president obama s double downing on what the bush policy was, doing the same thing. right. the bush administration created this theory that the world is a battlefield and the united states can strike against any terrorist anywhere it deems necessary, any country around the world. you see president obama, who is characterizes as a naive dove by some republicans authorizing a fair amount of covert, violent action inside yemen, somalia, else where in the horn of africa. he has been engaging in the more offensive policies of the bush administration when it comes to the war on terror, which has now been rebranded. but obama has a lot in common with president bush in terms of how he is caring for these covert little wars around the world. coming up, how did radiation from the crippled fukushima nuclear plant end up in milk in the united states? and then take a look at this. the young girl who got back at her bullies for all the world to see. my cream is what makes stouffer s fettuccini
and chicken feathers, ironically have all of these micropours inside of them that when you put hydrogen into an environment that has these treated chicken feathers, the chicken feathers absorb the hydrogen and you don t have so much pressurization. now you ve got hydrogen powered. you get to speak to t. boone pickens, too, an exciting conversation. indeed. boon pickens mentioned by the president yesterday. a nat gas act ta looks like it s going to go to the floor next week, sponsored by a bipartisan group. we ll see what we can get out of boone of the next steps in terms of getting on to domestic energy. james woolsey will be with us. we ll ask him not only about energy but national security and america s military resources even with the cia right now running operations in libya. we ll get a sense of our own national security and how
benghazi will do the best they can to defend the city. i think they can keep the fight up for a long time. richard, a great sense of what the rebels are going through there. chief foreign correspondent, richard engel. thank you so much. with all of the focus on libya, questions continue about why the u.s. is refusing to take similar action against president salei in yemen. one of the most active arms of al qaeda call yemen home. since september 11, 200 saleh a critical player in the war on terror, allowing the u.s. to wage a secret war against al qaeda in his country. but he s known to play both sides of the fence. it s the subject of the cover story in the latest edition of the nation. national security correspondent
administration. he s been clear what he is thinking, certainly. back to yemen, comparison to libya. given the criteria laid out for libya, this also, a tough situation for the president at the moment, he s not applied necessarily up to date the same criteria to yemen. right. secretary clinton has said they want to see a political solution in yemen. secretary gates said it s not the u.s. business to metal in the affairs of yemen. very different tune the u.s. is singing on yemen. the stakes for the u.s. are high in yemen. saleh is a thug, a lot of yemenese are wondering why the u.s. hasn t been stronger in condemning that. the obama administration has no good answer here because if they don t back their man and he falls, the alternative could be worse for the u.s. counterterrorism strategy. i was reading through your article about eight pages long, depending how you print it up. very in-depth. your point, you say that
there are a thousand rebels, not well-trained as richard engel has been talking about. it would require u.s. personnel to deploy to train them the president signed thorgz fauthor to secret aid to the rebels. it would be we re talking about right now this presidential authorizationization to liaise with the rebels maybe they ll give them tactical support but it would require involvement of congress if the president wanted to start funneling weapons or military aid to the rebels. the obama administration is torn on what should go forward. i mean only discussions at highest levels here. in a way it seems like secretary gates is trying to get himself fires because he does not sound enthusiastic about the current u.s. policy in libya and said controversial things this past weekend that i m sure made for interesting talk behind the scenes within the