stock up, charge your devices. don t travel tomorrow. we ll be in touch with team over the next 24, 48 hours to make sure we keep folks safe here. alex, as victor said, provi provincetown is one of my favorite places in the spire world. i love vacations there in the summer. p town cannot handle two feet of snow. you ll be socked in until may in provincetown. we are expecting 50 degrees next thursday. it will be warm and balmyx. this is my first winter in provincetown. i m looking forward to a winter wonder land over the weekend. hopefully power keeps up. i don t know if two feet of
ukraine when it comes to these talks? well, most ukrainians we spoke to, they don t have full faith in these talks. they re hoping. they re hoping things will change. but given the fact that there s already been so much destruction, devastation in kyiv, so people are not holding up hopes for any sort of progress. what they are doing is taking a lull in the fighting. some stores are open, groceries. people are trying to stock up, fill up gas, things like that, to prepare for the worst. of course there s definitely a sense of determination here, resilience. people are expecting to get back and protect their homeland again. so let s go to moscow with that same thread talking about these talks happening at the belarus border. what are the expectations inside moscow? are they taking these seriously?
i know that you have experienced having more wars in war zones for more than 20 years. are there misconceptions that the american public has about what s happening in ukraine, other things that were misunderstanding were just not seeing yet, that you think we should know? i think this is one of the rare cases where there are not misconceptions. i think, in many of the wars i ve covered, war can be raging in one part of the city, but life goes on in the other part of the city. that was common in baghdad, in afghanistan, and many of the wars of covered. here, actually, it s pretty grim. people are really preparing for the worst. there are lines at grocery stores, people are not panicking, but there are lines everywhere. atms, pharmacies, people are trying to stock up, because no one really knows what will happen. the thing that s been so moving to people around the
desperate situation, chris. you are not there about food and gas being in short supply, obviously, hard to resupply. normal grounds transport not functioning. that begins to become a concern, and we ve seen in the last few days, a ratcheting it up of people moving from the eastern part of the country to the western part, where you are. where there s been a massive influx of refugees. what s the situation there like? here in lviv, really, when i ve seen so far as the best of ukraine. you see people helping people, essentially. i was at a nightclub turned refugee center, yesterday. this lebanese expert who has been here ten years turned his entire nightclub into sanctuary. he s allowing refugees from all over the country to come and half foot. stock up on supplies. they can even sleep in the bunker, a world war ii style
shannon: welcome back to our special coverage. benjamin hall with us live in kyiv and bret baier is here for a little bit of a round robin discussion. benjamin, the sun is coming up and we discussed earlier how the city has been quiet not only overnight from attacks but from people wary of going out. is there availability of drug stores and grocery stores? what s the reality? benjamin: those supplies, they are running out. every day you see big lines outside pharmacies. food, it s going to be rarer and harder to get the more the russians cut the city off. stock up as best as you can. that s one of the great concerns, the human cost. the humanitarian disaster.