washington can be very much like a slow boiling pot of water. often the people who face the most scrutiny and lytic apparel, they don t seem to realize the trouble they are in until it s too late. critics say that could very well be the position that president biden finds himself in fairly soon, because despite repeated inquiries, neither the president nor his press secretary are answering basic questions about the classified documents. and certainly not in a way that s been anything close to the previous claim of being the most transparent administration in history. rather, critics argue they are continuing to, well, their track record of being the most secretive and dismissive administration in recent memory, including today s ill-fated attempt at a briefing by the dni. and tom cotton says he is going to slow down confirmation of all of mr. biden s nominees until congress is allowed to review the classified documents found at the homes of both biden and former president tru
wasi document to his journey from pakistan to brazil to the border. he went into hiding living from safe has to say half s with the help of american veterans he was still in contact with. the fbi met with wasi safi earlier this month to verify his identity and military service records. representative s mike waltz, dan crenshaw, and sheila jackson lee joined top pentagon officials in lobbying the biden administration to release wasi safi. this wasn t a partisan issue, it was an american issue. but how many others are in the situation? abdul wasi safi will now live with his brother, sami, and houston. he still faces asylum hearings but won t do so from a prison cell. customs and border patrol reports they have encountered 1,339 afghans at the southern border since september. trace? trace: that is good news, jennifer griffin. while i ve got you, i want to ask about the news of the day, which is that the u.s. is now saying they will send