tv Outnumbered FOX News March 2, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PST
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elps you build a future for those you love. vanguard. become an owner. >> breaking news: this is a situation we been watching for days. trying to come up with a resolution to condemn pressure for the ukraine. united nations general has just voted, the u.n. general assembly has approved the resolution ending that russia stop the war in ukraine and withdraw russian troops. this is symbolic. it's nonbinding. when they did this with the national security council last
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week, russia and china voted against it, of course they would veto that. what this means is after days talking about what could go into a resolution to get the cure against russia killing people in ukraine that the general assembly seems to agree with. meanwhile, sounds of gunfire in ukraine. protesters stand up to putin's army. ukrainian evil have shown bravery. with each passing day we are seeing violence and heartbreaking deaths. you are watching "outnumbered." harris faulkner come here with michael and the company went kayleigh mcenany. turning us, shannon bream and bret baier. we continue. [laughter] vitamin putin, deadly air assaults on ukraine's second largest city. at least four people have died there.
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after russia hit the police and intelligence headquarters in the city streets, they are filled with concrete, every kind of debris you can imagine. they are blowing them to bits. in kyiv, the capital city, civilians have filled train stations racing to escape the capital before the arrival of the russian military convoy. ukrainians, forced to abandon everything. speak a lot of pain, a lot of -- from a country, my people. it's or to leave behind. it's hard to leave behind. my husband, my home, like dogs, my cats, my life.
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>> reporter: you can hear the pain and the voices of these ukrainians. violence erupted again across the country overnight. the russian we've not seen only from the south, but the east. they claim they have taken the city. if true, it would be a significant territorial gain for russian forces, who will be able to bring in more soldiers through crimea. tonight, in the second largest city of kharkiv, there is heavy russian shelling and strikes. the police headquarters is on fire after a russian strike. the scenes are more widespread in kharkiv, as were to ramped up attacks. russian paratroopers purportedly planted in kharkiv overnight to support the ground offensive. other images show heavy dan dame to residential areas. images speak for themselves.
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striking residential homes, as russians tried to demoralize the ukrainian people. they are building shelters where they can come and are preparing to push back against russian forces in kyiv. ukrainian defenseman claims to cover jets were shut down overnight. we saw checkpoints set up across the ukrainian capital. there are concerns that russian forces have sent forward troops to try to scope out how much resistance they are going to face. >> harris: thank you. before we get started, i want to bring up something hitting our newsroom senator braun white, democrat from oregon, just tweeted "i just introduce legislation to strip russia of its trade relationship status, giving president biden an opportunity to raise tariffs on imports." a reporter filling in detail. democrats pushing to revoke russia's most favored nation status, which would allow their
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goods to be sold at lower tariffs. you are looking at a situation where economically, things are starting to get tighter. i will come to you first for reaction, and topline thoughts you you have. >> bret: good afternoon. i think there's bipartisan support. there's now a growing caucus on capitol hill looking for ways to increase with the demonstration is doing in the sanctions realm on russia, and also increase the support for ukraine. that's short of u.s. and nato troops getting directly involved. i think what you are seeing is movements by the russian forces -- these are places where there's been heavy shelling over the last couple of days. forces have been surrounding those cities.
