the mublg. this is definitely not the first one. gregg: leading car maker, called great wall, plans to double assembly plants overseas to 24 by 2015 and raise manufacturing capacity to half a million vehicles. this emerging marketplace and india, they economies are booming and trying to exported products? yes, they are. and they are taking plants like japan did essentially and putting them in places may need them. come to the u.s. and bring jobs here. everybody thinks exporting jobs over there, it could be that. remember when toyota and korea came out with the first cars, everybody laughed. china should follow that model. gregg: japanese cars are known for being sort of maintenance free. they run like a top and they are
bagram. millions of muslims celebrating the end of ramadan with feasts and festivities in iraq which is about 97% muslim. indonesia is seeing packed mosques as the largest muslim majority nation in the world. observers in china leaving food offerings there marking the end of the fasting month of ramadan. here is assad making his first public appearance since the bombing that killed four security officials. in the meantime, they are stepping up attacks pounding rebel fighters in the strategic city of aleppo. steve harrigan is streaming live where many syrians are fleeing violence. reporter: it was a rare public appearance by the syrian president. he appeared at a small mosque near the compound to mark the end of the holy month of
buy those goods? that has been a long problem between the u.s. and china. finally they are coming around a bit and that will make a difference. gregg: so china could be the next japan in terms of the great producer, manufacturing of goods? they got to get rid of the asbestos and quality problems, but we ll see. gregg: brenda, great to see you, thanks very much. you can catch her on bulls and bears every seriously morning 10:00 a.m. eastern time right here on the fox news channel. heather: annual 9/11 memorial ride completing their journey. in shanksville, pennsylvania they honored those who died on flight 93. riders headed to washington, d.c. to pay their respects to the pentagon memorial and on to the world trade center site. anna has more. reporter: very emotional day. it markets the final leg for the
newark liberty international airport. it was bound for seattle and reported smoke in the cabin. just last night a flight bound for germany made an emergency landing. that plane s engine caught fire. several japanese activists landing on a rky island in the east china sea. part of an island chain china and japan have been feuding over decades. it could worsen relationships. diane nyad is trying to be the first person to swim from cuba to florida without a shark cage. gregg: good luck to her. chinese automakers efforts to move into the american marketplace being dealt a two a blow. they recalled 23,000 of their vehicles that were sold in
fairly inexpensive to repair. that is what they have to do. it s quality really has to be part of this. gregg: let s talk the inverse. given the economies that are growing so tremendously in india and china isn t that good news for american companies that love to export products? absolutely. we are seeing that. there is more middle-class. china wants more middle-class. they want them to consume things they want stimulus not just come from industrial based companies. they want the middle-class to start buying. made in the u.s.a. is basically says quality to the chinese which is very interesting because it s often the inverse to us. gregg: china s currency is getting stronger and stronger against the u.s. dollar which means for chinese consumers of american goods it s cheaper to