leland vittert live with more from the white house. reporter: the white house says russia s policies towards syria are ill guide. but this meeting might be the ultimate proof that it s russia calling the shots inside syria, not the united states. this meeting proves a couple of things. first that assad feels comfortable to lead this country, and he s willing to lead the country and shows how close he is to vladimir putin who launches massive airstrikes to try to keep him in power. it shows how much the russians are thumbing their nose at the united states. in the past 24 hours the russians and american military agreed to new procedures where both russia and americans are flying combat missions. senator john mccain has been
momentum for bank of america too little too late. reporter: even a million accounts lost is just 1/2 of 1% of all bank accounts in the country. the big banks say point blank they will find a way to keep profits up. every bank needs to do what it needs to do to keep the customer happy and remain solvent. we have to raise revenue or cut costs. reporter: expect the big banks to do both. david kerley, abc news, washington. a new leader will guide greece through the next step of its financial crisis. the prime minister agreed to step down after sparking outrage around the world and among european leaders by putting the bailout plan to a popular vote. he called off the vote though. now up to greek lawmakers themselves to pass the plan. in washington, thousands of demonstrators gathered outside the white house yesterday to protest a controversial oil pipeline. the pipeline would carry oil from western canada to texas. opponents say the project is especially dangerous to the