i think there is another question about whether or not the surveillance cameras at the nearby businesses, which we have not yet had a chance to go ask all the businesses yet, about whether or not their surveillance cameras were working and whether or not there are surveillance cameras, not visible to my eye here, from the nypd that could have caught at least the mayhem of people making their way out of the train station and potentially even the suspect. but i do believe if they thought it was in this vicinity, i don t think traffic would have reopened, so that would perhaps they know the suspect is not in the immediate vicinity. and we are trying to figure out the type of weapon. there is some reporting on it, i m trying to source that and nail that down, but from what we understand it appeared to be some type of handgun used in the shooting as well. john and gillian. gillian: bryan, we have been following your reporting all day
putin was playing us. he was getting his forces to move in and establish themselves. he put issues on the table that he knew the united states and nato could never abide by it, which would have been the reconstruction of nato itself, and certainly we would not agree to something like that. we would fight over it, and go to war over it, but we are not going to hand it over to you. so yeah, when you look back on it, that s all that was. it diplomacy has come up with nothing here, that s the reality of it. it has failed. russia is going to war in ukraine, and willing to absolve all the costs that we have laid out as potential deterrence. he has factored it all in. will he pay a price for it? certainly, could this be a strategic overreach on putin s part? yes, i believe it can be. i believe from the beginning john and gillian, putin has
least afford it. up to 13 million could go hungry because of the war. now we are looking at a price hike to cost us per month anywhere from 60 to $75 million more per month. and that means less people, which means more people are going to go to bed hungry. the hardest hit, armenia, kazakhstan, mongolia, but they have to compete on price with china, turkey, egypt and iran, wealthier countries. one solution, and this is already in effect in europe, farmers there are going to be able to plant in areas that have been set aside for wildlife. u.s. farmers want the same permission from the usda, they are waiting on that now. john: more area, more food. william, thank you. gillian. gillian: now to the inflation crisis, we have brand-new fox news business report that is
certainly taking the brunt of all of this exodus. john: certainly they are and you can sympathize with them wanting to go back home, but no place to be. 80,000 a day, goodness. ashley webster in poland. thank you. gillian. gillian: bring in south carolina republican congresswoman nancy mace, she recently returned from poland where she got a look at the crisis. thanks for taking time to debrief us today. tell us what you saw, what people on the ground there told you, what your lasting impression is. i can tell you from a firsthand watching and witnessing what was happening in poland with millions of refugees, an inspiring display of humanity and you don t see refugee camps all over poland but see after a few days after they are in processing, into the country, polish families are opening their homes and welcoming these refugees, mostly wep and kids because their husbands and fathers stayed back
ukrainians will do everything to protect zelenskyy and he s going to fight. but the country knows who it is, they know what they are doing, not just the leader, it s the whole country is fighting. john: they have shown that. no question. kurt volker, always good to see you. gillian: in ukraine, known as the butcher of mariupol, one of putin s top commanders is accused of leading the worst of the bombing in the city, attacks on the maternity hospital and the theater where 300 people reportedly died. alleged history of cruelty towards civilians show a killer willing to win at all costs, even if it means resorting to chemical weapons. mike tobin joins us from the western ukrainian city of lviv with the latest, hi, mike. the general you are talking about is mikhail mizintsev. he studied in kyiv, and he was a big designer of russia s strategy in the siege of aleppo