour, the head of hezbollah accused israel of violating a red line and explosive devices could be a declaration of war. joining us, raf sanchez and four-star jienl and marc polymeropoulos for the cia and security intelligence analyst, raf, what can you tell us what's going on right now? >> jose, the israeli military
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has announced thousands of strikes in southern lebanon since this war broke out, but the strike they announced earlier this morning is different. rather than saying they are targeting a specific hezbollah operative or responding to a specific rocket they announced what sounds like a broad effort to, in their words, degrade hezbollah's capability and infrastructure in southern lebanon. now, this comes not only after that wave of explosions ripping through lebanon with these walk walky-talkies and pagers explodes but also after israel's defense minister announced what they called a new phase of the war. he said hezbollah is shifting troops and equipment from the fighting against hamas in gaza. to the lebanese border to the confrontation with hezbollah. and israeli officials tells me the strikes which we believe are going on right now are being
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carried out with air strikes and with artillery, but israeli forces have not crossed the border into southern lebanon. so, we don't at this point know exactly the scale of these attacks. we don't really know the substance of what is going on in southern lebanon. we do, jose, know the symbolism, the israeli military announced this attack just six minutes before the head of hezbollah was due to begin speaking for the first time since those pagers and walkie-talkies caused massive injuies and some deaths among this membership. in that speech, as you said, he believes israel has crossed all red lines and he is vowing retaliation, jose. >> general, what do you think israel is doing here? >> they've got to go to war to return civilian population to the northern part of israel on the border of lebanon. by now, they're moving up their
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famous 98th division commando forces airbourne units. they're preparing for, if not a ground invasion, but they're saying there are artillery and air strikes which are ongoing and significant. i think the biggest deal, though, jose, was probably 3,000-plus wounded and as many as 37 killed already in these devastating detonations of pagers and walkie-talkies, all throughout the hezbollah leadership. i'm sort of sorry the israelis did it now. it's provocative, it's humiliating to hezbollah. i don't see how they cannot respond. and the israelis would have been better served, one would assume, to save that as a surprise blow, in the event of total ground war. but i think -- >> general -- sorry about that, sir. i'm just wondering is it because maybe they felt this was a time
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they needed to do it? because some circumstance arose that maybe was going to -- you know, cause this whole operation to be found? >> well, marc may have some better informed judgments. there's a lot of speculation, certainly, on the internet. but they were fearful hezbollah would figure out that he's telephones and walkie-talkies and others have been booby-trapped. but there it was some tactical movement no question. and their entire control system, they're going to have to restab with either runners or land line telephones. it was quite the act by the israelis. but i think also, jose, the israeli people feel this looming threat from the north. 100,000 fighters. 150,000 potential rockets. and i think they're inching
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towards saying we've got to go to war to fix this. when they did it in 2006, it didn't work too good. the israelis had a lot of problems and there was sort of a draw at the end of that battle. >> yeah, so, marc, let's talk about that. we've seen two days of what appears to be clandestine operations followed by strikes today. what do you make of what israel has done? and again, israel hasn't said they're behind the walkie-talkie and pager attacks, but all indications are it probably it behind that, how do you see that? >> well, so, look, the two days, 48 hours of the attacks, pagers with the walkie-talkies, that's the most impressive kinetic operations i've ever seen. hezbollah is showing total dominance in the intelligence scheme. this is phase two, air strikes
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in southern lebanon and restricted to southern lebanon and you have israeli jets flying over as we're speaking. these are a psychological war. they're sending a signal that you don't want a wider war. i've spent enough time in the region. it's something to escalate to de-escalate. they're giving hezbollah a chance to stand down but as general mccaffrey noted, 70,000 people can't go back to their homes, ultimately, this is part of the overall strategy. >> so, marc, let's talk about that strategy. because why would they have decided to carry out these two days now, do you think? >> so, great question. there has been a lot of speculation that of course, that the operation may have been compromised, that they would have moved this up. i do think this is something to the notion that this is giving
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hezbollah a chance to come down before any all-out war breaks out. you know, the israelis do move deliberately. i've seen their decisionmaking processes. so in some sense, they send a message that every member of the hezbollah's head is on a swivel. there's nothing, with communication in the structure, it's been destroyed as the general noted there are perhaps thousands of hezbollah members incapacitated. so it makes sense tactically and strategically. this was designed for kind of the day of invasion. so, look, policymakers have tools in their toolkit. they decided to use this now. it was a tool but as we see, they're using this to climb this escalation ladder. that's what we see as events go day do day. >> marc, from hezbollah's perspective.
