tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News March 9, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PST
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gary 35 a one million dollar policy for only twenty two dollars a month. why pay more ? give your family the security they need at a price you can afford text quote to thirty to thirty two thirty two or go to selectquote .com now and get the insurance your family needs at a price you can afford selectquote we shop you say at a fox news alert. we continue our breaking news coverage of the war on ukraine. president zelenskyy pleading with the west for more fighter jets as russian forces shelled civilian targets and ukrainians fight for their lives and now the united states is saying that poland's offer to send fighter jets to an american air base in germany is quoting not tenable. the united states and other allies are concerned about bringing north american military alliance into the war amid fears of a nuclear
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conflict. and as ukraine pleads for more fighter jets, russia is pressing on straight toward the capital tehran where although the city still is under control by the ukrainian government, people there are very much concerned about how much longer they can hold on . meantime, the white house is working to further isolate the kremlin from the rest of the world by announcing a ban on imports of russian oil. president biden says the ban targets russia's main artery, but he also warned these actions could cost us as well. today announced the united states is targeting the main artery of russia's economy. we're banning all imports of russian oil and gas and energy. as i said, would level with the american people from the beginning. and i first spoke to this i said defending freedom is going to cost it's going to cost us as well in the united states. good morning again, everybody. i'm chris gallagher in los angeles where it is now
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straight up midnight and 10:00 wednesday morning in the ukrainian capital of kyiv where the fighting has now moved into day 14 two weeks death destruction with no end in sight and russian troops reportedly now on the move. we begin our team coverage again this hour with our chief correspondent and the man helping us co-anchor this special coverage, jonathan hunt. he's on the ground for in lviv . jonathan, good morning to you again. good morning to you. day 14 , as you say of this war and day 14 of increasingly desperate pleas from the ukrainians for the united states and other nato members to do more to help. they want, as they put it, the nato to close the skies, to instigate a no fly zone, to take out those russian aircraft, to stop them bombing ukrainian towns and cities. now the polish government has offered to send most of its
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fleet to if not all of its fleet of soviet era mig fighter jets to the ukrainians. but they want to do so via the american air base in ramstein, germany of the pentagon, as you said, has said that is a nonstarter as an idea. it's not that anybody seems to disagree with the idea of ukraine getting more of these planes. it's simply a question of everybody having a hands off approach to handing them over . that's a complex issue that nobody seems to be able to solve right. much to the frustration of ukrainian president zelenskyy who made a an appearance in front of a zoom in front of both houses of the u.k. parliament yesterday and invoked the spirit of churchill. listen here to the mayor then we will continue pointing out that whatever the political we
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will fight in the form of boots on the shores, the and they are fighting in the streets and in the fields and on the shore. one of the most heavily hit cities right now is the southerns city of mariupol, which has been bombarded day after day after day. and we're told that there are something like two hundred thousand people sheltering in mariupol desperate to get out as the bombs and missiles keep dropping on them. they have no food. they have very little water. in fact, we understand that a young boy died from dehydration just a couple of days ago in mariupol. it is a desperate situation and it is one that is playing out in many cities right across ukraine now they just want more help from nato troops. they have no food. they have no water and they have no medicine. and later on in this hour, jonathan, we're going to talk
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to somebody who is trying to help them get more medicine as well as other sustainable things. back to you in a moment, jonathan. we are now about to take you live to one of ukraine's most devastated cities. we're talking about and this is west of key, the capital and it has endured punishing blows by russian forces. with now former two term ultra runner sergey popov. he has been with us for the past several nights showing us with his camera some things that we just have not seen in sergey. if you can tell us where you are exactly and what it is you're seeing. >> good morning. 10 o'clock in ukraine and for now i'm not in gitomer. now it's 80 miles from kyiv and the air strikes was much more frequent last two days. right now i'm standing apartment buildings that was hit that was hit by russian missile last night. you can see it's total
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destruction. and what i want to show you another cpac is not right now i'm standing on a children's playground, you see. so this definitely not a military object. it's just civilian cars. people say that mostly old people lived in this house so and i don't know how to explain it, but much of what is happening here is this terrible . it's still a billion rescue teams to save all that remains after this moment and we still don't know whether there somebody died or not because people say that there was not many people in this house when it was hit by by the bomb. but there is still some damage and somebody could be under under this wall also yesterday another few bombs fell here
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in gitomer. it's hit the factory. it's also not military object. it those factories that build some stuff for for construction, for for for building civilian houses. and yesterday another missile hit his oil base and now we have big trouble with this petrol here gitomer so huge. and last night what i felt as a citizen as as a human who live here now for now it's a lot of thousands of jets or missiles. it's like we are talking now we will see air show every night at least here, air show every night and i don't know what it is going to be next . sorry if i can just ask you because the pictures behind you are just astounding
