i lieu this one in particular groups like syrian kurds so we know now president trump alongside ayman mohyeldin. morning joe starts right now. where bill barr was saying that said very clearly yesterday that because, quite honestly, they left center field. their position had evolved when u.s. troops would have this new back at the wall. don t trust us. one day s episode or cooperation and that s gone. it came to cooperating with a mission of securing oil in syria grand jury excuse me, between this white house and the and he talked about the importance of that mission. cooperating with impeachment american intelligence community we now, we ve seen the first of investigation to material over those deployments actually move materials to a grand jury. doth not a relationship make. the judge wouldn t have any of what worries me going forward is he goes deep. the enemy is still going to be from here into syria, driving there. the question is, will we? towards the region. that s whe
Organization like this go for comments but mulvaney has said heinous casualties like osama the next phase? you talked about how al qaeda from the beginning that he was bin laden, or you name it, or going to handle some of the other operations in the white evolved into al qaeda in iraq, house. japanese opponents, or nazis, you have al qaeda in yemen. he was going to let he s doing a bang-up job. isis is doing the same thing. why we didn t talk that way? you have isis splinter groups in he is going to let trump by north africa, isis splinter trump and we have seen where or quadafi in libya, for that has gotten us. groups in afghanistan. coming up on morning joe, so the killing of al baghdadi example. in every case, joe, the problem from the house democrats himself, while is obviously leadership, iraq war veteran here is there s that internal symbolic, is not necessarily congressman anthony brown joins desire to kind of take a victory tactical in the sense it s going us. plu
Again how can you say saudi arabia is a great partner fighting terrorism when they are fueling and funding terrorist groups in yemen. they are providing arms and supports to al qaeda in yemen to fight against their opponent in the . waiting a genocidal war and causing millions more to suffer. that partnership has got us as they are camping for a war with iran, a war far more costly than anything that we ve experienced in iraq. far most at stake. we can go to those discussions about syria, the competing interest there. you will discuss that in the sleep. again, and a lot of competing interests. tough thing for the u.s. to navigate regardless who is president.
Partnership has gotten us, how can you say saudi arabia is a great partner fighting terrorism when they are fueling and funding terrorist groups in yemen? they are providing arms and support to al qaeda in yemen to fight against the who thes. they are strengthening al qaeda. let s see where our partnership with saudi arabia has gotten us and waiting a genocidal war in yemen, taking lives of tens of thousands people and causing millions more to suffer. see where that partnership with saudi arabia has gotten us and they are pushing for a war with iran that would be far more devastating, far more costly than anything we experienced in the war in iraq, there is so much at stake here and this is the kind of seachange in foreign-policy i will bring as president. the discussion about syria and competing interests there and you discussed that endlessly but a lot of competing interests. something for the us to navigate. we know you speak with the
2001 with destroying al qaeda in afghanistan, 15 years later al qaeda has branched out to al qaeda in yemen, boko haram, al s al shabaab. it s hard to say we re winning. look at egypt. they re dealing with a strong isis presence now in northern sinai, one that s carrying out attacks almost on a daily basis that we don t hear about. we may have destroyed isis as a caliphate, but we have to be mindful of the ideology spreading to other countries and what it s going to do. it s a fanatical ideology that doesn t require large numbers of fighters on the ground. they can serve as inspiration online. a single actor can carry out a terrorist attack because it was inspired he or she was inspired by isis. they can be inspired by isis, or they could be foreign
Are fighting iranian rebels, , d to make all this worse, a cholera outbreak has killed at least 2,000 people since april, on thursday, former president, once a u.s. ally, drew about 3,000 supporters were a relic, now the u.s. is trying to figure out it s a level of support, who are fighting in this war, haven t seen countless human rights violations, all of this well the head of the u.s. command in the middle east tries to figure out to their level of involvement with the coalition. shannon: okay, so what is the u.s. involvement in the country now? well, yemen has been seen as somewhat of a safe haven for al qaeda in the peninsula, most dangerous of the al qaeda groups, regularly accused of attacking the west and has fired at u.s. ships in the region, now the u.s. has conducted more than 80 air strikes against al qaeda
U.s. navy launched a strike against iran-backed houthis rebels after they fired missiles at u.s. navy warships off the coast of yemen. u.s. marines had pulled out and shudder the embassy months before when a blood he civil war tearing yemen apart. the withdrawal slowed the fight against al qaeda in the arabian peninsula. one of the most lethal branches of al qaeda and its proven itself to have ambitions to attack our country. in 2009, they sent a man known as the underwear bomber to the u.s. with the aim of bringing down a u.s. airliner. in 2011, the u.s. drone killed the radical american born muslim cleric who had been directing and planning attacks on the u.s. since president trump has taken office, air strikes against al qaeda in yemen have more than doubled. there have been more than 80 air strikes this year.
U.s. navy launched a strike against iran-backed houthis rebels after they fired missiles at u.s. navy warships off the coast of yemen. u.s. marines had pulled out and shudder the embassy months before when a blood he civil war tearing yemen apart. the withdrawal slowed the fight against al qaeda in the arabian peninsula. one of the most lethal branches of al qaeda and its proven itself to have ambitions to attack our country. in 2009, they sent a man known as the underwear bomber to the u.s. with the aim of bringing down a u.s. airliner. in 2011, the u.s. drone killed the radical american born muslim cleric who had been directing and planning attacks on the u.s. since president trump has taken office, air strikes against al qaeda in yemen have more than doubled. there have been more than 80 air strikes this year. u.s. special operations forces have returned in small numbers
Fall. thanks. our legal panel, jeffrey toobin, lauren coats, and mike rogers and leon rodriguez. the white house touting this is a clear victory in their words for national security. does this improve national security? well, you know, it s interesting. some notion that this is trump against the democrats or something i think is completely wrong. we have to look at what are the underpinnings to where we got to where we were. i agree with his first ban. i thought it was too broad. i think they made big mistakes. but when you look at countries where our law enforcement intelligence services cannot properly vet people, there is no way to vet people from countries that we know are recruiting. you know, el shabaab in somalia, al qaeda in yemen, a whole host of groups in syria. all of those are realities. what the real debate should be is, is there a proper way to
Fight in iraq and syria and isis s control in that area. you also have to look at it in the global fight against terrorists and jihadists around the world. certainly going to demoral lies some of the fighters, especially with the push that s now happening from the coalition in iraq and syria. in the long term, you have to ask is this going to do anything to deter, as katty was mentioni mentioning, the next generation of isis leaders. think eve already begun to splinter in egypt and libya. their generation of leaders will be more hardened. as we saw with the killing of osama bin laden, what it did was allow al qaeda in yemen to be stronger and in tpeninsula to become stronger. we appreciate it ayman.