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they said no cell phones because they're probably going compromised. how do they communicate going forward? >> well, this is why it's so effective. there's memes all over the social media, hezbollah members, not really, but carrying carrier pigeons. communications is so integral to hezbollah's day-to-day activity. they will go to things such as couriers. this is going to really old school techniques but hand it to the israelis. he be, hezbollah was using cell phones and then worried that israeli apparatus could intercept it. then went to the pagers and ran the supply chain operation with them. they're pushing them to
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discomfort. it's obviously been effective. >> raf, how does today's operation compare to previous strikes carried out in lebanon? >> jose, we've seen israel carrying out strikes in lebanon and other parts of the country since october 8, when hezbollah effectively joins the fight against hamas and began firing into northern israel in the days after the october 7th terror attack. israel has been focusing its fight in gaza. but at this point, it's not clear, militarily, really, how much more there is to be achieved. israel claims that it has destroyed all of hamas' organized units in gaza. so, it is effectively fight an insurgency, a guerilla force that pops up, disappears again. and at this point it isn't clear that keeping lots and lots of israeli forces inside of gaza is leading much in the way of marginal gains. the defense minister seems confident enough to release some
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of those units, including the nameth division that the general mentioned allowing it to go to the border. the question is that a symbol, designed to put pressure on hezbollah? or is the idea that those forces are there to fight. and, remember, jose, from israel's perspective, the overall official war aim is to create the security conditions so that tens of thousands of israeli civilians who have been displaced from their homes along the lebanon border feel secure enough to return. now, it may be that if there was a cease-fire and the shooting stopped, that many of them would go back. but many of those israeli families have told us october 7th completely changes their perception of risk. even if the shooting stops, they will not feel safe in their homes, knowing that hezbollah fighters are just a few hundred yards away on the other side of the border. and they are demanding that their government find a way to move hezbollah away from that borderline through force or
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diplomatic deal. the u.s. has been trying month after month, not only to get a cease-fire in gaza, but to try to get to some sort of agreement between hezbollah and israel. neither of those diplomatic efforts seem to be bearing any fruit at the moment. and you're seeing israeli forces massing on their border and the question is it's only a matter of time before all-out war. >> general, looking at a crystal ball, of military experience, the one you that have, what are we in right now? and what are you seeing the possibilities of what we could be reporting on tomorrow and the next week? >> well, clearly, a war makes no sense, to israel, to hezbollah, nor iran. i think the "x" factor is going to be, if we take the next step, we, meaning the id f, and hezbollah starts using ballistic missiles against israeli cities,
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iron dome and their air fenc des will not be sufficient to protect israeli life. at that point, the israelis have to go in, on the ground, not with commando forces and air strikes, but by calling up several hundred thousand reservists and trying to knock hezbollah out of the fight. they will not be able to tolerate a continuing months' long rocket and ballistic missile attack on israeli cities. so, we're one step short of, you know, 1914, and the start of the regional conflict of tremendous bitterness. i hope that doesn't happen. >> raf sanchez, general barry mccaffrey and marc polymeropoulos, thank you for being with us. kamala harris is bringing on major star power. and later, the fed cuts interest rates by a half percentage point.
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so what's next for the economy? we're back in 90 seconds. you're watching "jose diaz-balart reports" on msnbc. ♪ trains that use the power of dell ai and intel. ♪ to see hundreds of miles of tracks. ♪ [vroom] [train horn] [buzz] clearing the way, [whoosh] so you arrive exactly where you belong. what the biggest companies deliver is exceptional customer experience. what makes it possible is unmatched connectivity and 5g solutions from t-mobile for business. t-mobile connects 100,000 delta airlines employees. powers tractor supply stores nationwide with reliable 5g business internet. and helps red bull revolutionize coverage of live events. this is how business goes further with t-mobile for business.
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51st really. former president trump will meet with jewish supporters in d.c. it comes after a held a rally in new york, where he had this message for the harris campaign. >> stop claiming your opponents will turn america into a dictatorship. give me a break. because the fact is that i'm not a threat to democracy, they are. >> and while new polling shows this is still a deeply competitive race, vice president harris is gaining ground in key battleground states. michigan and pennsylvania. a race is locked in a dead heat in wisconsin where absentee ballots are going out to voters beginning today. joining us, vaughn hill yard, amy pan at the hill, seth mayer and communications director on chill and adam jenkerson.
