yemen is releasing an english training manual. telling wannabe terrorists not to leave their home for a week so they can understand what terror camps are like. they said to image virgins waiting for them in paradise when they feel afraid. it is written by a man who is known to spread terrorism. a wildfire is still raging in arizona and forcing many residents to flee their homes. the fire has grown to nearly 1 square mile destroying two buildings and one trailer. crews continue to fight the fires across the state. the dry hot weather making it difficult to contain the flames. no more waiting to make a call until you get off your flight. passengers on virgin atlantic will be able to make in-flight cell phone calls and send text messages. it is only available on london
the police and the antiterror police are outside going on for 18 or 19 hours and we have seen movement with police and vans and police moving around thinking there could be something happening, but not yet. again, this man claims to be an islamic militant with ties to al qaeda and officials think he does. he has spent time in afghanistan and pakistan and at terror camps and he claims to be responsible for the killings you talked about at jewish school and the friend soldiers and he says he did it to protest the french involvement in afghanistan and the death of palestinian children. right now, the police are waiting to move in and it could happen in the next couple of hours or minutes. they do not want him dead. they want him alive but he is a dangerous person. shepard: back to you as news develops. presidential candidate mitt romney a step closer to the g.o.p. nomination after he won,
her down wherever you may encounter, he said, referring to the u.s., calling it a murderous country. the new calls for attacks add weight to the concerns about the unknown whereabouts of dozens of young men from somali and yemeni neighborhoods in minneapolis and detroit. u.s. officials say many ended up in terror training camps overseas and the u.s. has lost track of them. a 2008 recruitment tape for an al qaeda-connected group in somalia features an anonymous young man speaking with what seems to be an american accent and phrasing. we have a global mission reporter: in minneapolis another suspected terror recruiter, mahmoud saed omar, made his initial appearance in federal court, charged with steering young men from the twin cities to terror camps in somalia. u.s. officials are now being described as on full alert given the approaching 9/11 anniversary. so far there s been very little of the so-called terrorist chatter, which means either there s nothing going on, or perhaps as
cracks down, there s more bloodshed, that could play into the al qaeda narrative of an american backed dictator oppressing the population. it s a dangerous position for the united states. there are no real good options here. the best situation would be a managed transition away from saleh. there seems to be some prospect of talks in saudi arabia on this. i think the united states would likely back that process, christine. what we re seeing in afghanistan that ali reported from the wall street journal, not like the 90s when you had this long string of terror camps training thousands of young men. concerning to you that there s a renewed interest there? given what happened here in new york ten years ago in september, of course it s concerning. any time al qaeda has a safe haven, it has the chance to plot attacks. like you say, this is not the elaborate camp system of the 90s. most of that presence is still on the pakistani side of the border, but this is a wake-up call, if there
sentencing of committed terror admitted terrorist that d si bull saad si. they want the sentencing moved to june of next year. sa si, the limo driver from denver who told l fbi agents he trained in pakistani terror camps, was supposed to learn his fate for plotting to set off bombs in the new york city subway system. jenna: a big debate in washington over taxes. congressional republicans and democrats in this a heated battle over which americans should get tax relief to get the economy rolling, but some critics feel cutting taxes alone is not going to do the trick here like our next guest, peter schiff. he s president of euro pacific capital. also with us is adam lashinsky, senior editor at large, fortune magazine, also a fox news contributor. welcomewelcome to you both, gen. thank you. jenna: peter, you say tax cuts won t cut it. what do you mean by that?