Judging Freedom - Aaron Maté: Is Ukraine Now Trump’s War?
Episode Date: April 22, 2025Aaron Maté: Is Ukraine Now Trump’s War?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
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you Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Tuesday, April
22nd, 2025. Aaron Mate joins us now. Aaron, thanks very much for your time as always.
Aaron, is Ukraine now Donald Trump's war?
Absolutely.
He's been talking recently about how this is Biden's war
and there's a lot of truth to that.
Joe Biden has been all over this Ukraine proxy war project
from the start, dating back to 2014,
but Biden's out of office now
and Donald Trump is the president
and it's his choice
whether he wants to continue it or not.
And I don't think he wants to personally continue it, but he's facing forces from within.
He's got people like Keith Kellogg and Marco Rubio whispering in his ear.
They don't want to be the ones to make a deal with Russia and be accused of what's called
appeasement in Washington, which simply just means diplomacy and brokering some kind of
compromise.
So, it's up to Trump now to decide what he wants to do.
And although I think ultimately he will not go before Congress to ask for more money for
the Ukraine proxy war, and a source close to the White House recently told me that there's
no chance of him doing that, how he actually gets to ending the war I think is still being
considered because he doesn't seem to have his full weight behind it at this point.
Chris run the clip of Trump saying it's Biden's war, cut number 16.
Do you have a reaction to Russia's Palm Sunday attack on Ukraine?
I think it was terrible and I was told they made a mistake, but I think it's a horrible
thing.
I think the whole war is a horrible thing. I think the war is,
for that war to have started, is an abuse of power. They said they made a mistake. You were told they made a mistake.
You mean it was unintentional?
They made a mistake. I believe it was... Look, you're going to ask them.
This is Biden's war. This is not my war. I've been here for a very short period of time.
This is a war that was under Biden.
He gave him billions and billions of dollars.
He should have never allowed, if he had any brain, which he didn't have and doesn't have
and now it's being proven, he wouldn't have allowed that war to start.
I would have absolutely not.
That war would never have taken place.
But remember this, this is Biden's war.
I'm just trying to get it stopped so that we
can save a lot of lives. They happen to be Ukrainian and Russian lives. But all I want to do is get it
stopped. He must have said four times that it was Biden's war. We all know the history. You pointed
it out. It was back to 2014. But he has been in office for 100 days. He does not appear to have turned off.
We know he hasn't turned off. He hasn't even dialed back the spigot. He stopped Intel for about five
days, but now Intel is back advising the Ukrainians where to hit. Is General Kovoli, are General
Kovoli's people still strategizing for them in Germany? Do we know that?
That's a great question.
I suspect now Cavoli has handed off some authority to his NATO allies
so that they can continue this operation because without NATO support, Ukraine is extremely,
extremely jeopardized. I mean, they're already in trouble to begin
with. So there must be a way that this is continuing with possibly a lesser role for
Washington. But the question is, again, when first of all, what is Russia willing to accept
at this point? They've talked about Istanbul Plus, there was a deal on the table three
years ago now, three years ago this month month that was brokered by Ukrainian and Russian officials in Istanbul. We all know what happened.
Zelensky walked away from that under pressure from the UK and US. And now Russia is demanding
Istanbul Plus, that Ukraine recognized the territories that Russia now claims as its
own beyond just Crimea, which was Russia's main demand back in April 2022.
Now there's basically a number, there's several more regions, Zaporocha among them.
And so, well, if Trump can get Ukraine to basically accept that, is Russia going to
accept just a deal that addresses Ukraine, or is Russia going to also press its demands about a broader security arrangement in which NATO rolls back its military assets that threatens
Russia? For example, Russia wanted to address Trump's own dissolution of the
INF Treaty which allows for the US to point high-powered long-range missiles
at Russia and Russia wanted that addressed back before it invaded Ukraine.
I don't see Trump walking that back, though.
I don't see Trump going back on his own decision to kill the INF Treaty.
And so is Russia going to be content with basically a deal that cedes control of some
formerly Ukrainian regions and puts NATO's membership in Ukraine permanently off the
table?
