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Sep 21, 2011
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i want to bring in mohammed jamjoom. mohammed, can you hear me? mohammed jamjoom, can you hear me?tlanta. >> reporter: yes, brooke. we're here. we're behind the families of josh fattal and shane bauer. they're eagerly awaiting the door of this plane to open. right now we're seeing security men going up to the plane. everybody here, the mood, the anticipation very high. the family members, all the family members are waiting at the plane, waiting for the door to open, waiting to see josh fattal and shane bauer. brooke? >> mohammed, tell us what we can't see as we keep our eyes trained on this plane. around you do you see members of both of these families? who is there? >> reporter: we see brothers and sisters, we see sarah shourd is here and they're now actually approaching -- they're actually approaching the plane. the doors of the plane have been opened. we're behind the family members. they look like it's very emotional for them. all of them hugging each other, smiling. and now the doors of the plane are opening and they're waiting for the moment they've been waiting for for so lo
i want to bring in mohammed jamjoom. mohammed, can you hear me? mohammed jamjoom, can you hear me?tlanta. >> reporter: yes, brooke. we're here. we're behind the families of josh fattal and shane bauer. they're eagerly awaiting the door of this plane to open. right now we're seeing security men going up to the plane. everybody here, the mood, the anticipation very high. the family members, all the family members are waiting at the plane, waiting for the door to open, waiting to see josh...
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Sep 10, 2011
09/11
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that sun is khalid shaikh mohammed. and they ultimately he applies to school in north carolina and schumann university at the time. historically baptist school in north carolina. either the family has save some money or more likely the muslim brotherhood of kuwait has agreed to sponsor him. he joined the muslim brotherhood after two of his older brothers joined. so he arrived in america at roughly 18 years old and he is unprepared for what he sees. i interviewed the man who picked him up at the airport in virginia beach, and what he remembers years later, the memory he remembers his khalid shaikh mohammed being surprised by what he saw, surprised by the geography, the intense greenery. when you see trees in kuwait they're usually behind walls. here their trees everywhere. more surprising and more strange and more off-putting than the trees were the people and what they were doing. they were sitting in for lawn chairs on their front lawn visible from the road. they were growing out, playing with their kids, taking a hose
that sun is khalid shaikh mohammed. and they ultimately he applies to school in north carolina and schumann university at the time. historically baptist school in north carolina. either the family has save some money or more likely the muslim brotherhood of kuwait has agreed to sponsor him. he joined the muslim brotherhood after two of his older brothers joined. so he arrived in america at roughly 18 years old and he is unprepared for what he sees. i interviewed the man who picked him up at the...
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cross-talk yemen's limbo i'm joined by mohamed kobach in london he's a member and spokes person for the yemeni national council also in london we have john reed he is a national officer at stop the war coalition and in washington he crossed windass or david newton he's an adjunct scholar at the middle east institute all right gentlemen this is cross talk to me as you can jump in anytime you want but first i want to go to my show here why is yemen being treated differently would say from syria and libya that's right peter for months now the international community has watched another arab country descend into civil strife anti-government demonstrations a lemond began last january and a company of those in tunisia when three months later in may to start a bombing libya to protect civilians dozens were being killed in yemen and government car bombs and following more deaths in sana'a this week and two political rhetoric means no solution in sight we call on old to desist from the violence to come to that agreement for political transition in yemen. tens of thousands yemenis protesting agai
cross-talk yemen's limbo i'm joined by mohamed kobach in london he's a member and spokes person for the yemeni national council also in london we have john reed he is a national officer at stop the war coalition and in washington he crossed windass or david newton he's an adjunct scholar at the middle east institute all right gentlemen this is cross talk to me as you can jump in anytime you want but first i want to go to my show here why is yemen being treated differently would say from syria...
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Sep 27, 2011
09/11
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king mohammed reacted quickly. a few weeks after protests began, he announced reforms to limit his political powers. at the king's suggestion, andumo decide whether a new constitution should be introduced, strengthening civil and parliamentary rights. 98.5% of voters said yes. one change means the next prime minister will be chosen by the strongest party in parliament, not king mohammed. but the opposition says the changes do not go far enough. the king continues to control the army and domestic security, and the parliament still has only limited powers. >> the first major demonstration in morocco this year was on february 20. the main protest involvement has taken its name from the state. it has held weekly demonstrations to push for more change. thousands of people took to the streets in cities across morocco, demanding social justice and an end to corruption, one of the biggest protests in recent months. activists claim to live's referendum was not free and fair, pointing to figures that say an overwhelming majo
king mohammed reacted quickly. a few weeks after protests began, he announced reforms to limit his political powers. at the king's suggestion, andumo decide whether a new constitution should be introduced, strengthening civil and parliamentary rights. 98.5% of voters said yes. one change means the next prime minister will be chosen by the strongest party in parliament, not king mohammed. but the opposition says the changes do not go far enough. the king continues to control the army and...
