publicizing what the state deemedukraine. that the government decides, you know, if this journalistic account about russia s war in ukraine is false or not, and if they think it s false, they put you in jail. so it s a joke, frankly, jo journ journalistically, it s sad for russia and for russians what vladimir putin is doing here and how much he s discrediting russia. many journalists for major os have gone through training, what will you do if you re kidnapped. i went through it. very different situation than actually living it, which you did. what is evan facing right now? he it s a funny, you know, thing. he feels terrible for his family i know that might sound strange, but you know, he loves reporting. i was reporting afghanistan many years ago and the taliban held me for seven months, and you know, he s like telling the truth. he s actually trying to i think help the russian people by reporting on the ground there and taking a risk, but showing how much th
11,000 ukrainian soldiers across 26 different nations the u.s. will continue to provide training and work closely with our allies and partners to ensure the ukrainian people have the security assistance they need to defend the country, their country, and repel russian aggression we remain committed to supporting ukraine for as long as it takes. i d also like to provide a quick update on where things stand in regards to our recent air strikes regarding iranian backed groups, as well as the status o of our forces wounded during attacks by those groups. we now assess that eight mill t militants were killed in our strikes by u.s. air force assigned to u.s. air forces central. these precision strikes wiere taken to protect and defend u.s. personnel. the six u.s. personnel wounded in the march 23rd attack in northeastern syria are all in stable condition two of the wounded u.s. service members have already returned to
fair amount of republican backers who are attending his massive rallies. first, donald trump joined us in new hampshire hours after the republican debate in milwaukee. a big massive beautiful plane. we kick things off by discussing an emerging fault line when it comes to national security and foreign intervention. let s talk about policy. big battle over what the united states should and shouldn t do. the united states has been run by neocons. you have marco rubio who wants to spend a trillion dollars more on national defense. and then on the other side you had rand paul. where exactly do you stand between those two polar opposites? i would say i m the most mill t militaristic on the stage. i tell the story of you when you almost fell over.
some stronger steps. what s your take? mark is completely correct on this. let s be very clear. i always talk about with dylan, let s begin with the end in mind. what do we want to achieve? no matter what everybody else is doing, let s get our own head on straight. the idea here should be to look at lebanon. lebanon went through all sorts of chaos. they re now a republic standing up and doing things. let s just state that s what we want to see come out of this. we want to see syria set up like lebanon and then start acting in that direction. i disagree completely with the president s spokesman on this. mill t militarizing this is the only way to go. we will see more deaths and we will see this country transcend into chaos to the level we will see more of this thing going on, and i predict by the end of summer, you will see u.n. observers killed before our very eyes. mark, lots of americans feel kind of war fatigued after a