save lives. this is the second shooting at a naval facility this week. phil keating, how many foreign nationals are trading training at the station? the base commander the past hour just estimated it was in the hundreds. part of a long-standing international agreement between the u.s. military as well as its allies and, that dates all the way back to world war ii. he also added that guns are not allowed onto the naval air station property except for military police and security officers and the weapon used today was not a rifle, it was a handgun somehow or another smuggled in. naval air station pensacola, it remains on lock down and will be cleared at building by building. so far there s no evidence of this was more than just one shooter. not only is the shooter dead, but also three other people who
point. as you can imagine, there are just dozens of police officers. i m told firefighters did clear the scene. right now it s all about just making sure they do have this situation under control and that they have everybody safe as they go very, very carefully, room by room, building by building. and so vic, police are confirming multiple fatalities and that one suspect is dead. but what, if anything, can you tell us about how they re going about going into these locked places, finding people there, trying to discern, you know, who may, if at all, if there was any involvement with people who may be in these locked areas or if those people located were all just trying to cover for safety? so they re not talking about their protocol right now.
why not? first of all, it is a significant milestone taking down the head of the state pays him bulimic safe haven that they have had for five years, putting it at the feet of the obama administration for not taking the state safe haven sooner. the reality is that first of all, the people who are involved, the u.s. coalition deserve some credit. block by block, building by building, investigating room by room, the unbelievable amount of ids and explosives all over the place. but the reason is, isis, while they have moved from the vulnerable as a result of taking this down, they are not dead by no means, they have expanded it to 30 countries. they have a virtual caliphate which they use to expire the taxes all around the globe. they have attacked nato
prussia issue that s drowning it out. it not to say that that s not important but these are very important for the future of the world. are they not? absolutely. three years ago, isis came on the world stage. 30,000 strong. largest terror organization ever created. they raced across the border into iraq and caused the iraqi army to flee on television, as we saw. they took control of the major city in iraq. years ago, three. it produced the toughest infantry fighting the seen since world war ii. block by block, building by building. room by room. thousands of civilians killed by isis if they resisted. they made them human shields. that caused them to get killed again. it was absolutely horrific what was taking part there, in terms of the human dimension of this.
well. the u.n. has estimated 10,000 civilians still in that small area. building by building, block by block, as it s being liberated, they are fleeing, but they re fleeing in a city that s a wreck. very little fuel, resources, electricity. it s gonna take a while to bring this city back even when the horrendous terrorists are gone. melissa: greg palcott, thank you. new information ab a soldier killed in afghanistan. private first class hampton kirkpatrick was shot. the 19-year-old soldier died in helmut province in southern afghanistan. two other soldiers suffering nonlife threatening woupbsd. an investigation into the attack is under way. dozens of states now openly defying a request from the chief of president trump s election