is a front line in the way, and even if you could, the russians don t allow independentjournalists to operate there. so we have to try to piece together what is happening in a city that is, to all intents and purposes, cut off from the outside world. in mykolaiv, i met a ukrainian special forces officer who runs what he calls partisan warfare in kherson. he did not want to show his identity. he said harassing the occupiers does not just mean killing them. translation: the more effective it is, the - worse it is for them. it makes them live in constant tension, constant fear. that is our goal, our task. it makes them think, we don t want to conquer,
from here because there is a front line in the way, and even if you could, the russians don t allow independentjournalists to operate there. so we have to try to piece together what is happening in a city that is, to all intents and purposes, cut off from the outside world. in mykolaiv, i met a ukrainian special forces officer who runs what he calls partisan warfare in kherson. he did not want to show his identity. he said harassing the occupiers does not just mean killing them. translation: the more effective it is, the - worse it is for them. it makes them live in constant tension, constant fear. that is our goal, our task. it makes them think, we don t want to conquer, we want to go back to russia.
this week, we have been talking to ukrainian soldiers and kherson residents to try to gauge the mood there. you can t drive into kherson from here because there is a front line in the way, and even if you could, the russians don t allow independentjournalists to operate there. so we have to try to piece together what is happening in a city that is, to all intents and purposes, cut off from the outside world. in mykolaiv, i met a ukrainian special forces officer who runs what he calls partisan warfare in kherson. he did not want to show his identity. he said harassing the occupiers does not just mean killing them. translation: the more effective it is, the - worse it is for them. it makes them live in constant tension, constant fear. that is our goal, our task. it makes them think, we don t want to conquer, we want to go back to russia.
to try to gauge the mood there. you can t drive into kherson from here because there is a front line in the way, and even if you could, the russians don t allow independentjournalists to operate there. so we have to try to piece together what is happening in a city that is, to all intents and purposes, cut off from the outside world. in mykolaiv, i met a ukrainian special forces officer who runs what he calls partisan warfare in kherson. he did not want to show his identity. he said harassing the occupiers does not just mean killing them. translation: the more effective it is, the - worse it is for them. it makes them live in constant tension, constant fear. that is our goal, our task. it makes them think, we don t want to conquer, we want to go back to russia. some ukrainians under
democracies but also people who are advocating for a democracy and independentjournalists so evenif and independentjournalists so even if they live in other regimes and on these topics we happy to have conversations. what is the political question where there is a lack of clarity, even taiwan s defence strategy is lacking, taiwan s former top military initial agreement for admiral says the taiwanese army is not prepared and that it must think strategically which he says it isn t doing, his criticisms highlight the inertia in the taiwanese army because it was the armed wing of the kmt, the chinese nationalist party, that rules under martial law for decades and so therefore, it is not reinvented itself sufficiently for the modern era, so what do you say to that criticism? i era, so what do you say to that criticism? criticism? i believe you were mentioning criticism? i believe you were mentioning the criticism? i believe you were mentioning the asymmetricl mentioning the asymmetric