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Sep 12, 2011
09/11
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mohamed, it's good to have you on the program. your time today. >> thank you. >> maria. >> we'll see you soon. mohamed el-erian joining us from pimco. >>> up next as "the wall street journal" and the world marks 2001, a look back at the men who ran theity and the exchange on 9/11. former mayor rudy giuliani and former chairman dick grasso joins me. >>> the local economy in this iconic part of new york.
mohamed, it's good to have you on the program. your time today. >> thank you. >> maria. >> we'll see you soon. mohamed el-erian joining us from pimco. >>> up next as "the wall street journal" and the world marks 2001, a look back at the men who ran theity and the exchange on 9/11. former mayor rudy giuliani and former chairman dick grasso joins me. >>> the local economy in this iconic part of new york.
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Sep 30, 2011
09/11
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he's mohamed el-erian, ceo of pimco, the world's largest bond fund. mohammed, nice to you have back. >> thank you, susie. >> susie: so let's talk a little bit about this fund. is it big enough to do its job to fix the european debt crisis? >> it's not big enough as yet. so europe is taking a two-step approach. number one, get all the parliaments to approve and number two, try to-- up the fund because you need a lot of money to stabilize sovereign debt and you need a lot of money to stabilize the banking system. so today was an important step, susie. but it's the first step in a pretty long journey sus now you have been critical about the way the policymakers have been handling the debt crisis, what should they be doing that they're not doing? >> two things. one is they should move quickly to stabilize the situation. and today's set is an important one. it's necessary but not sufficient so they got to get money into the system. and they've got to move quickly. second they've got to deal with greece in a more realistic fashion. no one believes that what
he's mohamed el-erian, ceo of pimco, the world's largest bond fund. mohammed, nice to you have back. >> thank you, susie. >> susie: so let's talk a little bit about this fund. is it big enough to do its job to fix the european debt crisis? >> it's not big enough as yet. so europe is taking a two-step approach. number one, get all the parliaments to approve and number two, try to-- up the fund because you need a lot of money to stabilize sovereign debt and you need a lot of...
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Sep 19, 2011
09/11
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years pass on an khalid sheikh mohammed is doing very well at school. he's a good student and a bookish boy. and the family decides they don't have any money at all but the need to back the one son to get an education and that one son this is typical in the arab families at this period with the time to support the rest of them. and he is khalid sheikh mohammed and ultimately he applies to the schools north carolina and historical baptist school in murfreesboro north carolina. and either the family saved some money or more likely the muslim brotherhood of kuwait has agreed to sponsor him. he joined the muslim brotherhood after his older brothers have joined at age 16 so he arrives in america at roughly 18-years-old and he's not prefer what he sees i picked him up at the airport outside of the virginia beach and durkan to murfreesboro and what he remembers years later the memory is khalid sheikh mohammed being surprised by what he saw and a first piece of the suppressed by the geography of the intense greenery when you see the trees in kuwait they are usu
years pass on an khalid sheikh mohammed is doing very well at school. he's a good student and a bookish boy. and the family decides they don't have any money at all but the need to back the one son to get an education and that one son this is typical in the arab families at this period with the time to support the rest of them. and he is khalid sheikh mohammed and ultimately he applies to the schools north carolina and historical baptist school in murfreesboro north carolina. and either the...
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Sep 21, 2011
09/11
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mohammed jamjoon. we'll continue to monitor. we'll come to you for analysis. >>> and what could be biggest bibmatic challen diplomatic challenge of his presidency. trying to steer palestine back to the negotiating table with israel. that's a tough sell for a the palestinians. mass demonstration in support for statehood. richard roth live at the united nations what can the president say to mahmoud abbas to change his mind, richard? >> reporter: i don't think there's very much. he can now hope to work on after the application is submitted to the security council, white house officials saying in effect at briefings yesterday this is somewhat of a done deal that that will happen, and since there's no immediate security council vote where the u.s. has said it would veto, there's plans and time for more negotiations on this. last year president obama at the general assembly said if we act and do what's best for ourselves, he was previewing a palestinian state here at this time. that's not going to happen. the president will meet with
mohammed jamjoon. we'll continue to monitor. we'll come to you for analysis. >>> and what could be biggest bibmatic challen diplomatic challenge of his presidency. trying to steer palestine back to the negotiating table with israel. that's a tough sell for a the palestinians. mass demonstration in support for statehood. richard roth live at the united nations what can the president say to mahmoud abbas to change his mind, richard? >> reporter: i don't think there's very much. he...
