stopping kremlin aggression right now. that leads to measures which are not quite as good as they could be. ranking member mccaul also pointed to the u.s. withdrawal from afghanistan and the chaos that ensued as a reason why he believes putin and others, look what north korea is doing right now, are engaging in this provocation. listen. you and i talked about afghanistan over the summer, last summer. i think people, our foreign adversaries like putin, xi in china, the ayatollah, kim jong-un, view that as a moment of weakness. we are not projecting strength but projecting weakness, which historically goes back to hitler and chamberlain, always invites aggression, and i think you ll see a lot more of it. do you agree with him? i think he has a point. look, the actual withdrawal from afghanistan was disaster, which the biden administration could have avoided. but the decision to withdraw was
light of kremlin aggression. and also he s asking for guarantees from world powers to make sure that russia cannot with impunity go into ukraine again as it s done for the last eight years. and any kind of neutrality would have to be put up for a referendum vote as zelenskyy has noted. do you think the ukrainian people would vote in favor? well, it depends on what type of neutrality. if it s neutrality for an independent ukraine, which keeps all of its territory, i think there s a chance they might. if it s neutrality without being armed, without guarantees from western powers, without full ukrainian territory, i think not. what are your thoughts on this idea that russia may be aiming to split ukraine in two, like north and south korea? is that a realistic outcome? well, it s possible putin may reduce his war aims. but there s still no real evidence that he is willing to do that. we ve had a senior russian general say that this is what
by president biden. so i think it is very interesting to see these two men shoulder to shoulder now in the face of russian aggression. and if vladimir putin was hoping to exploit western divisions that actually the invasion of ukraine has brought the west much closer together. and seeing president biden here in warshaw giving a key speech in the country that was behind the iron curtain, part of the warsaw pact, is very much a sign of unity in the face of kremlin aggression. in one of its largest military exercises in recent years, nato has been simulating its response to an attack on a member state. it s been taking place in norway, which shares a border with russia and was planned before the invasion of ukraine. but as our defence correspondent jonathan beale reports, the war has given the training a sharper focus. gunfire. another neighbour of
Russian troops have been massing on the Ukraine border for a few weeks, waiting for the go-ahead from President Vladimir Putin on whether to invade. Here, ASU expert Keith Brown helps break down the two countries' complicated past and how it has led to the current situation.
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