Transcripts for MSNBC Alex Witt Reports 20220312 19:22:45 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
the ripple effects of the ukraine war and the impact they re already having on american politics. the impact they re already having on american politics. with a bit more thought we can all do our part to keep plastic out of the ocean. i m gonna earn 3% on dining including takeout with chase freedom unlimited. that s a lot of cash back. are you gonna stop me? uh-oh. i m almost there. too late! boom! earn big time with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? chase. make more of what s yours. a little bit of chicken fried cold beer on a friday night a pair of jeans that fit just right
it is being reported by the wall street journal and our own cnbc anchor hadley gamble. here s what she told me she is hearing from her sources just in the last hour. he and his counterpart, german chancellor olaf scholz, were asking specifically for an immediate ceasefire, and according to french officials, the background chatter, if you will, is that president putin showed absolutely no sign that he was in any way focused on ending this conflict. of course, that should be something that everyone takes into account, especially as the u.s. president, joe biden, has said that he s going to pump an extra $200 million to ukraine in terms of financial assistance. also new today, ukraine s president zelenskyy floated the idea of meeting face-to-face with putin, potentially in israel translator: i m not even talking about technical meeting but about meeting at the level of heads of state, maybe israel could be such a country, especially jerusalem. that s my opinion.
agree to that neutral possible status. but we are ready to do whatever it takes to discuss this all, but only with the mediators and with real negotiation. so, the deputy head of the president s office said that there are currently, what, 14 green humanitarian corridors in ukraine, including to mariupol. we ve seen some of these evacuations fail because of the ongoing, the lack of stopping any russian attacks. are they any more successful today than they have been? there s been some success, but very small. unfortunately, we keep seeing that civilians are targeted, lots of traumas, lots of killed people, lots of wounded. yesterday, i was welcoming the buses of ukrainian refugees in strasbourg, and most of them are
there at the border of poland and ukraine, describe the scene. what do you want to know about the plight of ukrainians? it is, i mean, it s the highest of highs and lowest of lows in terms of emotions. you see people coming through one exit of the border, actually, that exit that you re showing right there is unfortunately the exit where people come through if they don t have anybody, and it s a very solemn, sad experience. they get in lines. we help hand out hot food, hot soup as well. but they re waiting in lines to get in buses to the refugee center, and then figure things out from there. but there s another line where they have people waiting for them, and there s tearful, joyful reunions at the same time. so, it s very surreal in terms of the pulling and the tugging on the emotions. what kinds of things, paul, did you bring to help the people? we recognize that it was going to be disproportionately women, children, and elderly, and we tried to pack accordingly.