addressed the unprecedented indictment friday. we have one set of laws in this country, and they apply to everyone. if applying those laws, collecting facts, that s what determines the outcome of an investigation. nothing more and nothing less. paul: joining me now is the former attorney general of the united states, michael mukasey. judge mukasey, good to see you. so you ve read the indictment. how strong is it? well, if the facts set forth in there are provable, and a great deal of it indicates that they clearly are, it is very strong. a lot of the evidence comes from his own lawyer who was compelled to testify over a claim of attorney-client privilege based on conversations he had with donald trump that show that he knew that he had classified information. there was, there are two instances in which he met with people on the outside, one a writer, the other a fundraiser. and showed them classified information and said that he knew that he had it and knew that it was cl
the ukrainians have a huge opportunity here. the united states and the west has helped them but not with everything that they wanted and certainly not in the time frame that they wanted it. and they ve within attacking in three different locations. two of them they ve succeeded in marginally in ma muled and zaporizhzhia they conducted an attack, and the russians were able to stop it using attack helicopters and also successful introduction of electronic warfare and jamming ukrainians. the fact is, is that this is going to go on for weeks. but the ukrainians, i think, do have an advantage. and even though they re outnumbered by the russians, they have an advantage in terms of the leadership that they have, the training that s been conducted. the united states and the west has trained over 40,000 ukrainian soldiers, and most importantly the determination of the soldiers that are fighting for their families, fighting for the livelihood of their country. and so their determination is