that s how this investigation has got started and now here we are today with these unusually incredible charges against a very large organization that runs soccer around the world. evan why is the u.s. spearheading this? i know soccer is important in the united states but it s much bigger in europe and other places around the globe. reporter: that s a good question. we asked about this in december when we first previewed this investigation was heating up and the fbi was looking at bringing charges. the answer we got from officials is it looks like soccer is not able to police itself. they tried to do an internal investigation and came up that there was nothing wrong there. it became the responsibility of prosecutors to try to fix some of these corruption problems that people have been talking about in fifa for years and years. some of the alleged bribery took place inside the united states. some of the officials live here in the united states. and u.s. networks are some of
things like health and breast can sister cancer and other things are put in the defense budget, you need more. every 20 years we find a new enemy that will overtake us. in the 60s, the soviets were going to democrat nature us. in the 80s, it was japan. now it s china.nature us. in the 80s, it was japan. now it s china. what is your take on the latest and greatest to overtake america, china? the united states has a long history of thinking their opponents are 10-feet tall and it turns out that china won t be 10-feet tall any more than the soviets or the japanese were. there is a growing realization over the past year or two the problems with pollution, problems with corruption problems with internal dissent. they re all great weights on the chinese that we don t have. chinese have a number of problems. for one thing, we re getting older. with the one child policy, you re not getting the young chinese to replace the older chinese. in addition to it that they
a secretary, she actually was a real secretary. i mean, come on. this isn t like the secretary who s taking your calls, right? she s secretary of state. so i mean, what is the punishment post facto, i guess is what i would ask. and $500,000 from algiers to go to haiti, there have been so many corruption problems in haiti. if i m a government official in algiers, i want to know i want to trace those dollars not just because there might be some underhandedness or some questions later on, but don t i want to say exactly where the dollars went? so, i mean, or perhaps the money should be given back. and why does she well that s what bobby jindal says, he says pay the money back. why does she need this money? she cried poor and then it came out she was making millions with her speaking engagements millions with deals, so why do they need $500,000 from the algerian government? well, i i think they re going to raise i ll make a shocking statement here a. she s a democrat, her name s
officials at the aid agency knew about the corruption problems and hid them from our congress. all while congress was deciding how much money to send in all the united states has given the afghanistan government $88 billion. that s on top, and more than half a trillion dollars we spent during america s longest war, and that money keeps on going. much of the money going to the got of president hamid karzai, and his brother has ties to afghanistan s heroin trade. in response to the audit, the agency slammed the findings and insisted it had always followed the law. lea, who is behind the report. the inspector general for afghanistan and discusses funds and how the funds were used. now, according to the report,
we have given the afghan government the time it needed, if it was serious about attacking the credibility problems it has, the corruption problems it has. we can t make the afghan people stand-up for the government more than the government is deserving of that support. boy, we have tried. i think it s appropriate that we signaled to the afghan regime. they have so much time to get their act together. we will be there to support the troops with intelligence. at the end of the day, we can t fight the battle for them. we have had a lot of disagreements with the karzai regime. i don t think this is going to be an easy task. i think it s necessary that we wind down our troop presence there and leave the afghan future, ultimately to the afghan people. may i ask you about something statewide. the tsa. is it more confident there are no terror they are allowing