move that could change the trajectory of the war. let s bring in retired four-star general jack keane. he s chairman of the institute for the study of war and a fox news senior strategic analyst. general keane, welcome. so let s, we ve got a year into the war. what lessons have we learned, and what to do they tell us about what comes next? well, certainly we all welcome success that ukraine has had, and i think the center of gravity for that success has been the iron will of its soldiers and its people. and certainly the u.s.-led western coalition has been providing all the arms and ammunitions. but also while that is commendable in terms of the support provided, we have actually handcuffed the success of the ukrainian forces because we slow-rolled so much of weapons that they needed. we sent them in their piecemeal, and they arrived mainly after the fact. as an example, the ukrainians began an offensive in july after russia s offensive had talled in thalled in the east. an
i m jessica dean in washington, d.c. in today for fredicka whitfield. a major move by the memphis police department. less than 24 hours after the release of the video showing the brutal building of tyre nichols, the s.c.o.r.p.i.o.n. unit will be disbanded. this move coming after nichols family and protesters around the country demanded the unit be dissolved. cnn s isabelle rosales has more on these developments. what are you learning? reporter: the police chief cerelyn davis, in a statement she put out, talking about how it was disbanded, she touted the quality work of this unit. clearly there s been tensions between the community and this s.c.o.r.p.i.o.n. unit. what happened here is the police chief, she met with members that were not involved in the beating of tyre nichols and determined it was in the best interest of the community to disband. this goes to the direct wis activists and the family attorney as well. here is what we know about the s.c.o.r.p.i.o.n. unit. this
you need to take time, ingest it and take a deep breath and use reason and logic to come to a conclusion about what happened and how we can fix it. what happened in memphis is a disgrace. based on the feedback i received from my hundreds of friend in law enforcement i work with and met after i left, they are as disgusted if not more disgusted than anyone else about this incident. because they personally do this every day. now what they do, putting their asses on the line every day, their image is tarnished forever and they know it. and they had nothing to do with it, a lot of those good men out there. i looked at these videos multiple angles and multiple times. as a former police officer myself. i worked in brooklyn. we had everything from kidnapping to drug dealing to murder. anybody in the nypd between the 75 in brooklyn and upper manhattan, those were the busiest precincts around. busy when you are a police officer means bad. you are not responding to birthday parties to c
you need to take time, ingest it and take a deep breath and use reason and logic to come to a conclusion about what happened and how we can fix it. what happened in memphis is a disgrace. based on the feedback i received from my hundreds of friend in law enforcement i work with and met after i left, they are as disgusted if not more disgusted than anyone else about this incident. because they personally do this every day. now what they do, putting their asses on the line every day, their image is tarnished forever and they know it. and they had nothing to do with it, a lot of those good men out there. i looked at these videos multiple angles and multiple times. as a former police officer myself. i worked in brooklyn. we had everything from kidnapping to drug dealing to murder. anybody in the nypd between the 75 in brooklyn and upper manhattan, those were the busiest precincts around. busy when you are a police officer means bad. you are not responding to birthday parties to c
you need to take time, ingest it and take a deep breath and use reason and logic to come to a conclusion about what happened and how we can fix it. what happened in memphis is a disgrace. based on the feedback i received from my hundreds of friend in law enforcement i work with and met after i left, they are as disgusted if not more disgusted than anyone else about this incident. because they personally do this every day. now what they do, putting their asses on the line every day, their image is tarnished forever and they know it. and they had nothing to do with it, a lot of those good men out there. i looked at these videos multiple angles and multiple times. as a former police officer myself. i worked in brooklyn. we had everything from kidnapping to drug dealing to murder. anybody in the nypd between the 75 in brooklyn and upper manhattan, those were the busiest precincts around. busy when you are a police officer means bad. you are not responding to birthday parties t