president zelensky addressed the european union. they gave him a standing ovation. we re learning that russia is getting a good track on where he s at. are you worried, have you heard that the russians are indeed tracking his every move? i know this. we wouldn t have had this alliance in the american intelligence community hadn t been dead on on predicting what the russians would do. had they penetrated a loot of the ukrainian systems, absolutely. we ve known that. i ve been surprised that the russians haven t shut town the water, the power, the internet, the videos coming out that are so powerful. do i have confirmation that they re following every move of zelensky? no. would i be suspect or be surprised if they follow his moves? i wouldn t be surprised at all. they have penetrated so many years their systems. s been surprised that they have
this frustrated secretary of state mike pompeo who said just believe me it s what u.s. intelligence says. i wouldn t have said it if the intelligence community hadn t become convinced that this was the case. heed the u.s. intelligence community became convinced. the problem is the reason allies do not trust pompeo because he has under cut and questioned the u.s. intelligence community. take the death of washington post journalist jamal khashoggi which the cia concluded was ordered by the crown prince of saudi arabia. here is what mike pompeo said. there is no direct evidence linking him to the murder of jamal khashoggi. pompeo s cherry picking of when to believe u.s. intelligence mirrors that of his boss. i hate the crime, what s
the data for a public discussion, because it s an inapparently secret program. the elseberg argument doesn t make sense, because his papers released did not reveal current operations, it s a different type of crime. so snowden is facing harsher music because he did a harsher thing. and if he doesn t want to cop to that, that s, that s his problem. i m not sure, steve that the documents that snowden released didn t show concrete abuses by the nsa. one of them was an inspector general report that showed that the nsa had abused its own authority 3,000 times in one year and the senate intelligence community hadn t seen that report before it was published. there s a part of this interview that jumped out at me. on the surface it seemed scary and brian williams took out the cell phone. and edward snowden described hey, here s all the ways they can monitor you and profile you just with this. if you search for a new york rangers hockey score in this cell phone, they can build a whole profi