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Sep 11, 2011
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i don't know what they would do today if they captured the equivalent of sheikh mohamed. probably read him his miranda rights. i don't know. that's a mistake for us to give up those capabilities. i hope there are no more attacks, but even as we meet here today, everybody drove to work with their car radio on this morning, heard there's a threat that's of sufficient credibility at least at this stage, that the authorities are saying, this is unconfirmed but we're taking it seriously. so, i think -- i do think it was a mistake for them not to stay as actively and aggressively involved. there was a brilliant piece of the notion that somehow we overreacted. i don't think we did. i think we did exactly what we had to do and that the results speak for themselves. >> host: one or two more from me and then we'll open it up to questions from others. you made the case at that time iraq was a central front in the war on terror. looking back on iraq, one of the things that people have focused on in reading your book and in the reviews of your book, is the fact that you don't think th
i don't know what they would do today if they captured the equivalent of sheikh mohamed. probably read him his miranda rights. i don't know. that's a mistake for us to give up those capabilities. i hope there are no more attacks, but even as we meet here today, everybody drove to work with their car radio on this morning, heard there's a threat that's of sufficient credibility at least at this stage, that the authorities are saying, this is unconfirmed but we're taking it seriously. so, i think...
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Sep 14, 2011
09/11
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he said, "but he's not a member of al qaeda, khalid sheikh mohammed." i said, "well, think again." >> smith: abu zubaydah also told soufan about an active plot which led to the arrest of an al qaeda figure named jose padilla in chicago. but the cia believed abu zubaydah knew much more, so they brought in a special contractor, a retired air force psychologist. although he has been publicly identified since, his name is still technically classified. his real name is mitchell? >> i don't... >> smith: you cannot confirm it? >> i cannot confirm or deny the individual's name in any way, shape or form. so i describe him in the book as boris. >> smith: and so boris arrives. tell me. tell me the story. >> boris arrives, and we believed we were getting some headway with abu zubaydah. but he has different opinion about how to handle this interrogation. so, we said, "what's your idea?" and he starts explaining his idea. >> smith: and that's when the trouble started? >> yeah. >> smith: boris begins to enforce nudity, loud rock music? >> yes. >> smith: so there was a
he said, "but he's not a member of al qaeda, khalid sheikh mohammed." i said, "well, think again." >> smith: abu zubaydah also told soufan about an active plot which led to the arrest of an al qaeda figure named jose padilla in chicago. but the cia believed abu zubaydah knew much more, so they brought in a special contractor, a retired air force psychologist. although he has been publicly identified since, his name is still technically classified. his real name is...
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Sep 6, 2011
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. >> susie: joining us now, mohamed el-erian, c.e.o. of pimco, the world's largest bond fund. >> i think we can avoid t. it's possible to avoid t but there isn't much time. the economy if left to its own devices will go into recession. the consumers don't have the will to spent. companies have the wallet to spend, but not the will. >> we depend right now on washington, d.c. and the policy makers in >> susie: and to what extent is the u.s. economy hostage to the problems in the europe. >> we live in a globalized world, and it makes the challenge even more. i think we still control our destiny, but we have to move quickly, and president obama's speech on thursday is mission critical. >> susie: talk about president obama's speech. the president will outline a job plan that will have an immediate impact. will it be anything different then what we heard from him before? >> it's something everybody in the market will be lookingalt. so far, they haven't. and i think they are finally getting to the point of understanding that these are deep roo
. >> susie: joining us now, mohamed el-erian, c.e.o. of pimco, the world's largest bond fund. >> i think we can avoid t. it's possible to avoid t but there isn't much time. the economy if left to its own devices will go into recession. the consumers don't have the will to spent. companies have the wallet to spend, but not the will. >> we depend right now on washington, d.c. and the policy makers in >> susie: and to what extent is the u.s. economy hostage to the problems...
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Sep 13, 2011
09/11
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that was credited with identifying the mastermind, khalid sheikh mohammed.you get to the part about that interrogation, in ali soufan's book "black banners" it starts to look like this. writing for the first few pages. you start to see a few more redactions. then you get page after page of redacted text. there's something in here that somebody still doesn't want you to know. let me introduce you now to ali soufan to explain why the book is called "the black banners: the inside story of 9/11 and the war against al qaeda."k yofor b. i know you cou be anywhere for your first live interview. i'm grateful you're here. >> thank you for having me. it's a pleasure. >> let me start with the specific and broaden out. who's responsible for the redactions in your book? >> from the agency, the cia. the book was approved by the fbi. when we finished the approval process with the bureau it took about three months and it was reviewed by the counterterrorism division, reviewed by information security. we didn't have one single redaction. so unfortunately for some reason some
that was credited with identifying the mastermind, khalid sheikh mohammed.you get to the part about that interrogation, in ali soufan's book "black banners" it starts to look like this. writing for the first few pages. you start to see a few more redactions. then you get page after page of redacted text. there's something in here that somebody still doesn't want you to know. let me introduce you now to ali soufan to explain why the book is called "the black banners: the inside...
