is this going to change the way the iraqi forces and u.s. coalition, u.s.-led coalition deals with isis in iraq when you look at that area that we re talking about? well, like we talked about before iraq is where they get their center of gravity from. they re pushening up supplies pushing up more people. right now because they own ramadi the capital, they have a good clunk of fallujah t. big piece right now which is critical is this whole refugee aspect that has fallen. you got a quarter million people. they re trying to bail out of ramadi going into fallujah bypass that with isis. they are caught in the middle. imagine this what if tomorrow morning you woke up and a quarter million of people were standing on the mall in d.c. fought just that isis is blending in with the refugees the locals it makes it much more difficult to sort of rat them out? it does. i am not a fan of doing this sunni vs. shia. i ve seen it in detail.
who lives in yemen joins us. you can talk about what s happening on the ground. earlier we heard white house press secretary josh earnst annot sure if this is isis. now we know it is isis. sunni vs. shia, can you tell us what s happening on the ground between these jihadi factions? basically isis wants to outdo al qaeda. they want to be seen in the jihadist community as at the forefront, at the vanguard of attacks and carnage. they are able to it do this with the latest attack in yemen. remember, the attack had about 137 casualties, the largest al qaeda attack in yemen had about 52 casualties. and then they apologized for that al qaeda tried to have a soft touch. blood thirsty and wants to show off jihadist rival. they re competing with
predicted at the end of the cold war that the real conflicts coming up would be between peoples and tribes and races and cultures rather than ideologies like communism and capitalism. i think they are right. all over the world we see countries breaking down, breaking apart. sue began just broke in half. ethiopia broke in half. see all the troubles in kenya. you see iraq. sunni vs. she a kurd vs. arab. muslim vs. christian. the anti-christian pandemic. in the middle east and everything. it is frightening but this is what is happening to the world it is all breaking down. even in europe it s more peaceful. scotland wants out. cat lone i can t wants out of spain. northern italy wants out of italy. cypress is split in half. kurds want out of turkey these are the battles of the future. this is the future of mankind. that s what makes me so concerned in the next segment about what s happening in our own country. what i predict will probably be the most controversial and you had to know thi
moral vulcanization and economic vulcanization of america is that a good analysis? that is excellent analysis. let me say also, i predict and this is where you get into touchy. you have got the chapter on when white america. sean: saving that for the next segment. i mean, the vulcanization that s true and as we talked today, i have a chapter in there of 18,000 wortdz, it s called et nic nationalism and now it s tribal. predicted at the end of the cold war that the real conflicts coming up would be between peoples and tribes and races and cultures rather than ideologies like communism and capitalism. i think they are right. all over the world we see countries breaking down, breaking apart. sue began just broke in half. ethiopia broke in half. see all the troubles in kenya. you see iraq. sunni vs. she a kurd vs. arab. muslim vs. christian. the anti-christian pandemic.
who lives in yemen joins us. you can talk about what s happening on the ground. earlier we heard white house press secretary josh earnst annot sure if this is isis. now we know it is isis. sunni vs. shia, can you tell us what s happening on the ground between these jihadi factions? basically isis wants to outdo al qaeda. they want to be seen in the jihadist community as at the forefront, at the vanguard of attacks and carnage. they are able to it do this with the latest attack in yemen. remember, the attack had about 137 casualties, the largest al qaeda attack in yemen had about 52 casualties. and then they apologized for that al qaeda tried to have a soft touch. blood thirsty and wants to show off jihadist rival. they re competing with