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now, they are occupying. this is a dangerous time. it's a time where street to street fighting is going to start happening. i think that's why if you are seeing thousands and thousands trying to leave kyiv. >> harris: bill hemmer and i were talking couple days ago. if putin's army gets this, and it could connect breakaway regions in that area, they start to build more of a wall on the southern border, which is taking away places where people can get out. >> bret: at the beginning, i think there were some experts who believed that what putin wanted was that region in the east, and a land bridge from russia to crimea, straight onto the poor. he has greater for taking over
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the country, but if you control the south and the port, that's a significant strategic moment. it's one where everything would push to the capital city. >> harris: it's another is for people to get goods and supplies. kayleigh, i caught you out of the corner of my eye nodding, while talking specifically about choking off the south of ukraine. >> kayleigh: it's clear that putin has bigger ambitions than just the top regions. he is looking to use terror tactics to get it. that's what's frightening to me. we saw the president of the united states -- about an hour ago at point-blank asked if russia was committing road crimes, and the answer is "it's too early to say." zelenskyy has said in no uncertain terms to quote directly "this is outright terror, attacks on kharkiv, a war crime." he said that point-blank. look at what is happened internationally on figure 25,
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attacks of a preschool where civilians were inside, attacks in urban areas, and cluster ammunition yesterday was discussed -- i deeply fear that this will get worse. when you look at what he did in syria, he enabled assad, attacked urban areas, killed anywhere from 14,000 -20000 civilians. i know that's a wide range. that's the best that could be come up with an tracking. >> one of the things that kelly alludes to there, couldn't really see everything that was going on in syria. they tried to take down was basically a monument there in ukraine, that gigantic tv tower. they would not nothing more than for elon musk to move its darling satellite services away from the ukraine so people could show the world what's happening.
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>> kayleigh: that's what's interesting about warfare in 2022. we have social media. we can all talk to members of parliament, people who are stuck in ukraine, and real time to talk about what's going on with the people they are on the ground. it's important that the president mentioned last night, that these are people who have known freedom in a stable society for 30-plus years. they seem stunned that this would happen in their civilized, developed cities. it's a society that seems stable. he seems caught off guard and shocked. they are fighting from a place of passion. that's why people are refusing to leave, why these men and women are staying behind. they are then up against russian
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conscripts, and people who didn't know what they would be walking into. the more the russian army can be demoralized, the better it is for the ukrainian people. they are fighting for everything they know and love and care about. >> harris: they also have the support of the entire world. not only monetarily, food, supplies -- as long as we can get those things to them. the reports of russian forces -- that was happening yesterday. it did not happen overnight. we know that there is at least some thirst for convoys to get to places where they can cut off the supply lines. if that were to begin to happen that is -- part of what they feel from the rest of us is around the hubs of poland's -- >> kayleigh: that's exactly right, and a consideration that needs to be taken into account. calls for humanitarian aid
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skyrocket. carrying the ball a couple yards further, senior defense department officials in the country have reported that russian soldiers were the result of propaganda from putin, many were told they were engaging in training exercises. they've been reported to be surrendering in droves, sabotaging vehicles, making sure they would not puncturing gas tanks -- d creating an ambassador the u.n. read aloud from then deceased russian soldier, saying "we were told we were going to be welcomed with open arms. instead, we were called fascists." two quick points to the you in a condemnation and sanctions. on the condemnation, they have condemned israel 45 times. in 2020, 17 times. three times as many as they have condemned other countries.
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it is right that they condemn russia, and i hope we see the scrutiny from them on this as they had to our allies, israel. to that senator's call, remember after -- i agree with and bret that bipartisan support is swelling but -- taking more sanctions on the uranium in this country, but we know that there are commercialized interests. humanity is the first and primary concern for us for us. >> harris: i wonder when we will start talking about what americans want to do to support further -- that's what it's going to take. if the american people said "we ride a bike for a while --" get off of russian oil. we are up to 607,000 crude barrels a day think about the numbers of that, over $100 a
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barrel. coming up prison brian kemp -- flat report and has no idea what's coming during his state of the union address last night, promised to make a russian leader pay for the war on ukraine. whether it's enough to save the ukrainian people, we will get into it. no one deserves the american dream of homeownership more than veterans. at newday, you can buy a home with no down payment. and they're holding the line on purchase loans with rates in the twos. already own a home and need cash? with the newday100 loan, you can get up to $60,000 or more and lower your payments $615 a month. no bank, no lender, no one knows veterans like newdayusa. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition for strength and energy. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition with 27 vitamins and minerals. and ensure complete
