[gunfire] >> bill: these are the latest images inside gaza. israel's incursion three weeks old in gaza. new report that israel, hamas closer to reaching a deal on the hostages. watch that story. there has been a lot of reporting throughout the week. it hasn't happened yet. we can hold out hope. i'm bill hemmer in new york. dana is in nashville for the big patriot awards later tonight. martha and i have the duties in new york city. >> martha: good morning. let's get right to it. sensitive negotiations are underway right now for a potential hostage deal. we've been hearing about it over the last several days. we understand that they are making some headway between israel and hamas. >> bill: the potential terms are quite specific. it would reportedly include 3 to 5 days of no fighting and then after that hamas would release up to 50 women and children on day one. israel will release a similar number of palestinian women and children held in israeli prisons in return. >> martha: then hamas would release ten more hostages each day of the cease-fire. when the hostage release stops, the cease-fire stops and israel would permit fuel and aid into gaza. >> bill: the progress comes after israeli special forces ramp up their pressure on hamas physically going inside that large hospital in gaza city, which is believed to be a disguise for hamas's command center. team fox coverage begins a new hour. where investigators are looking into u.s. nonprofits for possible to links to hamas. trey yengst back getting a firsthand look inside the al-shifa hospital in gaza city. let's beginning with you. hello. >> good morning. the israeli raid of gaza's al-shifa hospital is ongoing at this hour. overnight we joined israeli special forces to get a front line look at the battles between israel and hamas. in the dark of night, flanked by israeli special forces, we move quickly into gaza's al-shifa hospital. you can hear the israelis are engaged in gun battles here with hamas. down a hallway in the radiology department soldiers point to piles of weapons and hamas booklets as evidence the building was used for military purposes. behind an mri machine more guns and ammunition. part of hamas grab bags feet away from injured palestinians. >> in terms of the patients here, there are hundreds of palestinian civilians, more than 1,000 internally displaced, are they being protected? >> first of all, they are unharmed, which is very important to state. no palestinian civilian was even hurt, injured, in yesterday's activity. >> as part of our embed israeli forces controlled what areas of the hospital we could report from. you can hear the gun battles raging on outside of the hospital grounds. leaving the hospital beneath the roar of israeli drones, light illuminates the path. we head to a staging area before switching vehicles. taking jeeps across gaza provides a glimpse of the destruction along the strip with entire neighborhoods destroyed, many palestinians will have no homes to return to. despite the rising civilian death toll and widespread destruction the israelis plan to continue their military campaign until hamas is destroyed and the hostages are freed. the israelis say gaza's al-shifa hospital is a headquarters for hamas with tunnels underneath it. they didn't show us the tunnels but they continue to dig. >> bill: trey, we have heard not a lot, frankly, about these hostages but we understand they did find information about them. how much of that did they reveal with you? >> absolutely. one of the first things the israelis told us when they came out to take us into gaza, they talked about the hostages and the critical information they were able to recover. take a listen to this lieutenant colonel who describes what they found. >> this bag is from the mri center. all of this here was taken. was found there. and we're bringing it out for processing. handwritten notes and computer where we found pictures and video of hostages and of hamas combatants being interrogated. >> on these you said you have names of hostages? >> of hostages. pictures of hostages and what appears to be at a quick glance files of hostages. >> fox news was not given access to the laptops or documents to confirm what they contained. >> bill: more when we get it as the sun drops for another day there. thank you, trey. martha. >> martha: did the united states government take its eye off of threats from hamas? rich edson joins us live at the state department. good morning, rich. >> good morning, martha. there is a renewed focus on hamas where the terrorist organization gets its money. analysts say the u.s. government had been prioritizeing other threats to the united states. after the october 7th attacks there is a renewed focus on hamas and its financing network. >> the congressional hearings on the topic there is a lot of movement, there is a lot of resources being shifted looking at both hamas and hezbollah and other shia networks in the u.s. and worldwide when it comes to funding. this is becoming once again a priority. >> the professor and his program on extremism at george washington university released a report detailing decades of hamas-linked organizations operating in the u.s. federal government prosecuted many of them decades ago. the report says these groups have displayed a remarkable resilience. they can be difficult to track. he says the current presence of hamas funding groups in the u.s. is unclear. aid on the house ways and means committee say they are investigating a handful of american-based charities to see if they are financing the terrorist organization in any way. yesterday chris wray testified federal law enforcement as multiple investigations into individuals affiliated with hamas and last month the treasury department announced sanctions on what it calls key hamas operatives in places and countries like gaza, sudan, turkey, algeria and qatar. they have a budget of hundreds of millions of dollars a year and the primary sponsor is iran. back to you. >> martha: we've heard technology and weaponry is better than people expected in the confrontation. thank you very much. >> bill: we showed you this last hour near boston university and a bridge in boston near the area of cambridge and b.u. campus. a group called if not now. and they declare themselves to be jews living in america. american citizens who are jewish, who say cease-fire now. it's written on the banners they are carrying across the bridge. let gaza live and free the hostages. we pointed out this is the same group at grand central station three weeks ago on a friday night and shut everything down. the turnout was massive. martha, when you think about it, you think about the anti-israeli rallies that we've talked about and we've seen across the country. that was really, i feel, looking bang now to see 1,000 people in mid town manhattan in black t-shirts calling for a cease-fire long before idf got into gaza city. people stopped and said what's going on? what's happening in america? >> martha: interesting to see how all of this was so close to the surface and it bubbled up to the -- into everyone's eye view as soon as this happened. that was during the bombing campaign when they were trying to soften up some of the targets in the city and many people were killed during that. it is interesting to see this jewish group protesting in favor of palestinians. what it makes me think of are the kibbutz and the areas along southern israel in gaza where many of the people who were killed were people who worked volunteering in gaza, who wanted better relations between the palestinians and israelis. so you see a lot of different mindsets this. this looks like a peaceful demonstration happening in boston right now. >> bill: let's keep it that way as opposed to outside the dnc headquarters last night. roll this. [shouting] >> martha: u.s. capitol police fighting violent protestors outside the democratic national committee headquarters last night. pro-palestinian rally that turned into an intense clash. police were as it got deeper into this last night forced to use pepper spray on protestors. lawmakers were ordered to evacuate the building and put part of the building on lockdown. six officers are being treated for their injuries. one person was arrested for assaulting a police officer and still some of the demon stateors insisted that this was a peaceful demonstration. >> there were about 300 protestors in front of the dnc right now holding we are hear to mandate a cease-fire, to stop the genocide in gaza that has killed over 11,000 people since october 7th. >> bill: that was last night. couple arrests made as well. couple injuries to capitol hill police officers. the polling are you comfortable with limiting free speech of people rallying support for hamas? 