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trump hosted a rally in long island, new york. not exactly a toss-up state. what was that like? what was the move? >> right, jose, it was inside of an arena. and he used new york to call for the backdrop for reinstatement of local and state taxes from one's federal tax returns. this was part of his 2017 tax package that he rolled back those varied deductions in the first place. but new york also for him is sort of this place where he votes or the states that he believes he's able to win this november. lee zeldin was the republican candidate for governor against democratic candidate kathy hochul back in 2022. he lost by five percentage point. donald trump ever since he was there for the trial earlier this year has continued to hold new york as the potential battleground state he can win. he also claims he would win the state of california if it were not for voter fraud and election
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interference. all of this is coming under the framework of a mounting number of claims that donald trump is making that he makes the sense amounts to election interference on the part of the harris campaign that otherwise would lead him to have an election win. like we haven't seen in decades. >> and, amy, meanwhile, here's what donald trump said about president biden and vice president harris, last night on fox news. listen to this. >> he got out. and they put her in. and she somehow -- a woman, somehow, she's doing better than he did. >> yeah. >> but i can't imagine it can last. >> amy, what's he saying there? >> i -- i don't know. but the thing is, jose, he really desperately needs women at this point. and when you couple together what his running mate said about women. he's highlighting women. you had the former white house
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press secretary talking about women. and, you know, how they don't have -- i forgot how she put it, but attacking women and saying that there's no purpose in single women. this is not helping him. i mean, he -- his operation right now needs to stay on message in the final days. they need to talk about the issues. and to stay away from these cultural war issues. and for whatever reason they're not getting that. and that is frustrating a lot of republicans that i'm talking to. >> yeah, like new polling from howard university shows, meanwhile, the black voters in swing states support harris over trump 82 to 12. is this something trump could change? >> well, you know, the republicans have always had a disadvantage when it comes to black voters. however, the harris campaign cannot take it for granted that black voters are just going to vote for her in margins that at
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80%. she's got to be in the 90s. black women have overwhelmingly supported the democratic candidate, they're plus 90%. but there is an issue here with black men, particularly in places like georgia. the "atlanta-journal constitution" poll came out today that showed something similar where her support is under 90% in the black community. that's something that they have to shore up which is why she spoke to the national association of black journalists this week. but the women issue is an even bigger one, more so for the trump campaign, considering that new polls show that donald trump is down 21 points with women. so kamala harris is a plus 21 gender gap with women. which is the largest gap since clinton and dole in the '90s. and this type of rhetoric saying somehow, she's a women, all of the attacks on women, it's clear they have given up the strategy of trying to bring more women into the tent on the trump side. they're going for this male
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misogynistic vote. you know, these -- the joel rogan type of voters. i just don't know if there are enough of them, particularly in the swing states and the suburbs of the swing states which are must-win states for kamala and for trump like pennsylvania. so, that's really where the focus is going to be. and the polling is starting to show that. >> do you think they've given up? or they simply aren't able to stay on any other message? >> well, i mean, obviously, the campaign strategists for trump would like him to stop this. and for jd vance to stop this. but they don't have control, because donald trump and jd vance cannot help themselves. they continue to insult women. every demographic of women pretty much, every week, it's something different. so, in my opinion, it's looks to me as though they are honestly not trying as candidates to try to attract more women. with the comments that they're
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making and the attack they're making. there's a green light to continue to insult women. somehow, they think this is a winning strategy. i'm not quite sure what makes them think that. but you can see the gender gap. it's not working for them. >> and, adam, meanwhile, the teamsters union declined to endorse any presidential candidate this time around. something it hasn't done since 1996. what's the impact of this? >> i think the impact is not that great. i think endorsements are generally rated in terms of their actual impact. i think what you're seeing there's become an increasingly large divide between leadership and the leadership of unions. that's something that we're facing than the impact of endorsement. i think the fact that it's extremely close in the blue wall states of michigan, wisconsin and pennsylvania is a reflection
