same time. there s artillery, russian artillery that is busted. again more destroyed, burned out tank pieces, what is left of clothing of russian soldiers. this has been 100 days of fighting here. the battles, it has largely shifted to the east. but there are still air raid sirens here in kyiv. we heard one this afternoon. we were at a food distribution in bucha. they had prepared to give food to 300 people. 600 people arrived needing help. they didn t have enough for everyone. the signs of war, they are here every day. and as we keep talking to people, what they keep saying to us is they hope that the rest of the world doesn t forget that because they are worried about what happens next. but also they are seeing the ripple impacts of this war even in places where there is no fighting, where there never was fighting. there is no sense of normalcy when you come home and you come home to something like this, when parents are sending their kids outside to play. they re doing it in many
that everybody understands we re not talking about a peace deal here. we re talking about russia accomplishing its mission here. we re going to continue on that mission. martha: he said something about what the rest of the world doesn t understand is when russia is in a more difficult position, it galvanizes them and galvanizes the country behind it. we ll see if that s the case. thanks, general. always good to see you. thank you. martha: so this report has also just come in in a basement in a town of brovery in ukraine. a gruesome discovery. they found six dead bodies riddled with gun shot wounds in a town outside of the capitol still there. a prosecutor says these murders likely took place at the beginning of the war as many fled kyiv. some stayed behind. now they re just learning the full extent of the carnage of those that stayed behind in
dance. you have to, when talking to our allies, make clear what we see in our intelligence, which is the potential for an imminent attack and it s no secret that our allies have not always shared our assessment of the threat. so in order to build this set of sanctions against russia that are multilateral along with our european partners, we ve got to make sure they understand how serious we see the intelligence. at the same time, again, inside ukraine, you don t want to build unnecessary panic. you don t want to bring down this government. so i can see why the ukrainians are being a little bit more delicate in how they advance this intel. you have to understand inside y ukraine, they ve had russians on their soil for the better part of a decade. they ve lost thousands of soldiers in the fight against russia. sometimes they worry the rest of the world doesn t know that, that they ve been at war with russia and this would just be a
truth is that the value of those assets are still going to have real value unless and until the rest of europe and the rest of the world doesn t want to import the oil and gs from russia. to a lot of people who don t understand the way the global economy works, which is most of us, it sounds insane, almost like putin has us in a box, american people sitting at home and thinking, well, i m already seeing it in my gas prices, i live in california, they re telling me i might see $6 a gallon, and there are potentially other economic repercussions. what are americans looking at right now? it s something the president will have to address tonight in the state of the union. absolutely. this is part of the larger inflation story we re seeing in the united states and is being exacerbated by the situation in russia, in part because to the extent we ll be exporting oil and the like and others are, as well, to make up for some of the sales that hopefully will not be sold from russia, that s go
minister laf ro. how can you probably justify the bombing of a maternity ward and children s hospital? do you agree that s an atrocity? and also, for the russian people themselves today russia faces a $40 billion default. that s worse than we have seen the russian economy since 1917. how do you justify it to the people at home you wrecked the economy for an invasion that frankly the rest of the world doesn t believe should be happening? thank you, sir. spot on with the questions. i know he gave a long response. within that he did. did you get a decent explanation from him? reporter: yes and no. what you saw there in the long response as you say is an insight into the kremlin s mind meld and insight of vladimir