burial in the royal vault alongside her husband prince philip in windsor this evening. as we are watching traditions that go back centuries and updated by the queen s agreement grandmother, queen victoria in 1901. the queen s casket will arrive at windsor castle, with the procession ending outside st. george s chapel. she will be the first female sovereign there. we will be bringing you the committal service for which some of the music was composed by the former chapel organist who is believed to have taught young princess elizabeth to play the piano. hundreds of world leaders, including president biden and more than 2,000 dignitaries joined the royal family for the queen s state funeral at westminster abbey. the 13th century seat of the church of england and where 25-year-old elizabeth was core nated 75 years ago. the queen said her funeral should not be long and boring. it was just about one-hour long, managing to be both personal and a world-class good-bye, including a
i also sat down with the president of south korea to ask about the threat from his neighbor to the north, who just declared itself a nuclear state. also, hijabs burned, protests rage and chants of death to the dictator ring out in iran after a woman dies in police custody there. what will come of the demonstrations? i will ask an expert. but first, here s my take. let s not play down what has happened this week. the leader of the world s largest nuclear power publicly threatened to use nuclear weapons. in an address in moscow on wednesday, vladamir putin declared that russia would use all weapons systems available to us to defend the country. he emphasized it. this is not a bluff. it might be. putin s threat with add-ones of traditional soviet doctrine. now they contemplate scenarios which it could use nuclear weapons. but he knows the west has nuclear weapons of its own and that the doctrine of mutually assured destruction has prevented any power from deploying them sinc
rachel: good morning, he can be. we re in the second hour of fox & friends here in new york city. it s christmas time and beautiful outside and i love being down here much we can look out right at the tree. it s beautiful, we re all in the christmas spirit. will: have you been out at night? last night i was on jesse watters prime time and it s beautiful out there. this time of year at night, dudes with the cell phone and everybody spins around and it become as destination. pete: you re in new york, no doubt when you re here. check us out, check it out. pretty cool. rachel: when the propalestinian protesters wanted to protest at the rockafeller, they got confused and came to our tree. i do think our tree is so beautiful. will: yeah. pete: i agree. nicely done. will: check this out, there s brand new polls this morning from the wall street journal showing hypothetical presidential election matchups. first the obvious potential head-to-head of donald trump and joe biden wi
Warrants . The concern grows out of the fact that all of the failures and the and The Information that shouldved been given and wasnt given. And the question being what was the intent . What what washa their intention . Their motivation there. And what we determined was we couldnt definitively say what the motivation was. Are these pretty smart people . Fairly welleducated . At least welleducated. I dont know if theyre smart. I dont know if were very smart to beow honest with you. I was b going to say they have law degrees, right . At least somehe of them do. So you think the woods review for people at this level of the organization. To be clear, the stuff that didnt happen on the woods review was basic stuff. Yeah. You didnt need to be a deeplyexperienced fbi agent to be able to do it the right way. Well, thats my point. So wouldnt you think that would almost be muscle p memory for people who are going through this process to know they had an obligation to go through that . They clear
regime, on the other hand the sanctions do empower, castro used to say if the americans were to relax the sanctions, i would do something to force them to reimpose them, because that s what keeps me going. what should the u.s. do? the challenge of u.s. pollty towards iran is on one hand you re trying to prevent the regime from becoming like north korea and trying to help the society become like south korea. to counter their nuclear and regional ambitions, you have to use pressure. if you don t want to use military pressure, that requires economic sanctions and isolation. but in a way that does empower these isolationists within the regime. so we have to figure out, how do we counter the regional and nuclear ambitions. but at the same time have a strategy which is trying to champion the cause of change in iran. then we would try to open up contacts with society, we thought that in a sense capitalism and commerce were the