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of reality. a lot of union who reliaby used to vote democratic, are shifting due to the issues becoming more prevalent over the last years. the lack of endorsement is less of an impact itself than reflection of reality. taking that into account, you see with the polls, kamala harris is still ahead or at least tied in these states and very much in the game. i think at this point you'd probably rather be heard than former president trump. it's all the wait to election day because that is the state of the country right now. >> do you think, adam, that shift in the rank and file and some unions is because of cultural war issues? >> i think that's predominantly it. i think the teamsters are a great example, because if they were voting along economic lines, democrats bailed out hundreds of thousands of teamsters' pension funds in the
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american rescue plan passed under joe biden and vice president kamala harris. if it were economic issues driving this shift it would go towards democrats. it's something that's tricky to deal with. it's something that a lot of political scientists, election operatives have looked how do we get them back home firmly and no one has come up with a solution because economically, it still remains in the interest of these working class folks to vote democratic but that doesn't seem to be the exclusive thing driving their voting decisions and often not the primary thing driving their voting decisions. >> and, vaughn, meanwhile on wednesday, the former president said he plans to visit springfield, ohio, that's the place where he made the false claims about migrants eating people's pets there. what's the thinking on this? >> right. so far, it's not will be formally announced he's going to springfield, ohio. we often hear donald trump suggest he's going to do
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something he doesn't actually doing. the way that he framed what springfield, ohio, visit would look like for him. take a listen. >> they've got to get much tougher. i'm going to go there in the next two weeks. i'm going to springfield. and i'm going to aurora. you may never see me again, but that's okay. got to do what i got to do. whatever happened to trump? well, he never got out of springfield. >> well, he never got out of springfield. i'll let everybody else fill in the blank on exactly what the former president means by that. but for donald trump, these next days are crucial for him on the campaign trail. and this is part of -- they call this a closing message here because, frankly, a great number of states have early ballots sent out to them this week. voters in wisconsin, today is the day that wisconsin local election officials are sending mail ballots out. begins to. so for donald trump, this is a calculation based off of his own strategy what he thinks is the
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most politically beneficial to him. and as you just heard, he believes potentially going to springfield, ohio, could be that. >> vaughn hillyard, amy parnes, tara setmayer, adam, thank you. we'll talk to the senator martin heinrich, the chair of the committee for what he calls a win for families. plus, we'll talk to a hostage released by hamas in november. and whose subject is still being held. we have been able to. me, lower back pain, and shortness of breath, i thought that's what getting older felt like. thank goodness... ...i called my cardiologist. i have attr-cm, a rare but serious disease... ...and getting diagnosed early... ...made a difference. if you have any of these warning signs, don't wait, ask your cardiologist about attr-cm today. (♪♪)
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30 past the hour. later today, we're going to be hearing from president biden about the state of the economy and what it means for americans. his speech came one day after the federal reserve cut its key interest rate by half a percentage point. also hinted to more rate cuts to come after aggressively raising rates to fight inflation. the move will affect credit cards and mortgage rates and savings accounts. the markets are reacting positively. as you see, about a 400-point up today, with dow jones. nbc news business correspondent, christine romans joins us. what did the federal reserve decide to go as far as it did? >> the fed chief, frankly, the
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sheet is going in the right direction and a strong jobs market that might weaken even further. there's forecasting that the unemployment rate will rise in the weeks and months ahead. they just don't want it out of control. so that's why they had such a big cut. >> when will we all feel the impact of this rate cut? >> you're feeling it right now if you're an investor. clearly, wall street like this. mortgage rates are declining in's of this rate cut. we know there will be more rate cuts ahead. the fed chief essentially said so yesterday. a lot of people looking at potentially what that means for potentially refinancing a mortgage. and we will see lower interest rates. he we had seen interest rates near 20-year highs and all of that consumer borrowing. this has been a pain point for the american household. overnight, you'll see the rates decline. it won't happen overnight, especially for car rates and credit card loans, but eventually lower.
