Say, an informal collection i have been making over the years which i know is the unsayable truths behind the scenes in politics that sometimes our problem is that are just too hot to solve all that successive governments have often not had the space, time, majority, money, or maybe the courage to crack. Courage to crack. Basically, the Difference Courage to crack. Basically, the difference between courage to crack. Basically, | the difference between what courage to crack. Basically, the difference between what you would do if you are building a new house with the blueprint or doing a fixer upper. I new house with the blueprint or doing a fixer upper. Doing a fixer upper. I think that is a doing a fixer upper. I think that is a good doing a fixer upper. I think that is a good way doing a fixer upper. I think that is a good way of doing a fixer upper. I think i that is a good way of putting it, or, there is a lot of you Wouldnt Start here. If i it, or, there is a lot of you Wouldnt Sta
russian shelling. this comes less than 24 hours after an initial cease-fire agreement fell apart when russians reportedly open fire on a humanitarian corridor. more than 1.5 million refugees fled ukraine creating the fastest growing refugee crisis in europe since world war ii. president zelensky put out a final video rallying his citizens to keep up the fight and suggesting more u.s. support is on the way and pleading for an international no-fly-zone after he says russians obliterated ukrainian airport. zelensky warns of odesaodesa. presidents from both france and turkey spoke with putin early this morning. anthony blinken met with counter
the circumstances there in syria were different. i just say all that because i don t like our president taking things off the table. again, having said that i also do not want us to get actively involved. we should look at other opportunities. to get to your last question, we have to continue putting pressure on vladimir putin but he ll not stop if he sees that we are weak. we can find ways out for hem. diplomats offered all kinds of way out. he can hold to pieces of territory maybe that ukrainians will contemplate. there are many mechanisms. i don t believe he s completely cornered. he ll use his military fast to kill more ukrainians and get his way in a gruesome fashion. evelin, i take your point, the president should not take things off the table like no to a no-fly zone. he s not alone.
nigerian students who talked to us they were not able to get on the bus that was free to get here and they can t sit but only stand and struggling where to go next. they were africans, because they were black. this is a reminder that war does not discriminate whether you are young or old or rich or poor. no one wants to be a refugee, thousand of people being forced the flee their homes over 1.5 million people fled ukraine since this inflation began. jonathan. ellison barbara, thank you very much. please stay safe. later on, ukrainian ambassador to the united states osana joins me live to discuss the war. president zelensky is pleading for fighter jets. we ll talk about how the u.s. is
this tight rope we have all been talking about here that i talked about with the admiral. david ignatius writes, stop the putin, how long can the united states walk this fine line and does putin want a way out? well, i mean this is a tough question you are putting to me. i want to make one comment on the initial set of questions, jonathan because i really don t like the fact that president biden has drawn these lines. i don t like it when a president takes things off the table. of course i agree with him that we should not get directly