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Sep 13, 2011
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we knew khalid shaikh mohammed was the mastermind of 9/11 in april of 2002, before the contractors even set a foot in the undisclosed location of where we were. so just to basically read later that people are claiming it was waterboarding that produced the information that led us to identify khalid shaikh mohammed as the mastermind is totally wrong. and unfortunately the same thing with the alleged dirty bomber, though i believe he's a brain surgery away from being a dirty bomber, but that's a digit story. they claimed it was waterboarding that caused zubaydah, and you can see that clearly in the steven bradbury memo. they claimed it's waterboarding that produced information that led us to it. waterboarding did not start until august of 2002. a couple weeks before. still, july/august of 2002. mr. padilla was in custody after an international manhunt in may of 2002. so unless you have a time machine, you're having a problem, you know, with keeping the timeline straight. >> and when the enhanced interrogation techniques and waterboarding for happening to zubaydah, you called fbi headquart
we knew khalid shaikh mohammed was the mastermind of 9/11 in april of 2002, before the contractors even set a foot in the undisclosed location of where we were. so just to basically read later that people are claiming it was waterboarding that produced the information that led us to identify khalid shaikh mohammed as the mastermind is totally wrong. and unfortunately the same thing with the alleged dirty bomber, though i believe he's a brain surgery away from being a dirty bomber, but that's a...
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the lawsuit is christian versus mohammed. ultimately, they win. they are awarded more than $10,000 in 1985. which is a substantial sum of money at the time. their injuries was fairly severe. he never pays. he dodges the sheriff. he flouts the law. but i talk to the christian women's attorney, and he remembers khalid shaikh bursting into his office with a translator and a posse of other arab students to lecture him about the iran-iraq war and what america is wrong on israel. israel turns out to be a very important point in his radicalization. more so than i would have thought. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. >> and now in a program from 2005, marian fontana becomes the first year coping with the death of her husband transit, a member of the new york fire department on september 11, 2001, in
the lawsuit is christian versus mohammed. ultimately, they win. they are awarded more than $10,000 in 1985. which is a substantial sum of money at the time. their injuries was fairly severe. he never pays. he dodges the sheriff. he flouts the law. but i talk to the christian women's attorney, and he remembers khalid shaikh bursting into his office with a translator and a posse of other arab students to lecture him about the iran-iraq war and what america is wrong on israel. israel turns out to...
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Sep 4, 2011
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the cold face of mohammed atta is cedar into memory.would crash american airlines flight 11 into the north tower. >> is he the ring leader. he clearly knew everything and everybody and what their roles are. >> he had been hand picked by 9/11 mastermind by khalid sheikh mohammed to be the 9/11 hijacker. using multiple names he had lived as a student in cairo and here in hamburg, germany. a key time of movement. he left san diego. moving out of the home he shared with fbi assets. it was a temporary goodbye to local imam anwar al-awlaki. he headed to yemen to recruit other muscle hijackers. and atta with a multiple entry visa touch down in florida. czech republic via new jersey. venice florida where he settled with the pilot who would fly united flight 175 into the world trade center south tower. already there was a lebanese man 26-year-old sahid he would crash united flight 93 into the ground in shanksville, pennsylvania. atta and jara made this video together as their last will and testament. san diego, all started taking flying lessons.
the cold face of mohammed atta is cedar into memory.would crash american airlines flight 11 into the north tower. >> is he the ring leader. he clearly knew everything and everybody and what their roles are. >> he had been hand picked by 9/11 mastermind by khalid sheikh mohammed to be the 9/11 hijacker. using multiple names he had lived as a student in cairo and here in hamburg, germany. a key time of movement. he left san diego. moving out of the home he shared with fbi assets. it...
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Sep 12, 2011
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i don't know what they would do today if they captured khalid sheikh mohammed. reva miranda rights, i don't know. that's not in my mind -- it's a mistake to give up those capabilities. i hope that there are no more attacks but even as we meet here today everybody drove to work with their car radio on her that there's a threat that's sufficient credibility at least with this stage that the authorities say this is not confirmed but we are taking this very seriously. so i think that -- i do think it was a mistake for them not to stay as actively and aggressively involved. charles brough mur has written a brilliant piece on the notion that we overreacted. i don't think we did. i think we did exactly what we had to do, and the results speak for themselves. >> one or two and then we will open up to questions from others. you often made the case iraq was a central war front. looking back on iraq one of the things that has -- that people have focused on in reading your book and the reviews of your book is the fact that you don't think that a lot of mistakes were made th
i don't know what they would do today if they captured khalid sheikh mohammed. reva miranda rights, i don't know. that's not in my mind -- it's a mistake to give up those capabilities. i hope that there are no more attacks but even as we meet here today everybody drove to work with their car radio on her that there's a threat that's sufficient credibility at least with this stage that the authorities say this is not confirmed but we are taking this very seriously. so i think that -- i do think...
