Camp Gagnon - No Ceasefire? Why Trump and Zelenskyy Can't Agree | Chris Cappy
Episode Date: April 10, 2025🚨 Make Sure To Rate Us 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟Why cant Trump And Zelensky come to an agreement on a ceasefire? What is the current state of the Ukraine/Russian war? Chris Cappelluto better known as Ch...ris Cappy, previously at Tasked & Purpose, joins us to explain the current nature of the Russia and Ukraine conflict and explain why the war hasn't ended! WELCOME TO CAMP! 🏕️☢️⚠️ ☢️⚠️ Make sure to follow Chris’s new channel @ChrisCappy Shoutout to our sponsors: Zippix, Morgan & Morgan, and Bluechew. Ditch the cigarettes, ditch the vapes and get some nicotine infused toothpicks at https://zippixtoothpicks.com/ today. Get 10% off your first order by using the code GAGNON at checkout.🎟️ 🎫 Comedy Tour Tickets Here: https://markgagnonlive.com👕🧢 GET YOUR CAMP DRIP HERE: https://campgoods.co/🏕️ Get Today In History Email Here (Free): http://dailytodayinhistory.com/Timestamps:0:00 Intro1:31 The Frontlines of War Today8:42 Trump vs Zelensky18:15 Putin’s Demands For a Peace Agreement + Violating Cease Fire 30:15 Hypothetically Speaking For Putin30:56 Live Map of The War + Cappy’s Time In Ukraine + Russian Drones38:27 Cappy’s Ukranian Drone Mission52:00 Forced To Retrieve Jammed Drones From Battlefield 57:15 CASEVAC + Hospital On Wheels1:00:51 Meeting American Veterans In Ukraine + Difference In Iraq and Ukraine1:10:50 Casualties From Warfare In Iraq and Ukraine 1:14:21 Civilian Life In Kyiv + Arriving Into Ukraine1:24:59 Russia Exploiting Trump Cutting Off Aid To Ukraine1:26:23 Future Of The War
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the highest stakes negotiation happening in the world right now.
It's the most complicated negotiation.
And trying to analyze it makes me feel stupid.
This is Chris Cappy, former National Guard, Iraq War veteran, and geopolitical analyst.
And today he'll be breaking down exactly what's going on right now in the Russia-Ukraine war.
What they've done so far is a miracle.
Having said that, they are losing.
And when you are losing, sometimes he exists.
explains what really happened with Trump and Zelensky in the White House and puts us inside the brains of both parties.
There's always been tension between Zelensky and Trump.
The read that I have is that Trump wants that war over.
That's the leverage that Zelensky has.
He knows that the United States does not want a situation where it looks like Trump lost Ukraine.
It became hard for him to have that argument behind closed doors.
Things kind of spiraled.
And then I think at the end of the day, Trump got his way.
How so?
He also gives us his.
eyewitness account of being on the front lines inside a Ukrainian bunker.
As soon as you hear the buzzing of a drone, it's too late.
Really?
You're done.
And at one point, I hear the buzz of a drone fly by overhead and I nearly shit myself.
Chris Cappy is an absolute expert.
He's a brilliant analyst.
So if you want to get caught up on this conflict and more, sit back, relax and welcome
to camp.
Chris Cappy.
Hello, sir.
Welcome back.
Thank you for having me.
Absolutely.
Great to be back.
A lot has happened in the last, I don't know, probably a year maybe since we spoke.
It's been about a year, yeah.
A ton has happened in the world and in personal lives too.
Yeah, yeah, a lot of changes.
A lot has changed, but also a lot has stayed the same.
There is still a, I guess, an active war, an active front line in Ukraine and Russia.
So I'm curious, you just put out a video recently, and you're putting out a bunch of
content also on Cappy's Army, your new channel. The new channel, Cappy Army, that's where people
can find me. It's going to be great geopolitical defense rundowns. So just lead us off, take us down
the rabbit hole. What is going on on the front lines right now? Is Europe preparing for World
War III? And furthermore, why did Zelensky and Trump have that battle, that faceoff in the
White House, in the Oval Office? And what is Zelensky thinking with that whole, you know, that
arrangement and why was he so confident in sort of like going up against the Presby,
United States and one of the main funders of their defense system? To start with the Zelensky
conversation, the thing that fascinates me about that is, so there's different levels of analysis
when you're talking about analyzing Europe's defense procurement, Europe's rebuilding their armament,
if they're going to be preparing for World War III. That's one type of analysis. And then there's
a very different type of analysis, which is like the diplomacy and the, the, you know,
way that diplomats speak and the way that negotiations happen and the rules of war are very different
than the rules of negotiation and the way that we try to use leverage. So everyone has a different
read on how a human's communicating, what they're trying to do, what their motivations are.
So my personal read on it is that I think he had a lot to gain by going in there and stoking
and provoking an argument that was years in the making.
This was, you know, anger building up, resentment building up between the Trump administration
and the, and Zelensky.
And this is years, going back years between not just these administrations, but also these
people.
The Ukrainian people have resentment and the American people have their resentment, I think.
think. I think the Ukrainians feel like they're protecting Europe. They're on the front line,
dying, giving their blood, and they don't feel appreciated for that. And I think that the American
people feel like we're funding this war. We are investing resources that could go elsewhere into this
war in Europe. And why is this our problem and not Europe's problem? And so there's all this
frustration building on both sides. And I saw it when I was on the ground in Ukraine. I went to
the front lines and I spoke to the soldiers and you can get that sense that there's, as much as we're
partners in any partnership, there's also frustrations. Yeah, where did it leave off in 2020 when
Trump's first administration ended as far as their relationship with Ukraine? Was it on good footing?
Was Zelensky trying to get funding for defense at that time as well?
The thing about Trump's first administration was he didn't have the full control that he does now to push the levers the way he wanted to.
He had a lot of people in his cabinet that I think we're working at cross purposes with him.
But at the end of the day, what happened was Trump ended up giving a lot of weapons to Ukraine.
And if you look at the overall trend of just Biden, Trump, doesn't matter.
it's trending up. They're doubling down on giving weapons systems to Ukraine. So they gave
something like $78 million worth of javelin missiles that were instrumental in their defense
against the initial Russian invasion. And Trump. But Trump does feel, I think, some kind of way
about he's used this in the past. He's used that as leverage where he held up $400 million
worth of military aid to Ukraine. And he used that as a bargaining chip. And,
And so there is, there's always been tension between Zelensky and Trump. It's, I personally, the read that I have is that Trump wants that war over, wants it over so that he can focus on China. And I think he's willing to make concessions and the Ukrainian people want a security guarantee. They need a U.S.-backed security guarantee because if the United States doesn't put in writing in black and white, hey,
Our military will our nuclear force, our bomber force, strategic bomber force, will, if Russia
violates whatever agreement they come to, the United States will guarantee.
It's like when someone gets an apartment and they need a guarantor when they're very young.
And like your parents are like, we're going to take on that risk.
If you don't pay your rent, it's going to be taken care of.
If you go to college and your parents help with college, guarantee.
tour. Ukraine is saying we need a guarantor. From Ukraine's perspective, they feel like for decades,
they've been promised, like you're going to come into the European Union. We'd like you to come
into NATO. And then when something happens, it's now they feel like they don't have that
guarantee. They need it in black and white. Right. I think what Zelensky feels like he needs to get
for his people. Because he's a lot.
advocating for his people.
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Yeah, I remember even just in their interaction,
like as things are getting heated,
Zelensky's saying that, do we have a guarantee?
Can you get us a guarantee?
And that seemed like the big contention.
So I'm curious, what would be,
some potential reasons that Trump would be resistant to giving some type of security guarantee?
The big reason is I think Russia will not sign likely, likely won't sign a peace agreement
where there's a U.S.-backed security guarantee.
And Trump wants something signed.
He wants a deal to go through.
I think he wants Europe to guarantee it.
When you look at Europe's army and their firepower that they have, they don't feel like they
can guarantee the security.
And it, and it also comes down to what's a credible guarantee.
Like Europe can say, UK can say we're going to send forces to Ukraine, but is it credible
that they could actually send something like 100,000 troops?
No, when you look at their forces, they don't have that kind of mass.
And I think the French have committed a certain number of troops.
I think it was like 20,000 or something to that effect.
It's when you look at what the size of their armies, it's, I think, combined each of them, their armies.
Like, so UK's army is like 80,000 active duty soldiers.
France is somewhere in that ballpark.
And you have to consider, even though you might have 80,000 active duty troops with the logistics and the rotate, you have to rotate troops through.
So you really need three times that.
