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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  March 7, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PST

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i've bee following that russia steps up its attacks even targeting civilians in ukraine . the pressure is also mounting for the u.s. to sanction russian oil. our white house correspondent kevin cooper has more from dc kevin, good morning. morning, trace. inside the white house, there's growing concern about the economic fallout surrounding the prospect of suspending imported energy from russia. still, it is also fair to say that there is momentum to shut off oil imports from moscow both at capitol hill and of course within
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the administration itself. now for the white house, that means exploring more options, but it also means possibly increasing oil imports from safe places like venezuela or iran or saudi arabia. as you know, the u.s. has had let's just call it for what it is a complicated relationship with all three countries in recent years in particular, some of them have been accused of election fraud, even human rights atrocities. still for all the hand-wringing in washington trace over the very prospect of shutting off the spigot to russian oil today the white house seemed to coolly downplay the story. and i will just note in this scenario that they are separate their separate paths and conversations, separate paths and conversations. it's not each country as a group. it's each country on its own. and while some democrats believe it or not, are increasingly calling on the administration to ban imports from russia, republicans are more or less doing the same.
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but they're also warning this that is the devil's bargain that this administration appears to be about to enter into. i fully support banning russian oil since the united states. you heard the mention they're a devil's bargain. the idea of doing business with iran and venezuela for more energy when the fact is trade we could certainly develop more energy right here domestically. and yet the white house still insists no decision has been made by the president, which is certainly politically prudent to say the least. however, with soaring energy costs sweeping the nation, the white house faces a very tough choice to develop more domestically. do you keep buying oil energy from russia or do you get a say from less favorable sources? meantime, secretary of state anthony blinken says the administration is speaking with its partners and allies to look at a coordinated way of banning perhaps the import of russian oil while still making sure there is an appropriate
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supply of oil on the world markets. we are told by our sources here at fox news. those conversations are ongoing. we'll keep an eye on it. but for now, back to you, trace. and i should point this out. you saw that video there of some of the gas prices i just saw and i look i get it. i traveled to california a lot . i love the golden state, live there for a long time. i understand there vaxxer it's tough to get , you know, oil up there. it's tough to get gasoline up there. and so the prices are usually a little higher by big sur. but i saw a station near big sur for premium eight fifty a gallon trace. it's amazing. outside the door nrcc evidence 650. if you go down the street i'll get it for you can get it for as low as 620 five . but the gas prices are the highest that i have ever seen from california. kevin, we're back to you later. thank you so much. and it really is jonathan hunt, their chief correspondent. let's go back to you now because you talk a lot. there's a lot of debate about cutting off the oil to russia and a lot of debate about implementing a no fly zone.
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but when you see these video images of civilians being attacked truly is just heart rending for people across the entire world. yeah, it really is. trace, we have seen so many heartbreaking images coming out of ukraine of russian troops firing on innocent civilians. now russian president vladimir putin has increased aerial bombardment of civilian areas. it seems with his forces stalled elsewhere. the continued attacks raising raising pressure on the west to take more direct action to save lives. joining us now, former foreign policy adviser to the obama campaign, david tafuri. and david, we look at the images such as the ones we saw on sunday of that family just running for their lives across the bridge in irpin just outside kyiv, a russian mortar slamming into them a mother, two of her young children killed among others. that must surely make leaders
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sit up, take notice and think we need to do more . absolutely. reporters like you and others at fox news and other networks are doing a great job of covering what's happening. this is a significant human interest story for the whole world and unfortunately, as russia continues this campaign, we're going to see more images like that . i think it's pretty clear now that russia is not going to be able to occupy and control ukraine. the uprising by the ukrainians who are unified has been too strong. they have 44 million people. they have five to 10 million military age males who are willing to fight. there's no way russia could have a significant enough occupying force to quell that in ukraine. so we see russia now pivoting to a campaign where they're killing civilians by shelling the cities and some reports suggest indiscriminate shooting at civilians. so this raises the specter that putin is engaging in war crimes. the international criminal court is now investigating him for war crimes. i expect that they likely will
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indict him. if you look back at other conflicts in libya, muammar gaddafi was indicted within a few months of starting to kill civilians and then with respect to the no fly zone, president zelenskyy is asking nato for that . so far nato has said they will not do a no fly zone. but you never know what's going to happen in a conflict back to the libya conflict when it first started in february and nato kept saying they would not do an air campaign but within six weeks because of the atrocities and as libya's columns of tanks went to enter benghazi where they would have killed tens thousands of civilians, ultimately nato did do airstrikes that significantly changed the picture on the ground. but david david, we know what surprises me about this is that it is so unsurprising and that we were more prepared for this . we saw what putin did in grozny, chechnya. we saw what he did in aleppo, syria.
