zone. . , . an evacuation in the middle of a war zone. ., , ., ., ., ,, an evacuation in the middle of a war zone. ., ,., ., ., ,, zone. but that state of readiness by the russians zone. but that state of readiness by the russians could zone. but that state of readiness by the russians could be zone. but that state of readiness by the russians could be a zone. but that state of readiness by the russians could be a tactic, - the russians could be a tactic, convicted, designed to extract compromises from nato and others. you re absolutely right, and it could be a way of raising the pressure on the west and on the ukrainian government. on the latter, just think about the potential chaos at kyiv airport tomorrow as for nationals try to leave. think about the impact of that on the people of the impact of that on the people of the ukrainians living in the country. think about the panic it might cause and you can see how this significantly, substantially raises the pressure to
courage of the ukrainian political people that you have been interview, zelenskyy in particular. the ukrainian army is fighting and if they recaptured the kyiv airport from air troopers from russia, that s an astonishing look at military effectiveness. the bulk of the military facing east will be from the separatist area. how will they deal with mobile warfare? the other question that bothers me, katy, if you want to defend kyiv or kharkiv, but kyiv is a city of 3 million people, you can t possibly defend its parameter, so the notion of sucking in russian armored forces in the city and fighting them with molotov cocktails and
kilometers in the road. and ukrainian military. they were really polite, just asking for the documents. and, well, that s it. it was like this. what do these places look like? well, just just military people. have you had confrontations with russian soldiers? no. no. you were supposed to go to egypt on vacation. so then you went to the kyiv airport and even got on the plane, as i was telling our viewers before we introduced you, with your 4-year-old daughter. the plane never left. tell us what happened. well, i was on a plane and because it was 3:55 in the morning. my kid was asleep already. she was without any clothes, like only t-shirt and jeans. so when the captain said that we have to leave the plane and we
morning after we landed. in kyiv airport and we woke up to explosion and car alarms going off. the next couple of days checkpoints all over the country. hunting down tourists from russia. the civilians were handed rifles and told to go stand at post. everyone has come together. i have met four civilians helping in cyber warfare. this is something that i think is almost unprecedented. we are seen civilians take place in cyber military operations. i couldn t imagine before this. trace: it is amazing, sky, you were in ukraine as a medic, but you haven t hooked an end with the medical infrastructure. so what are you actually doing right now on the ground? first of all, i have to clarify we don t have medics in the marine corps. i became a medic after i got out. but we have not been able to plug-in the conventional
germany. how do you explain this to a 4-year-old? katarina, can you hear me? katarina, it s john king, can you hear me? yeah, i can hear you. okay, good. we re having some technical issues. you had an ordeal where you were trying to go on a vacation. you re on a plane at kyiv airport. told to get off the plane. you stay in kyiv for several days. then after because of shelling there you move to odesa, moldova and germany. how do you explain all of this, the past week of your life, to a 4-year-old? well, my child is really scared now at the moment. you know, i have no explanation for this because now i feel like it s a nightmare.