If you want to rotate 40,000 troops somewhere, you need four times.
that amount because you need 40,000 in the rear for a year and then move them in to the front line
and then move those guys back. Because you don't want them there, you know, forever. Right. Yeah, I'm trying
to figure out, like I'm trying to put myself in Zelensky's head where he's going into this
meeting. It all starts off with the outfit. I guess they've requested that he wears something more
professional don't come in and like you know stuff of like you know like a militia you know military
type you know country at war uniform uh which he resists which again i kind of get it from his
perspective it's like optically i'm uh you know we're a nation at war so i'm gonna wear whatever
and it seems like i you know the white house is trying to pressure him in some capacity but then
you know trump makes a conversation you don't have the cards you don't have the cards and from my
perspective without really knowing anything it seems like he's right where you know
So, so unless he's getting the majority of their funding for defense from the United States,
and that Europe is not really in a position that they can back them either through, you know, troops or, you know, the actual, you know, like weapons.
So I'm curious what incentive he has to not just be sort of compliant in that meeting.
And you just kind of be sort of like more peaceful and less agitating.
Was he trying to create an optics thing where he was trying to show the American people how, you know, difficult it is to negotiate?
with this guy? Was he trying to get Europe riled up to then get more funding potentially? I'm trying to
figure out what leverage he has. He has a couple of goals, I think, in having that argument. And both sides,
I think, had a lot of incentive and motivation to have it out in that moment. Because Zelensky knows that,
I think going into it, he knows he's not going to sign that mineral deal without a U.S. security guarantee.
So I think it's likely that he went into that meeting thinking, okay, after we have this show, dog and pony show in front of the cameras, we'll go back behind closed doors and we'll argue and I'm not going to sign this. And I'm going to go back and the big headline's going to be we didn't sign it because there's no security guarantee. But I think it became hard for him to have that argument behind closed doors. Things kind of spiraled.
And they had it out in public.
I think there's no, and he said it.
He went on Brett Barr afterwards,
and he said it in as many words.
He said that he wasn't going to sign that agreement
without a security guarantee.
And Trump and Vance felt like they cannot,
that the mineral deal from their perspective
was as much of a security guarantee
as they were willing to give.
Because the mineral deal was like,
we're going to have hundreds,
maybe a thousand U.S. workers, American citizens, working on near the front line,
mining rare earth minerals that are a strategically important element.
So if Russia violates the ceasefire, like they violated ceasefires in the past,
then, and they kill Americans, there's an implicit security guarantee that you kill America.
Because if you look at world history, there's many examples of America protecting their business interests.
But to be fair, there's also many historical examples of America being like, see you later by.
Right.
Afghanistan.
Right.
Vietnam.
So I can understand both perspectives here.
I get why Zelensky, you know, can't.
What type of advocate for his people would he be if he went home empty handed with no security guarantee?
And what type of negotiator would Trump be if he just...
was like, yeah, I'm going to, I'm going to do a security guarantee, which would all but guarantee, like, further escalation and conflict with Russia.
These, all these, there's different stakeholders.
This is the highest stakes negotiation happening in the world right now.
It's the most complicated negotiation.
And trying to analyze it makes me feel stupid.
I mean, you can say, I guess, the fact that it was so public, both of their, you know, separate individual constituent.
feel validated by the outcome that, you know, Trump's people can say, like, look, this guy's
trying to get some type of peace deal and the, you know, the Ukrainians just won't have it.
They just, they just don't want to make a deal.
They don't want peace.
And then, you know, obviously the Ukrainians and all the supporters of Zelensky and his cause
can say, look, Trump is being unreasonable and Zelensky stood his ground and, you know,
held up to the big man and, you know, protected our people.
So in a way, optically, they both benefited.
Yes.
And then I think at the end of the day, what ended up happening was that, you know,
I think Trump got his way.
How so?
Because so he then, if what happened next was he was like, if you don't do what we want, we're going to cut off aid.
And that is the nuclear option, essentially.
That's always on the table in any negotiation is really the power that you have is that you're willing to walk away.
Like, whatever the consequences of that come what may, you're willing to accept those consequences.
And for the United States, the consequences of walking away are huge.
Like, potentially Russia could conquer all of Ukraine.
And then that would be a security nightmare for the United States because they would have to then send more troops, invest more money on building up a, you know, a defensive perimeter around Ukraine.
If all of Ukraine were, I know people want to say that like Trump is in cahoots with Putin, but like, really.
My perspective is that it would, Trump would, it would look terrible for Trump.
Sure.
If Ukraine rolled over and lost, it would look awful.
So I think Zelensky thought that his leverage was that he wasn't going to let Trump,
was that Trump wasn't going to basically call a bluff and be prepared for that to happen.
This is just my perspective.
Sure.
I know people have their own read and I respect that.
And I am not claiming that like I'm an expert.
This is just my read on it is that that's the leverage that Zelensky has, is that he knows that the United States does not want a situation where it looks like Trump lost Ukraine.
And now what is the state of funding?
So real quick, so Trump pulls all of the military aid.
Issues a stop, completely stops all every artillery shells that are in transit that are already on trains.
headed to Ukraine, stopped. Sorry, not going anywhere. Millions of dollars of equipment that was
authorized stopped. And intelligence sharing stopped. So all of the satellite imagery the United
States has, which is unmatched, Europe cannot do this, stopped. High Mars rocket systems that are
long-range rockets that are fired into Russian territory, Ukraine can no longer do that. All of these
weapons systems, all this intelligence, it's like having a wall hack in a video game where you can
see where the enemy is before they're there. It's a superpower. The United States shuts all of it off
for about, I think it was three, four, maybe five days. And Zelensky said, okay, we will do
what you want. He comes back. He says, I'm very sorry for what happened. If you want to,
you know, we'll do a ceasefire. We will work this out.
You know, we are committed to peace and instantly Trump turns it back on.
He sends intelligence again, sends military weapons again, and now he focuses on Russia.
And he says, okay, the Ukrainians want peace.
Do the Russians.
Let's try a ceasefire.
Let's see if we can agree to a 30-day ceasefire.
So this brings us up to where we are today.
And what we just see very recently, and I don't know how this is going to play out tomorrow,
things change by the hour.
But right now what we're seeing is Trump is saying Putin's not ready for peace.
Putin is, I forget the exact words, but he's saying something along the lines of Putin is very frustrating to me.
And I feel like he's, you know, basically dragging these negotiations along.
So he is now focused on Russia.
In this article from NBC, Trump says he's, quote, very angry and, quote, pissed on.
off at Putin during NBC News interview. Interesting. That's very interesting. And we don't know the
actual particulars of what this meeting was. This was not obviously publicized. This was just through,
I'm assuming, you know, secretaries that wrote everything down. So he, so what's happening is
there people are talking and negotiating and basically what Trump is communicating is that he feels
like Putin is saying, I'll sure, I'll do a ceasefire. I'd love to do a ceasefire. But
I need X, Y, and Z, which are things that would obviously not be agreed to.
No, he, you know, this is what people say is that he's basically feigning that he's willing to do a peace agreement.
And, you know, obviously cards on the table, like, I'm biased towards Ukraine, but I try to stay objective.
You know, the argument, I think, from Ukrainian side is that Putin is pretending like he wants peace.
but then he'll make a bunch of this has to happen, this has to happen, and he knows that they'll never happen.
So what I think we might see next is what type of leverage can Trump use against Russia?
For Ukraine, he could shut off their weapons.
For Russia, he could put more sanctions, which I know people think that you can't do any harder sanctions than we're already doing.
But maybe that's true, but we'll see.
We'll see he could also send more weapons to Ukraine, double down on
defending additional systems to Ukraine.
So that's what I, if I were to guess, would be the next step.
If he feels like Putin is dragging his feet.
Do we know how egregious the demands from Putin are for a peace agreement?
Would you be able to look them up exactly because I'm going to get them wrong?
Yeah, but I'm almost sure.
This is from perplexity.
So tell me if this is accurate.
We can get the exact news if we need to.
It seems like halting foreign military.
So Putin demands the U.S. and its allies cease military support for Ukraine.
Territorial concessions.
So basically withdrawing its forces from Donsk and some other words that I can.
Donets, Luhansk, Zaporizia, and Hirsan, which, like, that's what I mean by things that Ukraine won't agree to.
Because these are some areas that they've lost thousands of soldiers to, and it's just not realistic that they're going to give up Harrison right now. They might end up doing it eventually. But I see. And also, you know, it's aspirations to join NATO.
Halting, yeah, which I think is not a problem. Some of this is not a problem. But halting foreign military aid, like that's to. So if you really want to ceasefire and you really interested in just ending this conflict, like, okay, I'm obviously giving the Ukrainian person.
But why would you need to halt foreign military aid?
Couldn't could the military aid continue and we just stop the firing?
So Russia is going to have a very different perspective, of course.
And, you know, there's a lot of people that are very great at explaining that perspective.
But I'm better, I think, equipped to give you the Ukrainian perspective.