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Sep 23, 2011
09/11
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then a politician names his dog mohammed, causing all kinds of trouble. right back can a trading site help make you a sharper trader? mine can. td ameritrade can. they've got trading specialists i can call for help. and paper trading. free practice trading that helps me hone my technique. complex options. and free tutorials. online or in person. can trading site really make a difference? if it can't, why are you trading there? number one in line equity trades: td ameritrade. trade commission-free for 30 days, plus get up to $500 when you open an account. >> bill: can the white house make a comeback in light of all of bad polling numbers? joining us now from the abc studios in new york city, the co-anchor of "good morning america," george stephanopoulos who did work in the white house at one time. you got to think that things are grim at 1600 pennsylvania avenue. right? >> couldn't be tougher right now. even with these kind of economic numbers coming out, these numbers may be more important, the income numbers, incomes going down for most americans for the
then a politician names his dog mohammed, causing all kinds of trouble. right back can a trading site help make you a sharper trader? mine can. td ameritrade can. they've got trading specialists i can call for help. and paper trading. free practice trading that helps me hone my technique. complex options. and free tutorials. online or in person. can trading site really make a difference? if it can't, why are you trading there? number one in line equity trades: td ameritrade. trade...
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Sep 30, 2011
09/11
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mohammed jamjoom joins us on the phone.more at least about where he was killed. >> reporter: that's right. we have just gotten a statement from the yemeni embassy. they sent the location as to where he was killed. it was just about 140 kilometers from the capital. it happened about 9:55 a.m. local time. still not a lot more details. we're still trying to find out if the u.s. played any role in intelligence sharing. if this was a drone strike? how it happened and how they gathered the intelligence. before now, al awlaki was widely believed to be in another province in yemen. that's a special homeland. it's a province that they pointed to when they believed that's where they thought he was hiding. >> just to remind our viewers who he is. he's responsible for the underwear bomber plot back in 2009 here in the united states in detroit. he inspired the fort hood shooter that killed 13 people in 2009 as well. do we know what al awlaki's life was like in yemen? >> we don't know. we have ideas from journalists in yemen who had spok
mohammed jamjoom joins us on the phone.more at least about where he was killed. >> reporter: that's right. we have just gotten a statement from the yemeni embassy. they sent the location as to where he was killed. it was just about 140 kilometers from the capital. it happened about 9:55 a.m. local time. still not a lot more details. we're still trying to find out if the u.s. played any role in intelligence sharing. if this was a drone strike? how it happened and how they gathered the...
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Sep 18, 2011
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why your pictures, drives a profit mohammed -- why such trudges steve to print them?he whole danish cartoon is an example of those questions and efficiency should be able to ask. >> let me just say at the risk of offending and you know i don't worry too much about that. when the whole danish cartoon crisis happened, i needed to get the new classes anyway, so i deliberately tried danish frames. they are very, very funky. i was just a little signal of my solidarity for danish muslims and not just non-muslims, who in the country of denmark are working for freedom of expression. now, about the notion that images of the prophet bahamas are not allowed, first of all that is not true in a sect of islam known as the shia islam. you can even look this up on the internet. there are plenty and they are there on the internet, plenty of images of what shia muslims have imagined the prophet mohammed to look like. this is not coffee-table within shia islam. the shia islam is a minority sect. the majority sect, the majority nomination of sunni islam. about 90% is sunni. and because t
why your pictures, drives a profit mohammed -- why such trudges steve to print them?he whole danish cartoon is an example of those questions and efficiency should be able to ask. >> let me just say at the risk of offending and you know i don't worry too much about that. when the whole danish cartoon crisis happened, i needed to get the new classes anyway, so i deliberately tried danish frames. they are very, very funky. i was just a little signal of my solidarity for danish muslims and...
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Sep 12, 2011
09/11
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abu zubaydah was water-boarded 83 times; khalid sheikh mohammed, 183 times.t does that tell you? does that tell you the technique is working? >> logan: a number of people in the cia and the intelligence community told us that abu zubaydah did give up information after he was water-boarded, which they say helped save american lives, and that, all moral questions aside, the enhanced interrogation program yielded significant intelligence, including information that contributed to the killing of osama bin laden. at least two former directors of the cia, george tenet and michael hayden, say that enhanced interrogation techniques do work. >> soufan: sure, sure. >> logan: they have access to more intelligence than you. >> soufan: absolutely. >> logan: if you don't know everything, how can you be so sure that they don't work? >> soufan: because i am privy to a lot of information that also i'm not telling you here. >> logan: but is it possible for you to know all the information, everything that may or may not have been gained from these techniques? >> soufan: i'm not
abu zubaydah was water-boarded 83 times; khalid sheikh mohammed, 183 times.t does that tell you? does that tell you the technique is working? >> logan: a number of people in the cia and the intelligence community told us that abu zubaydah did give up information after he was water-boarded, which they say helped save american lives, and that, all moral questions aside, the enhanced interrogation program yielded significant intelligence, including information that contributed to the killing...
