tv Cross Talk RT April 29, 2022 4:30am-5:00am EDT
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hello and welcome to cross stock were all things are considered. i'm teeter, lavelle, u. s. secretary defense lloyd austin, says he will move heaven and earth to assist ukraine. at the same time, the even foreign policy chief exclaims relations with russia should be rebuilt. talk about a united messaging problem. this is akin to saying to save ukraine, the west must destroy it. i cross stock in the ukraine situation. i'm joined by my guess. earl rasmussen in washington, he is the executive vice president of the ration center in paris. we have john laughlin, he is a university lecture in history and political philosophy and we have alex me. however, he is a foreign affairs analyst and an rti contributor, i generally cross stock rules, and if that means you can jump in anytime you want. i always appreciate john, let me go to you 1st and paris list trust who's started her political career in
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child care. apparently, it was her portfolio. now as she saw the foreign secretary, she said the following, the last few days. the war in ukraine is our war. it is every one's war because ukraine's victory is a strategic imperative for all of us. so we're at war. all of us are at war. and it's not, it's something she said, the quiet part out loud rushes at war with nato rushes at war with the u. k. out wrote the we have a british official saying the british weapons used by ukrainians to kill russians in russia is okay. i wonder refresh is going to reciprocate john. well, that's what everyone hi suppose is afraid of, but the fact that this is a war not between russia and ukraine, but between russia and nato. we've known this since the beginning of the conflict. ukraine is just the theatre of this conflict. there belligerence are nato and
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russia. how we known this well, because president lensky told us, he told us, i think, 3 days into the war, 27th of february or something like that. he said he'd wrung up all the nato member states and asked them, could ukraine join the alliance? and they all said no, but publicly the doors will remain open. in other words, war is not about letting ukraine shoes make a sovereign choice about its future as the nato idealogue said at the time because they're not prepared to admit it to their lines. instead, it is, as you've quoted peter less trust saying, or joe biden, or the other week saying that the goal was to weaken russia. so that is the goal. and that's why the british foreign secretary says it's everybody's war because what she means is that the west london, washington, the european allies, once this war in ukraine, in order to weaken russia, that's what biden said to, we can russia. that's why they were rearming ukraine. that's why the united kingdom
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signed a military corporation agreement with ukraine in summer 2021. that's why the united states signed one, a few months later. the goal was to increase to ratchet up the arming of ukraine in order to pose a threat to russia. and that is now the conflict that's being played out. ok, but alex here, if i could still use this quote here, ukraine's victory is a strategic imperative for all of us. what if ukraine loses as well? if you look at it for solid, let's remember. and this little thing we're talking about the beginning of this war . this war started in 2014 and the war started when nato was involved it in 2014. i covered this from canada, j t, f 2, which our special forces along with the s a s n u s. special forces were all on the ground, and it could have been on the ground before 2014. how can what we know as the, as on battalion at robbie sector at the same time. so this is something that has been going on for an extended period of time. now when lose it, it's,
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we're living in 2 parallel universes here, because what we're seeing in the west is something that we've never seen before. this unprecedented type of propaganda that i can only say has to have come from the coven epidemic. because kettler, just as hyped about this, as they have been in the past 2 years about what coven was a, it's unbelievable and where you look in the west of flags, or hang the commercials or on tv, or see just blue and yellow, absolutely everywhere. so from that perspective, this war has turned into something very different year. and so it's one of those things where everybody's patting each other on the back and say, hey, i'm with this teen younger either way with us. i criticized it. what were all penalties alex? make it the same people that where the pins on their lapels and the banners and all that. if you ask them, do you know what the don bass is? what do you think their reaction would be? they'd say, what's that? okay, of course, the whole finances anyway. you've put it into context and this is this propaganda
