welcome to "the lead." i'm jake tapper. the fbi investigation into new york city mayor eric adams, his connection to the turkish government and what the feds might have been looking for when they seized his cell phone and ipad, a reporter following the money will be here. one of the most upsetting videos from october 7th, which says a lot. it shows a kidnapping victim being taken out of a hamas jeep. her pants are bloodied. her mother will talk to us about why that video was so important for the world to see. leading this how, the world's reaction since the mms attacks, divisive, ugly, even leading to deadly demonstrations. some people ripping down posters of children kidnapped. anti-semitism reaching dangerous alarming rates worldwide. also a spike in islamaphobia, anti-arab and anti-muslim incidents. not just in the united states. let's start with the ongoing conflict fueling this. a u.s. official telling me american intelligence backs israel's showing terrorists are using al shifa hospital as a command center and stealing fuel. cnn's jeremy diamond is in ashkelon. jeremy diamond is joining us, tell us what they show us? >> reporter: the israeli military has for weeks been trying to build up this case that al shifa hospital, where its forces appear to be at the gates of this hospital now, they've been building up the case for weeks now that underneath this sprawling medical complex, gaza's largest hospital claiming that hamas below it operates one of its largest command and control centers. as you said, u.s. officials now appear to be backing up that claim saying that hamas is indeed using this facility. they have released imagery, satellite imagery that shows where they say some of these locations are based. they've released 3d graphics claiming to show what these facilities look like below ground. right now, jake, we're also learning new information about al rin tis si hospital where israeli officials say they found a cache of weapons in the basement. we can't verify those claims. but they've showed videos showing some of those weapons which appear to include ak-47s, suicide vests and other weaponry as well as potential evidence that hostages were also being held in the basement of al rintisi hospital. there's some evidence that a woman may have been in that area. today israeli forces also released evidence that they show shows hamas militants with an rpg weapon near the entrance of al quds hospital. this is gaza's second largest hospital where there has been fierce fighting between israel forces and hamas militants. hospital officials have been talking about israel forces surrounding the hospital. so today israeli military releasing this video appearing to show a man with a rocket-propelled grenade on his shoulder in front of the entrance. we can't independently verify when this video was taken, but we can confirm that the image does indeed show the entrance to al quds hospital. >> jeremy, what are you hearing, if anything, from doctors at these hospitals? >> reporter: jake, they're describing an absolutely catastrophic situation inside several of gaza's major hospitals. a total breakdown at shifa hospital, gaza's largest hospital in the strip where doctors appear to be running out of medical supplies. there are major power outages forcing them to wrap premature babies who were in ink baiters, and the power went out, they're forced to wrap them in foil and blankets and put them near warm water in an effort to try to keep them warm. doctors who have been offered ways to evacuate the hospital by israeli military say they're not leaving, because they're concerned the hundreds of patients still at that hospital would die if they left them. >> jeremy diamond, thank you very much for muslims and jews throughout the world, it's a time fraught with tension and in some cases physical violence. cnn's nick watt reports on the widening global fissures. >> reporter: an american college campus saturday. seven arrests at a pro-palestinian demonstration after what brandeis officials call threatening language and hate speech. central london, the same day, a pro-palestinian rally, far right counter protesters, chaos. sue ellen braverman was fired after calling such pro-palestinian demonstrations hate marches. >> these comments have caused a lot of division. >> reporter: in paris sunday, thousands marched against anti-semitism which has spiked in france since the hamas terror attacks and the israeli response. we mustn't import conflicts that are happening elsewhere into our country, she says. fear and anger emanating from the middle east are going global, stoking stichl and islamaphobia. in brooklyn, a man wearing a ka fee yeah scarf says he was attacked by a woman who accused him of supporting terror. they've received over 1200 requests for help in the month since october 7, triple from the same time last year. college campuses are a flashpoint. at ucla demonstrators battered piñatas on campus showing the faces of president biden and the israeli prime minister. anti-semitic emails sent to staff at u penn, islamaphobia emails send to groups at uconn. >> the problem on campus has reached a critical point, really a point we've never seen in hundreds of years of higher education in america. >> reporter: jewish voice repeat and students for justice in palestine have been suspended by columbia university for unauthorized events, violating school policy. the groups could not be reached for comment. >> we are well beyond the time for words of support or expressions of understanding. we need serious, aggressive concrete action. >> reporter: a jewish legal authorization has filed complaints against u. penn and wellesley college saying both have claimed to failed to protect -- >> the student, residential staff of one of our dorms stated in an email there should be no space for zionism on campus whatsoever. there is a way to criticize, for exam, the israeli government and not be anti-semitic. >> the halel jewish student center was vandalized and two students attacked after being asked if they were jewish. police calling it a hate crime. there's an entering flip-flop at m.i.t., apparently a protest and counterprotest got out of hand, so college brass threatened students if they didn't disperse by a deadline, they would be suspended. it appears they found out several of the students involved were foreign nationals. if they were suspended, they'd lose their visas and be thrown out of the country. so they dialed back, we're going to suspend them fruft from non-academic activities in campus. they stay enrolled, keep their visas and stay in the country. >> we're