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>> national association of realtors said sales of existing homes fell 5.2% in august. what does that tell us about the state of the housing market? >> record-high housing prices in all four of the regions that that survey takes a look at. so you're seeing a decline. bigger than expected decline in home sales. people just aren't buying homes. because there aren't a lot of homes for sale. and record highs there. it will be interesting to see if lower mortgage rates will h shake up a housing market that has been really, really stuck with high prices, high mortgage rates and not a lot of supply. that's been another pain point for american families. >> christine romans, thank you very much. to finish our conversation, new mexico senator heinrich, he's the chair of the economic committee. thank you. you've been pushing for a rate cut. are you surprisinged that the fed went as far as it did yesterday? >> yeah, i think a lot of people
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were expecting a quarter-point cut. i think a half-point cut is a much stronger signal. and this is great news for consumers. i mean, this will ease the pain that we've been feeling from the interest rates we've been operating under for many months now. but it also helps the economy. because reducing these rates really does take some of the risk and the job market from high rates away. so, this is across the board very good news. >> yeah. and we're looking at this graphic, senator, i mean, from 2020, to 2022, ten-point -- you know, ten different times that the fed decides to raise the rate of interest. what do you want to see from the feds going forward? >> well, i want to see them do their job of both, you know, balancing the interest rates with the job market. and i think that's what we saw in this case. i wish they would have started this process three months ago. or six months ago. but i think it sends a very
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strong signal of the scale of the rate cut yesterday and the -- you know, the acknowledgement that there are additional cuts to come. so, for consumers, and that's kind of how i like to measure the economy, is the impacts on individual consumers, this is good news. >> yeah. and, you know, if we look at the impact, right, i mean, if you look at the trajectory, gas prices are heading down. food prices. >> yeah. >> are finally starting to head down. mortgage rates heading down. still very high. but things are heading down. however, a recent "the new york times"/siena college poll found 76% of americans rate the economy as either fair or poor. how do you explain that, senator? >> well, those consumers have been living in first a higher inflation environment, as a result of covid for several years. that translated then to a high interest rate environment.
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so they've been feeling the pinch for a number of years now. the good news is that both inflation and interest rates are headed down. so, i think we're headed towards, you know, a much stronger economy in the future. especially from the point of view of individual consumers. you know, the stock market is in a great place. and that's how a lot of my republican colleagues measure the economy. what i care about is interest rates. what i care about is inflation. and what i care about is job numbers. and so we're headed to a much better place from the perspective of individual consumers. >> and, you know, i am just wondering, do you see the main issue with inflation was because of covid? and is there any responsibility that you all in washington have to the increase in inflation? >> well, i think one of the things that we learned from the complete destruction of our supply chains is that we need to make things in america again.
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especially mission-critical items. so passing things like the chips in science act, that gives us the ability to make those chips in new mexico again and places around the country, that's one of the ways we insulate ourselves from the kind of supply chain disruption that raised inflation on every country on the globe. we've been able to manage it back down faster than any nation on the planet, out it still hurts. so there is more work to be done. >> and, senator, i know you also sit on the intel committee. just yesterday, you held a hearing on foreign election interference. the fbi said iran hacked into the trump campaign, stole material, and then sent it to journalists and even the biden/harris campaigns. so i'm just wondering so there's iran, china, russia, cuba, all trying to interfere in our elections. is there anything that can be done about this?
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>> well, i think the most important thing that can be done is what we did yesterday. we need to tell the story to the american public. campaigns on either side of the aisle need to know they're a target. we have these fake news sites popping up that purport to be "the washington post," or fox news or other american outlets that are not. and we need to tell that story. and work with the social media companies to take that content down. that is not free speech. when a foreign intelligence service puts things on the internet that are designed to impact our elections, they do enjoy first amendment protection. so getting the word out with the public is absolutely critical on this. so that they know when they're being manipulated. >> senator heinrich, i think you very much for being with us. appreciate it. >> my pressure. joining us next, the fredis really hostage who is still waiting for hamas to release her husband. we'll ask her what national security adviser jake sullivan
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told her when she met with him yesterday. plus, what's next for sean "diddy" combs after now being denied bail device after he is facing sex trafficking and many other charges. you're watching "jose diaz-balart reports" on msnbc. now available: boost max! ♪♪ missing out on the things you love because of asthma? get back to better breathing with fasenra, an add-on treatment for eosinophilic asthma that is taken once every 8 weeks. fasenra is not for sudden breathing problems or other eosinophilic conditions. allergic reactions may occur. don't stop your asthma treatments without talking with your doctor. tell your doctor if your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. step back out there with fasenra. ask your doctor if it's right for you. >> woman: why did we choose safelite? we're always working on a project. while loading up our suv, one extra push and... crack! so, we scheduled at safelite.com.