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intentionally has no contacts you, earl, i mean i want, i want to stick with this winning and losing thing because that's a we keep hearing about. what if the west lose? i mean a and that's in the cards here. i mean, ukraine as it stood on february 24th. we'll never return to that ever. okay. and when we hear the foreign secretary of the u. k. lloyd austin, you know, they're all in here. i mean, this is good and very, very badly because there will be a winner, and there will be a loser. and my hunch is, given that it's a neighboring country to russia, with russia, with overwhelming military force, is going to be a disaster for nato. and it is a disaster for nato. go ahead, earl peter, you can actually go back even further before 2014. you can look at woodstock and you can look at grand chessboard by as brzezinski and rand study in 2019 ukraine. is this critique importance in order to, to,
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doesn't really have a strategic importance to us for existence, but as far as weakening to russia is. so that's why it's focused here, and that's what this is all about to weaken and contain russia and to prevent them from researching into, to coming back up. what's going to happen if the, obviously the militarily, it's not going to, unless there's an intervention and then who knows what happens ukraine's going to lose the. and so what, what could happen is we could see a fragmentation of ukraine yet. we could definitely see a, a pseudo new coral door, potentially who knows how it would look with the 3 fourths of the world, a 2 thirds to 3 fourths of the world, citing and keeping good relationships with russia and china. and then we have the european group with some stragglers. japan and
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u. s. u k. lead by the us, obviously in that in the other camp. so, so it's, it's definitely a dangerous direction and, and it's dangerous from a, from an economic. we're looking at a potential economic lapse in europe. i thank you for the girl. i'm glad you brought that up because it may go to john and in paris is what i find really interesting to watch is that there's this enormous attempt to isolate russia. but the end result, the way i look at john, is that europe is isolating itself absolutely only question of winning and losing in a way the question is rather old fashioned that you put peter in my view, what the west wants, what the united states wants is for russia to engage in a war of attrition, a general milly, the supreme commander of the head of the chief of staff of the american army,
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said that before the war broke out, he said if that right, if russia were to invade the westwood almond insurrection in ukraine, and this has been said by many commentators that the american model is to have an afghanistan for ukraine. so the war could carry on as a war of attrition. a protracted period during which russia would, for example, occupy a certain number of cities in ukraine. it already i civil as it is and those cities would be subject to a long war of attrition. and should be very easy to wage in the sense that obviously there are no physical boulders between the cities and the rest of the country. easy for people to come in at night and, you know, blow things up or whatever, and a low level war like that or to try and maintain territories like council, nobody below whatever. which russia has already taken would, in the american calculation, be very costly and dangerous for russia. and i think that is the goal. in other
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words, i don't think there is a, a win or lose. we're not gonna, well, i say your line of argument perfectly let it out with whistling say, right, you know, one nail to nature will to one to rush or whatever. it's going to the ukraine is a trap. sure. and that is the, how the american see it. yep. all outcomes are bad at the moment to russia. yes, they're very bad for europe and i think euro was isolated itself. and europe is very l. a very vulnerable economically. and russia may well resist much better than europe calculates, but it doesn't mean that the outcome is not. that's roster, i get his bad guy. i absolutely agree with you, but alex vang audio, but the worst outcome is for the ukranian people. that's the worst outcome here. and that's not in the western calculation whatsoever. i mean, lloyd austin, say, you know, to, to, the goal is to weaken russia as, as john said here, he didn't mention anything about ukraine. and that sort of go head out. this is,
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this is something that we, i think as journalists and as animals that we've, we've saw from the outside looking at, i mean, i've covered wars for a long time. and it's usually the united states of america and baiting somebody for writers of mass destruction or some other obscure reason that doesn't really exist . there is no calculation. they don't really care how many people are going to be killed on the ground. ukraine. i as much as i sympathize with the ukrainian people and i feel for the credit people, i have a lot of ukrainian friends. i grew up in the ukranian neighbourhood and toronto, canada. i understand what they're going through. i was in the balkans during the award there. i understand what's happening, but at the same time that ukraine is not the point here. it's, i say it's a war proxy war between the united states and russia. what happened with russia now? i believe that this was a big mistake. they got basically lured into a situation where you had lincoln constantly saying, no, no, yeah, the well, going to do whatever it wants. of course, if they want to join, you know, could join natal. ukraine was a close joining nate when there's an election in 2024. if,