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we apparently, according to the administration, knew that this invasion was coming. so therefore we must have known we were going to get this kind of bombing of civilian areas. why were we not more nimble and ready to react to that ? well, when a conflict like this unfolds, i don't think you ever know exactly what's going to happen to even many russia experts didn't think that putin was going to invade. they were obviously wrong. and personally i thought we should they , you know, expect anything that we couldn't really predict what putin was going to do. we also didn't know how the conflict was going to go on the ground in the first few days. it seemed it was possible that russia could invade and occupy all of ukraine, but we didn't know for sure how hardened ukrainians would fight. we now know that . and so that's why we have the raising specter of significant atrocities like happen as happened in chechnya and has happened in other conflicts where russian forces on the ground were stalled and in syria, for instance,
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they resorted to barrel bombing and other bombing and bombardment shelling that was targeting civilians in order to basically suffocate the popular david. got to wrap up there. thank you very much, david tafuri, for being with us as always. traced one of the things you're talking about with kevin that the price of gas in our responses to this , we sometimes have to think a little more deeply. i think about do we want to do what's right even though it might be hard for us should we cut off paying for russian oil even if we're going to have to pay seven dollars a gallon? that's the balance that we all have to look within ourselves, i think, to try and i think the consensus seems to be at least here at home and some of the polls we've seen is yes, it's probably the right thing to do even with the pain. jonathan, back to you in moments. meantime, the situation keeps growing more dire with more russian planes in the sky. but despite the increased danger, the president of ukraine says he is staying put. we'll have that story next .
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i knew very well putin declares portion of the ukraine as independent and said this is genius and he's going to go in and be a peacekeeper and were more army tanks than i've ever seen. you got to say this pretty savvy. i mean, what he's done for russia is really amazing that after the olympics he starts with ukraine. what hey hey, why don't do some some laundry in your room and delivery came a laundry. we can do that . want to do captain mr. we have to go whatever you want to do it be ready with rob.
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magazine and a free video lesson. do to learn more in order to free gifts until just visit three trump guides .com free trump guide .com. bottom of the hour now. let's recap the top stories from the war front. russian forces have attacked another nuclear facility in ukraine as they make significant advances across the southern region of the country. the death toll and humanitarian crisis escalate with zero guarantees that ukraine's so-called safe corridors will provide an escape route for millions of war refugees. let's go back to our chief correspondent and co-anchor jonathan hunt. he's on the ground in lviv. jonathan, so we're getting some interesting claims this morning from ukrainian officials that they may have killed another top russian general. i think the optimism that comes with that that it will really throw the russian operations into chaos is a little over done. but certainly it doesn't help the russians if they keep
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losing generals who are obviously at the forefront of organizing this war. meantime, the guns are anything but silent, as you say, across the south of this country in mykolaiv for instance, there has been an intense bombardment that is the cities that are in center of that southern strip that runs from mariupol to odessa and is an area that the russians have made significant gains in as they keep pounding away at military and civilian targets. there. hundreds of thousands of civilians trapped in those southern cities right now. and the sad news is that we've had three cease fires which was supposed to give time for those so-called humanitarian humanitarian corridors collapse over the last three days. we have no talk of a new one . there was some progress made at peace talks apparently about the details of humanitarian corridors and how they might work. but no establishment of any such thing right now.
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so all of those people remain under constant bombardment, little food, almost no water and no power whatsoever. just awful. jonathan, back to you. in moments outnumbered and outgunned but in the face of superior russian power, ukraine's president and his military continue to show unprecedented courage and they've not given up hope that peace without defeat is still a possibility. yes, it was. i stay here in kyiv at bunkerville street. i don't hide and i'm not afraid of anyone. >> i will stay here as long as it's necessary to win in our patriotic war with is now lenin lenin. >> she's a ph.d. adjunct professor in political science and international affairs at the university of new haven. professor, thank you for coming on . we very much appreciate it. i'm curious very quickly, i want to get a take from you what the world happening with these cease fire talks. we've had three rounds now there appears to be very little if any progress. do you think it's one issue they're facing a series of issues. what's your take on this?