So if they were to halt U.S. military aid, for instance, to Ukraine, I mean, they'd be so far, can I curse?
Yes.
You're so far fucked.
Yeah.
At least one.
Do it again.
So hard.
Maybe fuck so hard.
Like, um, so, um, so, yeah, you shut off military aid and then basically Russia has an incentive to, because their advantage is that they can just build up mass.
They can build up, uh, they can prepare and launch another offensive and be in a better position to do so.
So this, these are the, the concerns that are being.
basically like teed out right now.
And Trump wants to see movement,
just a temporary ceasefire, I think.
And, you know,
why can't we agree to a 30-day ceasefire?
It's not necessary.
It's just like a,
in negotiations,
you try to build trust.
You try to,
like before we get to the real main meat
of our negotiation,
let's see if we can just agree to this little thing.
30-day, see how it goes.
A little trial offer.
Put the toes in the water.
Just test it.
Is it chilly?
If it is, pull out.
Yeah.
That's what this kind of is.
It's a little test.
And if that goes well, we do another test, it's trust building exercise.
It's like one of those terrible corporate trust building exercises.
But with, we're trust falling.
Yeah, with nuclear weapons.
Right.
Yeah, that's a little scary.
I wonder if Trump could just say, hey, we are going to keep funding.
We'll keep weapons systems in place.
But if the United States or Ukraine violate in any way and show any type of outward aggression and then basically line out what that would look like, then we will pull out funding.
Like if Ukraine or the United States agitates, you know, Russian borders in any capacity.
This is where you get into like the weeds of who is the arbiter of who's at fault for violating a ceasefire.
Like how do we how do we who says that?
Is it the UN that is on the ground in Ukraine?
Because Putin would not want that.
Is it a European force?
He would not want that.
I wonder if you could get like a joint committee or something.
Is it a private security force?
Is it some kind of private, multinational like mercenary, not mercenary, like security force?
Is it what is it?
And who trusts it?
Because if there's a little militia here and there that, you know, throw some rocks of like a Russian airplane, that doesn't count.
Because that's not sanctioned from the Ukrainian military.
It's very, it's, it's very difficult to agree on who's going to be the arbiter of who violated the ceasefire.
Right.
Fairly.
Who's not going to play.
Is it China?
I know they threw their hat in the ring recently.
Is it like it can't probably be the United States, can't be Europe.
It's, it feels a little bit like, like an impossible puzzle to solve.
Mm-hmm.
And like what you said would be ideal.
That would be ideal.
We just agree if you violate the ceasefire, then there's consequences.
And if you, there's consequences.
But on the meta analysis, it's like, how do you agree who it was?
Because everyone's going to say, we didn't violate the ceasefire.
It was them.
Right.
And then you get into all sorts of, you know, like perverse incentives where it's like,
let's say that deal goes in a place.
hey, if Ukraine violates a ceasefire in any capacity,
then America pulls out funding and Ukraine's on its own, right?
Like, if your girl starts a fight and then you come in and protect her,
but if she keeps swinging, then you got to back off.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's a crazy deal, but then, you know,
is it possible that, you know, the Russians could create some type of skirmish
that then looks like it is Ukraine's fault?
What you're talking about is, I mean,
I think if you were a soldier who's been on the front since,
You're probably screaming watching this saying like this has been my reality for the past 10 years
Because this was before it was a full-scale invasion it was like
Russia and Ukraine both claiming that each side is shelling each other in
Donyatsk the back and forth you know and so and and and each side was claiming the other violated ceasefires back to 2014
Mm-hmm
And I don't know that there's any like perfect way to say like whose fault it was.
Right. Because American intelligence does that say we have scans and, you know, all of our equipment looking at everything. We could say, no, no, no. It wasn't Ukraine's that started. But then they'd be like, well, obviously you're going to say that because you're in bed with them. So let's look at our intelligence. Oh, our intelligence says they did start it.
Yeah. And there is a truth. There is an objective truth. But are we going to know? The first casualty of war. Always. So it's like, yeah, I don't.
I don't know necessarily how you could create terms on that front.
I'm curious, I know that you're not going to, you're not some type of, you know, staunch pro-Russian, you know, thinker.
But I'm curious, if you had to steal man like Putin's position, obviously he's been agitated by NATO encroachment in the past.
And if that's off the table completely, what else does he have as far as, you know, personal grievance to continue this and not look for peace?
Is he's, you know.
If I was Putin, I probably wouldn't be pushing for peace right now.
Like if I, you know, this is a thought experiment.
Sure.
We're in school.
This is an academic exercise.
Steal manning the Russian perspective.
This is an academic perspective, rather.
Exercise of thinking because this is what they call it in the military.
They call it red cell thinking.
You want to put yourself in the shoes of your adversary.
Because it's advantageous to understand their perspective in, you know, making your own
decisions and thinking two steps ahead, you want to best understand their perspective. And so if I was
Putin, I probably would not be pushing for peace right now because the way I look at it is that the
conditions on the ground, the conditions on the front line dictate a lot of times the the negotiations
and the peace deal. And so if the reality on the ground is that you are.
gaining, let's say. It might not be that you're gaining much and it might be coming at a big cost.
But if you're seeing that your team is winning, is getting, is gaining ground. Like, why would you be,
why would you say, yeah, let's stop, time out? Why? That is the current state of things. It seems like
Russia is gaining ground pretty steadily. And so when I went to Ukraine, when I actually, I went to the front,
like this is not a secret.
The Ukrainian soldiers themselves say it.
There's no sense in pretending otherwise.
It's a struggle for the Ukrainian people.
It's like four times smaller than Russia or something.
Like they're, what they've done so far is a miracle.
The fact that they haven't been already completely occupied.
So having said that, they are losing.
And when you are losing, sometimes it's not.
not like Russia needs to advance a kilometer at a time for the next year. It's when a front line
breaks, sometimes it breaks hard and you see just, you see a collapse. So it's not accurate to say
like Russia, it's going to take them six years to conquer all of Ukraine because there are
defensive fortifications back and back. I saw them myself. They're dug in all.
the way back to Kiev. But personally, I feel like if I'm Putin and you're, you're advancing,
like, why would you be calling for a timeout if you're him? He, I think, is making the calculation
that his forces are going to be advancing and that if he can push, if he can buy time as long as
possible and capture as much territory as possible, then he will be in a better and better
negotiating position
when it comes time
to negotiate because they'll have more and more leverage.
Right. So let's say they take over all of these regions
that are contested right now and they just fully
sweep through. You know what I love? You want to pull up
the Institute for the Study of War
there's a
live map of the front line
and zoom in to let's say Kursk.
Which is... Yeah, I don't think
Gabe knows where Kersk is.
I didn't know where Ukraine was until
a year ago.
I thought you got a plane zing it.
This is in it.
This shows you where the minerals actually are.
But if you go up north, up north to the top red,
the top red piece, that's curse, the very top.
Yeah, yeah, you're getting there.
That's, so that's.
That one right there?
Yes.
So this will be interesting when I walk you through basically where I went on the front.
Without giving away too much specifics.
When did you go again?
I was in November.
Okay.
So like, what was that?
Four months ago, five months ago?
After the election?
It was days after the election.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So I asked their one of their, I spoke to this one of their like top diplomats and I asked
them, what do you think of Trump coming into office?
How is it going to be?
Talk to their soldiers as well and ask them, what do you think of Trump coming in?
Everyone thought that they're going to hate Trump or something.
But the answers I got were interesting, not.
they weren't all unanimous, like, oh, we hate Trump or something.
Interesting.
Okay.
What's up, guys?
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Now let's get back to the show.
So I see this is, and where is Kursk, what is this budding up against?
Kursk Oblast or region is, if you zoom out, it's that whole kind of, I guess the best way I described it is like a state, I suppose.
It's like how we have New York State.
This is Kersk State sort of.
And Ukraine, their incursion into Kursk was that red piece that you see right there.
That was the territory that they captured.
It has since fallen and they've withdrawn.
The spot that I went to physically is now back in Russian hands.
So that was Ukrainian land at one point prior to the conflict or they was still just contested.
It was under Ukrainian occupation, under Ukrainian military control.
It's interesting. It's interesting that it doesn't end on the river. They had the other side of the land on the other side of that. There's not a river there. What there is, if you zoom in, there's only one way in and out of here. It looks deceptively like you could just like drive anywhere you want. But really, there's just one highway, one border crossing point that was open. And I drove in an armored vehicle from Sumi. If you see Sumi down a little bit south. Yeah, pretty much there. So from
Sumi, we met there, got in an armored vehicle, and then drove up north, and I met with some
M2 Bradley American armored vehicles that were over there, met with them. These are the guys that
were rotating in. Then we went up in past the border. And it's a surreal experience where
you cross over the border and you see the sign. And it says Ukraine and Russia on this big
giant sign and the checkpoint.