going to talk about the m.i.t. situation with a college student in a little bit. let's talk about this in a more global way now with the former deputy director of national intelligence and cnn national security analyst beth santer. earlier today i reported that a u.s. official with knowledge of intelligence says hamas are using al shifa. they're stealing fuel, fooul that is meant for the hospital. hamas is taking it. hamas militants, terrorists are gathering around there using it as a place to hang out. this obviously is what hamas does. it's not a secret. i'm not trying to take a position on what the idf is doing one way or another, but it does seem odd to me -- again, i'm not taking a position on what the idf is doing. but it does seem odd to me there isn't more criticism of what hamas is doing because they they're obviously putting their own people in harm's way. >> it's purposeful. it was what we talked about the very first day this happened on october 7th, you and i. we talked about what hamas is trying to do here, drawing in an israeli reaction to try to change the narrative so they are the victims. unfortunately this is an information war that hamas so far seems to be largely winning. not just here on our college campuses, but globally. that's a huge concern. u.s. tests here are different in some ways than israel's interest. >> how so? israel's existence is survival. >> u.s. interest definitely has that there, but we also have broader tests. we're in a war of global influence, and the future prosperity of america with china and russia and our interests there are really much bigger in some ways. so this is what's difficult about being a policymaker in this environment, is that you have these interests that often are competing. the world is not black and white. it is filled with gray, and filled with contradictions. working those things out is what we're struggling to do with the administration, the administration struggling to do. i think they're trying to recalibrate right now. that's what we're seeing. >> if you were president right now -- >> thank god i'm not. >> obviously it's in the best tests of the united states and in the best interests of everyone for the war to be over as quickly as possible. netanyahu's position, even though i don't think there's much chance that netanyahu will last as prime minister much longer based on my conversations with israelis when i was there. but netanyahu's position is we have to destroy hamas, and i think the israeli people are with him in that. >> 100%. >> we cannot allow -- the policies since 2007 when hamas took over, basically it was containment. let's just contain them. i don't think very many people in israel think that's possible anymore. we can't contain them after what they did october 7th. >> that's right. >> how does one get rid of hamas in gaza? >> look, i don't want to monday morning quarterback what the biden administration has done. let's sunday morning quarterback what should be done from here on out. i think one of the things we can do is lay down very firmly what israel cannot do in the west bank. we're all focused on gaza, and that place is going to blow because netanyahu is allowing settlers to be displace -- >> you are 100% right. >> but we're not doing that. >> we'll talk about ben ga veer and smol trick maybe tomorrow or the next day. >> maybe we should be talking about that now, because that's the thing that's going to blow up in our faces. that makes a two-state solution impossible. >> agreed. let's table that for a second. that's easier to say than everything netanyahu is doing there is wrong. what about hamas, how do they end hamas in gaza without doing what they're doing now, which everybody hates? >> fine. i think we should be doing both things. >> i'm agreeing with you. >> on gaza, the jordanians came in with a drone to resupply a hospital, okay? well, why can't we do that with al shifa? why can't we make sure that more than 10 trucks, when there were 500 before the war actually would allow people in the south to eat and have more than a piece of bread a day. >> much more humanitarian aid? >> so much more humanitarian aid because you can talk, talk, talk, and you're not showing anything. but at the same time, let's face it. it's true that you can't constrain idf to the point where they can't accomplish something quickly because, and i think this is the big dilemma, because the longer this goes on, the harder and harder it gets for us to balance those other trefrts. this is the big dilemma. you want them to slow down because the humanitarian thing, but you want them to speed up because your broader interests are for this to go quickly. >> i'm not blowing off the west bank thing, and we're working on a piece right now for this week about it. i don't want you to think i'm blowing it off. >> thank you, jake. >> thank you so much. the pentagon identified the five u.s. army special operations soldiers killed in the helicopter crash. the team was conducting refueling training over the eastern mediterranean sea when their mh 60 blackhawk helicopter. chief warrant officer stephen dwieer, 38 years old, a u.s. military academy graduate. chief warrant officer two, shane barnes, 34 from sacramento, california. he had an english literature degree from gonzaga. staff sergeant tanner grone was 26 from new hampshire. 27-year-old andrew southard was from arizona, volunteered with this unit. the youngest of the team was sergeant cade wolf, only 24 from mancato, minnesota. he enlisted in 2018. these special opins forces weren st standby in case americans needed to be evacuated. mayor their memories be a blessing. i'll speak with a student from the m.i.t. campus as that college deals with the fallout. also ahead, donald trump jr. wrapping up a day in court after a day on the stand. how he tried to o rehabilitatate image e of the trump o organiza on thehe stand. that's nexext. as cnn nick watt reported earlier, college campuses have become hot beds of protests because of the israel-hamas war. in many cases, of course, it's more than just people exercising their right to free speech. instead the protests have descended into outright anti-semitism. it's gotten to the point where on many campuses jewish students no longer even feel safe. joining us now is m.i.t. graduate student talia kahn, president of the israel m.i.t. allowance. >> thank you for having me. >> as a jewish student at m.i.t., do you feel safe on campus? >> honestly, jake, in the past few weeks i have not felt safe on campus. >> why not? >> so ever since october 7th we've seen at universities around the country that