we said, including that russia said over many yearsant how a nuclear war is not winnable. something that was reaffirmed as recently as the meeting between president biden and putin in the summer in geneva. so we watched this very, very carefully. there is a lot of bad loose talk and bluster. at the same time i have to tell you, we have real concerns that russia could use a chemical weapon, another weapon of mass destruction. this is something we are very focused on. unfortunately we seen them use or aquestioiesce in syria and ts something we are focused on. if they use chemical weapons, what will the u.s. and senate to do? we have been very clear with russiaed with others that there would be a very serious response, not just from us, from
or so, more when the curfew went in, there was a lot of very heavy fighting or at least sounds of heavy fighting, artillery exchanges from the west of the city, somewhat unexpected not because the west of the city hasn t been a hot spot now since they ve started attacking kiev, but that there has been an anticipation that it would be the east that was likely to come under pressure and that that might explain why the ukrainians have imposed this curfew, which is a day and night curfew through to thursday. but at the moment, the pressure seems to be continuing to come in the west. it has gone relatively quiet now. earlier on in the day a gain in the west this morning, there you can see on the screen, there was a very substantial attack against a large apartment building, 16-story apartment building. four people were killed there. there were also attacked in the northeast and southeast of the city as well so clearly the
china partner. when they provide support to the russians, what will the u.s. do? again without going into specifics of what we will do, we ve made very clear that s not something we will take sitting down. as you know, putin is making truly outlandish and very, very offensive claims that he is de-nazifying ukraine. you and i both have family that survived the holocaust, president zelenskyy does as well. do you think the u.s. will look back on this team right now and wish the west had done more to stop putin? wolf, it s hard to project into the future. can i tell you a couple things i am confident of. first of all, there will be an independent ukraine a lot longer than a vladimir putin. one way or the other. ukraine will be there, and at some point putin won t. the real question is how much death and destruction is brought by russia s aggression in the meantime, that s what we are working as hard as we can to limit to stop to put an end to
it uses a mechanism to signal the missile that it s a heat-seeker and attracts a heat-seeker i should say. then as a result of that it pulls the missile in so it shoots down instead of the actual iscander missile. nato forces probably have their hands on this assessing it as we go. it looks like colonel layton and i were talking about. we believer that reassessing, they re good on that and make continued pushes on some of these cities in the south and towards kiev. don t look for them to be stalled that long. meantime, they are killing a lot of the men, women and children. thank you very, very much. coming up, the ukrainian refugee crisis surges past yet another awful milestone, more than 3 million innocent civilians, mostly women and children now on the run for putin s invasion, even though some make the heart wrenching
Despite the rapid spread of the omicron strain, the amount of coronavirus in wastewater remains stable and the new strain of the virus has not yet emerged as the dominant variant in Estonia, the results of the most recent wastewater analysis show.