a month, interesting thing from a foreign policy aspect, is president obama responsible for al qaeda s morphing and evolution. i don t know about that. maybe not. one of the reasons for the increased chatter here is a lot of these prisoners have escaped from where we have been holding them and we have been releasing them. so you have the abu ghraib prison break, morsi in egypt released about a thousand the other day, in afghanistan we have a program where we pay militants to leave the battlefield, they get to keep their guns, just have to sign the dotted line, say i am going to reintegrate into the community. they should do that for chicago. it might work. sundays, everybody knows i love to watch the sunday shows, i sit and record them just for this show. here is a montage of people talking about the terror threats. a threat to blow up an embassy, consulate or something else. that part of it is unspecified, but the intent seems clear. and the intent is to what?
information. reporter: but a planning document obtained by sky news indicates the attendees are worried about the development of schisms amongst the brotherhood s leaders and rank and file, that they see the movement also suffering from, quote, fragmentation and that they hope to combat these trends in part by means of subterfuge. the document recommends brotherhood supporters publish files to expose corruption by the egyptian military and other opponents of the deposed morsi government and suggests amplifying the statements of senator john mccain and other u.s. lawmakers who have described the army takeover in egypt as a coup. they are going back to what had been their previous strategy for getting into power in the first place, which is to work secretly, to defame and spread distortions and lies about their enemies. to spread division among their enemies. this is precisely why they have fallen because they didn t understand the mistakes they were making. reporter: as american p
government. the brotherhood is going to have to be part of it in some way. i don t really know how this gets resolved. right now we are back to where we started. we vergovernment in egypt. bill? i m heartened that if this document is correct and accurate and information some sort that the muslim brotherhood thinks that the coup in egypt was a real blow to the muslim brotherhood and morsi s ability to governor by a very very narrow margin behind him. if he failed, that s a good thing. i hope we aggressively push to support friends elsewhere in the region who are neither military or muslim brotherhood. at times you have got to pick the lesser of military. the military maybe is the lesser of two evils in this case. they do seem intent not to try governor forever and hand it over to some kind of civilian leadership. i think people have been much the arab spring happened. great, wonderful. democracy. a later, it s horrible, arab winter. nightmare the muslim
arrange asylum. today vladimir putin characterized his long stay as an unwelcome present foisted on russia by the u.s.. security forces fired taker gas today when pro and anti-more city forces clashed in cairo. tonight james rosen tells us two week after his overthrow, more city s supporters are not giving up. in fact they re joining forces with others across the region. reporter: from sky news arabia, a sister organization of fox news, an explosive report about a secret emergency session to be held in coming days in istanbul that will bring together major muslim brotherhood figures from the mideast, europe and the hamas organization. their aim, plotting the return to power of ousted president morsi in egypt and other action to reverse the political fortunes. it was not a meeting if it occurred that the united states was involved in. so i don t have anymore
nato and a close u.s. ally. while last night s protest may look like the arab spring, we re sure you heard the comparison our next guest says, turkey is very different and we need to snow that. he is a senior fellow with the cato institute. so, doug, why, why is it different? the critical difference here turkey is democracy. the prime minister s been elected. his party has won three straight elections. every election they gain popular vote. polls show he has support of about half the population which is percentage that his party got in the elections a couple of years ago. so he is not likely to be toppled the way we saw in these authoritarian regimes. this is a very different system. he has problems but this is a democracy. jenna: there have been some questions raised about other democratically elected leaders like morsi in egypt or ahmadinejad in iran, for example. there seems to be widespread or wide swath of the public in turkey that have been issue with his rule. even though, he