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Sep 11, 2011
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. >> khalid sheikh mohammed is about four years old. his father dies, and as search for the death records. apparently he died in 1969. and they simply did not keep records of births, deaths, marriages. we have this account of his father's death, but it is very sparse. no official transcripts. his father dies, and there is no welfare state. there is no organized charity. so his mother takes a job of washing the bodies of the dead and preparing them for burial. a very low statice, low-income job, but it enables her to eke out a living. at the time she has nine children and khalid sheikh mohammed is the fourth male. years pass and khalid sheikh mohammed does well in school, a goods didn't. a somewhat bookish boy, and the family decides that they don't have money, but they need to a back one son to get an education, and that one son, typical in arab families in this time with support the rest of them, and that sun is khalid sheikh mohammed. they ultimately, he applies to a school in north carolina. historically baptist in murfreesboro, nort
. >> khalid sheikh mohammed is about four years old. his father dies, and as search for the death records. apparently he died in 1969. and they simply did not keep records of births, deaths, marriages. we have this account of his father's death, but it is very sparse. no official transcripts. his father dies, and there is no welfare state. there is no organized charity. so his mother takes a job of washing the bodies of the dead and preparing them for burial. a very low statice,...
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Sep 12, 2011
09/11
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why do i see mohamed atta driving by me looking at me in a car? i know none of this is true.i know he's dead. >> tuohy, long since retired was afraid to even leave his rural home in maine. he sought counseling, was prescribed medication and only now realizes he did nothing wrong. vaughn alex now works for the federal air marshals, helping schedule the cops now in the air. he, too, will never forget. >> i mean, it never goes away. there's not a single day that i don't think about it. there's not a single day that i don't wonder what would have happened if i had done something differently. i did what i was supposed to do that day. i was supposed to take
why do i see mohamed atta driving by me looking at me in a car? i know none of this is true.i know he's dead. >> tuohy, long since retired was afraid to even leave his rural home in maine. he sought counseling, was prescribed medication and only now realizes he did nothing wrong. vaughn alex now works for the federal air marshals, helping schedule the cops now in the air. he, too, will never forget. >> i mean, it never goes away. there's not a single day that i don't think about it....
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Sep 10, 2011
09/11
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CSPAN2
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but -- >> go back to mohammed bin laden, the father. >> yeah. >> back to yemen. what year did he go to saudi arabia? >> 1930. and he founded the family company in 1931, and then the kingdom of saudi arabia was founded in 1932. although, you know, the saudi family had been sort of gathering pieces of the puzzle to make the kingdom. but -- and he became very close to king faad and was able to build palaces and the family renovated mecca and medinah. >> what year did he die? >> 1967. >> 1967. >> when bin laden was 10. >> how many wives did he have? >> only four at any given moment, but i think my understanding is perhaps up to 10 or 11. >> and how many children total did he have? >> around 50. >> and where did osama bin laden fit into that? >> he's supposedly the 17th son. he's the only son of one of the mothers, so there was a syrian mother and bin laden has two full sisters, but the family is pretty large. i mean, you know, 50 siblings of one stripe or another. and now, of course, there's another generation, so those -- those kids have all had kids, so somebody wa
but -- >> go back to mohammed bin laden, the father. >> yeah. >> back to yemen. what year did he go to saudi arabia? >> 1930. and he founded the family company in 1931, and then the kingdom of saudi arabia was founded in 1932. although, you know, the saudi family had been sort of gathering pieces of the puzzle to make the kingdom. but -- and he became very close to king faad and was able to build palaces and the family renovated mecca and medinah. >> what year did...
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Sep 6, 2011
09/11
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mohammed atta very much a question.u what he remembers and how he remembered it because this is his legacy as he sees it >> gloria, thank you. as well dick cheney as all of our viewers know about by now. he survived five heart attacks and relies on an implanted machine to keep him alive. he will demonstrate how he stays alive when we come back. [ male announcer ] members of the american postal workers union handle more than 165 billion letters and packages a year. that's about 34 million pounds of mail every day. ever wonder what this costs you as a taxpayer? millions? tens of millions? hundreds of millions? not a single cent. the united states postal service doesn't run on your tax dollars. it's funded solely by stamps and postage. brought to you by the men and women of the american postal workers union. ♪ >>> dick cheney relies on the special machine to keep him alive. he showed us how it works. >> let me talk about your health right now. you have heart issues as all of our viewers know. explain what's going on with t
mohammed atta very much a question.u what he remembers and how he remembered it because this is his legacy as he sees it >> gloria, thank you. as well dick cheney as all of our viewers know about by now. he survived five heart attacks and relies on an implanted machine to keep him alive. he will demonstrate how he stays alive when we come back. [ male announcer ] members of the american postal workers union handle more than 165 billion letters and packages a year. that's about 34 million...
