they? forso companies have a dilemma, don t they? for so long, companies have a dilemma, don t they? forso long, governments haven t met their spending commitments. did they invest now in the next generations of weapons when they don t know how long the war might last? might last? exactly. first, thanks for havin: might last? exactly. first, thanks for having me- might last? exactly. first, thanks for having me. i might last? exactly. first, thanks for having me. i think might last? exactly. first, thanks for having me. i think they re - for having me. i think they re looking at stuff like many european companies. the concern is that all attention is on ukraine and nato members are talking about reaching the spending target that lots of countries have field to do. the big question is what will happen five or ten years down the line. the general who heads us forces to put together a report. in terms of where its focus will be, how in arms itself, what would you expect to
the weapons he had and who else he stalked. also tonight, the latest in the string of holiday mass shootings, including philadelphia s five dead and what prosecutors say was deliberate. the bag of cocaine in the white house. where it was found and what that could mean about who left it there. we begin with a picture federal prosecutors are painting of the man arrested are firearms and ammunition in the washington neighborhood home to many dignitaries, including president obama and mrs. obama. it comes from a court filing urging the man be kept in custody. alleged threats against kevin mccarthy and jamie raskin. that he allegedly live streamed a claim he had a debt nature a explosives and the got the address for the obamas from a post from donald trump. walk us through what exactly the former president posted and when this guy showed up in the obama neighborhood. there wasn t a long time between the two events happening. donald trump posts a newsletter that purportedly h
when they put me in prison, i heard they were recruiting. serve six months and they pardon you, he tells me. so he signed up with storm z, a unit made up of convicts attached to the russian defense ministry. after only two weeks of basic training, he was shipped off to the frontlines near bakhmut. [ gunfire ] after days of intense shelling, with only rainwater and no food, he heard ukrainian troops outside his foxhole. he assumed they would execute him. i thought that was the end, he recalls. i switched my rifle to single shot mode and thought, i ll shoot myself, but i couldn t. this video, shot by soldiers of ukraine s assault brigade, shows the intense moments when he and his comrade surrendered. the ukrainian troops told them, unlike russians, we don t kill prisoners. we spoke to him and another soldier in a jail in eastern grain, concealing their faces and not using their real names. the third assault brigade granted us access to the p.o.w.s, and two of their soldie
Where the Russians lately have gained ground in Ukraine, it’s because meat assaults have overwhelmed Ukrainian troops. What happens when the meat runs out?