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McFarland: Blind Sheikh is Second-Most Dangerous Man to US
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KT McFarland weighs in on Wikileaks, the state of national security and Egypt’s elections.
- Duration 7:35
- Date Jul 6, 2012
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KT McFarland weighs in on Wikileaks, the state of national security and Egypt’s elections.
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And kids -- MacFarlane.
-- Fox News national security analyst.
-- -- appears all over the place on fox.
Each Israel does not good morning must apply and get more Mario.
Terrific thank you -- about a big -- -- particle of time zone thing.
Well known.
Too complicated for me miss my hair -- Well I don't think if you don't have I mean he's got gray hair but it's not a lot puppets so if you're -- -- -- -- airport earlier this article.
-- All possible and we're gonna have doctor -- -- -- -- of a physicist on this morning.
-- talk about it just short.
The president just -- probably no one else on the planet well obviously if she -- somebody who reads -- front urged.
There -- time at least all -- lenders well.
Anyway let's go around the world lady's second spotlight -- show -- -- doesn't have boxed.
I'll start -- the -- On the WikiLeaks sailor what do they do -- impairment.
They've released -- -- Democrats is releasing two million.
Emails secret emails -- Syria so far there's nothing that they've release and I think the important thing is that there's not an important.
WikiLeaks.
And George hashing out ahead of what you think -- hiding in the basement.
-- embassy in Ecuador embassy in London because he's awaiting extradition to Sweden.
Rape charges he's trying to escape.
And then ultimately -- extradition to the United States for receiving.
So on documents but the more important thing is what you fixes broke.
Credit card companies and -- well are going to do do not honor the transactions -- donations to WikiLeaks that are running out of money and I think that's that's the fuel that keeps them going so there's two million documents on -- the biggest things so far.
-- that there are two companies and attack and agree company.
That they have probably so.
-- radio equipment just Syrians cited that as being a bird around sanctions so that's what they do.
Normally get the documents.
How would that actually is the pretty intercepting the wake -- and initially was we think -- from sergeant.
Demanding there was an army sergeant who gave some drive to people who then gave them to -- -- shipment of some drugs contain both the US.
State Department.
And and other secret documents from the US government and those are the most damaging documents.
But now it's not clear how it gets -- and and he got -- very sophisticated.
The cyber warriors I think for want of a better word and they know how do.
Sort of get -- staff and they know how to distribute -- -- of -- -- how to mask where they're setting cents for a.
But this second thing about which -- -- it's important is that.
You know what you're gonna do to the contact -- diplomacy.
It's about scaring diplomatic -- have come it'd sound of silence.
You know where they've both sides are negotiating nobody knows what they're saying dynamic.
-- -- present the world with an agreement that everybody applauds.
What I worked for Kissinger for example the secret opens.
This secret trip to China and the negotiations with China -- -- never could've done at a -- read in the front page of the New York Times.
Every day -- the transcripts are so I think that it may have a chilling effect.
Down the road diplomats think whatever they say it's not just gonna leak that it's gonna leak in real time.
Which brings to mind.
The recent national security leak scandal.
And what she they'll start to -- more male.
When there whacked two Osama bin Laden.
And they'll start talking about the maker of the shalom.
-- -- Well the latest is that does that leaks in the last few days have.
It seemed to have dried out I think it's a really serious problem and the really serious credit that you'll never see coming.
You know in the 1970s in the banking and -- they're cutting corporate church committee hearings on Capitol Hill investigations into the sea change.
And a lot of sources and methods remains.
First is how did we find information how we -- -- spread information.
Yeah that's the general who was getting this step to its what are their names where they -- -- what all that information and leave it really -- ever spy network.
And despite networks -- decade to create.
And I think -- a result of those leaks in the seventies.
The spy network dried up by the eighties by the ninety's we've ever struck by the company.
And if these leaks are significant.
And they do reveal sources and that's what's gonna happen for intelligence agencies are gonna -- witnesses say is we -- -- you guys.
To keep this secret -- -- stuff.
Any informant it's gonna say well I think what happened to doctor afridi.
In Pakistan after she helps you find Osama bin Laden he's in jail you didn't protect him.
And but it also does census -- any adversary that is how Americans collect intelligence that is what to avoid going forward there's a result of all those things.
We are now going to be.
Potentially.
-- guess again.
To -- particularly this the national groups.
Yes spy satellites are terrific to try to find it -- -- a ballistic missile or submarines or text.
There awhile if you try to find out what a bunch a guys like -- Applaud what -- to take down the Twin -- -- -- -- -- Yeah an actual national security analyst for Fox News fortune in until -- -- Muslim.
Brotherhood are receiving all this surpluses then is not comment more.
Policy wanted to and Alice.
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- the got the original World Trade Center about a double blind shaped -- -- jail.
Serbs like hundreds of years Mohammad -- -- Muslim Brotherhood and the Muslim Brotherhood he's been elected president of.
Egypt he wants to get that guy out of jail he wants us to get them -- and probably after a salad that laden.
For blind -- is the second most dangerous man to American security and the -- that we would even.
About giving him this is impossible to stop -- of the -- even trying to ask the United States which is giving them billions of dollars debate every year.
I think it's pretty -- This is.
-- -- well that's the big question.
You know with that we have that -- a war the Middle East and Arab Israeli all out war since the 1970s.
And that's because Egypt in the 1970s again -- Henry Kissinger.
Slipping each different -- -- -- to pro American and signing a peace agreement.
With Israel and that has maintained the peace for four years it's allowed Egypt to prosper it's allowed Israel really to prosper.
And it's kept the region the peace and now if Egypt just science for a whole lot of reasons.
But they don't want to honor that peace treaty anymore -- I think.
As goes Egypt as goes the region and all the other countries in the Middle East.
Especially that one's going to these transitions.
Especially because they're all their vote allows economies that are getting worse.
Debate is that they're gonna go scapegoat Israeli -- you have another series Arab Israeli war -- -- have -- -- is worth about this environment.
The price of world go through the group's stapled -- much more heavily on them there -- -- before and you know world.
In some ways Iran and others seeking nuclear weapons.
Arsonists are -- programs -- very much upbeat saying it now turn to McClellan announcement sort of the -- minutes up.
Until now we're talked -- -- -- commissioner doctor.