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and horrifying to us . but i'm wondering with the smoke still billowing up, do you know, sergey, when that missile hit when that explosion happened and how long would it take for that smoke to clear? yes, i know i saw this explosion. it was about closer to midnight last night. okay, so hours ago. yes, yes. about an hour, maybe less. maybe more because there was fewer explosions in quite a similar time, maybe two hours range. but still you see a the team started to work immediately, you know, and they're still working. there's still there's still smoke. >> and when you look the people behind you, sir here when they are carrying their belongings away is because is because they can no longer live in that building. is it because the building
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itself is heavily damaged and have all the people been evacuated and when will you find out if people are still inside and if they're still rescuing some people who might be trapped inside there? we are waiting for more information from authorities work here. the subject is going on definitely this house actually two houses that was standing very close to each other. no way to live in the building anymore. so everybody who could live here, they they have to evacuate. i don't know at the moment where exactly. but i can give you that information that here gitomer just yesterday a huge group of refugees from kyiv came from areas that you mentioned and from all the cities near the key. >> they came here in gitomer and they all they all are located in the local schools
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and you know, people are kind of afraid because just a few days ago one of a school in gitomer was also hit by russian missile and it was almost totally destroyed and i wonder sumy because we know and you know that going after civilians is a war crime. but when i see you night after night going to civilian areas and you show us children's playgrounds, this doesn't appear to matter much to the russians because this has become a war crime for the rest of the world. but for the russians this has become a war tactic and they apparently believe it is a very successful war tactic because they use it day after day. is that what you are seeing as you roam around these parts of ukraine that their tactic is to take everybody here to make everybody fear and surrender?
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but you know, ukrainians such a public that when somebody tries to scare people here, there's no scare in the united and they just getting more angry. they have more faith to russia ,to russian authorities and probably to most of russian people who support this war. yeah, you talk about the hey, have you seen it grow? i know you've been there for several days now, sir. have you seen the antipathy the hate grow for for russia? i mean, in the early days of this war, a lot of people said they just wanted this thing to be over and now they really they want to fight. are you are you sensing that they are getting momentum and the will to fight much more much longer? correct. people who tried to run from from this war, from mobilization that turning back and the more and more
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people want to contribute to ukrainian victory. >> yeah. and the victory would be sweet, i think. very quickly, sir, i know you've got to go, but these people who are walking toward the building again behind you are these people who are going back in to get stuff out. are these part the rescue teams? who are all these people milling around and are there are there any are there any ukrainian troops that you have seen on the premises? well, there are a lot of different people. there are some troops, but there's more like guarding the area around here. there are also rescue teams and there are also lots of volunteers just just citizens of gitomer who who just helped to to to fix all this . >> yeah, it's just astounding. it's amazing. it really is just horrifying. the sights and sounds of war . sorry people don't know you are
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a world class runner. you were a television journalist. you have been on for us for several nights. you have showed shown us some images that we we have been unable to see elsewhere. you have done exceptional work for us . please stay safe. you will hope to see you again soon, sir. thank you . thank you very. meantime, how much longer can ukraine hold on to its capital ? john hanna joins us with more on that next. energy is everywhere, which in turn can help our economy with gasoline and our planet money come of energy, but it's find the ones
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free to as though to three, two, one , three, two, one well as russian forces try to encircle the capitol of kyiv, many wonder how long the resistance in kyiv can hold on . meantime, the u.s. is now reassigning patriot missile batteries to poland to counter any threats to our nato allies and nato troops stationed there. amy kellogg is live in milan with more on this. amy, good morning. hi, trace. again, as we've been saying all along this war is really horrifying on two fronts. one , of course, the fact that there's been this unprovoked sustained attack on ukraine, this war being visited on a sovereign country but but also trace, of course, the fear that it could spiral out of control and involve other countries.
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and as you mentioned, sits right there on ukraine's borders. so the redeploys movement or the repositioning of these two us patriot missile defense systems to poland is an attempt to try to prevent further escalation, should say a russian missile stray into nato airspace either deliberately or by accident. so these will be there to protect against incoming planes in poland or perhaps long range and long range ballistic missiles. this after poland's plan apparently mooted over the weekend to send its mig twenty nine fighter jets to ukraine seems to be off the table now that poland wants to send the migs first. it turns out to the ramstein air base in germany, which would effectively mean the american sending those migs into now what is a somewhat muddled and disputed airspace over ukraine as war rages.
