Serious frictions have decreased and we have of quote this deescalated crises in gaza and quote, so this is small praise, but at least they have section on gaza, and atypically they have section on israel. Now, what does that section section amount to . Not much at all. We have fifth grade. Son who is exposed to 10 minutes of cnn every morning at Elementary School, cnn 10 minutes for grade schoolers, it could have written, and it sounds very much like what was written here, main the main issues are not addressed, and when the when they are mentioned, the fact that netanyahu may be in trouble and that a more moderate government might come in, well thats not very. Help, you can clean that from any newspaper, so again, im not surprised, but i am disappointed, except for a couple of things which are more positive and i can mention those later. Okay, now uh, george, this report, whats interesting is that theyre kind of actually alluding to the military and commit wititness of the hamas move
In the 2024 annual threat assessment report issued on monday, United States intelligence agencies point at the risk of water conflict related to the israely war against gaza. The report also notes that netanyahus viability as leader as well as his governing coalition of far right parties may be in jeaperdy. Welcome to the spotlight. Im your host bery with us and well review and discuss different aspects of the israely failures in the deadly onslaught against gaza in the eyes of u. S. Intelligence separatists. Now let me introduce our guests. Ray maccuvern, former cia analyst says a joining guest from riley, north carolina. Also what is george zamueli, Senior Research fellow with Global Policy institute, london Michael University out of budapest, good to see you gentlemen, both uh lets begin with ray, according to this uh Us Intelligence report, tel aviv seems adaman to want to destroy hamas, that of course enjoys great. Public support in gaza, it predicts that the Israeli Regime could
climate spending. the president found time to relax with 207 vacation days logged and just 22 press conferences since being sworn in. alexandria hoff has the latest. alexandria: this is likely a kickoff point for the 2024 election season. this will not fly under republican-controlled house, biden will be working to win over his own party. according to abc washington news poll, democrats want someone else to run, just 31% support the president. buttigieg was presented with numbers and offered this. the poll, large number of democrats say they don t want him to run again. he is an absolutely historically successful president and i want to see that continue. alexandria: take a look back. this is important. we ll go over fiscal year 2023 alone, 718,000 migrant encounters, 207 days of vacation. tim scott doesn t expect to hear about any of that tomorrow night. i think you will hear a lot of glossing over the real issues that the american people are suffering through. if we
$90,000 per year says this has created financial hardship for them. carley: americans are optimistic about falling gas prices and people feel better about the economy. kevin corke has more on the white house victory lap. good morning. kevin: to hear the white house, the president has taken america from crisis to resurgence and that is the message he will float later today at 3 p.m. to hype the inflation reduction act. president biden: do we need to sell the house? do we need to skip payments on the car? can we afford to send the kids to college? inflation reduction act is a god send. it will save people one prostate cancer drug $6000 a year. thousands of women are taking breast cancer treatment. we will see the savings. kevin: for all the back slapping, analysts point out that the biden students loan give away will eat up progress on inflation. the student debt cancellation announced by the biden administration will cost $500 billion over 10 years, under our estimate,
documents seized from his mar-a-lago home. carley: ripping the probe as unprecedented and misguided. brooke singman joins us live. good morning. brooke: the justice department signing off on one of two candidateings to overview the review of records seized from mar-a-lago. the doj said it would allow raymond deary to review the material, writing deary along with two original nominees have substantial judicial experience during which they presided over federal criminal and civil cases involving national security and privilege concern. deary nominated by former president ronald reagan back in 1986 and served on u.s. district court for new york until 2011, then served another seven years on the u.s. foreign intelligence surveillance court. he was one judge who approved investigation into former trump advisor carter page and ties to the russian government. clearing the way by florida judge cannon, who will have the final say. trump s legal team still rejecting the doj request