C&B Analyze the Latest Developments in Ukraine and on MSNBC
4 Apr 2022
BUCK: Weโve spent some time updating the latest from Ukraine as the Russian invasion seems to have at least come to a point of temporary halt around Kiev. Thereโs still rocketing. Thereโs not a ceasefire, but the Russian military, the Russian war machineโs momentum has certainly slowed down considerably. And now there are more reports than ever about what that Russian war machine is willing to do to try to take territory and break the Ukrainian resistance.
โAtrocities Prompt Calls for More Sanctions as Russia Pummels South.โ So southern Ukraine still very much being bombarded. But around Kiev, which it seemed the plan for the Russians was going to be to encircle the capital then command a surrender and concessions โ territorial concessions, among others โ neutrality concessions from the Ukrainian government.
Now weโre seeing that the Russian military is not only indiscriminate in its use of indirect fewer, of artillery and rockets, but will execute and engage in widespread atrocities against civilians. This is now prompting calls for war crimes investigations and eventual prosecution, all the way up to Joe Biden saying that Vladimir Putin is a war criminal.
Clay, weโre going to reach this point, I think, very soon where we realize, first of all, the military reality on the ground in Ukraine is what is determining this conflict. For all of the talk and all the things that have been said by external actors about sanctions and now thereโs a call for even more sanctions, of course, yeah, thatโs putting pressure on the Russian government. Putin is dealing with a military reality on the ground.
Thatโs whatโs actually determining where he stops and where he goes and sends the military with this situation. So everything else is secondary to that military reality in the mind of the Kremlin โ or of Putin at the Kremlin โ and now we have our own president calling Putin as a war criminal.
And I just have to say, who will enforce this? Because on the one hand while it is true that these are atrocities, if youโre gonna go after Putin specifically, how can you have a peace deal when youโre going to say the leader on the other side should face a criminal tribunal in the Hague?
CLAY: Well, and can he leave this country, Buck? โCause thatโs the first thing I think of. Are we going to have Vladimir Putin either locked into Russia, or if he leaves the country are there gonna be people who storm him to try to arrest him for war crimes? And youโve been, I think, really kind of plugged in on this from the start, obviously, with your background.
So now that we have effectively the war shifting almost exclusively to the east of Ukraine, do you think at this point that itโs just a battle over whether Ukraine is willing to cede this territory to Russia? Is there any way that Ukraine can โ and Iโm using quotation marks here โ โwin,โ i.e., expel Russia from the territory that they already owned up to this point, or are we effectively now to the point where the battle is going to be over how much of eastern Ukraine is going to be given up to the Russians as a way to end this conflagration? How do we get this done, basically?
BUCK: Yeah. The answer is I think just what weโve seen in the Donbass region stretching back now seven years. Itโs one thing to defend bravely and admirably your home in a city environment, your hometown, your home city as Ukrainians have been doing. But once the Russians have taken an area fully and dug in, going on offense against that is a different situation.
CLAY: Expelling them.
BUCK: If they werenโt able to do that with a much smaller paramilitary Russian infiltration โ or I shouldnโt say paramilitary, but essentially false flag Russian incursion into the Donbas, itโs unlikely Iโll honest happy to do that it here with the full Russian military. You can see it on maps. Thereโs a lot of maps popping up on TV; thereโs substantial shelling in the south. Maripol, the city, looks like itโs essentially been turned to rubble.
CLAY: Itโs basically been leveled.
BUCK: Theyโve destroyed the city. But what theyโre doing is creating a corridor from the east, the Donbas region โ which is a region that has had fighting now for years โ all the way down along the coastline to the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea, so that they cut off Ukraine from maritime access.
Which is a big deal for a country. But the Russians also have a land corridor to bring together the territory that they would want including Crimea, right, โcause that would stretch into the Crimean Peninsula too. So is it likely that thereโs going to be any future in which the Ukrainians kick the Russians out of those areas? I think militarily no.
And then you have to ask, โWell, do we have the diplomatic leverage to get those kinds of concessions from the Russians?โ I think the answer to that is also, no. Thereโs a big question right now as to whether the Russiansโฆ Are they backing away because they think they canโt take Kiev or are they backing away to just regroup and come at it again? Here is Zelensky. He appeared over the weekend at the Grammys โ which, just as a side note, I didnโt even know the Grammys was a thing that was happening. But regardless, here is Volodymyr Zelensky, the president of Ukraine.
See John Legend and Zelensky deliver anti-war message at Grammys with โFreeโ โ https://t.co/mgsDgTwPuJ pic.twitter.com/4YQkYGO6ro
โ CNN (@CNN) April 4, 2022
BUCK: So Zelensky, obviously, able to address a whole lot an American international audience there, and, Clay, you have to wonder at this point. Weโve given the Ukrainian a lot of emergency services; thereโs a huge humanitarian relief effort underway. I have a family member โ not in my media family but a family member โ whoโs gone over to Poland to help with the relief efforts now.
