heart, and a hospital technician. we ll be on the scene all night long. our command post is coming out. the faa will conduct an entire investigation. we ll assist them in any way we can. julie: the mayo clinic saying the heart they were going to pick up could not be used in another transplant because it s viability expired. federal investigators now looking into that crash. jon: al-qaida in iraq now claims responsibility for a deadly wave of attacks that ripped through baghdad last week. nearly 70 people killed in one day in a series of coordinated blasts, sparking more concerns about security in the withdrawal of all u.s. troops. senior foreign affairs correspondent amy kellogg live in london with more, amy. reporter: this is really soaking fears that al-qaida maybe on the a send tkapbt again, exploiting a power vacuum. a lot of fears that sectarian violence in iraq may be experiencing an up surge again.
i would see it of being raised in the christian faith. but it s also about god revealing himself to people in different ways and at different times. and i think it s a wonderful thing that we can respect each other s different traditions to say merry christmas and also to say happy hanukkah and blessed hanukkah. what a great thing that we re celebrating the gift of god s love to us in different forms. we feel loved. i loved you the first time i met you in rome. that s right. here you are. that was a long time ago. it was a long time ago. thank you for being with us and for sharing the spirit today. father, thank you so much. and it s just fabulous. i got one more service today at 4:25. go get them, father. spread the love. absolutely. well, now to the future of iraq. the last unit of u.s. forces pull out of the country and headed home for the holidays, there s a red hot political crisis that s sparking fears that iraq could potentially come apart. sectarian tensio
gregg. heather: a fox news alert for you. al qaeda in iraq now claiming responsibility for a deadly wave of attacks that ripped through baghdad last week. nearly 70 people killed in one day in a series of coordinated blasts leaving some new concerns about the country after the withdrawal of u.s. troops. senior foreign affairs correspondent amy kellogg is live for us in london with the details. amy, what did this terror group say? reporter: well it is the islamic state of iraq that claimed responsibility to be technical here, heather, on a website. it is an umbrella group for all the al qaeda-affiliated organizations in iraq. it is a sunni extremist group and it said that the waves of attacks that happened last week, 14 of them in a coordinated series of explosions that rocked the capital as well as the attack on the interior