i m jim acosta in washington will be in this hour of americans caught up in the escalating crisis in sudan. just minutes ago, the u. s state department announced it will carry out a military assisted evacuation of government personnel if the crisis worsens . in the past week, more than 400 people have died since two rival generals first lead their forces into a battle for control of the country. that death toll includes at least one american. both sudan s army and its paramilitary rival. the rsf say they will help evacuate for nationals. the u. s is making preparations to get diplomatic personnel right out right now. but the white house says private citizens should not expect and evacuation. we have correspondents in the military expert here to help us tackle all of the angles of the story. let s begin with cnn s larry meadow, a live in nairobi, kenya. larry. i know things are very fluid at the moment. but what s the latest on these evacuations? jim right now there s evacuati
aggressive they were, how overreaching they were that they were willing to go past the four corners of the warrant and take whatever they thought was appropriate or felt they could take and go back through and looked through everything once they realized maybe we went a little too far, then negotiate the return of it. that is absolutely not the way the warrant is supposed to be executed to. shannon: in an exclusive interview with fox news, the former president continues to dispute the classification of the record seized adding the has to be brought down in the country, threats to law enforcement following the mar-a-lago rate, kevin corke is here now on what we know about exactly where the doj investigation stands tonight. in a court filing federal prosecutors asked the court to deny any revelation that might otherwise present the affidavit to american citizens. you may be sitting why would they do that? the fact is they feel like this will jeopardize the investigation. on
Events. But she still has nightmares and dont know where her mom is at right now. And thats not the only person that she doesnt know where shes at right now because her aunt, caramel, which was playing with her all weekend and every time, and every minute she was in the kibbutz, she was coming to play. And their grandmother that died, but we are not telling her because thats not something that she can take for the moment. And she was really connected to her as well. Were a really close family. I know you are. And would you stay in touch, i know we had connective problems from your end, but would you stay in touch. Were out of time on our show, but please let us know and well talk to you we hope with better news. Thank you. Thank you very much. We want to bring them back, and we want women and children first. Anyone that see this need to remember its a human thing. Its not a war between two sides. Its a human matter. We need to bring back the girls and the children first. After that the
be a far more precise number. yeah and general. the state department estimates estimates that there are about 16,000 americans in sudan. um most are dual nationals. i mean, what? what is the danger right now for those americans. well let s look at the ceasefire. the ceasefire is probably only relevant to the urban area in and around the airport within khartoum, where those other 16,000 americans, dual citizens are located could be throughout the sudan, which is an incredibly large country, so that becomes a challenge if you have these disparate pockets of us citizens. that s what john kirby was talking about in terms of the magnitude of that type of an evacuation. it would be phenomenal unless there s been a call to get everybody into a couple of very precise locations . this will be something that would be incredibly difficult for the united states and especially led by the military to execute. and could this blow
rights have been rolled back despite promises to the contrary. one activist organized the protest over the weekend to speak out about the issue. the demonstration was broken up by the taliban who fired guns into the air. they forced us to take a stand and raise our voices because they are going against their promises. what we have encountered so far as fear and anxiety from afghan civilians, they don t know what comes next but they do know the country has been set back decades. in kabul, trey yingst, fox news. shannon: a year later nearly 75,000 applicants remained in the pipeline requesting escape from afghanistan that is according to the latest state department estimates. something one of our next guests said would take more than 100 years to process of the we are doing it. with former state department officials and former foreign policy advisor to the obama campaign david to bury and save our allies cofounder, how the