I don't know if you ever cross the border into Canada or like Mexico.
Yeah, yeah.
Looks kind of similar, but it's just bombed the fuck out.
Just totally flattened and all this concrete chewed up.
And you could see where the tanks destroyed tanks everywhere, littering the place,
destroyed Abrams tanks on the side of the road.
Bradley's just bombed out.
And once we get to Suja, you're,
feeling, and this is something I couldn't communicate in the video, was you feel the artillery,
feel the ground shake under you as the outgoing Ukrainian shells are being fired, and then you feel
the return fire of Russian Grad rockets, which are like smaller but more saturated all over
the place, and it's shaking the ground, and I'm interviewing these Russian civilians, these people
that, like, lived there for their whole lives of generations before they've lived there,
And they're like, we're not leaving here, no matter how much shelling happens.
Really?
Meet these Russian women.
They remind me of my mother.
And they show me to their house that has just been blown up.
And on the door, it says, mom's dead.
If you want to find us, we're at, you know, here.
And it's written in chalk.
These people have had been like devolved.
to communicating through writing on a wall
because there's no internet, there's no communications,
and the only way to tell your loved ones
what's happening and what's going on
is by writing it in chalk on the wall, on the door.
And there, this woman, this old woman
who's like a grandma,
and she's picking up pieces of like family photos and stuff.
And it's just terrible to watch.
And I feel awful seeing it. And this bomb, this house was bombed out by Russian bombs, Russian aerial strikes because the Ukrainians are taking shelter in Russian houses. Same thing Russians do. They take shelter in Russian basements and there are no big military bases. It's like these lines are blurred. At this point, when I went to Kursk, I had already been to a bunch of different parts of the front. And this was by far the most.
intense in terms of the fire coming in and out of there and unlike anything like when I
was in Iraq I'm not worried about air strikes the insurgents aren't calling in
close air support they're not calling in artillery fire on us mm-hmm it felt like a
roll of the dice and drones were another thing that when I was in Iraq I was
mostly scared about IEDs explosives here I'm terrified
of the buzzing noise.
And as soon as you hear the buzzing of a drone,
it's too late.
Really?
You're done.
And at one point, I'm interviewing these Russians,
and I hear the buzz of a drone fly by overhead,
and I nearly shit myself.
They didn't even react.
It was fortunately Ukrainian-friendly FPV drones,
explosive drones that are being flown by the Ukrainians.
But if it had been the Russians, like, you're dead already.
Because by the time you can hear it, it only takes, you can hear them.
I think it's about 50 meters away where you can start to hear the buzz.
And they move, I forget the exact speed, but it's, you know, it takes them two seconds to get 50 meters.
Wow.
So, like, how do the drones work?
Are they buying commercial stock drones and outfitting them?
Are they big?
Like, can you break down what they look like?
They're producing $100,000 a month of their own, domestically.
Russia and Ukraine?
I don't know what Russian numbers are, but I know Ukraine is producing.
at least 100,000 of these FB drones,
got to go to their training center,
which was an amazing experience to see how they train
on their drone operating,
talk to some of the guys that have just killed, like,
scores of Russians,
and he's showing me on his phone.
Like, the way I might show you photos of my vacation,
he's showing me just, his phone is stacked
with videos of his kills.
Whoa.
And he's showing me these,
he's just flipping through it.
And he's like, oh, here's one guy that I put a Claymore on this drone.
And like, he took two drums to get him.
Just like in his photos, like album on his phone.
Oh, yeah.
Wow.
It's mixed in with like his family photos.
Bizarre.
And are they comacizing the drones?
Mm-hmm.
So they outfit them with explosives and then just attach an RPG to it, attach a Claymore to it.
So on impact, C4.
It explodes.
Boom.
Wow.
I mean, and they're using.
full vis, like optical apparatus to see exactly where it's going.
FPV drones, first person view drones.
Wow.
They've got the goggles on.
There, and there's like this misunderstanding.
You think that they're, so I went with a drone team to the front.
And you think, I thought, I'm like, I'll go with the drone team.
I'll be safe.
I'll be like a bit away from the front.
No, they want those guys all the way up on the front so that they can hit 12 kilometers
into the Russian rear.
So I'll finish I guess I'll finish out Kursk.
Maybe this is a good point to talk to you about the drone mission I went on because the
curse, yeah, the Kirst mission was intense and it was, you know, I'm still processing all
this honestly.
It's like it was a lot and your adrenaline's pumping.
But I do feel like the drone mission was even more intense and scary and probably the most
terrified. I'm not going to lie to you and be like, I'm not a tough guy. I'm not. I was bullied when I was
in school. Like, I was terrified in on this mission. And it's a combination of like when you're in
Iraq, you got your whole squad with you. You've got the power of the American military,
the logistics that's capable of putting a Burger King anywhere in the world and then dropping
a bomb like 100 meters away from it any day that they want.
Right. The Ukrainian military cannot do that. And so I guess I knew that, but like, there's what you know and then there's what you really know. And when I got there, when you don't speak the language, you don't really know what's going on. So I was like, everything's in flux. We think we're going to go to the front. And then they're like, it's too dangerous. You can't go to the front.
You specifically or the whole operation? Yeah. Like, a lot of times I would get, if you want to go down, I can say this. So it was nearer.
Touretz. If you type it is search bar on the top left. So the red is where the Russian forces are.
And on the other side of that is where the Ukrainian forces are. What's that big blue?
That's just a mineral deposit. That's where I wish we could get rid of that, but it would take, be annoying.
So without getting too specific, I'll say that I was, I was two kilometers from where the red is.
Wow. And so we're based, we're surrounded on.
three sides. They're up, they're up north, they're down south, and they're also to the east.
So the Russians are all around us. And the team that I'm with is a three or four men squad,
that their job, they're drone operators. What they do is they find a basement near here.
They go into the basement because Soviet buildings, Soviet houses where it's like a bomb shelter.
It's concrete,
top bottom,
like if a bombs dropped on you,
you have a chance of being okay.
And so it's a game of cat and mouse.
Your,
the hardest part is infiltrating.
So getting from where it's safe
in like Kramatourisk,
getting from there to the actual zero line,
getting down to the front.
That's when you're most vulnerable.
So would they usually do it at night
or during what they call the gray hours?
which is like when the sun is setting and rising
because thermal optics are least effective
during that time.
Interesting.
So as we're infiltrating to the position,
I didn't realize, I don't speak the language.
They're like, okay, we're going.
Like I said, a lot of times they'll say that
and then you don't.
This time we ended up actually going.
I realized that we're going there
in an unarmored pickup truck.
We're going there in like a Ford Jeep.
and to the front.
For what purpose is that?
Is that to not alert or like to raise suspicions or is that because of funding they
don't have the vehicles?
A couple of reasons.
I think mainly it's to be inconspicuous.
It's because you are less of a target for drones.
If you're in an armoured vehicle, you're less heat signature, less noise signature.
You're just not going to be seen as much.
And but I don't know that I would have agreed to this trip if I had known that like,
okay, we're going.
They didn't realize it until too late.
But I'm like, I'm not going to cancel this trip either.
My interpreter is an amazing guy named Demetrio, my guide, my fixer.
He asked them, he's like, is the EW working?
Is the electronic warfare device working?
This is the device that jams the drones.
They're like, EW.
Fuck are you talking about.
We don't have that.
Wow.
Like, what do you think this is?
The Ritz Colleton?
Like that's dude, we're rolling bear
We're raw dogging this trip
Wow so what time is it roughly? It's late at night
It's dark and well I'll say it's like between between the two and we've got this super dangerous stretch of road
Which is like the I'll say the last mile to getting there and
As we're driving there I'm seeing artillery shells explode to my left
and to my right, and we're seeing all these rockets go, like, through the horizon up in the air.
We're seeing outgoing incoming.
And they do this every night.
Like, these Ukrainians are insane.
And he's just shit talking as we're driving.
You know, you have to cut the tension, basically.
You're not going to sit there and just, you're going to feel terrified and also talk about how you're
terrified?
No.
So did you get the sense that they were scared, or at least.
A little anxious?
No, you don't get the sense at all.
These people are desensitized to it.
Never did I ever, ever once meet somebody who seemed scared.
Like, they're so desensitized to it.
Me, I am because I'm coming off sitting with my pup, my little Tucker, my new, my pug,
and hanging out with my pregnant wife back home and like watching YouTube videos all the time.
And then suddenly I'm in this like situation.
So I'm terrified.
But then it's a Tuesday.
This is a normal day for them.
And how far away are the shells that are dropping?
Like two, 300 meters away on the other side of a tree line.
Oh, I think we're going to take a mile.
Like, no.
Like, you're seeing it and hearing it.
Yes.
Like, lightning and thunder.
Like, it's coming at the same time.
Yeah, and you could see it in the video that I posted.
