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Newsday

chinese exports falling at their fastest rate since the pandemic — by 14.5% in the year tojuly. and china isn't importing as much either — down more than 12% in the same period. joshua meltzer is a senior fellow in the global economy and development programme at the brookings institution. i asked him what exactly the latest executive order targets. this is something the administration has been preparing for quite a number of months now. they've been running it through the traps, doing the interagency process to get it right. and it's really about complementing all the other export restrictions and investment screening tools that the administration has put in place, with respect to access by the chinese communist party to what the us considers to be critical technologies for its national security purpose. and this is essentially a complement to that, by restricting certain types

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The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer

turn over every rock until we find the source of this and the extent of it. we have engaged with allies and partners at high levels over the past the past days. including to reassure them about our own commitment to safeguarding intelligence. and, of course, our commitment to our security partnerships. so wolf. now the investigation really is ramping up the department of justice leading the criminal probe to try to figure out who exactly posted these documents online. the pentagon, of course, leading the interagency process to figure out what the impact was on national security. the pentagon is going to be looking into who has access to these kinds of documents. how they're disseminated. it is believed that something is that thousands of people may have been able to see these documents as as they were, as they were put out. there will also be looking into printer logs because it is relatively easy to figure out who was printing national top secret documents. and these were these slides that we saw. these were photographs of documents

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The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer

of trying to figure out what happened to your how these documents were leaked and put online. the department of justice has launched their own criminal investigation because these are the classified documents that were posted online. but there is now we are told an interagency process so agencies from across the u. s federal government they're coming together to try to figure out the scale and the scope of the damage being led by the department of defense, trying to figure out what what in terms of u. s national security was harmed, but also how allies were affected. but wolf, the pentagon admitting today that four days after these documents came to light weeks after these documents were first posted online, there's still a lot that they don't know. they don't know who took these out of any kind of secure space who posted them online how they were leaked, and how many more are out there. um so this is something that they're obviously digging into? it is something that they are. they're trying to figure out they want the answers, allies want answers and congressional oversight committees want answers. we know that the house and senate intelligence committees have asked for

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America Reports

will there ever be a definitive answer from the biden administration on the origins of covid-19 and how much is dependent on cooperation from china? >> we really do want to know what happened here because the president wants to make sure that we are postured to prevent any future pandemics or if not prevent them, to be able to get farther along ahead of them. so we are hard to understand this as best we can. again, there's no consensus across the government. the work continues and i'm not going to get ahead of conclusions that have not been arrived at yet. >> one quick follow-up. what agency is taking the lead on this? >> this is a whole of government effort and clearly here at the national security council, we are running the interagency process, a whole of government effort. >> [inaudible] coming to the white house on friday, second visit in roughly a year. can you talk about the expectation for the visit? >> sandra: we are going to continue listening there for the white house press briefing. right now it appears, john, that

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CNN Newsroom

the united states, is there any u.s. surveillance aircraft over taiwan, over the south china sea, that would fit into that? >> there's no u.s. surveillance aircraft over chinese -- in chinese air space. >> even chinese claimed air space. >> no u.s. surveillance aircraft in chinese air space. >> finally, is there any new formal approach that's being developed as far as how you're going to deal with these things on a systematic basis going forward? >> again, that's exactly what the president wants mr. sullivan to run, is a process, an interagency process to help us get around the policy implications here, and whether or not there needs to be any policy changes going forward. >> question on objects over u.s. tearies as far as i'm aware of. my question is you talked about the tweak in the radar systems.

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Tucker Carlson Tonight

it's not my fault. okay, so joe biden does not read minds but the question isd is anyone in the white house read newspapers or watch television news supplies? baby formula were down at least 20% as far back as january. that was not hidden knowledge. it wasub public knowledge was ot there. if you were looking here's one representative headline from the fox affiliate in west virginia, the vns back in february quote what the baby forula shortage means parents. there you have it. americans were worried about not having a baby formula. there was a shortage in february, but the white house wasn't concerned and they knew we know k for certainis because brian deese is the director of the white house economic council just admitted that he knew on cnn quote we were aware back in february and we've had a team on this from the fda, an interagency process since then. okay, so joe biden has been on this problem since february. so why is this still a problem? why it's so impossible to buy

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America Reports With John Roberts Sandra Smith-20220214-19:47:00

what responsibility the president not getting essential information from the commanders on the ground? >> nancy, i would tell you through the month of august, well before the month of august, there was a very robust, steady, frequent interagency process. >> yet to receive that, but -- >> sandra: now talking about the phone call with the president, president vladimir putin, and president biden on saturday. >> now, there was no discussion, no specific decision as to when that dialogue would take place, we don't have anything scheduled at the moment. the next step will be the receipt of the russia response. we'll need a bit of time to evaluate it. but as we said, we are prepared to engage in diplomacy, hope to engage in good faith dialogue and diplomacy. but in order for it to be good faith, of course that will

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The Story With Martha MacCallum-20220208-20:49:00

who are these individuals that should have been on the game and wasn't and are they going to be held accountable? who would you point to? >> having been involved in discussions with central command and the uscis and the state department, the one thing i have to say is the people on the ground were very sympathetic. it's a breakdown in leadership. a lot of people that would hear our case and completely agr with it and never got done what they didn't get done in most cases. so i think the leadership has to be held accountable. why the interagency process broke down? i have a confirmation hearing today with the incoming head of central command. the department of defense, the army and the lines of service are bested positioned to know who is in the country and who we should get out. something like that is missing and it's a break down in leadership and the people at the highest levels need to be held

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Katy Tur Reports-20220214-19:47:00

>> nancy, what i would tell you is throughout the month of august -- in fact, well before the month of august, there was a very robust, steady, frequent interagency process -- decision-making process. we started thinking about and planning for a noncombatant evacuation as far back as april, and we did not do that in a vacuum. there was ample discussions about that through the spring, and all through the summer, the chairman and the secretary take seriously their requirement to provide the commander-in-chief with their best advice about how to proceed forward and how the situation is changing, and there were many, many opportunities for them to do that, both in terms of larger interagency meetings as well as private sessions they have weekly with

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