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>> i think it's a combination of things and the russians are obviously frustrated. as you know, they didn't quite go as they planned this operation to be from the initial stages of the war based on the russian military operational performance. it was pretty clear that they expected this to be a special operation with a quick run on kyiv cutting off ukrainian forces in the east, in the south and obviously they were met with incredible resistance from the ukrainian forces that they had underestimated. so now they're finding themselves fighting a war of attrition, not just a special operation for which they had been grossly underprepared. on top of that , you know, the, the negotiations of the requirements that the that putin put forward for the zelenskyy administration are complete nonstarters. so it's quite obvious that there's no diplomatic off ramp as there are actually more and more belligerent and more frustrated as it's obvious that putin had been cornered
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by the ukrainian forces and the resilience the ukrainian army had demonstrated. but i'm wondering because you said there's no off threat and yet the foreign ministers of both countries will meet on thursday in turkey. will they will they employ a different strategy? what's the point here? right. so i think that both parties are both sides are stalling for time because the requirements that putin had put forward so far include three things. one is that ukraine has to change its constitution to become a neutral country, basically a forswearing nato and eu membership number two, recognition of crimea as russian territory and number three, recognition of the of the republics in the east as independent. now that adds up to capitulation of the zelenskyy regime and basically at the ends of ukraine as an independent state. so these positions are nonstarters. you know, they had tried negotiating this positions for many years and for ukraine it's
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basically given up its sovereignty and ceasing to be a state and you know, these attempts is of course laudable then that these negotiations persist. but unfortunately i believe that at this point these are just opportunities for to stall for time the longer this war goes on . you have some analysts who say, you know, this really threatens vladimir putin's power. political wrote the following an op ed professor and i'll get your reaction on the other side no matter what happens on the ground in kyiv in the coming days, the world's moral compass has been set. putin might have stared at maps, ponder geopolitical trends and calculated the balance of weaponry. but he did not count on facing a tv star, which you know, it's it's a catchy line because it kind of reminds people of butch cassidy and the sundance kid when they're riding away looking over their shoulder like who are those guys? that's kind of how you think the russians are looking now like what in the world is going on here? >> you know, iranian president
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zelenskyy has become a symbol of defiance in the face of aggression, not just in ukraine but globally. he has become an international phenomenon. some people even compare him to winston churchill who mobilize the world, galvanized the world to fight fascism. i actually think that it's not so much that zelenskyy galvanized the ukrainian people. it's the other way round. it's the ukrainian people who galvanized zelenskyy because the fighting spirit and the resilience really comes from bottom up. i know very quickly you've got friends and you've got family in ukraine. how are they doing? professor, it's a difficult question. nobody's okay. and now the entire ukraine is under a lot of threat. and as you know, it's a multi-sector operation where every single region has been affected. my family and friends have been okay. so far. but like i said, you know,
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everybody's security hangs by hair and we're in anticipation for all of an escalation, especially now that putin has put a strategic nuclear forces on high alert. so obviously these are very reckoned times. but you know, ukrainians are strong and they have shown incredible resilience. they have indeed a level best, best of luck to you and your friends and family in ukraine. thank you for coming on . >> thank you so much for having me. well, the president of ukraine calling for western leaders to do more to stand up against putin's. that story is that it's never been more important to check your heart from whataboutism personally personal personal device. you can check it from hungary , smartbomb. i use kageyama every day, sometimes twice a day, every morning. i just make sure i'm in good shape and it makes me feel
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eight. >> that's eight hundred five point nine nine point two eight. and welcome back . millions of people are fleeing ukraine as the russian invasion shows no signs of slowing. let's get live to our senior foreign affairs correspondent greg palkot. he's live in london this morning. greg, good morning to you. as we look at all the various parts of the story, the humanitarian crisis continues to bubble up, maybe becoming one of the biggest headlines that we're dealing
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with right now. authorities say over one point seven million refugees, half of them children have fled the country already and that number could reach something like five million if the fighting continues. it's really the biggest outpouring trace of people since world war two, the biggest fighting seen in europe. it's also been reported there are millions more internally displaced. just listen to a few leaving a battered suburb of kyiv called irpin fox caught up with nicholas. the glass is broken forever and you have no hope. i live in the denuke complex or the other end of the destroyed everything. they destroyed everything. trains, busses, cars are helping to move people around the really desperate folks are those who are stuck in places with no way out like the besieged coastal city of mariupol at their russia basically reneged on agreement three times to allow safe passage for those caught up.