Like, there, you see, I got it on video.
And it's these, like, explosions.
And, um...
I'm so I'm trying to ask questions to get my mind off of it because I really feel like I'm going to throw up at this point. And I feel like I've made an awful mistake. And they're joking and they're like, where are you from? And I'm like, I'm from New York. And there's this, there's actually a town right here named New York, New York. And they're like, what are you doing here? You're in the wrong New York, brother. Like, what the hell are you should go back home? That's funny. And I'm like, oh, I should be back home. Like, what am I doing?
here. I'm going to like, I'm going to, I've made a terrible mistake is what I'm thinking. And we get within
five minutes of where the position is that we're going to be spending the night because the idea is to
spend the night with this drone team and they're going to be dropping bombs on Russian infantry
that are assaulting through here. And in the back of the vehicle, we've got the ammo, we've got the
battery supplies for the drones
and that's when over the radio
they say you have to turn back
but I don't hear this I only know I only find this out
when I get the interpretation back
from the the interpreters who
are going through the whole video and I get a
transcript of it and I'm reading this and I'm realizing like this is
way worse than I knew they get
a read they get a read they get
get a radio call that there's a Russian drone in the air and it's looking for us.
And they're like, it's too dangerous.
You need to go back.
I'm thinking, okay, thank God, we're going to abort this mission.
We can go home and I can feel like, okay, I tried.
Yeah.
And then they're like, no, we're going to go, we'll park under this tree.
We'll hide here for a little bit.
And then when the coast is clear, when we get intelligence, it's probably American intelligence,
probably like a U.S. spy plane that's seen or satellite that's seeing this.
And so they get, we go, we park at some random house.
We hide there.
And they, we wait for about like five, ten minutes, take a piss.
Then they're like, okay, Russian drone is gone.
Go to the position.
Do the rest of the infiltration.
So then we push out, get back in the Jeep, drive to the position where the Ukrainian drone
team is they like a choreographed drill they just unload the batteries unload the ammo unload
supplies food water and then we go to the next place drop off food battery waters and then we drop off
us and we go back we go down into the basement where the drone team is and what they do all night
the kind of like the loop, the, you know, the routine is they go up, they prepare an explosive,
moored around some type of explosive, attach it to the bottom of this drone that has,
it's like a size of a lawnmower, and it sounds like a lawnmower.
It's got six, maybe the size of this table, a giant drone, and it lifts up this,
I forget, like 60 pounds worth of munitions.
And then goes and they get they're on, I can't say exactly what they're on, but they're on a messaging service of some kind, secure service.
And they start transmitting intelligence to the drone team.
You see they're like, here's the photo of the house that we think the Russian soldiers are at.
Go fly over it.
drone flies over it.
And they're like, okay, they'd make the fine tune adjustments.
And then they drop the payload.
and you see on the thermal camera on the computer's big explosion
and you just saw people get blown to bits.
Whoa.
And then they go, they do that six, seven,
won't say exactly how many times,
but they run multiple missions that night,
dropping razor wire, dropping explosives.
And, I mean, it's just like unlike the war that I knew,
the logistics of it.
the how to get to the position and out of the position.
It's just a very different war than the insurgency
and global war on terror that I know.
Did they lose any drones while you were with them?
No, but they told me that one of the,
the worst things that can happen is that
if they fly over a position and the drone, like, loses signal,
then they have to, they have their rifles with them
down in that basement and they have to go and retrieve it.
What?
Yeah.
This is a $10,000 drone.
Did you retrieve it?
Yeah.
So they've had to go.
They've had to.
And I'm like, I don't think I'm going to go on that.
Fortunately, that night, that didn't happen.
But there's jamming.
The friendly units that are right on that red line, they have electronic warfare devices that are jamming the Russian drones and Russian missiles.
Because all night that we're in that basement, I'm hearing and feeling the Russian
artillery hitting around us and mortars because we're within mortar range and it's hitting
all around us and it's getting closer and they're walking it in and there's air strikes happening
so an air strike one of those like cruise missiles that they launch it sounds like a low flying jet right
it sounds like there's a jet flying over but you know it's yeah but you know it's not because
the unsettling thing about ukraine is there's no jets and there's no airplanes in the sky wow
There's no commercial traffic in the whole country.
So you know there's no plane flying overhead.
It's a bomb.
And what EW does is it spoofs those bombs.
It stops those bombs from being accurate.
But at the same time, if your friendlies are running their jamming devices...
They can jam your own?
Yes.
Wow.
So this is the problem that they were telling me that they're both sides of running up against
is like you have to coordinate telling your guys, hey, turn off your jamming so that we can fly
our missions, but if I'm that infantry unit, I'm not going to turn off my, basically, it's like
a force field. So you're asking me to lower my shield so that you can know thanks. And then even
if they are, it's just a, you know, there's the air of human communication. It's like, hey,
at what time are you running your op? But it took you an extra five, ten minutes to get your actual,
you know, drone set up for whatever reason. And you didn't relay that properly or it didn't get
communicated effectively. Now it's jammed up. And then from their perspective, they're probably like,
hey, it's better that we jam up everything and protect everyone
than to risk letting, you know, a Russian drone in.
Yes.
Wow.
It's the exact dilemma.
And then I'm sure the Russians are also running EWs as well.
Yeah.
So everyone's got this force field and you're trying to basically circumvent
each other's force fields with your drones.
I mean, it's like.
And trying to ask, it's like putting the greater good ahead of your own.
Right.
You're asking your guys to be like, hey, shut it down so that we can hit them.
And a lot of times they'll be like, yeah, sure.
Oh, it's still up?
I don't know what happened.
How do you retrieve a drone?
Let's say you send it a kilometer away to, you know, some type of Russian target.
Yeah, these drones are not the kamikaze one ways.
Right.
These, you go drop the ammunition and then it comes back.
And are they typically doing-
lands short range?
I mean, it's open source.
It's open source how far they are, but I'll say that it's, you know,
I'll say that they can go, let's say, within the ballpark of 20 kilometers out to behind the enemy lines and then 20 kilometers back.
So how do you get a drone back 20 kilometers into enemy lines?
It flies over and you control it using like a computer.
But then you lose the signal.
No, no.
They are careful not to let that happen.
So when I was there, there were several times where like they would lose the signal and then they got it back or they would call up.
and be like, they call up headquarters and say,
hey, can you get so-and-so to turn off their EW
because we're getting jammed?
And then it's like trial and error.
But when you say they get,
take their rifles and they go retrieve,
if they lose signal and not just,
because I think if it loses signal,
it like hovers before it's,
before it gets signal again.
It's not like it just falls.
Right.
And I'm assuming they might have some homing or something.
They,
they know,
you know,
they have a map similar to this.
What they're seeing is like this,
but then they'll also have a marker of GPS coordinates.
And it's all Starlink.
It's all Elon Musk's Starlink system that's running these drones.
And this is public information.
They said this.
They openly say how Elon talks about it all run on Starling.
And you can see it in the basement.
They've got this like what looks like a big server or something.
And then it goes out and they have it wired up on a place to get the signal.
And they're running your ops through that, whether they're communicating.
Secure communications are going through that as well as the drone communications. But like to your question, if if it were to lose signal and drop provided that it's not like, you know, deep behind Russian terror held territory, they'll go and retrieve it because there's a GPS marker of where it was. Wow. And that's why they carry an insane amount of ammunition with them. They've got just like mags on mags and backpacks filled with AKs, just like hundreds of rounds.
and another crazy part is the medical situation.
I'll say whenever my vehicle was the Kazavak vehicle in Iraq,
and so Kazavak and Iraq was relatively easy compared to this.
We were just...
In Kazavak means.
Casualty evacuation.
So when Iraqi would get killed or blown up,
we would throw or put them in the back of the striker
and drive them a click away,
a kilometer away,
and a Black Hawk would land
and pick them up,
get them to the level four trauma care
where they get really good surgery,
and then they could be in Germany
in like 24 hours
and getting the world's best medical care ever.
It's not how that...
Yeah, those are casualty evacuation vehicles.
You could type in Kazavak Striker.
What the Ukrainians do is a lot of Kazavak
happens in like the M113 or even just in the back of like a Jeep.
Wow.
So these Kazavaks are little hospitals on wheels.
Yes.
This is not what they had.
They have the hospital on wheels.
But the problem is for us, we didn't have to worry about as we're going to get them
to the care.
Like we're not worried about the insurgents sending a missile and hitting our hospital.
hospital, our level two care or level three care, wasn't a reality we had to worry about.
In Ukraine, they have to hide their hospitals in bunkers deep underground because if they don't,
they're going to be targeted and hit.
Those field hospitals are going to be struck with cruise missiles.
And the same for the Russians.
Like, the Ukrainians are going to hit them.