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>> kayleigh: the russian opposition leader is urging the country to stage daily protesting against vitamin putin for his invasion of ukraine. back at home, president biden should a rally cry state of the union address to unite the nation in the world against vladimir putin's invasion of the ukraine. he vows to make russia's leader
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paying for unleashing war in europe. >> when reporting started to shake the foundations of the free world, making it bend, attempting to, to his menacing ways. he badly miscalculated, thought he could roll on the ukraine, and the world would rollover instead, he met a wall of strength he never imagined. he met the ukrainian people. >> kayleigh: when you think about state of the unions, i think about landmark moments that we all remember, johnson laying out the war on poverty, the axis of evil comments by president bush, bill clinton pivoting -- i don't recall a line like that last night that will make this go down in history. >> bret: definitely not. it was a speech -- the traditional shopping list of a
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president trying to get things done from a congress that is divided, and not getting what he wants done. the speech was not inspiring, wasn't lofty. there is unity on the ukraine issue, and you have to give the biden administration credit, for reaching out to the nato countries for having that sheet of music. their critics say the he's leading from behind, letting the other nations lead the way with sanctions. he's steering and talking and engaging with these countries. on that part of the speech and the sanctions, going down that road, i think you'd have success. the rest of it was lackluster. you can't point to something that says it's going to change the dynamic. they had the ability to shift, to make a decision, shift policy. go after independence, overcome
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energy, do something that. there was no swinging. there was no fences. there was nothing as far as "big" in this speech. >> kayleigh: that's a great decision. harris, one thing that stuck out to be, dumb economic income of that was a key moment where we did not hear president biden -- i -- no president does, but in my view, i wish he had given a slight nod to the 13th -- >> harris: i don't think it's also so much to ask that he could put that into more than an hour long speech, in terms of who you are is the president, as the commander in chief. i think you are right. if anybody had doubt of "maybe, he didn't have time," i watched last night. i know he has a lot of crises going on, but he made more
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emphasis perhaps -- on how much has gone wrong with his presidency, and hit it's like a laundry list. it's like the fourth of july, music is over but they have to light everything. [laughter] you see all the fireworks on display, blue, red, gold, none of it makes sense. after a while, i thought we are "indiscriminately going down on the pier" stick set on the poles, items in terms of his agenda. "i'm going to secure the border." i thought i had hallucinated for a moment. didn't go into how. we were talking about this last hour, is he going to do it with the wall, what was the plan? all of it was "touch, but don't go deep." go to ukraine, but don't go so deep that you would say there would be a red line. militaries off the table, when -- wants to go to war, but don't you say that all things
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are possible if, if, if? we didn't go deep last night. >> kayleigh: wooden. josh groban from the western post pointed out that there were things not mentioned in -- syria wasn't mentioned because he has no syria strategy and the terms that to the cries of suffering there. almost no mention of china. president biden was so focused on the near-term near-term crises, not the long term. no mention of north korea. the list goes on. on iran, many adversaries were not mentioned missions on the world stage did not make it in. >> shannon: that something the president has been lauded for for decades, that he was the foreign policy guy.
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yet all of the polling shows us now that americans increasingly do not trust him on issues of foreign policy. they weren't good things for him to bring up last night. i don't think he wants to start -- it's a full plate. he avoided those, there were clunky things. we are talking about one topic, and all of a sudden -- on to something else. towards the end, he had the rhetorical stuff where he starts sounding like he's screaming, and the ending nobody could figure out. it wasn't one of his best speeches, but with the polling against him in domestically and internationally so many fires burning, i think he just wanted to get it done and get out. >> bret: once the votes, the over/under had to be about 35/36. [laughter] >> harris: the over under and folks who had to shannon's point, god bless the troops, god bless america come and go get 'em. >> harris: is that what he
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said? [laughter] i wondered. >> kayleigh: we were talking about last night. what is that referencing? >> emily: who knows the market in that they answer to every question, getting clarity? brett mentioned the lackluster shannon mentioned the shouting. shouting is no substitute for resolve, determination, seriousness. those were lacking in my opinion, in addition to clarity. it's exhausting. he moved on -- just getting to the extra moves we were talking about last night. we keep hearing them. more generalized, over some plus tick like you are saying. been hearing them since he was candidate biden. he's never failed to support any type of policy or achievement. when he did reference things, he failed -- >> harris: infrastructure. >> emily: -- he failed to take responsibility when his --
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and exacerbating or creating the problems. when he talked about the children's response on social media, what about the mental health declined from the pandemic? he talked about appointing a doj prosecutor. his bungling of the dissemination of those funds created that. finally, i thought also so little too withhold, too late. there's a lot more, i had a lot of issues. >> harris: infrastructure, one of the things he touted. the supply chain crisis undercuts anything you would want to do one infrastructure in certain areas. he didn't address how it was not santa claus who was going to bring a resolution of supply chain issues we have.