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Sep 12, 2011
09/11
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. >>> field marshall mohammed hussein was scheduled to appear on sunday but his testimony was postponed until september 24th because he says he's dealing with last week's riots. mubarak is accused of ordering protesters shot during last winter's uprising. ♪ o say can you see >>> the u.s. continues to mark ten years since the 9/11 terrorist attacks on new york and washington. solemn ceremonies were held sunday at ground zero, the pentagon and shanksville, pennsylvania, honoring the nearly 3,000 people killed. >>> while there were no attempted attacks on sunday, fighter jets were scrambled to escort two commercial airliners to their u.s. destinations. passengers on each flight were reported to be acting suspiciously but authorities determined they posed no threats. no arrests were made. those are the headlines from cnn, the world's business leader. i'm monita rajpal. "world business today" starts right now. >>> good morning from cnn london, i'm nina dos santos. >> a very good afternoon from cnn hong kong, i'm andrew stevens. you're watching "world business today." the top stories this mon
. >>> field marshall mohammed hussein was scheduled to appear on sunday but his testimony was postponed until september 24th because he says he's dealing with last week's riots. mubarak is accused of ordering protesters shot during last winter's uprising. ♪ o say can you see >>> the u.s. continues to mark ten years since the 9/11 terrorist attacks on new york and washington. solemn ceremonies were held sunday at ground zero, the pentagon and shanksville, pennsylvania,...
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Sep 20, 2011
09/11
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. >> mohamed el nuevo técnico y en Águilas también mostraron el nuevo . >> alfredo tena dice que hay si cambian las cosas. >> y el pronóstico del chicharito también cambio . >> le partio la pierna y dice que podría estar listo para el fin de semana . >> los angels en toronto con los de texas . >> a la hora cero los errores, los angels con los errores y toronto gana . >> histórico hy . >> rivera llegó a 602 rescates y queda como máximo taponero . >> merece esto y más felicidades al nuevo líder en rescate. >> en la nfl con alexander que tuvo más de 100 yaradas en recepciones . >> y finalmente hila los hizo pedazos y pierden los rans . >> hasta aquí llega la acción deportiva volvemos con más noticias . >> un día fantástico hoy el fin de semana también esperamos que dure . >> aunque el smog concentrado . >> alejandro garcía y el tiempo . >> que gusto saludarles. >> el tiempo despejado maximas de 77° . >> satélite naional la costa ostes despejado . >> aguaceros al este . >> en el estado sin posibilidades de lluvia s. >> temperaturas que oscilarán entre 70 y 75° . >> cálido, agradable, tie
. >> mohamed el nuevo técnico y en Águilas también mostraron el nuevo . >> alfredo tena dice que hay si cambian las cosas. >> y el pronóstico del chicharito también cambio . >> le partio la pierna y dice que podría estar listo para el fin de semana . >> los angels en toronto con los de texas . >> a la hora cero los errores, los angels con los errores y toronto gana . >> histórico hy . >> rivera llegó a 602 rescates y queda como máximo...
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Sep 10, 2011
09/11
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and the one who was subjected most often do that was khalid sheikh mohammed and it produced phenomenal results for us. there are reports that the intelligence community did of the results of the program, which were declassified and at my request are now available on the internet that talk about quality of information that we got as a result of our enhanced interrogation techniques. it was applied to a handful of individuals. we were talking about only a handful of people who were indeed a part of the al qaeda organization. and khalid sheikh mohammed was not only the man who we then had reason to believe correctly had daniel pearl, the reporter from "the wall street journal," but also had claimed credit for being the architect of 9/11. killed 3000 americans that morning. another key point that needs to be made was that the tech makes meeks that we used were all previously used on american military personnel. not all of them, but all of them that they have used in training for a lot of our own specialists in the military area. so there wasn't any technique that we used on any al qaeda in
and the one who was subjected most often do that was khalid sheikh mohammed and it produced phenomenal results for us. there are reports that the intelligence community did of the results of the program, which were declassified and at my request are now available on the internet that talk about quality of information that we got as a result of our enhanced interrogation techniques. it was applied to a handful of individuals. we were talking about only a handful of people who were indeed a part...
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Sep 25, 2011
09/11
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on our side, i truly hope that mohamed is right. that we can start coming together. it doesn't have to be government directed to get the economy growing. but it's got to grow. we got to shift to business investments and exports. there's not going be massive residential construction again, that bubble is over. >> just to go to mohamed's point, secretary gethner said this week -- i mean to add to that, i'm already hearing, you know, it's all over the place that people, capitol hill right behind me, are concerned that, even this relatively minor thing that they're having a big argument about, fema and disaster, is causing this deadlock? >> the image is that the global economy and the markets are on the backseat. the policymakers are on the front seat. and what's happening on the front seat is the following, first, the drivers are very secondly, they're not even looking through the screen. they're arguing with each other. in that situation, people get very nervous. in that situation, you lose confidence. that's true for europe. we have two distincts issues. we have a pol
on our side, i truly hope that mohamed is right. that we can start coming together. it doesn't have to be government directed to get the economy growing. but it's got to grow. we got to shift to business investments and exports. there's not going be massive residential construction again, that bubble is over. >> just to go to mohamed's point, secretary gethner said this week -- i mean to add to that, i'm already hearing, you know, it's all over the place that people, capitol hill right...