And the calculus that this changes is basically the time to,
get to getting care. So if you're wounded on the front, instead of it being 15, 20 minutes to see a
real medic, you're waiting 14 hours. Wow. So with that tourniquet, you're losing that arm.
Right. And if you survive, you're lucky. And the guys that I saw going into the Kazavak Medical
Center, their eyes were just, they had shrapnel deep into their eyes from an FPV drone that had
exploded, they were lucky because it got caught in a net, but most people aren't that lucky.
They don't survive.
So their whole casualty meta, the whole way that that works is in a near-peer war, unlike
anything that America has recently even had to consider.
Wow.
And that, I guess, is the biggest distinction for you.
Someone that's seen, you know, active warfare in Iraq, you know, you're one on the American
side so you have all the, you know, luxuries and resources of an American war. And then, I guess,
additionally, you know, you're also there for a specific cause. You know what I mean? Like, in this case,
you're there for journalism and to document what's happening. And so, you know, you don't have necessarily
the training, right? Like, you don't have, like, the specific mission. You're just kind of along for the ride.
My tour in Iraq was super tame compared to a lot of people. Like, I was not Fallujah. I saw my share of
death and it was awful.
Ukraine was
indescribably different and
sometimes not even in like a worse way, but just in
it is way worse my experience, but
weird things where
I met with the Foreign Legion, which are
Americans, veterans of Iraq, that
are serving in the Ukrainian Foreign Legion
and fighting now for Ukraine. It's weird to like,
talk to a bunch of dudes that for once spoke English.
Yeah, voluntarily they're going.
Yes, yes.
So a lot of them are former veterans.
Yeah, I knew a guy that did that.
I know him.
He'd served in Ukraine for like six months or something,
then came back.
Yeah.
So tons of dudes do it.
And the guy, it was eye-opening for me
because it's way easier to communicate with them
and get, like, really have a conversation with them in English.
And one of them was a Fallujah veteran who was like,
he felt bad that what he did in Iraq, he felt like was messed up and awful. He invaded a country
he felt his perspective. He invaded this country and did the wrong thing and that this for him
was like a cathartic. It was him doing something that was good protecting people this time.
But with that, you're also getting the, you know, the amenities of a much smaller force.
So here's what I, yes, he was talking about that.
how it's so different than Iraq and like you're on your own almost.
But what they were telling me and they all told me,
it would tell me it was interesting.
Difference between Iraq and Afghanistan is like,
when you're on the front, it's hell.
But then you rotate back after, let's say, a week and you're back in the rear way,
you know, 20, 30 kilometers where you sleep at when you're not at that rotation at the front.
And then you can like go get pizza.
We go on a date.
You could like hang.
with your buddies and have a good time and like enjoy the city.
Yeah, bizarre.
So weird.
What's up guys?
We're going to take a break really quick because I need to tell you about how you are
potentially entitled for some compensation.
That's right.
You may have been injured without even knowing it.
And I think statistically most Americans have been injured by this.
We know that our food is poison.
Many of these companies, these massive conglomerates are pumping our food with stabilizers
and gums and other processed chemicals.
that are illegal in most other countries,
but for some reason in America, they are fully legal,
and they are allegedly causing many health problems.
That's a very small alleged.
I actually just read a book about this,
ultra-processed humans.
It's fascinating that the processed chemicals
that are going into our foods are terrible for you.
I mean, if you were to take a baked cookie
and a cookie that's filled with processed preservatives,
even if they have the same exact nutritional profile,
the one with the preservatives and all the gums and stabilizers
and ultra-processing chemicals is going to be worse for you by a far, far margin.
So if you have been exposed to many of these ultra-processed foods, they've been known to be
addictive, they've been known to target children, and they can potentially cause chronic
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and let's get back to the show.
I remember, I spoke with a World War I historian,
this guy Benjamin Hett.
He's a brilliant guy.
But he described one of the bizarre things
that was happening World War I is that it's one of the most bloody sort of gruesome wars ever up
into that point, right? It's like this trench warfare and, you know, chemical weapons. But then,
you know, you were fighting on these borders and then taking a train back to London and that you would
get rotated out and you'd be back in London with your countrymen and with your family, but still
reeling from the trauma you just experienced, unlike any other war you'd ever been in, you know,
even if you had been conscripted for, you know, a decade. It's unlike anything you've ever seen.
and then get back on a train and go back to the front lines.
And so he said that the PTSD actually worsened,
getting pulled out of, you know,
these like war environments going into civilian environments,
specifically civilians of their own kind,
assuming these guys going back into, you know,
rear position or not, you know, just like, hey, we're out of war, you know,
like I imagine it's a little bit different.
But I think that that change is probably necessary to an extent,
but also can be traumatizing if you're not around the right people.
So I think that experience is actually even different
than what I'm talking about,
because that does sound like it could be traumatic
because you're getting, like you said,
you're getting on a train, right?
Like you're going to the rear.
You're back in London.
Everyone's like, oh, how's it going?
How's war?
This is different.
This is, you're not going back to London.
You're going a 15-minute drive.
Oh, is that close.
Yes.
Oh, I thought it was like two hours, three hours in.
You're going like a 20-minute ride away.
And then you're at a city where,
yeah, they'll get hit with missiles,
occasionally, but
if two missiles, three missiles
hit a city, the size of it hit
New York City, like in Upper East Side, you wouldn't
know about it down, you know, like
Lower East Side, right?
It's like similar to that. It's awful. It's terrible.
But like these cities
that are 20, 30 minutes from the front,
you can definitely
feel that the war is there, but you can
also the burger place is open.
Like, bizarre.
Yeah, it's, so I would say
these dudes, it's almost
not that's not less traumatic.
It's just different because you have that,
at least you have that release.
So you can at least,
there was one guy that I met when I was in Kursk,
who he's rotating to the front in Kersk in Russia.
And then when I took him back to interview him,
he then went and met with his wife.
His wife came up from Sumi to meet him.
I won't say where, but like near Kursk.
And he was then going back to the zero line in Kursk.
the next day.
Like, you can see your wife that in, when I was in Iraq, I, you're, you're there and you are
no alcohol, no, just dudes.
So many dudes.
Yeah.
Like wall-to-wall dudes.
Yeah, just working out, maybe you get one video game on like a shitty, you know, PS1.
A lot of gay chicken, like, all day.
So, like, I'm not saying it's less traumatic.
I'm just saying that it's a, to me, it was like, what is going on here?
It's so different.
It's just crazy.
It's like,
um,
I think the way you see it and feel it and sense it is that guys,
um,
it seemed like there was me,
I might be totally wrong,
but just from like what I saw,
maybe a little less in fighting,
especially because you've got such an enemy.
And maybe I'm totally wrong and people could correct me if I am.
But like,
maybe they just,
oh,
there's a journalist here.
I'm not going to argue with my buddy,
but like seemed,
and it's also cultural, like less of a rank structure.
The dudes just way different military structure
in terms of the way they treated each other,
acted with each other.
To me, it was amazing because I got to learn
how the sausage is made in a major,
insane peer-to-peer, near-peer war,
just the scale of it.
Absolutely mind-boggling.
Everywhere you go, everyone's in uniform.
I thought, I'm like, are there really, like, millions of people fighting this war?
Are they just inflating these numbers or something?
But there are, everyone you see is in uniform.
And all these buildings are filled with troops and armored vehicles, especially as you get closer to the front, away from Keeve.
And the casualties, too, are, I was like,
are there really thousands of people dying here?
Just that small sliver of the front
that I was at near Toretsk,
that day I saw, it was, I think,
only 10 wounded that morning,
but I asked the medic, I'm like,
how many wounded do you have a day?
And they're like, we'll have 20 wounded or killed a day.
And they're showing me photos of people
with their limbs blown off by chunks of artillery.
And I got to bring a piece of Russian artillery
shrapnel back, hunk of metal,
that if it's moving at 3,000 feet per second,
taking your coat.
Yes.
Wow.
Now, I guess for comparison,
I'm not sure if you can even speak to this,
but like in Iraq,
if you're on like the zero line there,
how many Americans would be wounded a day?
There's no zero line.
In Iraq, it's asymmetrical warfare.
So it's, you're on a patrol base,
and then there's insurgents all around.
All around.
But not as intense.
There's not like, there's no front line.
is how it was when I was there.
There was, you know, a period of the war
where there was, like, a front,
but I was there during the occupation phase.
And, um, but, but in any, you know,
like sort of patrolling area,
would there be, like, as 20 wounded or, you know, casualties,
that would be high for the Americans per day.
Yeah, the amount of casualties I saw when I was in Iraq during the period I was there
was there was, there would usually be, I think it was like one or two,
Iraqi police would get wounded or killed per week.
Here you're seeing 15 or 20 in just this small section get killed or wounded per day.
And so multiply that by a week.
And you've got, you know, that's any and then multiply it by that.