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if it's still happening in ukraine works, zalinski probably would have been booted out. and russia had that done the exact same thing that the united states did in 2014. and that was a qu, he's on the exact same way. and it could have done this in a way that there would not be so much bloodshed. but at the same time, you have to remember as much as russia was bated and who did the beating and who doesn't care about lives. a did see over and over again. it's basically the u. k. and the us that are met and alec, there's one thing that you might could have mentioned, well, never know is that in between time, the don bass could have been invaded by care of. okay. and that was the impetus for us. history will judge. okay, but i'm not sure i agree with your timeline there. okay, we'll find out what eventually, what the timeline was and why the decisions were made. i gentlemen, i'm gonna jump in here, we're going to go to a short break. and after that short break, we'll continue our discussion on the situation in ukraine. stay with
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he's one of them, like he's with talk video with you look out him, you up for you that but use with the and i do so as you know, that way, if you don't mind i look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except we're said shorter is it conflict with the 1st law, show your identification. we should be very careful about artificial intelligence and the point obviously, is to rates trust rather than fear plate take on various charlene with artificial intelligence,
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real summoning with obama's protective own existence with awe. welcome act. across sac, we're all things are considered. i'm peter le belt remind we're discussing the situation in ukraine. ah. okay, early one of the interesting things that i find in watching this conflict here is alex mentioned in the 1st part of the program that he's covered to foreign wars around the world. most of them initiated if not all of them by the united states and its allies. but the impact of those wars on western voters in western consumers i would say was quite limited. ok, it's, there wasn't a high profile thing. some of us have very strong interest in foreign policy,
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but the average voter doesn't. now we have this situation here. we have supply chains, we have inflation. the fate of the dollar is at stake in many ways people are not aware of it, but that's true. um, so this endeavor to support ukraine that has have no strategic value whatsoever for europe in the united states is beginning to cost something go hetero. i think peter, you remember, i think the whole initiative, this is and all the other work tooth is maintaining us supremacy dominance around the world at any cost essentially. but, but yeah, i, i do not, i would agree. i do not think that they fully thought this out. i think they thought there was going to be some ramifications. some blow back on sanctions and stuff. but i mean, they went all in with section all it, i mean ridiculous, this is direct company and, and i think, i think they also were thinking that they would get more people, those court, the sanctions, other than just the u. s. in europe. and they're close satellites,
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and that hasn't been the case. so i think this is a major, major threat to, to the global economy in the global financial system. we also, what's happened here, you hear them saying that russia's using oil or whatever for and gas for us as blackmail. but what has the u. s. allies done as far as the funding, global financial system and the dollar and the euro blackmail exact and, and what they've done by using the, we basically basically have damage themselves as far as credibility. as far as the whole global financial structure, i think it's really being challenged right now and, and it's going to have, i think rush is going to have some tough times, but i think they'll get through it. europe. i think it's going to have a very challenging time and some blow back will come back to us too,
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but it will definitely be affecting on the long term the supremacy of the dollar as a, as a reserved currency. so i think it really hurts the european and the u. s. reputation globally and, and i, and it's as a result that they're not getting the actions that they thought they were going to . that's why they keep doing after this. freya. yes, you and john, you know, i, i'm, i'm living in moscow, i've been here for almost a quarter century now and i'm very well aware of the sanctions here, but life more or less just goes on there some inconveniences. yes. particularly when it comes to financial system, but you know, totally destroying the economy. now, the rubel a tumble than it is right, right back where it was before. ah, as the earl is pointed out, am i the global south is i'm not going to get involved in this. say, see, this is a, something well beyond their interests are these countries are looking out for their