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the un is demanding that the people get out or at the very least food, water, electricity is allowed to come back in. take a listen. it is also already clear to everyone that the fragility of the situation reaches beyond ukraine into europe and across the world, across the world. this is a global story now trace europe and the world is responding. neighboring countries taking in as we noted, countless numbers. poland alone has accepted already over a million and then they're being brought to countries further afield in europe plus aid is coming in from far away, including a lot of local groups across the united states pitching in with volunteers and with humanitarian supplies. it all gets down to the russians, though, trace. they say that they're not targeting civilians, that they're the civilians are only being used human shields. but frankly, there's a lot of humanity, a lot of horror and a
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lot of hubris on the part of moscow and a lot of bloodshed. it's got to stop. yeah, greg palkot live for us in london. greg, thank you . and greg makes a good point. jonathan, back to you now because you know, we are having a guest on a little later on who is helping the thousands the tens of thousands of children who have been orphaned in recent years in ukraine. they are also trying now to get out of the country and of course, it is a special task to be able to take care of those kids and put them in the proper places. yeah, we've met some of those extraordinary orphaned children yesterday and we'll be bringing the images of that and some of the heartbreaking stories to fox news later today. in the meantime, ukrainian president vladimir zelenskyy has become as you were just talking about, the face of authoritarian defiance and a symbol of inspiration to his civilian population. here he's receiving global support in ukraine's
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war against russia, but he's now calling on world leaders to do more to stand up against russia. joining me now is karen filippetti, executive director of the vanderberg coalition and the former deputy assistant secretary of state. kerry, come with the outcome with the man in ukraine, but in the rest of europe and in the u.s. it seems to be more a case of come with the outcome committee to discuss everything for a long time. well, unfortunately you're right, jonathan. and what we're seeing is essentially the geopolitical equivalent of thoughts and prayers to the ukrainian people. when president biden came into power, he specifically made a campaign promise which is that america is back and unfortunately what we've seen him deliver from afghanistan to ukraine is america in the background. so what do we need to do? we the people who say we care so much about ukraine, what do we need to do to put more pressure on leadership in the united and also in the
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rest of western europe? i think we need to be calling for certain change. so i would say there's five different categories of things that both americans and europeans can be providing. first and foremost, while it is true that we're implementing some sanctions which are very effective, we need to be doing more of that . we need to be considering having the entire russian financial system divorced from the global financial system which we have not yet done. number two, we need to make sure that we are providing increased counterbattery fire capabilities. we're providing things like javelins and stingers, but we are seeing the russian regime indiscriminately attacking the civilian population. we need to make sure that they have the materials to prevent those attacks from actually hitting the population. third, we need to make sure that we're figuring out on how to hold not just putin but also his generals responsible for what united states officials have called the war crimes and we should call them directly what they are
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the biden administration as a whole has not yet done. we need to protect the humanity in that were the subject of this most recent round of talks . and finally, we need to make sure that we're doing more than what you are doing, what tracy is doing, which is really drawing attention to what is going on and finding ways to get the information about these indiscriminate attacks on civilians to the russian population because they cannot see the average russian supporting the deaths of their soldiers and ukrainian citizens simply to satisfy their own ego. carrie filippetti, great to talk to you. great to get those insights and list of things that other nations need to be doing. carrie filippetti and trace, it's interesting you think about what the world could do, what we are doing and there's that simple thing as well in the united states that our colleague jacki heinrich asked jen psaki this week at the white house why are we buying russian oil? aren't we literally financing the war? it's a question that has not
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been answered satisfactorily yet, i don't think no, it has not been answered yet and there's a lot of money because of that oil that's going into vladimir putin's pocket and that has also would not answer. but we're going to delve into that a little bit more . jonathan, back to you in moments. the united nations is reporting more than one point seven million refugees have fled ukraine. this number is expected to grow heavily in the coming days as people all over the world are helping ukrainians evacuate in 2015. our next guest made a powerful video for the ukrainian army since then, he has decided to stay in ukraine with his wife and help others escape. let's bring in filmmaker mark wilkins. mark, i viewed part of that film and it's based on the fact that , you know, you've got all of these people who in in their normal lives are salesman and bus drivers and so forth. and as you say in the film, they're not born soldiers, but they will answer the call of freedom and mark, they have answered the call of freedom that was in twenty fifteen or in twenty twenty two . what do you make of the intestinal fortitude of