Okay, so that's a 10, 15 kilometer section of the front.
Multiply that by, it's a 1,250 kilometer.
Then you start, you're like, oh, okay.
It is like a thousand.
Yeah, and certainly some sections are going to be, you know, more hostile than others, but you kind of average it out.
Yes.
I'm curious about the civilians that are in these areas, like Kursk and things like that.
Evacuated.
They're all gone.
Yes.
And so like-
There's military evacuations.
There's martial law in this country.
So every matter where you go, every 20, 30 kilometers is a checkpoint.
There are SBU, you know, like our version of the FBI that are checking IDs, making sure you're not a deserter, making sure you're not a spot.
asking the password, code word, that only Ukrainians know.
So...
Are there Russian civilians in any of these areas?
Like, obviously, I know, like...
My fixer was he was born in Russia.
My guide that drove...
So let me give you, if you don't mind, I'll give you quick,
just like, the stuff that I couldn't talk about in the videos that I put out were, like,
the backstory of it.
So just to even get to Ukraine, you have to fly to Poland to the east, or sorry, the west,
Poland, a little bit more of the West.
Yeah, so I flew into Warsaw.
And from Warsaw, you have to take a train that is 17 hours.
And there's like a sleeper car in it.
It's really cramped, tiny car.
And that train for 17 hours gets you to Kiev.
And Kiev is, you can see that there's a war happening here, a lot of soldiers.
But people go out at night and get drinks and have fun,
and it's a really beautiful, nice city.
There's a curfew.
Can't go out past, I think it's like 12 or 1 or something,
or you know, might get questioned.
If you know Eastern Europeans, that's pretty early.
Yeah, they go out to like 6, 7 in the morning.
With their discotheque.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Americans are listening to be like,
that's the curfew of Arizona.
Yeah, New York.
which we're, that's how we're pre-gaming at that point.
So, so I take the train into Kiev and I'm like, I can't wait to get out of Kiev.
Like, I want to get further east.
I want to see if I can get to the front.
And who's on the train from Poland?
Like, it's all women because there's very few men because as martial law, the country's in lockdown.
You can't, you don't really see any men under 60 on the train.
So it's people that are probably going to see their family, women, they're going to see their
family that maybe the women evacuated to women and children who are going to see family in
Poland or in Europe and very maybe one or two men I saw on the train who were over 65 going
into Kiev right and as soon as we get there I'm an auntie I want to get out and my fixer
advises me like no let's talk to some diplomats here let me show you the memorials let me
give you a sense of my country and like it'll be good if we spend a little bit of time here.
So I spend one, I think it was a night there and you get woken up at like midnight by this
app on your phone that tells you that there's bombing raids happening and just have to like turn
it off at a certain point.
You're supposed to go to the bomb shelter, but I'm like, too tired.
I'm just going to sleep through this.
And I'm really glad that I spent that time.
in Kiev because I met with, I had the opportunity to get drinks with some intelligence agents
who, it's like guys that are like our version of the CIA, right? And I'm, I just get
annihilated with these guys. And we're like swapping stories about like, you know, because we,
we're allies in a way. We're, they, we have a mutual respect for each other. I also mentioned, I
I imagine there's a similar cut.
You know what I mean?
Like you and these guys, despite being different countries,
causes nationalities, potentially religions,
is, you know, you guys are the same type of guy.
Yes.
And that's like, we're the type of people who want to serve our country,
whether it's they want to serve Ukraine,
I want to serve America,
and I want to tell their story.
And they want me to tell it right,
but they don't know if they can trust me.
Because there's a lot of people that go there and want to, like,
blow up their spot, expose.
Yeah, they also don't know your agenda.
Like, if Ukrainians are getting shit-faced every night, they're not taking
seriously.
Right.
I'm sure there's pieces like that that come out.
They're,
they're, these guys are familiar with like the videos that I've done over the years.
So they know that I cover Ukraine and like, let's be honest, a pretty positive light
for them.
So they're, uh, I would say probably cautiously optimistic that were aligned on a lot
of our values.
And I'm trying to figure out if, because when I went to Iraq, I thought that it was
going to be very dark, I thought the people there want us to
give them freedom and when I got there, it's very much not that. So I'm going to Ukraine
thinking these people want democracy. They want to be a part of the West. They want to fight
against these evil or these authoritarian. But I'm like also thinking in my head, maybe it's
going to be the same situation where I'm being let down and they're like, these are bad dudes.
They're corrupt. They're assholes. And so we're feeling each other out. And we're there's
these, I don't know what type of drink that they have there, but this is crazy.
It's like, makes Red Bull look like decaffeinated.
Yeah.
And it's mixed with, I don't know what kind of vodka, probably Russian.
And I'm, pre-work out moonshine.
Yeah, I'm turnt.
We're like, they're teaching me how to curse in Ukrainian and we're like how to do different
saludes.
And we're just getting a feel for each other.
He's like, I like you.
Like, you're a good guy.
You're not like some of these other people that come through here.
Like, I like you too.
And he's, and he's like, what would you, what are you trying to get out of here?
I really, you know, I want to know the truth.
I want to see what's happening here for myself.
And he's like, I, you know, I get you into Kursk.
I get you to Russia.
And I like, put down the shot.
And I'm like, no one, you don't, you guys don't let anyone go to Kersk.
Like, no Western journalists are allowed there.
The Russian government is prosecuting journalists that go there.
They're, you know, if you go to Venezuela, you go to Uzbekistan, go to Turkey,
you're going to get arrested on your passport if you go to Kersk because you're illegally entering
Russia without your passport being stamped.
And he's like, I know the guy who runs PR, public relations, he does the communications
for the Kersk operation,
and I'll get you in.
And I'm like,
you know, you hear a lot of people
promise you this and that.
Like, yeah, man, I'll go.
Like, hook it up.
After a couple drinks.
You know, everyone's got a,
everyone's got something to offer.
Yeah, yeah.
I figure up like,
this guy's full shit.
And then, like, a few days later,
they're setting it up.
They're giving time and date and where to be.
And so by spending this time in Keev
and getting to know these people,
and giving it the right, you know, like doing it right instead of just rushing into this
and trying to like, because some people do that. They go, they try to like just elbow their
way into the front. Like you don't want to do that. You want to, if you're in somebody's house,
you play by their rules. And so they, they, that I was fortunate enough to be like one of the only
Western journalists to be able to go to curse before the withdrawal. Wow. Now, how can you be
sure that you're getting the most honest look because I believe you when you say like oh I'm looking
for the truth but if they're ushering you in knowing that you have a you know PR presence how can you
be sure that you're getting the real no I think that they took me on a like a what they wanted me
to see what they wanted the world to see I think it's my job to acknowledge that say like this is
what they want you to see and in the video at some points I say like they told me you know they've made a
show of how the Russians are pounding their own civilians and that they're not killing civilians.
And I'm like, that didn't really resonate with me because I saw them at other points.
Like, Ukrainians are bombing civilian houses too.
Like, it's our job to try to see through what is, yeah, there's some truth to what they're showing me,
but they're also, this is what they want to show me.
Right. And there also can be an omission of truth, which, you know,
You're getting a certain perspective, which is true, but it might be, you know, this most severe element.
It might be part of the truth.
And the way I look at it is like, it's not my job to, like, I have to go to Russia now and like also report on the Russian side.
There's plenty of people doing that.
And I encourage people to find those resources and to look at what they're saying.
Like, look at what RT is saying.
What, but we also, I think, have to tell their side of the story.
And like, undoubtedly, civilians are getting, we're getting killed.
Anywhere war goes, innocent people are dying.
And it's awful.
Like, so I didn't want my trip to be like a trip to North Korea where they show you through, like, the nice supermarket.
But also, I wanted to tell their side of the story.
because if I don't tell an American audience their side of the story, if I don't give them a platform and a loudspeaker, like, who will?
Because the Russians, they have a loudspeaker.
There are people telling their side of the story.
Right.
Which I think is fruitful.
Like, you know, again, like in the way that you're showing this side, like, you know, I know people criticize Tucker and other, you know, journalists that go to Russia.
But I actually think, like, his conversation with Putin was really enlightening and made, you know,
put the whole thing in perspective where it's like, oh, I can see why this aggression is happening
from his perspective. And again, like, I think it'd probably be, I don't know, maybe short-sighted
feudal to basically be like, oh, one person is wholly right and one person is wholly wrong. And,
you know, only one side is committing atrocities. Another one isn't. Like, that's the nature
of war is that, you know, both sides are going to, you know, do wrong. And you can maybe measure
it on a scale, like, who's doing more. And that's probably, you know, up for debate. But,
Yeah, I think that showing in good faith the side that you've been shown and being transparent
be like, hey, this is what I saw. I don't think that there's, you know, any fault in that.
