want the affordable care act to go according to the time line set by congress. greta: congressman, always nice to see you. thank you, sir. you too. greta: the u.s. making a major announcement about egypt. former alaska governor sarah palin hitting the campaign trail and undercover cop landing on the wrong side of the law. get ready to speedway your way through the news. first the state department announcing the u.s. will withhold the delivery of military equipment and cash assistance to egypt s military backed government. the u.s. and future aid will depend on egypt s progress on democracy and human rights. now to west virginia. a man with an assault weapon opening fire at federal courthouse. security officers returning fire killing a suspect. is he reportedly a former police officer. no one else was seriously hurt. now to alaska. well, sort of. also to new jersey. former governor sarah palin planned to travel to new jersey this weekend. she will wane for steve lonegan. she will
make and part of me doesn t want the affordable care act to go according to the time line set by congress. greta: congressman, always nice to see you. thank you, sir. you too. greta: the u.s. making a major announcement about egypt. former alaska governor sarah palin hitting the campaign trail and undercover cop landing on the wrong side of the law. get ready to speedway your way through the news. first the state department announcing the u.s. will withhold the delivery of military equipment and cash assistance to egypt s military backed government. the u.s. and future aid will depend on egypt s progress on democracy and human rights. now to west virginia. a man with an assault weapon opening fire at federal courthouse. security officers returning fire killing a suspect. is he reportedly a former police officer. no one else was seriously hurt. now to alaska. well, sort of. also to new jersey. former governor sarah palin planned to travel to new jersey this weekend. she will wane
this is the fox report, heather childers in for harris faulkner. debate intensifying on capitol hill over providing u.s. aid to egypt. it is a country ripe with turmoil. after the military removed a democratically elected leader and days of protests have left more than 800 dead. this comes as we learn of more deaths, this time 38 muslim brotherhood supporters died in attempt to escape from a prison trust convoy. jake lip encot joins us by phone from cairo. what s the latest on the ground now and how likely is it that civil war could break out? reporter: well, as you mention, these protests against the military backed government have been escalating, use of force against them reached
plans to stop to sit ins against morsi. the goal was to cut off access to food. it appears it s not happening, not yet. in cairo, what is the latest on this? reporter: things are calm at this hour, john. you get the impression a lot of people are anticipating what s to come. a lot of people went to sleep last night thinking they might wake up and a crackdown would be under way against two pro-morsi rallies taking place for six weeks now. morning came, however, the crackdowns did not. no sign of security forces, no sign of police. the demonstrations continue as we speak. what we have is this high stakes waiting game and this political conflict where on one size you have the military backed government. on the other side, supporters of morsi and the muslim
than mohammed morsi reinstatement would convince them to leave the streets. one month after he was deposed by the military, his supporters continued to protest. with reconciliation talks at a standstill, egyptian authorities are vowing to flow morsi supporters from the camp starting at daylight. it could trigger a lot more bloodshed. military backed government is under intense pressure to end the protests by the muslim brotherhood. at the same time u.s. and european diplomats are demanding any action be done peacefully. twice the egyptian police have tried to end the demonstrations. both times they have failed. in the process more than 250 people have been killed. it isn t clear that the egyptian military backed government is in any mood to listen to u.s. or other european demands despite the billions in aid they get from the u.s.