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sovereignty and their citizens here going along with the europeans and the americans are not in their interest here. so, um, this endeavor, propaganda and using the financial system and trade is not panning out because it hasn't brought rushes to it to its knees. as i've been telling people they've been preparing for this for since 2014, they've been thinking about it a lot. go ahead, john. well, in fact, when you get back in time, russia that before the soviet union has been under sanctions, western sanctions since, since before i was born, you may remember comic on which was a body that designed to restrict the export of technology to the soviet union. so the, the use of sanctions to try and we can russia is decades old. and i very much agree with what alex just said about using the dollar. and also incidentally, the euro as instruments of blackmail as russia is accused of doing with gas. there's a big difference, however, a gas is a real thing. oil is
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a real thing at the dollar and the euro and not real things. they just bits of paper which of another purpose, namely to buy whatever it is you want to buy. but some people are always going to want gas or we're going to want oil. now they're not necessarily going to always want dollars if they can instead buy the oil gas in the chinese currency or in the russian currency or in the indian currency or whatever you want. and one of the extraordinary things about this war is that, i'm sure, like many people, many people may have, have asked what exactly are russians war aims, you know, what, what, what is the end game from the russian point of view. one of the consequences of this war has been to fro the pack of cards up into the and see which way they settle. and we have seen the answer to that already with india and china and brazil is gigantic countries, the gigantic economies. of course, citing with russia, as you said, just now the global south, including by the way, the middle east,
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saudi arabia, the gulf states, these, these economic power houses have not cited with the 2 sides of the atlantic. and that is indeed indeed indicates that as you asked me in a previous question, europe is isolated. you know, alex, you know, the, there is this issue of using our energy as a form of blackmail. well, i think we should kind of put it into perspective here are over $300000000000.00 of rushes. reserves have been frozen if not stolen, and you have, you have nato officials giving a nod for the ukrainians. the use nato weaponry to a hit targets inside of russia. i mean, why shouldn't russia just turn off the gas? i mean, that's a war. how, what, in what war can you, any of you think of where? well, you know, we're going to be fighting each other, killing each other, but we're going to keep commerce going on. doesn't happen. i don't think it's ever happened here. so, i mean, there, there should be a point in time and say, well, i mean, if you want to kill our people, then why should we sell you energy?
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go ahead, alex, why? absolutely. i mean, look and it's, it's are for exactly what you said, i mean, this goes a, it, it's a what the u. s. thought would be a win for them in this, in the sense that north street chew is not working. or they thought that they, they basically shut their oil into europe, exactly the way that they plan to. but a, it's a little bit more difficult than, than what they imagined to do in the 1st place. and as far as i don't correct me, if i'm wrong, they're still a pipeline. they runs 3 am praying from russia into europe. so you were in the middle of a war, this type to i still, floyd saw it from the very beginning. got from, i least from my humble opinion, i was like, why doesn't russia just turned that tap off after college campbell alex, i will even add a layer to that, that, yes, that pipeline. it's the amount that through bob, a pipeline, and they're shipping it through ukraine and they're paying the ukranian government transit fees as we speak. okay, here you go. okay, and these are 2 countries that have been at war for how long now and do you have
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flights between kevin and moscow every day for how many years? so it's just one of those situations, i mean and back to the sanctions. i just want to touch upon this. i was in serbia and the former yugoslavia during sanctions. there are some people say i wrote a book on it when i was with a you in organization. i co wrote a book actually. but the fact of the matter is that sanctions do not work. some of the best times my life were under sanctions, where you grab a bottle of wine and guitar, the lights are off and everybody had the best time of their lives. you still could get food, serbia was prepared for it and you could be sure that rushes prepared for it. yes, but earl has the west prepared for it? that's the question here. and i don't think they have and certainly the european solvent. i mean, i've been watching media coverage of germany hemming and hawing of what kids can do it, it can't really do very much. there is a choice. turn off the lights and closed the door in the entire year. european economy will collapse. ok, but there are still these buffoons in the u. k. in the u. s. forcing the germans to