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the leader of nato, however, keeps repeating the line about russian president vladimir putin miscalculating here and wanting less nato but getting more nato as the alliance unites the face of threat from russia now and back to poland, trace, i think it's important to point out that just a few months ago poland is in a bit of trouble with the european union for some anti democratic measures. in other words, they were restricting the independence of poland's courts. the polish government was doing that was seen as anti-democratic in the european union actually froze some eu relief funds that were connected to the covid pandemic. and also there was some criticism of poland for not taking in those migrants that belarussian president alexander lukashenko had invited over from the middle east and other countries and was sending into the forests of poland and around poland and other eu
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countries as a sort of hybrid warfare that poland had pushed back . but now poland is stepping up in the face of a real refugee crisis and taking the lion's share of the two million refugees who've left ukraine. and there have been numerous stories coming out of poland of families taking in strangers, other families from ukraine into their often modest apartments and telling them they can stay there as long as they need to trade. amazing stories coming out of poland. amy kellogg live for us from milan. amy, thank you . back to our co-anchor, our chief correspondent jonathan hunt. you know, amy talks about bringing those refugees, but you go back to the gentleman we had on just a few minutes ago. we're talking about sumy pope bob who was giving us that that amazing tour of the burned out and bombed out buildings and the children's playgrounds. and every night jonathan gives us what certainly appears to be
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the russians attacking civilian sites and we've had people come on saying they haven't really seen hard evidence about these civilian sites being targeted. but boy, you know, you you follow a guy like sahi around and he is giving you what appears to be and again, we haven't confirmed that it is. but boy, it sure appears to be something that is very much akin to a war crime attack on civilians jonathan. yes, sir. trace has been doing some extraordinary work for us . you saw him there as you mentioned. he says he's standing in a playground with a bomb that what looks like an apartment building behind him yesterday and the day before we saw him standing in front of what was clearly just ordinary homes for ordinary ukrainian people. it is very hard to believe impossible in fact to believe with all the images we are seeing coming out of ukraine to believe the russian claim that they are targeting military sites only that simply is not true in russia.
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meantime, pushing toward that is being repelled that push so far. but what tactics should the ukrainians adopt now to keep the russian forces out of the capital ? former national security adviser to vice president dick cheney, john hannah joins us . and john, how tough is it going to be if the russians launch a full frontal assault on keeva? how tough will it be for the ukrainians to keep them out? and what can they possibly do absent this no fly zone that they want? yeah. hi, jonathan. listen, the russians there's a question still whether the russians are simply going to try and entirely encircle kyiv and medieval siege like tactics to deny them food, water, medicines to turn off the lights to turn off clean water, to shut down hospitals
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in that case, you know, they're they're going to try and wait and starve out the ukrainians and probably destroy and bomb the city into absolute rubble to break the back of any kind of ukrainian assistance if they eventually have to decide to go in in an assault on that capital , you know, the ratio of attackers to defenders to actually take a major urban area. you're talking a four to one , five to one . the russians simply don't have the numbers. urban warfare people are going to have to get out of their tanks. infantry troops are going to have to turn corners. they're going to have to overcome obstacles. streets dug up that tanks can't pass through snipers from tall buildings, molotov cocktails drop from from tall buildings.