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just this morning, family members of american hostages held by hamas met with cia director bill burns at the agency's headquarters. this after white house security
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adviser jake sullivan met last night with some family members. right now the united states and egypt are working to free hostages. joining us, aviva siegel held by hamas 51 days whose husband keith is still being held hostage by hamas. keith was an american citizen. aviva, thank you for being with me this morning. what can you tell us about your meeting last night with jake sullivan? aviva, can you hear me? aviva, can you hear me? >> i can hear you. >> all right. aviva -- okay. let's do this. let's try to re-establish communication with aviva. and ask her if she would be so kind just to stand by for a
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looking good, guys! thanks! vacations are better with the credit gods are on your side. i'm coming up! rewards once available to the few are now accessible to the many. earn points for travel with credit one bank, and live large. a test or approve a medication. we didn't have to worry about any of those things thanks to the donations. and our family is forever grateful because it's completely changed our lives. 48 past the hour. we are back now with aviva siegel who was held by hamas for 51 day, and whose husband keith is still being held hostage. aviva, thank you so much for being with us this morning. i want to first ask you, how are you doing today? >> i want to thank you all for
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listening to me. it's not my first time being here. and i am just the saddest person you know. worried about keith all the time. that he's just lying on a dirty, filthy mattress underneath the ground, begging and crying and sad. and maybe thinks he's being forgotten. and it just breaks my heart. >> yeah. i'm just wondering those 51 days that you had to live that horrible ordeal, you know, what is it that we can do to maybe continue shining a light on what is happening to keith and so many others? hostages, one of them is hirsch, was killed in such a brutal way. they found them. he weighed 79 pounds. that's nothing for a grown-up.
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they were starved. they had infections. they were this a tunnel that was very, very -- they couldn't even stand because it was so small. i want to tell you i was in one just like that. i've been shouting for nearly ten months, coming back from the same conditions. i had an infection in my stomach. when i came out, i could not stand and walk. i had to lean on somebody. i was so weak. >> yeah. aviva, i know you get a lot of your strength from what you are doing now. i want to ask you about your meeting last night with white house national security advisor jake sullivan. what was that like? >> i've met sullivan many, many times. it just seems like that's what i feel that i've been telling these stories over and over, and everybody has heard that i went through hell, and everybody knows it, keith, my husband, 65
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years old is still going through hell with other seven americans that are still thrown in gaza. i beg every time i go, every time i see anybody that can help me, i beg and i tell my story. i want to ask don't let it just be words. it's more than words. it's something that i felt while i was there. it's something that the hostages are there. keith is crying. the video that came out in april, that he looks terrible. he looks like 20 years older than he is, thin. is begging and crying to get out of there. i'm sure that he is feeling that he is being forgotten. i want sullivan to understand that keith cannot stay there forever. he is in a place that's so dangerous. he could die any minute. the hamas terrorists, they are in charge of the conditions of
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the six that came out in terrible conditions. they had bruises all over. keith is still there in those same conditions. >> yeah. you know, you were released by hamas during a cease-fire. right? right now it seems as though any progress towards a new deal is still far away. what do you want to see happen? >> i just want keith back. i want him to come back. i'm sick and tired rying about keith. i know where he is. thrown on a mattress without any water, without any food. they didn't even let us stand and move our bodies when we needed to move. no bathroom. no water to wash our bodies. filthy, dirty, the hamas terrorists used to threaten us all the time that they're going
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to kill us. you get the feeling you are going to die every minute. >> what do you want keith to know? >> i want keith to know that the whole family, the whole family is doing everything they can. we're not politicians. we are just simple people that come from israel. we want him back. we want all the hostages back. i want keith to know that nobody has forgotten about him. united states hasn't forgotten about him. >> yeah. i know that you all met in 1980 when you were both volunteering in a kibbutz. how do you, aviva, process and explain to yourself these horrendous times that we are living in? specifically, your family and what you and keith and your
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family have to continue dealing with this. how do you go forward, aviva? >> i see keith in front of my eyes all the time. i'm still with him in gaza. and i'm still in gaza, because i was there going through so much torture, starvation. they hit me. they pushed me. they threatened me. that's what they're doing to keith and to the hostages there. what is keeping me going, i'm talking for them. i'm telling hirsch's story because he is not here to tell. i remember one time keith said to ask to remember everything we're going through, to come out and to tell the world how mean and brutal the terrorists are. so i'm talking for keith and for the people that were killed. >> yeah. aviva, i thank you very much for
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speaking about this and for keeping that hope alive and for doing everything that you are doing to try and get keith and the others out. i thank you for being with us this morning. >> i just want to say that before it's too late, we want keith coming home alive. we do not want keith coming home in a box. i'm sure all the families, that's the same. everybody, the families are doing everything they can. please, please, if anybody can help, we need help. thank you. >> thank you very much. that wraps up the hour for me. i'm jose diaz-balart. thank you for the privilege of your time. andrea mitchell picks up with more news after a short break. ♪♪ citi's industry leading global payments solutions help their clients move money around the world seamlessly in over 180 countries...
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