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no call for making it up in the united states. he had the time. he could've made some assessments. >> kayleigh: between fund of the police and secure the border, it's the election year. coming up, ukrainian president zelenskyy has been hailed for leadership, but as a relative newcomer on the world stage. how he and the ukrainian people have rallied local support for his country.
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pushing president zelenskyy into a wartime leader that some didn't expect. >> nate did a really good job putting this information together. his most recent involved entertainment. at one point, he was the voice of paddington bear. [laughter] he was a popular ukrainian comedian. if you google him, you can watch some older material on youtube. if you take, for a moment, his previous history -- that's the part i focused on. last week he called on israel to do more. the world might have wondered why he would do that. he is jewish, his grandfather fought against the nazis in world war ii. i've been telling this on "the faulkner focus" -- he has posted online that it's not just about
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letting jews in, it's about letting everyone in. he is a relative of a holocaust holocaust -- amazing personal history and journey, but also, his most recent history. as a sense of humor. he told biden "i need ammunition, i don't need a ride" when biden asked if he needed help escaping. >> he said that the test of a middle the test of a character of a president is in the unforeseen, where man reveals his character. speaking to president biden, he commented on what zelenskyy would say -- we will play that. >> reporter: how worried are you about president zelenskyy, and do you think he should try to leave ukraine?
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>> president biden: i think it's his judgment to make, and we are doing everything we can. >> kayleigh: i think it's the right answer. it's the choice of zelenskyy. some chose to leave the country, he has on the opposite end stage. seeing zelenskyy's personal journey, ironically, part of his time and entertainment was "serpent of the people." how -- 73% of the votes elected him president. he became a valiant president at that come to fold, fighting alongside his people is to medication strategy the ability to inspire the e.u. to give a 1:10 standing ovation. loosing his medications in germany, his changes in posture -- he is impressive. >> among those
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>> emily: among those with impressive nature, general kellogg. people praising him, analyzing the relationship between him and putin. >> zelenskyy has death in the face, and that just point: that's putin. i think he's got put in on his because putin has realized he's got a charismatic leader, a true commander in chief. >> bret: he comes from the entertainment world, but so did ronald reagan and he went on to be one of our best presidents. he has a commit haitian ability, and he has walked in the streets in the middle of a war, like churchill did as they were facing down the nazi aggression in world war ii. i think he's inspirational, emotional. he's tapping into his resilience, this result that ukraine has. they need it now. they are going to go through tough days. >> emily: shannon bream, take
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us home. >> shannon: the people that got surrounding, his wife put out a piece on instagram saying "my tears and are going to see tears and panic. this country is watching me. i'm standing with my children, my husband, the people of ukraine we are not going anywhere." a brand-new opinion piece hit "the new york times," the equivalent of the chief and staff saying "i'm riding this appeal from the bunker with the president next to me, we are not going anywhere." they have made that this decision, and everyone else in the country is making difficult decisions too. >> harris: we have my pictures -- demonstrators arrested, protesting against the war in ukraine. let's talk about the significance of what you are seeing. for the last couple of days, they have arrested 2,000 people for protesting. this is not just people in the streets in moscow or wherever they might be, saying "no more
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war" i remember one person come to took the sign out of her window, and that wasn't enough: they dragged her down and took her. what happens to these people when they get in the hands of russian authorities, can get 20 years in prison for screening for freedom of speech. the other part is this is now not just a few voices. this is an antiwar movement in russia, a communist nation that tried to take down the internet because they don't want the world to see. we see you. >> emily: those are just some of the events, 800,000 people forced to leave the ukraine, making their way to neighboring countries after the russian invasion. in poland, more day. his ukrainian mother shares her harrowing story. >> left on the 25th.
