Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has little time to prove he can hold things together before the 2023 referendum on his leadershipMalaysian prime minister Anwar Ibrahim has only a short time to prove he can hold things together ahead of the next referendum on his leadership in 2023
way from a claim of a responsibility but we are watching that with our sources, and we are now hearing from jill ian as well that there is increased pro-islamic state telegram chatter, more on this as it comes in. elizabeth: and more insight let s bring in former cia operation officer mike baker. mike thank you so much for joining us. certainly, we re dissecting this information as it s coming in and we re waiting on german officials to come out and say whether or not this was an accident or whether or not an act of terror but certainly with our own jillian who worked at the national security council for years it appears there is an up-tick of chatter and i m curious to what s going on behind the scenes and what your sources are saying. yeah, well, look it s typical for the german leland: for the government there and for others in the eu to take their time in deciding, you know, when they pull that trigger and say that it s a terrorists incident so that s not a surprise they re
purpose, defacing websites for propaganda for certain groups they re pro for. this one is specifically pro-isis. that s what they ve done. hacked over 8000 websites webs past. their pro-isis. pro-islamic states, and what they primarily hack for. trying to spread media around that and show signs of support and hack into government entities. they ve broken into a number of different u.s.-specific states as wealth as federal government websites as well. with all respect to the governor, why john kasich? seems like there are a lot of other targets that are preferably closer to donald trump who seems they were trying to get a message across to? i don t think governor kasich and donald trump are best buds at this point. when it comes to what they re trying to do, any site that has security vulnerabilities, usually rudimentary hacks in nature. they go after whatever they
pro-mupro pro-muslim brotherhood, pro-islamic state. but there are a whole lot more egyptians out there who want change and they don t think that change is coming fast enough. wes, this brings up the question being whether to call this a coup or not a coup has i think put a the lot of people we found ourselves at a crossroads. to a certain degree, a large part of the egyptian population didn t want to see morsi go. there is also the argument that if you don t like what is happening in a democracy, you do not tear apart the threads that hold the democratic institution together to get change should happen within the institution. i don t even know how you begin to answer that what seems certain is that this region will be in chaos for some time given the lack of leadership. it is important that you say the region. this is this has implications that are much larger than simply just egypt. when we are talking about egypt, first talking about the second largest recipient of u.s.
bolton, we do back parties and individuals, pro-shirria and pro-islamic ones, like the muslim brotherhood. why didn t we back the democratic movement in iran in 2009, if that s what the united states does? the president s policy is confused. that statement was mushier than even his usual statements. look, we have mishandled the situation in egypt for two and-a-half years. i don t think the president knows, really, where he stands or what he wants to do. the anti-morsi demonstrators for several days have criticized the obama administration for standing with the muslim brotherhood, which most americans would find inexapplicable. i think we shouldn t overstate our influence. i do think we have influence with the military through years of providing extensive assistance. i hope that that was understood by the military. and i think, although it overturns an elected president, really, it is in america s