about lithium batteries? i knew all about that, did you come about lithium batteries? about lithium batteries? i know never to stick about lithium batteries? i know never to stick them about lithium batteries? i know never to stick them in - about lithium batteries? i know never to stick them in the i about lithium batteries? i know never to stick them in the bin l about lithium batteries? i know. never to stick them in the bin but i never to stick them in the bin but i never saw the impact. that was remarkable. it never saw the impact. that was remarkable- never saw the impact. that was remarkable. it was. what is your chart, i like remarkable. it was. what is your chart, i like a remarkable. it was. what is your chart, i like a charter. remarkable. it was. what is your chart, i like a charter. i - remarkable. it was. what is your chart, i like a charter. i know- remarkable. it was. what is your| chart, i like a charter. i know you do but i thought chart, i like a charte
they go to canada, mexico and britain. those are traditionally the closest neighbors, closest ally. in going to saudi arabia, he s choosing to go to the country that is perhaps more than any other country in origin, the font of radical islamic terrorism in the way he describes it. 15 of the 19 bombers from 9/11 were saudi. the saudi government initially, and then saudi private foundations and people have funded radical islam all over the world, billiowe so ma bin l was saudi. you look at almost all terrorist attacks somewhere the leads go back to saudi arabia. says he s going to create a partnership there to fight extremism and terrorism. let s hope he it us that. the symbolism is odd. i would have gone to britain. fareed zakaria great to have you here from the bottom line. thanks so much for being with us. cnn newsroom with poppy harlow and john berman picks up
deposition. bret: there s other news today, a senior law maker calling for the administration to release more bin l documents. we ve done that story before. reporter: that s right. this week the house intelligence committee is doing a deep dive on the bin l document, questioning why only 17 are public. we need to have that extra set of eyes scrutinizing this information and coming to a conclusion about where where wey going, did we miss something, can we do something better to try to counter their growth industry of al-qaeda affiliates around the world. reporter: after the raid in pakistan two years ago, senior aadministration officials say te documents, mostly on thumb drives and cds, amounted to a small college library. two reviews were done, one by the cia, the second by military intelligence, generating more than 400 military intelligence reports which appears to undercut claims that bin laden was no longer relevant. bret: there are possibly hundreds of thousands of those