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do it. i mean, the chancellor of germany, i com. sergeant schultz because that's exactly how he acts. go ahead url. yeah, absolutely here, and then this is going to have a i don't think the west completely prepared for this. ah, but i also think get a secondary intent of this not only was, was directed towards russia, but i think also was directed towards europe because one of the yeah, one of the things all the docs vince is to prevent europe from researching and create inter revenge to close of business ties. ah, yeah, but with her to maintain us dominant in europe, i agree with you. i agree with you, but isn't it kind of a hollow victory? i mean, you want had gemini, you want to maintain your head gemini in europe, but then europe just becomes a poor house. i mean, how is that a victory in the long term? let me throw that to john. go ahead, john. you react to that? well, it's not a victory, it's, it's caught making
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a desert and calling it piece that i think that the cutting off of gas is going to be the next escalation. it's already started with poland and bulgaria, or the europeans for one minute say that they will pay in roubles in another minute, say that they won't. and unless the escalation, which has been explicitly threatened by vladimir putin notably against britain, unless at escalation takes a military form. i don't know what exactly he means. maybe he means some kind of a hypersonic strike on a british target. unless he means that the logical next step is indeed the escalation that you have mentioned, namely cutting off the gas supplies. even if those gas supplies were only cut off for, let's say, a week, the rise in gas prices would be so catastrophic, and the effect on the markets would be so immense that that would itself strike a very severe blow. as of course would a permanent cutoff. so yes,
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i think europe is stuck in the middle. europe has cooled the wrong as, as back the wrong hold on this because europe has happened. this happened so many times in the past takes the flag, but decisions which are taken in the united states. well, you know, i, alex, i mean, let me finish it with you here. i mean, they are the, are western publics prepared for the long term long. busy cold war, even if it flares up with that, with russia, they prepared for that 30 seconds. no, you're not. absolutely not lucky. europe right now is taking a look at the euro. is right now, i mean we saw this during 1999 during castillo, europe was hit, the euro was hit, the u. n was hit ignored completely, as well as russia, 3 birds with one stone back. then this is exactly the same type of thing and it makes you fake why this could have been predicted at this could be this paradigm shift. everybody's talking about. russia could be a useful step by actually shutting down oil. what is it? we're going electric?
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what are we doing there should be some mastermind up there who's completely off his rocker? who thinks that this is a good thing? it'll always be what could have been gentlemen? that's all the time we have here. i want to thank my guest and i want to thank our viewers for watching us here are, do you see you next time and remember, wrapped up with a little, you know, one? no, sir. no, no. hon. who are job? no, no, well door, more shrill than what they should end up unit 731 was a unique organization in the history of the world. what they were trying to do was to simply do nothing short and build the most powerful and most deadly biological weapons program that the world had ever known.
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a progression issue or short good, though did that. they're not able to. when you saw new rochelle, he or more my general manager thought this is meant new again from all one of our new and i got to learn much sale. i got ya. i go on monday. i wish to know about joy whole knew he didn't or gotten more polished enough, jr. let's i had to put on with their mother on all everybody bill could you could help us out. oh boy, that's good to go on. what the on this for? she my a new other, i'm all i can send more on all said mom in don't the jojo law on law,
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but the law thank give us a newly to come to the russian state will never be as tight as on the no santini div asking him then i'll set up for a group in the 55 with we will ban in the european union, the kremlin media machine. the state aren't russia today and split r t spoof neck even our video agency, roughly all band on youtube and pinterest and with
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me ah, to put the low reserve, a doubles are limited for dwelt. you talk to rogers q a, told her shoulders, but the school as well. but i see, i hope you do you like you've got a delicate bullet but to let it grow stuff like that. just the yellow cream along with my words to my lawyer to own sure to stick on the, to the ball on the other.
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