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these people on the front lines ? yeah, i'm i'm incredibly concerned and worried. i'm lucky that i'm here in least in the most western part of ukraine. it's pretty safe here and shops are open and cafes are open. but many of my friends are working with the territorial defense force and you talking about the people in this video of 2016, i found out that one of the performers and characters have actually killed just two days ago in battle. yeah, that's that's just awful. i know that you fled kiv with your wife. you're staying in country to help others. mark, what are the biggest obstacles you're facing right now trying to help people? i think we all overwhelmed by the brutality and force coming from russia right now. the biggest problem is the city of mariupol. it's a city with four hundred thousand people cut off
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and surrounded by by by russians. there's a big humanitarian catastrophe building on us and we are not able nobody's able to go in there to to help the people to get out to provide food, to provide simple basic needs. and i think this kind of overwhelming that this feeling of of you cannot do enough and this this is the biggest. yeah. scare worry at the moment. >> and i think when you're talking about mariupol, you're exactly right. and my question to you, mark, is how do you how do you have these people trust again? i mean, a couple of these cease fire and these humanitarian corridors have been violated by russia and there's a possibility they might start others in the days to come. but but how in the world would you trust them to keep their word? >> you know, the ukrainians have a very, very small level of trust with the russians for four centuries. you know, this is not the first
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time russia is attacking ukraine and humiliating or crime and said it was always a very, very low level of trust. but i think now the last since the last 12 days, you know, that will that will never be any trouble at the moment. just you know, there's a humanitarian corridor and promised we don't know if it's going to be mined. is that the refugees are going to be shot at, but people will just have to take their chances and get out hoping that they at ,you know, are going to be safe or for for a moment. but trusting russians this is like done for for i mean, was it sounds so horrible, right? it sounds so general like we don't trust the russians. but the unfortunate russia really has so much to support that the whole world, especially ukraine and that will take centuries that we can trust. and the idea of a russian together where we have a banner in front of your face on the screen that says
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more than one point seven million refugees have fled ukraine. the numbers we're getting, mark, is that they're crossing the polish border like one hundred refugees every single minute. and i'm wondering if you being in the western part of the country along with maybe giving these people some give these people some sustenance and so forth, have you given them advice on where to go and what to do? >> look, i'm not generally i'm not directly at the border. there are many great volunteers who are at the border helping people, handing out water. actually it's hard warming how much you know, and human health is coming together. i was i was when we came back into a crane and we were driving one of the border roads, we saw, you know, traffic jam of 40 miles and all the villagers, you know, set up little tables in front of their houses serving tea and food to the to the refugees trying to cross the border. and it i'm not directly there myself. i'm mainly on my laptop
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coordinating. i'm trying to matchmake and private evacuation teams when people who are looking for somebody help them to get yeah, you're doing yeoman's work, you and your group. thank you so much for coming on and we very much appreciate it. and coming up our next hour, negotiations over humanitarian corridors as we talked about just continuing after repeated violation. where do they stand? somebody is very far the body which wasn't much of a he was a violent individual try to cover up what is the motive for the oldest one in the world? money and with my instincts told me this is not an accident. so a lot of sleepless nights thinking i knew that we had not there were six for recovered at
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the scene. there was a dna match. you do do at the time we the jury find the defendant in the small the internet to the forensic world without the science. i don't think you might have because on the witness no forensic files screaming down part of all american justice this march on fox nation. this is crazy, you know, with and we could get a small business going fast and order more equipment today for loan. fulgoni there's a better way to get a fast small business loan on that. >> the online lender, it makes it easy to choose your loan and if approved, get funds your loan is on debt.
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