they will not control us. ukrainians will not surrender. mr. president biden, if you stop russian aggression, if you stop aggression of vladimir putin right now, with a very serious, very a concrete decision to intervene immediately with all the needed forces and prevent the genocide and prevent catastrophe and prevent the third world war, you will be the best man in the world, a person a big part of history. the president who stopped the global catastrophe. neil: you remember her? she became the iconic face of a resistance movement against russia toppling ukraine, from a bunker enconed with her children, and her husband went on to fight the good fight in ukraine. and she s back with us, how things are looking right now and what she thinks of this war and where it s going right now, a war that steve harrigan has been covering from the very beginning as we look back at a year that shocked the world. we just whoa. large explosion two miles behind me, black smoke coming up.
jinping, presumably about this peace overture. your thoughts? well, again, we know that russia and china have a relationship. that s something that we, of course, here at the department of defense closely monitor, so that s no surprise in and of itself. again, what we re mostly focused on here is ensuring that ukraine, along with the international community, is working together to ensure that the ukrainian people have what they need to defend their country and importantly, take back their sovereign territory. neil: you know, general, it s interesting that french and german leaders were telling president zelenskyy that they need to consider the peace talks and i m wondering, the official ukrainian position has been they don t plan to give up an inch of land in order to accommodate the russians or sign an agreement.
leaders reject the latest peace overture from israel. what, if anything, was accomplished by the president s trip? are we closer to peace? and what happens next? david miller is a former adviser to six secretaries of state. vice-president of the woodrow wilson senior and a senior negotiator on palestinians. i m grade great, jamie. how are you? jamie: we watched the trip and the meetings of the president and the new secretary of state, senator kerry, former senator kerry. what progress did we make? well, you know, my view is that obama went because he had a problem n. in the first administration, he couldn t figure out whether he wanted to pressure netanyahu or pannedder to him? now he has clearly made a decision to try to create a functional partnership. i think that s really important because as things stand now the, if barack obama doesn t want to be the guy on whose watch iran gets the nuclear weapon or the
for state hood. this hour, the president is expected to meet with palestinian authority president abbas. he held a separate meeting just a little while ago with benjamin netanyahu. let s bring in our chief white house correspondent, jessica yellin. she s covering this from new york. the president also delivered a major address before the u.n. general assembly. that s rig, wolf. the palestinians continue pressing their case here at the united nations and it was the most dramatic issue the president addressed in his speech today with repeated the theme, peace is hard. the president trumpeted progress at the end of this year, america s military operation in iraq will be over. osama bin laden is gone. and warned of challenges ahead. where we stand with the syrian people or their oppressors. what so many were listening for was this. we seek a future where palestinians live in a sovereign sate of their own. how would we explain his opposition to the palestinian push