video of him leaving rostov-on-don, where he had taken control of a key russian military facility. the kremlin says, he is now heading to neighboring belarus, wagner soldiers would not be prosecuted. again, all of this is from the kremlin and unverified by nbc news. new reporting from the washington post reads, quote, while putin seemed to avert his greatest prices crisis in more than 23 years as russia s supreme political leader, grief armed rebellion, presented the starkest evidence yet that his brutal invasion of ukraine could backfire. leading to instability at home and exposing his growing isolation from reality and weakness as a leader. joining us now from kyiv, nbc news correspondent kelly cobiella, nbc news white house correspondent and on capitol hill, and pc news correspondent julie adjuster. kelly, let s start with you. how is the kremlin trying to explain what s unfolded over the past 24 hours? well alicia, it s interesting. they re not trying to explain, it t
ingraham good to be back. what about the disappearing acts. whwhat about the disappearing ability whatever shed the credibility the biden administration had remaining. now they dug deeper on two blatant lies. first, the so-called bipartisan negotiations on the very border crisis that the white house itself precipitated. now, after mayorkas and biden have already green lit 12 million migrants into the united states already? what frauds. i will dip into that in a minute. the second line the defense secretary disappearing act. the president respects the fact that secretary austin took ownership for the lack of transparency. he also respects the amazing job he has con as defense secretary. how he has handled multiple crises over the past three years and very much values his advice, candor and relationship? laura: is that right? look, we are running the television show, not the pentagon. if anyone on my senior staff was missing for four days, we would all know about it within,
laura: hello, everyone this o is laura ingraham from the ingraham angle and it is going to be back but what about the disappearing acts, that is the focus of tonight s angle. we saw over the weekend was andh utter collapse of whatever shren of credibility of the biden administration add remaining. now, they dug deeper ontoed b coblatant lies. first the so-called bipartisanis negotiations on the very border crisis that the white house itself precipitated.n now, after alejandro mayorkas and biden green lead, what is it, 12 million migrants into the united states already, they think they can force republicans to agree to a bad deal or get the public to blame them if they don t. what fraud spirit i will dip inton that in a minute but thee second light and post the secretary disappearance act.cret speak of president respects the fact that lloyd austin tooke htransparency. he respects the amazing job he s done a secretary. and now handling the crisis ovem the most three yea
at the capitol building in washington injanuary last year, when supporters of donald trump tried to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to president biden. the congressional committee has spent almost a year investigating the attack. now on bbc news, counting the cost. millions of people around the world are facing increasingly difficult decisions amid rising food and energy costs. the world bank has warned the war in ukraine is set to cause the largest commodity shocks since the 1970s, with the price of wheat, cotton and natural gas affected, set against a backdrop of global supply disruptions because of covid lockdowns, and the effects of climate change on crop yields, many people are facing a fall in living standards and it is pushing many to the edge of crisis. our correspondents around the world have been looking at the challenges faced by many different countries and we start here in brazil, one of the world s largest agricultural exporters, now struggling to feed it
now on bbc news, counting the cost. millions of people around the world are facing increasingly difficult decisions amid rising food and energy costs. the world bank has warned the war in ukraine is set to cause the largest commodity shocks since the 1970s, with the price of wheat, cotton and natural gas affected, set against a backdrop of global supply disruptions because of covid lockdowns, and the effects of climate change on crop yields, many people are facing a fall in living standards and it is pushing many to the edge of crisis. our correspondents around the world have been looking at the challenges faced by many different countries and we start here in brazil, one of the world s largest agricultural exporters, now struggling to feed its people. to you and me, this looks like the land of plenty. brazil is an agricultural powerhouse. it s farmers reaping the rewards of an insatiable china, and the demand is not letting up. thiago was brought up on the land, his whole li