the big question is whether the money will be enough to put on those finances on an even keel. you re live with bbc news. nine months after launching the assault, russia has not managed to capture the city it is been the longest and bloodiest battle so far but ukrainian forces are hanging on the western edge of the city, each site is suffered heavy casualties, reporting from this area is extremely dangerous and video journalist working for the french news agency was killed this week and rocket fire in a town just west of the city. our team correspondent and camera crew travelled to the front line for battle and sent the special report. a rare pause in this, the longest, bloodiest battle of the war so far. with just a few metres away,
this war so far. none of a bat this will long yet. whatever the cost to them in so far as et wears down russian ability to continue waging this war and whatever the cost. reporter: ukrainian forces giving all they can to defend bakhmuit. or what s left of it. after the longest battle of the war, one of the oldest cities lies in ruins. translator: no decisions were made regarding withdrawal. we re holding the defense. reporter: aband beyond by 0% of the population, only those who couldn t leave before are left. the intense fighting means that only 5 to ten people a day can now be evacuated, compared to the 500 to 600 a day when the
selected to do the initial analysis. let that investigation take place. we are doing what the republicans didn t. if there is something wrong needs to be investigated. extraordinary difference in magnitude and scope and clearly the level of cooperation. prosecutors traditionally have handled. intent matters, disloyalty to the united states. almost all of them apply to former president trump. none of them seem to apply to present biden. let s let the investigation take its course. thank you very much, congressman, appreciate your time. any time. next bloodiest battle of the war in ukraine. russia reporting fewer than 100 deaths from the strike. a new phone call shows a
we are great at conventional war and that s what they found out. everywhere they attacked, they were driven back. whether it was offer, they had suffered well over 10 fatalities for every one they inflicted upon the u.s. or the south vietnamese. it was a devastating defeat for them. is. bret: conservative estimates put the north s losses at 40,000 killed. the vaught congress forced for the first time to fight out in the open suffered the worst casualties and never really recovered. after the tet offensive, the south vietnamese viet cong were no longer an effective fighting force. they write this in heir own histories. bret: the largest battle of the war had ended in total defeat for hanoi. the north vietnamese came nowhere near what they were trying to do with tet. johnson was handed this victory and his generals said now is the time to exploit this let s
inevitable. mike? lydia hu live in new york tonight, thanks very much. 1968 was the bloodiest month for americans fighting in vietnam. now 54 years later new evidence, much of it from recently opened vietnamese, chinese and russian archives is changing the way historians think about the war. in a new fox nation documentary series coming soon the unauthorized history of the vietnam war. bret baier take as fresh look at this controversial episode from america s past, including what the latest research tells us about the biggest battle of the war, the so-called ted offensive. john f. kennedy was a staunch anti-communist who believed south vietnam s war with the north was a crucial battle in the larger cold war, a global struggle between democratic capitalism and communist dictatorship. in contrast, his successor, linden bans johnson wanted as little to do with vietnam as possible. but as we ll see, the war would