60% said no. i think about the scene in new york and one of the construction workers ripped down the pictures of the hostages saying you can't do that in this country. so if it's good for one side it has to be good for the other out of fairness. want to bring in karl rove joining us now. good morning to you. i think about the raid -- not a raid, the rally that got violent outside of d.c. headquarters last night as compared to the 290,000 for israel the day before. you look at it from a political view and you have to admit the democratic party has a problem. how do they deal with it? >> they have a big problem because, you know, that scene on the mall of tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people waving american flags, israeli flags, peaceably supporting israel in this moment of crisis, democrat and republican leaders on the stage thanking the crowd for their support and then we see black shirted thugs trying to break into the democratic national committee in order to confront the leadership of the house democrats who were there for meetings. they wanted to quote, engage them. well, i bet those democrat members of congress are happy they weren't engaged. we saw the definition of engagement when these people started to beat up on the police, lock arms and keep people from coming in or out of the democratic national committee. the democratic left has violent anti-israel element. pro-hamas, pro-hezbollah, pro-radical organizations in the middle east. they have an element that supports all that. and they are making their voices heard. think about that woman talking about genocide. really? the people who were involved in genocide were the hamas terrorists who said kill the jews. kill the jewish state. so the democrats have got a big problem and it has been growing for some time. it is being fanned by the democratic socialists of america and other left wing groups inside the democratic party and hard for them to excise them from the ranks of their leadership. >> martha: a lot of these folks chanting genocide joe in front of the white house. we saw that protest a few days back, karl. here is one of our brand-new fox polls asked about people's top concerns in the country and 82% say they are extremely or very concerned about threats to personal rights. 74% about the israel/hamas war. attacks by islamic terrorists here at home. potential for that 73%. that's now up 23 points since may. your thoughts on that and what the political impact potentially is of that. >> that is a pretty dramatic jump up and getting back to the levels we had in the after math after 9/11 when americans felt intensely about this. look, this is a recognition that our country scan to go to sleep on the issue of trans global islam terrorist threats and now we're awakening that it could come again. hamas struck israel but there are other elements of this terror network around the world who want to strike america. have never stopped thinking about how they can hurt america again like they did on 9/11. our intelligence community and the f.b.i. and have been working against this threat. the department of homeland security. but it is real and we saw how it could happen in israel. it wouldn't necessarily happen exactly in that way but there are people in this world who want to hurt america just like they did on 9/11. >> bill: thanks. good reflection, too. interesting to see whether or not that number is as high as it has been in the past 20 years. nice to see you. >> martha: thank you, karl. >> thank you. >> president biden: he is a guy that runs a country that is the kind of country based on their form of government totally different than ours. >> martha: refer to president xi jinping as a dictator after the two leaders met for a four-hour summit in san francisco yesterday. jacque heinrich live from san francisco covering all this for us. hi, jacque. >> yeah, after the summit both leaders had good things to say about their time together. the president called it some of the most productive and constructive time he has had with his chinese counterpart. president xi said the planet is big enough for both great powers to co-exist and also saying that they are fully capable of rising above their differences. that question and answer in the press conference when president biden said that xi is a dictator, appeared to cause heartburn for the secretary of state and kurt campbell. you can see kurt campbell, biden's coordinator for the indo-pacific looked like he was taken aback by the president's frankness. the style of government he runs is different than ours is how he felt. a little concern among the top diplomats in the biden administration. xi met the business leaders. 400 executives were there, apple's tim cook and a bunch of wall street and silicon valley heavy weights and government officials and the commerce secretary. xi's message china wants to be friends and do more business together. >> china is ready to be a partner and friend of the united states. the fundamental principles that we follow in handling china/u.s. relations are mutual respect, peaceful co-existence and win/win cooperation. if we see each other as competitors it will lead to outcomes. >> martha: promising an unwanted outcome if there is pushback. >> it's a clear national security risk. the fact that we have put the leading news source for the next generation of americans for the most impressionable minds of our society in the leads of our adversary. historians will say it's national self-sabotage. >> bill: old terror threat trending anew on tiktok is what he is talking about. bin laden has been dead and buried for a dozen years. why his words are getting new attention online today. plus this. >> they choose -- medical child abuse. >> that's when they told me i had to leave. that my daughter was under state custody. >> dana: it's a chilling story. a teenager at the center of a very lively watched netflix documentary just finished their trial and they were awarded $2$61 million after the lawsuit against a florida children's hospital was found liable in the mother's suicide. she will join us, maya joins us to talk about her ordeal and the legal battle and the loss of her mother and their big win for their family. i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema, and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. this was no bear. it was like a bearsquatch! dad. what's a bearsquatch? it's a cross between a bear and a sass... it's made up. he's usually sleeping. he'll never sleep again. ♪ ♪i'm hearing 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