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Sep 29, 2011
09/11
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. >> reporter: mohammed said at one point dr.urray asked jackson's security guards if they knew how to revive someone. >> had conrad murray asked you and alberto alvarez if you knew cpr? >> yes. >> and did you see alberto go over and assist dr. murray with cpr? >> yes. >> reporter: by the time mohammed had arrived, 911 had already been called, but 911 was not the first phone call conrad murray made when jackson stopped breathing. in court, new insight into murray's state of mind from jackson's personal assistant, michael williams. he painted a picture of a doctor on the edge. on june 25th, 2009, williams received a frantic voice message from murray which was played in court. >> please call me right away. >> reporter: that message was left after michael jackson had suffered cardiac arrest. murray gave no indication of that on the message only saying jackson had had, quote, a bad reaction. murray called williams, not 911. >> were you asked to call 911? >> no, sir. >> did you, upon hearing that message, call dr. murray? >> yes, sir.
. >> reporter: mohammed said at one point dr.urray asked jackson's security guards if they knew how to revive someone. >> had conrad murray asked you and alberto alvarez if you knew cpr? >> yes. >> and did you see alberto go over and assist dr. murray with cpr? >> yes. >> reporter: by the time mohammed had arrived, 911 had already been called, but 911 was not the first phone call conrad murray made when jackson stopped breathing. in court, new insight into...
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Sep 29, 2011
09/11
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making lonoc rec 2 c re@noc rec 2tnd toauly $600 bo callingc rec 2 actioian, ceo ofau]ieus largest2 mohammed>>a . toau]i @ob to fix theau]ieu au]i big @yet.noc re taking tnowoc -sretec p2 approach. alld tryup theau]ieuu need a moneya2 the banking system.@ imnopoc rt2 but it's th step in abu journey youbu h]iaveue been policymbu]i2 >> two things.2 should move s situation. anbu]ieu nt sbuo]ieu they@ gotnoc reet m2 quickly.noc rec 2 to dealce in . no one believes greecbue ]i approacbuh]ieu@ and thirdbu]ieu@no c terellc w2 these tgs we're going to from oobu]ieu bit ofbu]ieu@noc re c sus now if@ --.noc rec 2 come togenoc rec 2 suggestions yong to be cu]i eu cu]ieu@ mnoarc ke >> a long eu @unfonortc unreatc el2y. beent r cu]i at pimco andthat next, for to rec cuba]ibeuly@no]ieu@noc rec u.s.-- u.s. from eurything euroe headwind for economcuic >> susie: leonomy.cu]ieu@ that we justcu]ieu@noc re u.s. s grew at of one.e reality iscu]i@ hoss marketdu]ieu@c 2 speaks toh to grow2idly and ifieu@,noc re 2 could we, theiryeu list? months, six now@noc rec 2 >> it's ac i2 think that our projection @s aboutdu]
making lonoc rec 2 c re@noc rec 2tnd toauly $600 bo callingc rec 2 actioian, ceo ofau]ieus largest2 mohammed>>a . toau]i @ob to fix theau]ieu au]i big @yet.noc re taking tnowoc -sretec p2 approach. alld tryup theau]ieuu need a moneya2 the banking system.@ imnopoc rt2 but it's th step in abu journey youbu h]iaveue been policymbu]i2 >> two things.2 should move s situation. anbu]ieu nt sbuo]ieu they@ gotnoc reet m2 quickly.noc rec 2 to dealce in . no one believes greecbue ]i...
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Sep 30, 2011
09/11
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CNN
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. >> mohammed, quickly is yemen taking full credit for this kill?> reporter: yemen is not yet taking full credit for this kill and we have been told by yemeni government officials that this was a joint intelligence-gathering operation by yemen and the u.s. now, we are still trying to find out was this a drone strike? how much was the u.s. involved? u.s. officials not commenting on that's expect yet beyond saying anwar al awlaki has been killed but not surprising to find out that this were a drone strike and it would not be surprising to find out that the u.s. did participate in some watch right now, yemeni government officials only saying it was a joint intelligence-gathering operation on the part of the yemenis and u.s. officials. and again, right now not surprise, they have been involved in joint operations of this type of scale and magnitude in the past. >> got it. mohammed, thanks. >>> in less than an hour, we are told the president is going to speak on this killing, comes a year and a half since president obama authorized the cia to capture and
. >> mohammed, quickly is yemen taking full credit for this kill?> reporter: yemen is not yet taking full credit for this kill and we have been told by yemeni government officials that this was a joint intelligence-gathering operation by yemen and the u.s. now, we are still trying to find out was this a drone strike? how much was the u.s. involved? u.s. officials not commenting on that's expect yet beyond saying anwar al awlaki has been killed but not surprising to find out that this...