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took refuge in the basement, and then, we moved to the railroad station. tonight -- -- >> he went with your baby down to the basement >> you want with your baby down to the basement. >> emily: joining us now from poland, near the border of ukraine. >> reporter: when you were playing that piece that piece, it brought back so many conversations that we had with people. if we have had those conversations on the other side of it, women and children who eventually get out of ukraine and make their way into poland. all kinds of supplies or waiting, cases and cases of water, a warm meal. then, there's a bus ride into
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another part of poland, maybe europe. many e.u. countries taking in refugees. getting closer and closer to 1 million. the number is 800,000 officially at last check more than half coming here to poland. that's only part of the story. i want to show you video we shot a while ago, a woman here with her child and dog. they made their way in from ukraine. they are okay for now, but they are worried about the people they are leaving behind. >> don't have water and food. 6-7 days from the beginning, and they are asking us about help. my relatives are two very old people, and they cannot move. i don't know how to get food, water, medicine.
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>> bret: it's a refugee crisis putter it's a refugee crisis here >> reporter: it's a refugee crisis here, all over europe. what is happening now is that these buses behind me are driving up refugees here, the parts of europe or maybe other parts of poland. then, we see this sign that says ukraine, to go back if you want to be involved in the war. sometimes, like a woman we met moments ago come inside from ukraine, dropping her children off with some relatives. she's going to rejoin her husband. in both ways this camp where we are is going to get more crowded as the days go on.
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>> just yesterday, only four trains got out of the country. 16-17 people are being shoved into these departments, dire situations. >> bret: it is, and can't overlook the refugee crisis, the fact that poland is taking his people. what we should mention about what just happened to look hundred 41 countries throughout the favor general assembly resolution to deploy russia's aggression against ukraine, demanding immediate withdrawal of all russian forces. this is overwhelming. there are four countries that joined russia: belarus, north korea -- and syria, and 35 abstained. the world is speaking, and they may realize they are stepping up. >> kayleigh: it reminds me of the walk out of the u.n., when
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lavrov was speaking and only russia, china, and north korea were left in the room. i want to put this on the screen. "a new mom, a 3-year-old, i carry her around while rolling two kids." "this truck to come and have not been able to get it out of my mind." this is from the economist. "escaping on the ukraine, in the cold for more than a day the traffic is such that they had no choice but to leave their cars behind and continue on foot. a bag in one hand, her young daughter's hand in the other, carrying her toddler, having to walk 17 kilometers to the border." that's 10.5 miles with two children. these are the states. we pray for anastasia and others.
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>> we said this was never going to happen. in world war ii, we made that promise to each other. half as many countries of nato as there are now true we are supposed band together. this is not supposed to have happened again. why did it take so long to put sections on russia? why are people buying over 600,000 barrels of crude from russia today? ambassador nikki haley put it well yesterday. ". she said it sickens her to say that we would go from one enemy to deal with another. why do we need alongside our run? why do we need to have secrets with china about russia? why do we think we would keep -- and not our own? we said it wouldn't happen again. what does it take to keep this from happening again? we owe it to the world to be the beacon of light that we are. we had better get on it.
