the other side, the dark side, you need their trust. and you have to the government has to be seen as being on their side. that s one of their con kcessio to the muslim community in the united states, talk about it in a different way, recruit muslims as an ally for the government. you talked about how you re not sure this speech will help to reis aur americassure americ nerve-racked by this. it was released, taken, the respondents answered before the san bernardino crisis and here s what it said. how is obama handling isis? only 33% approve of how he s doing it. 64% disapprove. so what what were people hoping the president would say to your mind? what do you think the president should have said to sort of quell some of the anxiety? that was to matt, right? yes, matt. sorry. oh, sorry.
syed farook. his father said among other things is that his son shared in the ideology of al baghdadi, the isis leader and that he was fixated on israel. the father said he never met his own daughter-in-law. and so one of the things that investigators are trying to do is probe into her background, in saudi arabia and pakistan. tashfeen malik, of course, is her name. that s where she lived before becoming to the u.s. on a fiancee visa. she was radicalized before coming to the u.s. is one thing we re hearing. michaela, there s a lot to pore over, a lot jx electronic data from phones and computers. but the destruction of that evidence and recovering it
leader who seems to be thistthis t is clearly trying to divide, some of the analysis about how much language is us versus them, talking about fellow americans. do doesn t make us stronger or cohesive. it s time to say what donald trump is doing is doing the bidding of our enemies because there are enemies in particular, isis, wants to see the american people divided, for example, against the muslim-american community. that s the isis game plan. what trump is saying is falling right into that gam plain. thanks so much for coming into new day. thank you. it s a pleasure. this was a big moment, president obama s speech. at least it was supposed to be. now it s getting scrutinized from every political corner. is it what we need to do to take down isis? do we know this strategy is
will there be a shift in military strategy in the war on isis? barbara starr live at the pentagon with more for us. good morning, barbara. reporter: maybe not a mass deployment of ground troops but make no mistake, there will be ground troops. the pentagon preparing to send dozens of special forces into iraq, possibly into syria as well. it s all about now getting those special forces on the ground, essentially right next to isis, an acknowledgement this is the best way to find out what isis is up to, where they are, what they are doing. these special forces with their support could number upwards of 200 troops. they will be having the task of conducting raids. we ve seen that before. gathering intelligence. we ve seen that.รง but a very fundamental difference now. there will be an emphasis on trying to capture top isis operatives and that means if they can capture them, they feel
instance, can be high among recruits. it s important to understand, it isn t just young men. it is professionals. it is people with families. it is women. and the domestic radicalization challenge requires us to take on the ideological underpinnings to this organization. isis is one manifestation of this broader problem which is this extremist ideology which we have allowed to take hold unchallenged for 30 years. this is just the fact that social media has hypercharged it in the way that it has just means that it s a bigger challenge than ever. it s just about more, not different. understood. sasha havlicek, thank you very much for the perspective. appreciate it. allegations of a cover-up after police reports and dashcam video paint vastly different pictures of a deadly police shooting. we ll take a look at the trouble, the embattled police department of chicago could face, next.