terrorism task forces in minneapolis, san diego, and mobile, alabama, for their work on these cases. i also want to thank the duch klpd, the dutch ministry of justice, the justice department s own office of international affairs, the state department including the u.s. embassies in the united arab emirates and yemen, the hague in the netherlands, and the department of defense for their assistance in the minneapolis cases, in particular. now, these indictments and arrests would not have been possible without the critical contributions from the national security division, led by assistant attorney general david chris and the u.s. attorney s offices in minnesota, the southern district of alabama, and the southern district of california. all of whom are here with me on the stage today and represented by todd jones from minnesota, lauren duffy from san diego, and kenyan brown from alabama. i would now like to turn it over to the fbi s executive assistant director for the national security b
adding 1,200 jobs and a second shift. the president strongly defended the unpopular $60 billion decision to bail out the auto industry and said it prevented a collapse. we had to face a hard, unimaginable reality. which was two of the big three automakers, gm and chrysler, were on the brink of liquidation. if that had happened, more than 1 million jobs could have been lost. and that would have been a devastating blow to the entire dmi. well, new numbers show the auto industry is making a comeback. general motors saw sales in july jump by 25% from a year ago. ford, up 22.5%. and chrysler up a more modest 5%. bob king is the president of the united auto workers, joins me now. how much of the recovery that you re seeing among american auto manufacturers do you think, bob, is directly attributable to the policies of this administration? a tremendous amount. if it hadn t been for president obama believing in american workers and wanting products made in america, we would hav