when you show them losing. for the longest team, i don t know when it started, 2013, 2014, we watch unabated horrific videos and people joining isis because there was no response. we couldn t show them anything. so i think it s when we started watching isis getting humiliated and giving up, that s when the recruitsment died. the more you see them die, the better it is for the world. jessie: and they said that gitmo is a recruiting tool and it s still open and less isis. barack obama telling people to knock it off. that story coming at you next. he community, we present limu emu & doug with this key to the city. [ applause ] it s an honor to tell you that liberty mutual customizes your car insurance
same way that al qaeda survived the death of osama bin laden. yeah. erin, way nt to let our viewers know what you re seeing right now is that video we have been awaiting, it is of the aftermath, that location, that safe house there in northwestern ear i can t where this strike took place. erin, some details are trickling out. have you heard that he may have died as a result of a suicide vest being detonated, whether or not that was something that he personally detonated or in exchange in a fire fight that may have been detonated for him? i mean, is it typical that these kinds of vests or belts are born by these isis members just in case? reporter: well, alex, we have seen those reports that he did perhaps detonate or someone detonated for him a suicide vest in the midst of this u.s. operation. we have yet to get confirmation of that, but it is a known isis tactic to carry out a suicide to
the turkish border. it s not the safest place for al baghdadi to have been. there are other groups that operate there that are closer to al qaeda and that ever no love loss for isis. in fact, there are groups operating there that actively look out for and kill isis fighters. so the fact that baghdadi chose to be there suggests a level of desperation, it also suggests he was perhaps trying to get somewhere else. we heard earlier in the hour richard engel point out that that particular location is known for people smuggling in and out of turkey. that s that could be very indicative. the other they think i m looking out for is that this was a raid, right? there were military boots on the ground so i would be curious to find out hopefully the president will tell us in a little while what information was acquired. remember, when bin laden was killed in pakistan, they got ahold of laptops and a trove of information. i wonder whether that also
dead after a u.s. military operation last night in northwestern syria. we are awaiting some new video of the aftermath of the u.s. special forces operation which targeted a suspected isis safe house, u.s. helicopters, jets and drones all were deployed. officials believe that the isis leader abu bakr al baghdadi is among the dead. erin mclaughlin is joining me from turkey just across that border from syria. what are you hearing from your vantage point? reporter: well, alex, everything we re hearing so far from u.s. sources suggests a well-executed, well-planned operation took place in the middle of the night by u.s. special forces. they attacked by air then went in on ground to gather intelligence using planes, drones and helicopters. we understand that during the operation a safe house was
hierarch hierarchal, and isis is one of them, where the fighters take on a decentralized kind of structure, it s really not as effective in bringing an end to the group when you decompass tate the leader. what was it like being a woman under deep cover? horrible things could happen to you as a woman. was it easier to get information? how did you do all of that? one of the things that is exciting in the intelligence woman at the moment is seeing more and more women take on leadership roles. because my experience was that actually the feminine approached problem-solving, the emotional intelligence and in tuition and multitasking are critical to the intelligence officer. we don t necessarily see them