More than 20 years after the Bali bombings in which he allegedly played a central role, nobody quite knows what to do with a man once seen as Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorist.
between the u.s. and russia. when it comes to negotiating for detained americans abroad, even with hostile countries touchdown u.s. trying to keep that on a separate track from foreign policy goals and we ve seen this in other places like north korea and venezuela. christina, which was a one for one deal. why won t russia negotiate for paul wheewhelan s release? reporter: whelan is consider a high value detainee. he s a u.s. marine and charged with espionage, which the u.s. says isn t true, but to vladimir putin that doesn t matter. he can parade him as a captured spy, and that s different than a celebrity there on drug charges, and that s not a chip he s going to e willing to give up easily. adriana? christina, thank you. today activists from russia, belarus, and ukraine accepted their nobel peace prizes. at the ceremony in oslo they denounced the war in ukraine, one a them calling putin s actions, quote, insane. bt there s no letup to the
the main goal was information on hard drives it wasn t a high value detainee. we have navy s.e.a.l. team six in yemen. they encounter small arms resistance. three wounded, three die. one of those appears to be an 8-year-old girl, the daughter of awlaki who was killed in 2011. the daughter, the 8-year-old, her gran father told the news she perished. we are getting conflicting reports how many civilians perished. but we know there was 14 al qaeda militants killed. numbers of civilians others are saying in the field is close to 60. we also know that donald trump had to make the first gold star kaufl his presidency. listen to how sean spicer put it earlier today. the president also had a very somber and lengthy conversation with the family of chief petty officer william ryan owens.
conclusions just like the rolling stone author. is that true or false? i want to say this up front because i agree the debate over how they put the report together matters and they should have interviewed these people but i don t want to it distract from the substance of this. we use these interrogation techniques which goes to torture. if you read the report we used them on a lot of people. we profiled this one case where we brought in this one guy and presumed he actually wasn t a high value detainee. what did we do? we did sleep deprivation for 56 hours. they then concluded he probably had been set up by an enemy of his family. said he should be released back to his home with money. instead of releasing him back home they kept him locked up for years. that s the stuff that s in this report. there s a value to knowing this. in context i can give you ten