what we should be doing and should have done years ago given our time spent in iraq and afghanistan is we should have been looking at the military as let s build up not just the marine security guard program but you a separate cad ray also charged with protecting some of the high threat areas in a more robust way. and whalid one of the things that hillary clinton said as we stepped down yesterday she implemented all of the arb recommendations. do you buy it? the enemy knows all of these recommendations. the jihaddists are not dumb and they understand how we protect ourselves. in the area where the embassies fortresses they willres they not send a brigade to attack us head on. not just the inner wall we need to look at but the strength and capacity of the enemy in
more than 2,000, more than two dozen used car dealerships in the u.s. raided after being accused of helping funnel money to the terrorist group hezbollah as part of an international money laundering scheme. a fox news middle east and terrorism analyst and author of the confrontation is here. first off, whalid, tell me how this works. this is almost a james bond jihad. you have a network of hezbollah controlled financial institutions sending millions of dollars to banks and networks in north america. they ll be in canada and the united states to purchase from those dozens of dealerships, used cars to be shipped to africa, west africa to four or five countries in west africa and the operation there would be send that money plus laundry money back into lebanon. we re talking about half a
programs eight years ago. his son alleged two prominent libyan intellectuals, beat severely the wife of one of those men. school children were ordered to leave school to participate in pro moammar kadafi rallies. a sign of desperation for sure, jon. jenna: for more on the developing story we are joined by whalid, spaeutz ferris. as we take a look at all these different countries and cultures that are protesting the government in place, what trends or what similarities are surfacing? well, jenna there are two important trends to note. one is that there is a surge of civil society movement across the world among the countries who are proamerican and antiamerican. at the same time there is a race within the civil society surges
joins us. achmed, have you heard from your family over there? what is going on? di i did get in touch with some of my family members. fortunately they live in a little town, 20, 25 minutes outside of cairo so they haven t suffered a lot of the looting and crimes but some this of still exists and thank god they are all okay. geraldo: congratulation on that regard. whalid, thanks for being with us. what do you think of a possible democratic government that is relatively stable? that should be the end of the process. we are still in the beginning of the process. the big debate in washington and other international capital still the same and gonenessed who are the leaders are these hundreds of thousands or millions of people walking the streets of cairo. i have been on arab media for two days now talking to people either from the government or from the opposition and nobody was able to answer who are the
geraldo: they are defying the curfew in cairo. we hear suez and alexandria, the other historic cities in egypt similarly dissolving into anarchy, vigilantes in the streets as the cops have disappeared. they high tailed it. the army is following a kind of hands off policy. where this all ends nobody knows. continuing our in depth coverage of the unraveling of egypt and the fear the current government will be replaced by radicals like the muslim brotherhood. whalid joins us in washington. caucuses med, the egyptian american come kayian who did a documentary called just like us