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While Democrats continue their obstruction, the media drive their collusion narrative and the Republicans struggle to pass legislation. Foreign threats are growing from Russia, the Syrian situation, and North Korea. Ingraham pointed to U.S. college student Otto Warmbier, who died Monday after North Korea returned him to the U.S. Warmbier had been sentenced to 15 years of hard labor and returned to the U.S. in a vegetative state.

“He was murdered, and he was murdered by the regime. They delivered him back to die. That’s what they did,” Ingraham said. “This is not new. This is what they do. They keep people in five-foot by six-foot cells, withhold food, withhold any type of nourishments, liquids, water … multiple beatings, electrocutions. This is the regime of North Korea.”

“There’s a lot of the evil in the world. The question is, what is America’s role in advancing our interests, our allies’ interests, and also remaining that beacon of freedom for the rest of the world?” she added.

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Noting that Trump ran “on a non-interventionist foreign policy,” Ingraham conceded that “sometimes we do have to intervene.”

“But you have to be very careful how you do it. We have a very dangerous situation now in Syria, and that could — we could start a world war if we don’t watch how we handle that situation with the Russian planes,” she said.

“This is an existential threat to the United States. I think it’s the number-one threat that we face today. And the president has essentially stated that,” Ingraham said of North Korea. “ISIS is a huge threat, but so is North Korea, and our government should be really united in how we respond and drop the partisanship when it comes to an issue like this. Because this is beyond serious.”[lz_pagination]