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it will be bloody. and for a russian military already suffering terrible problems of morale, it's going to be a really difficult operation for them. >> yeah, and john, as somebody who has advised on matters of national security, what would your advice be now to nato leaders about how and whether we can get these polish mig fighter jets into the hands of ukrainians? how do we do that ? nobody seems to be able to come to agreement right now. >> yeah, nobody wants to hold the hot potato of actually handing these things over to to the ukrainians. listen, nato does face a real problem. where is that line? what is that step that you finally take that does is the straw that breaks the camel's back for putin in terms of unacceptable nato intervention that he feels that he has to respond to
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directly and then you've got an article five situation in which nato is going to be in direct combat with russia is that fighter planes or is it a humanitarian corridor? is it a no fly zone? nobody knows for certain. i think the intelligence community is quite nervous about putin. they take seriously his doctrine of escalate to de-escalate and the first use of tactical nuclear weapons. so i think this is i think nato will eventually get those planes to ukraine. i think they probably will go across a polish or romanian border. but it's it's going to still take some time and hopefully they won't do it in public the way they've done it. i think this is really undermined nato, the fact that this is as this negotiation has been conducted publicly and gone so badly. yeah, that is definitely a a an all the thing that these negotiations seem to have going
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on publicly. john hannah, former national security adviser to vice president dick cheney. john, great to have you with us this early morning. untraced again, we're hearing a guest after guest, these experts telling us that these negotiations should not be happening in public, make a decision quietly, privately, let diplomacy work, then just announce it through public negotiations. everybody has weighed in . you're exactly right, jonathan. back to you and moments coming up. we take you live to ukraine where attacks on ukrainian hospitals and ambulances are now increasing. that's next . hello, friends. michael usif here. youst know the right says the priceless conservative, the left this priceless radicalt but is the creator god and human flesh and he's the only one who can give you peace and he wants to give you that eternal peace if you come
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and european allies. the good news arrives to the people of ukraine as they face another day of destruction and bloodshed. let's get back to the point where she's respondent jonathan in lviv. jonathan trace, the ukrainian people, the ukrainian government grateful for the help they're getting. they'll be grateful for those extra billions of dollars. but what they want more than anything and what they're not getting right now is a no fly zone. they need more cover in the air. they need in the words of every ukrainian we speak to for nato to help, in their words, close the skies and have the polish government has said it is willing not to be part of a no fly zone itself, but to give the ukrainian air force the hard pressed ukrainian air force, more than two dozen of its mig fighter jets. but the polish government does not want obviously those migs to be taking off from polish airfields and heading directly into ukraine.
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so they suggested let's send them to ramstein air force base, a u.s. air force base in germany. the u.s. says no, we don't want them taking off from a u.s. air base either. so it appears that if you talk to all the experts, the ukrainians will eventually get those migs. but just how they get them is a question and every day that they are delayed in getting them increases russia's ability to continue that crushing of ukrainian cities. among those, mariupol, a city in the south which has been boarded by russian shelling russian missiles over the last few days, 200000 people, we are told, trapped in mariupol, desperate to get out with no food, no water, no power. and it's a similar story in other cities. obviously another north eastern city this time sumy has seen very intense fighting over the last few days and through all of this , president zelenskyy of ukraine is become increasing
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angry, increasingly desperate for the west to do more . listen here to president zelenskyy denuke school. the blame for the death of each ukrainian person who died from the airstrikes in the bloc's cities lies doubtlessly on the russian state. but the response ability also lies on those who for 13 days cannot approve somewhere there in the west and obviously need a decision on those who still have not secured the ukrainian sky against russian killers. very passionate words from president zelenskyy there and what is essentially saying the west isn't doing the not doing enough and if the west isn't doing enough, then leaders in the west essentially have ukrainian blood on their hands because president zelenskyy very obviously believes that the west could stop the russian advance at least to some extent and save ukrainian lives if they did more try.
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and there seems to be a lot of concern that western officials are very worried about stepping on russian toes and the russians don't appear to be concerned at all about chopping off people's feet altogether. jonathan, back to you in moments. thank you . attacks on ukrainian hospitals and ambulances increasing rapidly. our next guest, mitchem kiv is live from kyiv where he is coordinating all medicine deliveries for hospitals and pharmacies across ukraine. dmytro, thank you so much for coming. we very much appreciate it. i want to know if you know how exactly and what medicines exactly do these hospitals need and is the need increasing? hello sir. we are the biggest pharmaceutical company in ukraine, garnethill located in kyiv and we continue to operate and ship our products and the needs across whole ukraine hospitals, its military hospitals, its civilian hospitals. it's hospitals in mariupol