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it isn't just russia. china's watching, seeing the mistakes russia has made with its military. they are learning. we've got to get it together. >> bret: not only did we say it wasn't going to happen again, but we told ukraine if they give up nuclear weapons in 1994 that "we've got your back." >> harris: why didn't we let them into nato then? >> bret: they had a lot of corruption. >> harris: observer status? >> bret: they were on the outskirts, wanted nato status, but they did not get in. at the time they gave up the nukes, we said "if you do this, we've got your back." we do, but i don't think there's a lot of u.s. troops getting involved here. it's something to say. >> harris: i think that was a long time ago. >> kayleigh: there has to be a
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great sense of betrayal on behalf the ukraine people. >> shannon: have to imagine that's how they are feeling. this is devastating to watch, horrible to see families ripped apart, people killed, the destruction that's happening. it's gut wrenching. the one bright spot are wars whether volunteers standing here, cooking people, moldova, they are saying "we will give you a job." people staying overnight in poland, kids showing up at the train stations. >> emily: i want people to understand that they refugee crisis is in addition to the in-border crisis. the embassy has requested $1.7 billion in aid, but they will use that for the 12 million ukrainians inside the border.
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that $1.1 billion will assist 6 million inside ukraine for just three months, in addition to the 4 million outside the borders. they expect this is the largest refugee crisis in europe in this century, but also means the premium people inside the border are decimated as well. eight is required for ukrainians regardless of the border. i hope that we answer that call. >> kayleigh: as war rages on in ukraine, they are growing concerns that vitamin potent could retaliate against the united states , leaving the supply chain particularly vulnerable. ose whot more energy in just two weeks! (sighs wearily) here i'll take that! (excited yell) woo-hoo! ensure max protein. with thirty grams of protein, one gram of sugar, and nutrients to support immune health. and it's easy to get a quote at libertymutual.com so you only pay for what you need. isn't that right limu? limu? sorry, one sec. doug blows a whistle. [a vulture squawks.]
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billing or older, and pressure for him to push out the ukraine. a leading security expert's warning that the russian leader could launch cyberattacks against key sectors of america's economy in response to these punishing sanctions. this is the director of harvard's intelligence project. >> they view the economic sanctions we've taken as economic warfare. they are in a position to launch cyberattacks on targets you might expect and targets you might not. i would be wary of attacks on targets that might affect the supply chain. >> brett, we have reports in the ukraine about a cyber army consisting of over 225,000 members, in addition to an underground hacktivist army, and others who are trying to combat
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russia while defend against cyberattacks pick, perhaps, our vulnerabilities domestically of these threats. >> bret: i think this is a real threat of a definitely. i mark warmer , don't act on my stomach i talked to mark warner, the chair of the senate intelligence committee. i've done stories at the nsa, and they do red team, blue team efforts to go after cyber attackers. we have the ability to do our own damage overseas as well, but this is our new battlefield of the next century. we have to be wary, especially about our electric grid and other vulnerabilities. >> emily: here in new york city alone, the estimates are almost $1 billion of property that oligarchs only here in addition to long island,
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that the state that putin owns. what do you think about seizing those properties? >> shannon: the efforts they are going to take gear for luxury apartments, jets, yachts, anything they can trace to oligarchs. we know sanctions are heard in the russian people. we see them lining up at the atm, worried as the currency crashes. we need to make it painful for the oligarchs. if that should be the focus. there seems to be a coordinated effort with european allies as well. last year, president biden gave a list of 16 sectors to president putin that he said "don't attack these." health care, defense, water, energy, all these different things. i would be the most worried about them. putin had no response to that, like "yeah." >> bret: thanks for the list. [laughter] >> shannon: those are the sectors i would be most worried about right now.
