the interior temperature is at least 165 degrees. you ve got to use a thermometer to do that. and anytime that you re handling chicken, make sure you thoroughly wash the surfaces, the utensils that you propose the chicken with so that prep the chicken with so that the salmonella doesn t linger and get onto other food. this is the second time foster farms has had an outbreak this year. earlier this spring 134 people in 13 states were sickened by it, but the centers for disease control signed off on that back in july saying that outbreak was over. clearly, jenna, more problems today with foster farms. jenna: a story we ll continue to watch, john. thank you. reporter: thanks. jon: an ohio school district in a big fight to try to keep its picture of jesus on public display. there s an end to this legal battle now. we ll tell you about that. plus, should the washington redskins change their name? the controversy s been around for years, but now some major players are weighing in. muck
maybe both sides can he address the problem with sequester spending both on defense and spending side and in return there is conversation about entitlements that gets rolling in a way it hasn t all year long. jenna that is an interesting scenario if it comes out that way. seems based on your description there might be sunlight for it to work that way. the question of the new health care law keeps popping up. yeah. jenna it is noticeable you don t have that in the scenario. is that something you feel republicans have to push that to aside? they have to decide they will fight that in a different venue or reduce demands down to something like, for example, the question whether this tax on medical devices ought to be part of the conversation. i think democrats are prepared to entertain that conversation. the idea you can use this budget negotiation i m talking about as a way to fundamentally change obamacare i think the political reality is and republicans will admit this in private th
think that actually is a weakness. but chinese people, though, see an open disagreement, people are able to actually have a debate and conversation and even argue and they actually like that because their government doesn t operate that way. and that s why there s been a lot of comments on china s internet ta the u.s. system is much superior to their own. but throughout the rest of asia, when you look at asian leaders, they re very concerned about president obama missing the two big regional meetings, the apec meeting in indonesia and they re looking for leadership against a china which seems to be threatening most of those countries from india in the south to south korea in the north and we ve just gone missing. jenna: it s interesting. japan came out today as well, japan s finance minister followed china and said wanting to get a deal. your own perspective in all of this, as you re watching a lot of different governments at work, you say you don t see disfunction in this debate. shar
more global than we ve seen today where it comprehensively applies pressure from pakistan to, say, morocco where al qaeda is active. but it s tailored down to the local level and it s working with partners on the ground. and of course, there are concerns that the united states needs to be looking to defeat the al qaeda network on the whole rather than piece meal. jenna: there was a report a few moments ago saying, listen, al qaeda, the core al qaeda in pakistan has been affected. that has been a victory for us but in your research, what is the connection between all of the al qaeda groups, whether it s al-shabaab in somalia, groups operating in libya and their connection back to pakistan or vice versa? the importance of pakistan is still there. the group there is important but what we need to remember is that al qaeda has changed. today the groups are inter woven and connected in ways they were not connected in 2001. and it s those relationships,
otherwise, as we have seen, al qaeda will continue to be a threat to the united states. jenna: what we saw over the weekend was the intent as we understand it to capture some high value individuals and to gather intelligence from them but you say if we kill our capture all of the top guys in al qaeda, al qaeda will still be stronger than it was 12 years ago. why? why is that the way it is in your opinion? getting the top leadership is, of course, important but what we ve seen is that it s not a long term effect on the organization. it s been able to regroup in areas that it has control and so we need to start developing a strategy that goes after the mid to lower level operate ivoperat. it s expanded today across africa and the middle east. jenna: what would that look like? the strategy is going to be something that has actually been