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in kharkiv. it's very difficult. we are missing drivers the yesterday the trucks that were shipping medical goods to mariupol were shelled by the military, by russian military. it's it's very difficult. but i have at the plant right now 150 people, including 47 children. some of them engage in helping i would seem to continue the production of necessary medical supplies and products for the whole ukraine. but the demands are growing and the needs are growing. i wonder if i know you said you're targeting hospitals and you're doing yeoman's work over there, sir. i just want to know if if you are either willing or if somebody is willing to go to other places because the european center for disease prevention and control said the following year crowding in bomb shelters and reception centers could facilitate the start of a measles outbreak, particularly as spring coincides with the natural seasonality of
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the disease. and i'm sure it's also a concern about koven so forth. is there a way to get medicine to some of these people who are not in hospitals but in some outlying areas? yes, there is. there is a high demand for the vaccine, especially for the different different areas and different zones. currently there is engagement of the ministry, health and humanitarian aid from the red cross and other charity organizations that are involved in shipping specific needs of specific vaccines or specific medical products. there is the key challenge in ukraine is actually distribution of these products. so it's not only shipping them to ukraine but actually getting them to the people pharmacies, the quantity of pharmacies take into account evacuations have been decreased distribution of moving goods between cities is complex, but that's the area of major focus today of the farmer
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and the government of ukraine. i wonder i know a lot of doctors in ukraine stayed back and they're staying the hospital, staying at their posts and helping as many patients as they can. but we have seen russians go after some of these hospitals as well to the doctors feel like they are also under attack . what we've seen over the recent night, russian artillery and rockets being launched from the civilian side, including hospitals and areas where people live. the pharmacy is being destroyed . thomas has been injured. doxxed has been injured. but i can tell you that ukrainian doctors own their places. they have supplies have been receiving necessary treatments to civilians first hand and of course ukrainian military. yeah. are you worried, dmytro, that as the fighting gets closer that some of the supply lines that you so desperately need to get these medicines into hospitals will be shut down? yes. when we made if when we
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shipping goods, for example, to mariupol, hideki netgear, for example, we couldn't get through the territory, give civilians who are trying to get out of the get for any supplies that is going into tunnicliffe is is shelled even if it's careys red cross, it's shelled by the mines and bombs. so it's extremely difficult and requires a lot of courage for drive to get through. we are trying to and that's why we appeal to international governments to not only seal the sky but actually ensure that the humanitarian corridors are in place for the places like hideki sumy sumy yesterday last night there were so many kids being killed, families being killed. a shipment to chebeague shipping to mariupol, shipping to dupree's shipping to make life. this person desperately needs drugs, medicine and food supply and this needs to be provided.
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dimitra, i hear you i hear you saying that you want a no fly zone and you want as well as humanitarian corridors are you talking about a humanitarian no fly zone as well? are you talking about these corridors on the ground that can be safeguarded? yeah, we are asking when are we talking about humanitarian corridors, corridors to the places where people currently suffering from missing food from from missing medicine? yesterday the little girl, six year old die from dehydration in mariupol. twenty first century dehydration of the kids. what is this ? the russians are shelling on the medical convoys. they're shelling on the trucks carrying food. so corridors on the ground to get the medical supplies to get the food supply to the to the people injured in mariupol intermediate and so on in sumy
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. this is very critical and this needs to be addressed and of course, no fly zone every day my employees go in in the bomb shelter out of the bomb shelter. but we continue to produce our products and delivering them to ukrainian patients. >> and dimitri chhim, kyiv, you and your employees are doing tremendous work on the ground. best of luck to you and i hope you get the help and the wishes you need. thank you , sir. thank you very much. meantime, by the administration imposing a ban on all russian oil imports, ukrainian member of parliament joins us next. this was when i noticed how white my son's teeth were and how yellow mine were and i needed to make a change. my smiles, yellowish or dingy and a definite he made me self-conscious. i can't magically become younger, but i can certainly look younger and i'm doing
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everything. russian forces have bombarded the city since the start of the invasion, but residential houses that are getting destroyed and people are getting killed and children are getting killed. kharkiv is located in eastern ukraine. the city's population about the size of dallas. many have fled when russian forces knocked out the power grid, olga's family and her friend decided it was time to go. >> she was not angry before, but they choose our last. they killed our people. putin he very united our nation. actually , we are very strong now. >> oguz mother grew up under soviet rule. she sent her daughter to oral roberts university in tulsa, oklahoma. did she go? and when i went to america for the first time i really felt was home then i felt like my whole life i never had a real home like that like you guys have there. yesterday morning we had to pack our backpacks because it is not right now and but our
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clothes there a little bit more . but we shook our favorite pictures of our family. you would you want us to go and we just had to leave forever. last night olga, her family and friends slept on the floor of a church. tomorrow they continue driving. they don't know what their ultimate destination will be in lviv, ukraine. lucas tomlinson fox news. amazing. lucas , thank you . meantime, chinese hackers launching attacks on european officials in the russia, ukraine war . let's bring in cyber fauci ceo eric noonan now along with my co-anchor jonathan hunt on the ground for us in the veev. and eric, you believe that we are weeks behind these hackers and they are already in the later stages of the attack. can you explain that for us if you can? well, chris , as we mentioned previously when we saw these these discover attack and when they're publicly acknowledged,