People are getting involved all over the place. Heโs gonna be trying to helping the refugees, bringing them food. A friend of mine I use work with over at The Blaze, heโs also over there now, Brian Sack. He is trying to just do his part to help. But, again, it comes back to this military reality on the ground in Ukraine. We should help and do help refugees. We should help and do get munitions and weapons to the Ukrainian fighters. But if weโre not doing a military intervention, weโre also at some level in a bystander capacity here.
CLAY: And itโs gonna be more difficulty, I think, Buck. Weโve talked about the emotion and the way itโs going to dictate in many ways the response of the United States and other Western allies. Buck, the war crime evidence is, it would appear, nearly 100% certainty now, as youโre aware of seeing all of these civilians, many of them bound up, buried in mass graves, shot with their hands tied behind their backs, all of these things as the Russians are pulling back from the Kiev area.
And that is going to further, I think, embolden the emotional response, which is going to continue to press us towards, โHey, be as aggressive as you possibly can in providing sustenance, support, and maybe a continued push towards the idea of American military intervention in some way.โ Iโm not saying I support it. Iโm just saying the emotions that youโre going to see brought to bear from all of these mass casualty events is going to continue to weigh on the way that America responds.
BUCK: Yes, and of course, there are still some in this country who are trying to find a way to make this about a domestic political score-settling situation. What Putin is doing is horrible, but the history of the Russian military โ when it was Soviets and now the Russians but โ is one of extreme brutality. I mean, the notion that theyโre going to abide by Geneva Conventions is unfortunately repudiated immediately with a brief look at history.
Thatโs just the way the Russian military fights is in this way, with extreme brutality, viciousness and targeting of civilians. But put that aside for a moment. As you call him, Clay, the de facto president, Ron Klain. Weโre looking at whatโs going on with Putin and the Biden White House is saying the real enemy are like our friend Tucker Carlson at Fox forโฆ Well, just listen to this.
โEvery day we wake up and see [Putin] dropping bombs on hospitals, on schools, on children, and we have the former president, who thinks thatโs a great person to try to engage in a political scheme with. Itโs absolutely disgustingโ โ @WHCOS w/ @NicolleDWallace pic.twitter.com/eyCb1WPloy
โ Deadline White House (@DeadlineWH) March 31, 2022
BUCK: Okay. Can we justโฆ? I think itโs Nicolle Wallace who is one of theโฆ Am I right on that one? Is that Nicolle Wallace?
CLAY: Yeah.
BUCK: Sheโs one of the dumbest and most dishonest people in the political space on television. Just put that aside. Sheโs up there.
CLAY: By the way, thatโs saying something.
BUCK: Sheโs like top 10 dumbest and most dishonest. When has Tucker ever given Vladimir Putin safe harbor for dropping bombs on civilians? I do watch. That is a show that I do watch, right. I watch Tuckerโs show and Iโll watch the opening monologue. Iโve seen him countless times. I canโt remember how many times heโs said we stand with the Ukrainian people in theirโฆ?
You know, stand with them in a moral sense, in an unethical sense in their fight Benson Russian aggression. Itโs horrible whatโs going on. But the Democrats canโt help themselves. Their real enemy, Clay, is always here at home. Itโs not even Vladimir Putin abroad. The real problem is always right next door to them.
CLAY: Well, the amount of just lying that goes on. I mean, youโre seeing it. Certainly, weโve seen it the last several weeks out of Florida over the parental rights bill. People you donโt even watchโฆ This happens to us to a certain extent. People who donโt listen to our show criticize us for things that we never said, and I think the positive here is Tucker is such a part of the conversation that they consider โ the de facto president of the United States does, Ron Klain โ Tucker to be such an equally that heโs attacking him directly.
I always say you know youโre over the target when the bombs start getting dropped right on you, right, like when theyโre coming after you. And Tucker makes a lot of logical sense on a night-to-night basis. Itโs why, Buck โ and this is a tremendous fact that doesnโt get enough attention โ more Democrats often watch Tucker Carlson than watch the counterprogramming on MSNBC and CNN.
BUCK: Yeah, well, itโs also a function โ itโs a vestige, really โ of all the lies told about Trump for four years as Putinโs puppet, that that audience โ
CLAY: Yes.
BUCK: โ the CNN and MSNBC audiences, the New York Post, New York Times, et cetera, then all the lesser dumber versions of those platforms, theyโve convinced their audience that the Republican Party is somehow in bed with Putin and Russia and we love Russia and all this stuff. I mean, you know, we do our own show here.
Iโve written at Fox News about how we should give arms and munitions to Ukraine โ the whole thing is just not rooted in reality, but they tell their audience what they to want hear. The point I really want to hammer home is for the Democrats on the left, the real threat, the real enemy is always here at home. Vladimir Putin is not as scary to them as โwhite nationalists in America!โ and all the other stuff that they cry about and pretend is some huge threat.
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