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>> emily: it's like a "don't throw me in the briar patch" moment. before russia even entered the ukrainian space, the fbi prepared a report warning of the vulnerabilities of our system and numerous preceptors coming to shannon's point, expressing that there might be cyberattacks from russia on that front, and warning that the private sector as well as numerous governmental agencies -- >> kayleigh: the colonial pipeline was allegedly not the russian government. it is believed that perhaps these russian actors had tacit approvals of vitamin pollutant. during my time in government, we had the u.s. technological firm that, because of the hacking of this firm, they were able to obtain data from the then department of homeland security. that's an enormous threat to our country. i hope these are preludes to something bigger. with senator warren -- keeps him
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up at night. >> i've been talking to a lot of generals, they are always thinking >> harris: i'm been talking to a lot of generals, they are always thinking "what's the next move"? russia, this could be a situation where they would cyber hack and hurt people around the world. they can manipulate things where it looks like we are fighting each other, and they can get stuff started, can be instigators. having a background as a kgb agent, i would think putin is probably gifted at manipulation. that has always concerns me. when you hit an energy sector with a cyber attack and make it look like something else to, it is not an impossibility. these are people who come inside russia and the putin kremlin, have a lot of time. while simultaneously chumming it up with beijing at the onbase, this man came back with a plan
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to wage war. the full-time he was in beijing rubbing elbows at the olympics with president xi, troops continued to amass. he's a good multitasker. a warrior on the field -- we will see. cyberattacks can trigger events that he wants. it's like a shiny objects, a distraction. >> emily: he is like a scorpion. you are having a conversation, and the tail is coming from behind. the kgb is skilled in social agitation. we've seen that over the past decade. with the new income of social media, we know that that's been a point of them creating that community, the dissonance between the community and government, and in within respective communities, we've been experiencing that for quite some time, unfortunately downplayed by certain mainstream media outlets. >> it's a big factor in social media. there is a piece the other day, the big ukrainian man, family
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man, who was weighing in on the issues of ukraine. if there was a picture of him. he was very much against the government. not a real person. he was getting a lot of follows, retweets. that's the world we live in the in a social media. took a back to harris' point about the relationship between hooton and the chinese leader, at the olympics when they were conversing, there was a lot of things that xi said. that was a joke, i'm sorry. >> harris: we got it. [laughter] you are weak today, bret. [laughter] >> bret: for delay on the satellite. [laughter] >> harris: this is happening now. senate judiciary committee chairman -- just announced a few months ago, that the committee will begin the hold hearings on
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the u.s. supreme court nominees. judge catania brennan jackson. that begins monday, march 1st dominic 2020 march 21st. then we will hear from jackson herself. this -- one of the days on wednesday, march 23rd, the committee will have a closed session to talk about any matters relating to the nominees fbi background, so a full week. what are your thoughts? >> shannon: i predict a boring confirmation. democrats have the numbers, and judge jackson has a great resume. differences on judicial philosophy, but she -- we hope this is a snoozer. >> harris: i know you said she's got one of the most impressive resumes of any of the candidates. there were quite a few with merits.
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speaking of, don't you have another best seller? [laughter] shannon bream with a new book at the end of the month, "the mothers and daughters of the bible-speak," march 29th. preorder your book at fox newsbooks.com . >> shannon: these women in the bible, some stories are joyful and faithful, and others go through dark valleys, destruction, wartime, all the exchange we are experiencing in 2022. he was never surprised, he was all was working. i think that's true today as well. i hope the book will be a source of encouragement for whomever picks it up. >> harris: we did something for fox nation not too long ago. we were asked to come forth, and i love that story. we have about 30 seconds. it was before the pandemic.
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we would love to hear about it. >> shannon: what i like to do with every book, i take a scripture i signed, and this time i picked psalms 34, not just a verse. it talks about god protecting those who fear him and are faithful. i've got to believe he is watching innocent people. >> harris: kayleigh? >> kayleigh: i had an opportunity to read a chapter of your book. it was amazing, it was inspiring. it's amazing. i would encourage anyone to get this, fantastically. >> emily: today on ash wednesday, i appreciate it. if you could briefly share the evolution, because it's the second book on this. what did you learn from readers that will inspire you to carry forth the second book -- much >> i heard from men and women who
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studied it, there are questions in the group that have allowed this. i think a lot of them found encouragement in a time that they needed it. they have gone in depth in relationships -- from the viewpoints of mothers and daughters. >> harris: shannon, good luck with the book. i was excited to have you, bret, and your exciting humor. much. fox news alert to kick off "america reports" as russia faces global condemnation for its invasion of ukraine from the united nations. while police headquarters in kharkiv is one of putin's latest targets. john roberts, sandra, on this wednesday. >> sandra: sandra smith in new york, the blast blowing the roof off the five-story police building and setting the top floor on fire.
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