indeed, good to have you. i m jim sciutto. justice department facing a noon deadline, two hours from now, to give a judge and we should be clear a redacted version, perhaps highly redacted of the affidavit behind the search warrant for the mar-a-lago home of the former president. the judge will then decide whether to release that redacted version to the public or continue to keep it under wraps. plus, new details about the national archives multiyear effort to get former president trump to hand over classified documents from his time in office. a top white house lawyer at the time told trump he should hand those documents over. so why didn t it happen? key question. also overnight, the department of justice releasing an unredacted full memo from 2019 that unveils why former attorney general bill barr decided then president trump could not be charged with obstructing the russia probe. we ll break down what is ahead in all of that. all right, let s begin this morning with
afghanistan. you re watching fox and friends first on this monday morning, i m carley shimkus. great to be with you, i m griff jenkins in for the great todd piro. president biden enjoying the beach in south carolina as his top administration official repair to release a report defending his failed withdrawal from afghanistan. the disaster unfolded one year ago today. here are details. alexandria: a strategic failure criticizes the president s decision to unconditionally pull u.s. troops without heeding military assessment that capable capable could fall. the choices made in dc led to outcome, 13 dead servicemembers, american lives at great risk, and embolden enemies across the globe. here is chad robichaux who served eight tours in afghanistan. chad: they were aware it was going to happen, they were watching the influx. everyone in afghanistan, who is aware of strategy like this place will fall in the next days or weeks. alexandria: biden administration vowed to lea
turns out he wasn t missing, he was dead. so your missing person case has become a homicide. correct. that solved one mystery, but left another. why would anyone want to kill him? maybe it had something to do with a woman in his life. he had broken off his engagement with one. i just found out he was dead this morning, and now i feel like i m a suspect. and there was somebody else nobody knew about. i was lonely, just needed someone to talk to. did it also get a little steamy, mary? yes. passion and a secret the wrong person discovered. her face looked like she had seen a ghost. stay with me. you have a phone call, i think you need to take. hello and welcome to dateline. keith reed was a school superintendent who was respected by his students and adored by friends and family. when he didn t show up at an out of town conference, it set off alarm bells. investigators would take a hard look at keith s love life for clues, and it would be another perso
yet now, especially in europe and the western world, it feels as though the disease has passed us, even though it actually hasn t. it s as though we couldn t take all the restrictions it brought any more. life has opened up and only a minority of people are wearing masks now. in china, by contrast, the epidemic still dominates everything. i talked to fergus walsh, the bbc s medical editor, about the world s experience of this modern day plague. covid is going to be with us for years and years to come. and there was a lot of talk right at the beginning about herd immunity the idea that we d all get it once and then that would be it. well, now you can get omicron, the latest variant of concern, and you can get that again and again. so it s going to be, in a way, a little bit like flu and vaccines will be our best protection against it. they have been the extraordinary success story of this pandemic. i think the fastest ever developed vaccine was. took four years to develop an
are a clear and present danger to american democracy. after a second resignation in as many years, downing street says borisjohnson is looking at whether the role of an adviser on standards is needed after lord geidt stepped down last night. and the bank of england hikes up interest rates to a 13 year high and warns that inflation could hit 11%. tonight with the context, chief political commentator at the i newspaper paul waugh and former adviser to hillary clinton amanda renteria. welcome to the programme. we start in washington, where the third day of the january 6th committee hearings has just wrapped up. it s been focused on mike pence and connecting donald trump s intense pressure campaign on his vice president not to certify the election results with the violent intentions of the mob that stormed the capitol. democrat bennie thompson is chair of the committee. he spoke of the danger mike pence faced in his opening statement. we re fortunate for mr pence s courage onjanu