afghanistan you may want to know where they could have familial ties. it s a very big city. pretty small police department when you think about the amount of terrain i want has to cover. this is not a perfect situation. i m trying to get little beyond what would have been prudent. one of the people who pushed to end this is the one who helped to get honor diaries shut down. she helped to get this shut down. the mayor came out and i ll read you in part. he said this is a critical step forward in easing tensions between the police in the communities they serve so cops and citizens can help go after the real bad guys. they felt the muslim community felt alienated and trying to heal rifts.
in their terrorist camps or afghanistan you may want to know where they could have familial ties. it s a very big city. pretty small police department when you think about the amount of terrain i want has to cover. this is not a perfect situation. i m trying to get little beyond what would have been prudent. one of the people who pushed to end this is the one who helped to get honor diaries shut down. she helped to get this shut down. the mayor came out and i ll read you in part. he said this is a critical step forward in easing tensions between the police in the communities they serve so cops and citizens can help go after the real b they felt the muslim community felt alienated and trying to heal rifts.
of the united states charter. it threatens peace and security in europe. russia must stop its military activities and its threats. today we will discuss their implications for european peace and security and for nato s relationship with russia. currently under way a meeting of the nato ukraine commission. that is at the request of ukrainian officials. the commission was actually established in 1997. it was designed to improve ukraine s defense capabilities as well as strengthen ties between kiev and western europe. so that meeting currently under way. we don t have a timetable as to when that will end. we do expect ukrainian ambassador to speak here in brussels following that meeting. so far the messaging coming out of brussels is one of easing
again, another crazy end to the session. my mom says my tie s not straight. is it better now? all right, mom? better? thank you, mrs. cuomo, looking out. thank you, thank you. you want to continue? my whole morning s blown. you ll be fine. we ll play through. chris won t make it through. it s a very busy news morning. let s get to michaela pereira with the other stories developing. we begin with a major about face for north korea. it is proposing high level talks with the u.s., saying it is ready to discuss easing tensions and pulling the plug on its nuclear ambitions. a top north korean official says they re willing to meet at any time and at any place the u.s. wants. it also proposed talks with south korea this month, but that agreement fell apart. a bloody weekend in chicago. the chicago tribune reporting a staggering 46 people shot, 7 of them fatally, in separate incidents of violence. cnn has not been able to independently confirm these numbers yet. chicago has seen
falling through the summer. experts say easing tensions over iran s nuclear program and re-opening of refineries and plummeting crude oil prices could get us closer to $3 a gallon. and gerri willis has the news. the president was working on this and that and putting pressure here and there and now the vice down but it has nothing to do with him. gerri: that is not what the analysts are saying. they say europe s demand is down. shepard: they don t have anything. gear gore they are trying to pay their debt. and supplies are up. so they say those things are creating less demand for oil so prices are down and we had an expert saying on fox business network that gas a gallon could go do $3.50 in short order. shepard: everything with iran is tamped down with restrictions on them. gerri: that is a big deal. the fear of the market drives prices higher and higher and