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that means it's a lagging indicator. we're already probably weeks or in this case months behind in this particular case, it's believed that it was a known vulnerability that has been unpaid for some time that was actually exploited in any of these cases. so by the time it publicly disclosed, it's like coming to the crime scene and trying to put things together after the fact. yeah, my colleague has a question for you as well. yeah, eric, i'm interested. it seems to me that we have been warning about cyberattacks for so many years. we had a u.s. government official in fact, a couple of years ago say the next pearl harbor will be a cyber attack. why do we always seem to be behind these russian hackers? are they that much more clever at this than we are? jonathan, it's an excellent question. and really when you when you really pull the camera back and look the past 15 years it was 15 years ago almost no. and it was deputy secretary of defense gordon england who called some of the top tier
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defense contractors to the pentagon and effectively said stop the bleeding, we're under attack. so it's really 15 years in the making and that was really the start of the largest public private partnership between the department of defense and their federal contractors. and so i think the reason we are so far behind despite the great progress, it's just lack of enforcement. these vulnerabilities often known vulnerabilities. we know what to do but we need the impetus of enforcement to really force a federally mandated standard around cybersecurity. you say, eric, that lack of enforcement, but really what you're saying is that we need to play better defense. and i guess the question would be how is it how do we go about playing better defense so that we don't get behind the eight ball on these cyberattacks? we know what to do. we know we need to patch our systems. we know we need encryption. we know we need multifactor authentication. so you know, i make the analogy sometimes about, you know, working out and many people
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know what to do, but it's a discipline of doing and it's much the same on these networks that we're trying to protect. we know the things to do. we know what to patch. we know what we need to protect . so it's really getting getting the impetus behind us . and i think there could be a big policy push to help us do that and to help fund some of the investment that's needed around cybersecurity. eric, we see obviously the damage very easily that bombs can do what is the ultimate damage that the worst cyber attack could do not to not just countries in western europe but also to the united states itself? >> well, i think that we've seen some indicators if you remember the, the attack on the florida war water plant last year, anything on critical infrastructure, things that we depend on every day in that supply chain really we focus on the tip of the iceberg and so we hear about attacks on oil and gas companies and in these large multinational
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companies are well resourced and have the resources to largely protect themselves. but their supply chain beneath the surface. the tip of that iceberg that we really need to be concerned about because that disruption could be just absolutely tremendous. the supply chain you think about financial services, the defense industrial base, all these critical utilities and services and sectors that we rely on on a daily basis. so we need really to do the things that we're supposed to be doing around patching and encryption and multifactor authentication. we know what to do. we need the impetus to go do it. i find it fascinating because you know, we talk to generals all day and military analysts and they're watching troop movement and ship movement and you know how weapons are being moved out. and i'm wondering what in your field what are you looking for as you watch this war in ukraine and you watch the, the nations who are involved, what keys are you focusing on ? so the things we look for on you know, so it's obvious much of our customer base defense industrial base, we're
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looking at that supply chain on a daily basis monitoring those attacks and many times we're focused on doing the things that these large cybersecurity vendors have told us to do relative to their products. so they told us here's a vulnerability gilpatric. here's some intelligence and many of these large companies are very good at actively sharing their intelligence information with the ecosystem that is trying to help protect the supply chain. so we're plugged in to all those different ecosystems and threat information sharing channels and then pushing that out to our customers. yeah, eric, it's great to have you on as always. thank you so much, sir. we appreciate your time. thank you . jonathan, to you. stay safe, my friend. again, terrific work out there and i know you are right there on the front line. please stay safe. we started this broadcast off three hours ago with an air alert in ukraine. people were told to shelter that alert. jonathan was lifted and now
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here we are day fourteen well into day fourteen and the war russia against ukraine continues. we will have continuing live coverage of the war on ukraine with fox and friends first coming up next . i'm gallagher in los angeles from all of us here at fox news to have a great at policy, we build homes that think ahead to everything you need, like a dedicated office space with wi fi for you to stay to fit everything. or, just enjoy more outdoor living. at pulte, we build homes that think ahead to tomorrow, so you can build the life you're dreaming of today. pulte homes. more life, built in.
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>> i'm standing near apartment buildings that appear hit by missile last night. you can see it is total destruction. what i want to show you, another thing, right now i'm standing on a children's playground, what is happening here, it is terrible. >> break thanksgiving morning, fresh smoke from the latest round of russian airstrikes on residential neighborhoods in ukraine. air-raid sirens blaring with officials warning residents to imme
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