the conflict that's overseas has come to our home turf. we have had a lot of rallies and events but an organization called the coalition against apartheid which is the anti-israel group on m.i.t.'s campus. they, along with some other local anti-israel groups have come to campus because m.i.t. is an open campus which means anybody can walk around and be on campus, so they together have done protests on campus, on the steps of lobby 7 which is the main entrance at m.i.t. and in front of the student center. >> people protest, but what do they do, what do they say that makes you feel unsafe? >> so i guess part of it is the fact of what they're saying. so when you're saying things like global lies the into fad da, someone solution intifada. we know what happened during the sect intifada, it was suicide bombings and attacks against israel. the other thing about it is these people aren't just protests and exercising their right to free speech which i fully support as an american. they went to the personal offices of a program that runs israel internships on the campus, they went to the offices and tried to enter, going from door-to-door trying to unlock the doors. the people who worked in this office had no idea what these students were trying to do by trying to get into their office. they were actk accuse them of apartheid and genocide. another frightening experience that a friend of mine experienced, she has a child in the m.i.t. day care. these people were going around campus yelling anti-israel things, and they were doing it in front of the day care. she called to pick up her child early because they were worried it would get violent. m.i.t. student who has come here from israel, who has a child at the m.i.t. day care shouldn't have to worry about her own safety, her child's safety on campus. she should be able to focus on the studying she came to america to do. >> m.i.t. suspended students who ignored the deadline to end the protest but then m.i.t. didn't follow through. a letter from the president said in part tay didn't do that, quote, because we heard serious concerns about collateral consequences for the students such as visa issues. we've decide thad the students who remained after the deadline will be suspended from non--academic campus activity. they weren't punished as college rules and regulations suggested they should have been because they might have lost their visas and i guess deported. what's your reaction to that? >> you know, i can't personally react to -- have an opinion on whether or not these visa issues should or should not play a role. i think the point here is that myself and other jewish students on m.i.t.'s campus don't feel safe. these people are repeatedly violating m.i.t.'s rules. they're emboldened after the thursday event when they refused to leave and they were threatened with suss special. they didn't care. on sunday they invited over a thousand people to come to the steps of m.i.t. and chant again for intifada and from the river to the see, the destruction of israel. even yelling against the president of m.i.t., they had a poster with her name with blood on it, accusing her of genocide because of her support of israel and her support of the israel internship program, that she supports genocide. it's really just this kind of violent rhetoric that makes it so that people cannot study and focus at m.i.t. it's happening day after day. they're repeatedly violating the roles. that's really the problem here. >> i'm really sorry you don't feel safe, talia. that's really horrible. i went to college, i did a semester in grad school. i didn't last much longer than that, but i never felt unsafe. that's just not acceptable. >> yeah. it's a very hard time for all of us. we appreciate that, thank you, jake. >> i know your mom is an asking knowledgic jew and your dad is a muslim from afghanistan. you have a special insight into all of this. >> yeah. i think it's important to remember here that when people are pro-israel, when students are pro-israel, it's not like an anti-islam whatever. i have two sides of my dna. i have my jewish side, my afghan side. currently my afghan side is crying as well because of what's happening to the afghans in pakistan being kicked out. we have to remember that everybody here is really just trying to fight for peace in the region, and we're not trying to say we're anti-palestinian by saying we're pro-israel. we're saying what hamas did is an act of terror and it's evil and it should be condemned. we want peace for everybody in the region. whether you're muslim, whether you're jewish, whether you're anything. >> talia, thank you so much for your time. i hope you feel safe on campus soon. coming up, inside the fbi investigation into new york city mayor eric adams. i'll talk to someone who says adams' connections to the turkish government seem to be behind the prorobe. c'mon, we're right there. c'mon baby. it's the only we need. go, go, go, go! ah! touchdown baby! -touchdown! are your neighbors watching the same game? yeah, my 5g home internet delays the game a bit. but you get used to it. try these. they're noise cancelling earmuffs. i stole them from an airport. it's always something with you, man. great! solid! -greek salad? exactly! don't delay the game with verizon or t-mobile 5g home internet. catch it on the xfinity 10g network. as lawmakers continue to fight on capitol hill over keeping the government running, there is one group who do their job every day no matter the cost, no matter the consequence. on january 6th, 2021 we all witnessed what that price means for them. it means life or death. capitol hill police officer harry dunn is one of the officers who showed extraordinary courage that day. he details how his brave acts still caused him pain in his brand new book. >> never in a million years imagined that the capitol was going to be stormed over, run over. >> harry dunn reported as a police officers on jayne january 6th, 2021 like it was any normal day. then they handed him a riot helmet. for hours he and other members of law enforcement fought off the mob that stormed the capitol. in the end lawmakers went back to work to certify the election. dunn went back to work, too. now he's putting his experiences to pages in his new book "standing my ground." >> do you ever have days up here where you don't think about january 6th? does that ever happen. >> no, there aren't many days where i don't think about it at all. you're at the scene of the crime. every day i work at the scene of the crime. >> do you ever think about resigning or getting another job? >> there's still work to do