I tried also to focus a lot on the logistics of it and talk about like the tactics of it as much as I could
because they very much wanted to push the, they had a story they wanted to tell by giving me access.
They wanted to tell the story that, hey, we're not, you know, essaying and we're not murdering and
killing and pillaging.
That's the story they wanted to tell.
And I told that story.
And I think that it's true to the degree that I told it.
But there's also the side that I'm more interested in telling, which is like, look at
the logistics of their 24-7.
They're running thousands of trucks up this one road and in and out of here to resupply it.
And they have to rotate the truth.
Like, you know, that piece of it, which was the majority of the video.
So, you know, I didn't feel, I didn't feel like I'm going on some like just propaganda
or tell their story.
I'm telling what I, the piece that I know, which is the ground level troops, tactics,
strategy.
And then on top of that, yeah, I'm interested in the geopolitics of it and the other
side of it.
But that's, to me, 10% of it.
No, I'm curious, like now that, you know, based off what you've seen and kind of what
you've been updated with in, I guess, a couple of things.
One, in the time that Trump cut off aid to Ukraine, were you speaking with any of your contacts there trying to get, you know, and telling what's going on? Did Russia use that as an opportunity to strike?
They absolutely exploited the gap. They tried to, they did that last time, too, when American aid was shut off in 2024. And I spoke with the Ukrainians and they felt betrayed.
Mm-hmm.
And it's best, it's good to acknowledge that, that Europe and Ukraine felt betrayed.
There's a lot of different ways of looking at it.
You know, it seems to have accelerated Europe's mindset that they need to double down on defense and invest in defense, which is something that America has been asking for for years.
In three years, they've been, Russia has been at war, and, like, they still haven't really peddled to the metal.
And a lot of times with what you would call the defense burden or burden sharing or the freeloader dilemma is that, like,
Why would you stop taking money from your guarantor unless they cut it?
Right.
And why would, you know, England, France, Germany,
why would they support Ukraine if America's already footing the bill and, you know,
getting everything settled?
Yeah.
Interesting.
So I'm curious now kind of where things stand if you had to, had to guess.
And I'm going to put you in a difficult spot to try to see the future.
If you had to guess kind of how things play out the next six months,
would you put money on kind of more stalemate negotiations quasi sort of ceasefire do things accelerate from here
there are several directions that i could go in there's different likelihoods of those directions
i'm not confident enough to give a likelihood on which direction it'll go but i'll say that
it could either be that trump starts to pressure russia and starts to pressure them to because
he's unhappy with the speed that they're moving, that they're not get, both sides are not
reaching a ceasefire as fast as you like and he starts pressuring Russia, which could lead to
escalation or it could lead to Russia agreeing to a ceasefire.
Interesting.
So I think that's what's on the horizon.
So high likelihood that Trump will put pressure where that goes is kind of.
It's a possibility.
I don't even know if it's highly likely, but it's definitely.
a possibility that he puts pressure on Russia at this point. It's also a possibility that he puts
more pressure on Ukraine to accept the concessions to Russia's ceasefire that we read earlier,
those different points. Like maybe he tries to pressure Ukraine into accepting that. It's,
I would say at this point, very difficult for me to say. Yeah. Yeah, it's interesting. Just seeing so
much talk, I guess, you know, on Twitter, both sides of people saying, like, oh, Trump is,
you know, like Putin's little crony and he's, like, doing the bidding of Putin. I think that
probably oversimplifies it. Like, I wonder if it's similar to, like, you know, like a bully picking
on a kid and then the school being like, okay, you're both suspended. And instead of being like,
oh, you're siding with the bully, it's like, hey, I don't care. I just want this to stops to further
my own personal agenda of being, you know, a president that, you know, made peace to focus.
on other issues. And if that means, you know, there's a little bit unfairness, I don't care.
It's kind of the way that I'm kind of seeing it. I'm curious if you think that's somewhat accurate.
He is from his perspective and what, from their communications, he's portraying himself as the
arbiter. Zalinski didn't want that. He wanted the United States in his corner, publicly saying
that they're in his corner. Whatever you need, we got you. We got your back. Russia's the aggressor.
They're the problem. Trump's, what he's saying is that you don't reach a,
deal by doing that. You don't get to a deal by doing that. Again, like, I'm just a everyday infantryman.
I don't know the intricacies of negotiations, but I do understand a little bit about how people work
and I feel like I at least can see what they're arguing. I do think, you know, some people,
you hate Trump. I try to be very nonpolitical in my videos and my analysis. Like, when I was covering
Biden and the military stuff he did. It's like America's doing this. This is what America's doing.
This is what the people who America elected Biden and this is what the country's doing.
Like, for me, it's the same analysis. This is what Trump's doing. He was elected. This is what America's
doing. And America right now has decided that it's in their interest to be the arbiter, to be a
neutral arbiter, to like you said, to like not play favorites and to say and to, and to,
to say like you're both not going to be happy with this.
Is that going to work?
Like we're we're going to find out over the next.
These, these negotiations take years.
Vietnam, I think it took, I don't remember exactly,
three years or something for them to reach a peace agreement.
Not a month, not a couple weeks.
No, it takes a long time.
This might go a lot faster.
We don't know.
You know, you look at other wars that ended in peace agreements
and you see how difficult they are.
involved and the back and forth and the like, you know, you have to slowly and sure,
but like reach, figure out what they're willing to accept, what you're willing to accept,
are either of you ready to accept that military means is not your best option?
Maybe one of you feels like it is.
So like, this is the back and forth and back and forth.
Also, the American political system also creates an interesting dilemma as well,
because if both sides are unhappy with the potential agreement,
could they look at each other and be like,
hey, we're going to wait until Trump's out of office
and then try to renegotiate with the new administration
and see what America brings us next?
And, you know, maybe they're playing more favoritism with Ukraine.
And then in which case, Ukraine
almost has an interest in sort of stalling.
And, you know, Russia might have an interest in stalling
saying like, hey, we're just going to run this back
and keep on mowing you guys down.
And, you know, it's possible that Trump might not be able to
solve it within, you know, the next three years.
It's this like you just pointed out.
There are legitimately hundreds of variables that are going into this.
What's Russian population's opinion on ending the war and on what terms are they okay with ending the war?
What is the Ukrainian population's opinion on what, you know, because what their people think is a very important factor.
not just what the leaders think.
And also, yeah, like, just so many variables that go into, this is why I say, it's like the most crazy negotiation.
And why if I were to also add on to it like a layer of just like political bias and like I hate Trump or I love Trump, like to me, that doesn't serve the analysis.
Yeah, sort of beside the point.
It's like what is happening and what could or will happen in the future and your feelings are sort of, you know, uh,
not really important in that regard.
I'll say this, whether you hate him or love him,
to say that he's like a pawn of Putin,
I feel like if he were,
wouldn't he just not have restarted aid,
not have restarted military aid?
Because now they're once again giving intelligence and weapons.
So like, if you're,
what I think is that he's,
he is, and I don't know if this is a good idea or not,
but like it seems like he's 100% wants to shift the focus to China.
because the United States is not going to be able to counter China.
And I know this is a topic for a different episode,
but I'll just say that like,
the United States cannot counter China
if they have to devote any percentage of their resources,
air defense munitions, any of that to Ukraine,
because they need every single air defense munition for the Pacific.
They need it and more.
Right.
And so, you know, yeah, if any of your attention is there,
you're screwed. And the idea that like Europe is going to help in a war with China,
probably very unlikely. Yeah, they're barely just getting going on a war on their own continent.
Right. And then also like what are they going to devote there? Like UK and France has some ships. Yeah,
but I mean, the majority of the combat power for that war, I think is going to be from the countries that
are already in Pacific. And that's like a different episode, but I'll just say that's what I'm looking at.
Yeah. And who knows what China's interested in.
keeping this war going looks like, I mean, they seem to have some benefit and whether they're
actively, you know, stoking or somehow creating conflict or not. Yeah, and I don't, I don't,
there's arguments we made that it's in their interest. That's not in their interest. Definitely a
discussion that I feel like we should have because the China thing and the Iran thing is stuff
that is about to, I think, hit the forefront in ways that we have not seen.
in a long time.
Hmm.
Okay.
Well, we'll save that for another episode,
Cappy.
I appreciate this.
Thank you for your astute analysis,
as always.
If I'm interested in seeing more of your analysis,
I can go to Cappy Army.
You can.
Yeah.
New channel.
Can we pull it up?
Actually, I want to see.
There it is.
That's it.
Nice.
Yes.
So we have not launched yet,
and we've got 15,000 subscribers
that have already come to the channel
and we're launching,
by the time this episode is up,
we will have launched.
Gabe, hit him with a subscribe, dude. Come on, huh? There you go. Gang. Adding even more. Thank you so much. I appreciate it. And yeah, look forward to our next convo.
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