I suspect they would, but we'll only know once these
negotiations play out. And there's supposed to be a new decision from Ukraine this week as to whether
or not the recently proposed U.S. terms. So basically, a lot of things are still in play.
But is the U.S. making any progress in negotiations? And is the only issue
just Russia's demands? Crimea, the four oblasts, no NATO and a new government in Ukraine?
Or is it a big reset, which might take Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in the same room
to bring about?
Yeah, I just don't see Trump agreeing to a big reset, given that it was some of his
own policies that he had to undo, including walking away from the INF Treaty.
He's also talking recently about spending a trillion dollars on the Pentagon budget,
after initially talking about cutting the Pentagon budget in half.
So if that's where he's going, they're going to need enemies like Russia to justify such
a massive expenditure.
So I don't think a big reset is likely.
But I do think we will see Trump walking away from the US role in the proxy war.
Again, I spoke to a source recently, close to several White House officials who is extremely
confident that there will be no new Trump request for money for the Ukraine proxy war.
And when that money runs out, it's anyone's guess, I suspect it's the summertime.
At that point,
where is Ukraine going to go? Because Europe, despite all its tough talk,
can't make up for the US when it comes to weapons and intelligence.
You wrote recently about Trump's disdain and mockery for a Ukrainian request for a Patriot
missile system, but did he send it anyway?
Patriot missile system, but did he send it anyway?
Well, there have been continued weapons deliveries from the US to
Ukraine as to this latest Patriot request. I don't know actually I don't think so unless you've heard something different
Hmm. Well, I mean, I don't know. I mean he he was very Trumpian. I mean, you quoted this in your article. Why do you start a war with somebody 20 times your size
and then expect other people to help you?
It's a little late in the day,
but you know, he's the type of person to say that,
get it off his chest and then say to Hegseth,
or send it over there anyway.
But I don't, we don't know if this stuff was,
and then Hegseth will tell his wife and his gardener what he said what he said
I haven't heard any news of them actually granting Ukraine's
Request and by the way when he talks about this is Biden's war and we spent billions of dollars
Fueling it well, why doesn't he apply that also to the Gaza genocide?
Which also was Biden's war because by by gave Israel the green light to commit mass
murder and Trump is continuing that policy. So you also apply that to the Gaza war as
well.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that that's the issue of the tail wagging the dog. If you're talking
about Netanyahu, what is your take on the Petegseth stuff lately? Seems like it's more than just a one,
one off simple mistake. Yes, it's hard to know what's going on because there definitely seems
to be I mean, first of all, Pete Hegseth himself, I mean, we all have our it's pretty clear that
he's not qualified for the job. I mean, when you have spent, you know,
with all due respect to former Fox News host judge,
I don't think he's qualified to be the secretary of defense.
And it seems like his main qualification
was that Trump liked him on TV and sees him as a loyalist,
which, you know, is not, I think,
sufficient grounds to be hired to head the Pentagon.
But there does seem to be some sort of infighting inside the Trump camp.
And I don't know where Pete Hegseth falls in that.
I mean, we do know recently from the New York Times that Pete Hegseth was among the officials
along with Tulsi Gabbard and JD Vance who were opposed to Trump bombing Iran.
So then with Pete Hegseth being targeted with media leaks, I have to wonder if this is a part of that.
I'm not saying it is for sure,
but I have to raise that question.
And we know recently that there were some officials fired
from the Pentagon who are opposed to war with Iran,
including Dan Caldwell,
who gave an interview to Tucker Carlson recently,
basically saying that he was fired
for opposing war with Iran.
So there's some factional infighting going on and if Pete Hegseth is being targeted
I'm saying I don't know this for sure
but if if he's being targeted because he's not in the
hawkish bomb Iran camp then I have to be skeptical of all this controversy surrounding him as
Admittedly unqualified as he is. Here's a very interesting take on that controversy. I don't know if you know this fellow, I don't.
Although I've obviously seen the clip we're gonna run.
His name is Brian Tyler Cohen, and he's a podcaster.
So this is somewhat serious and somewhat ridiculous
about Pete Hegseth.
Chris, cut number eight.
See, this is what the media does.
They take anonymous sources from disgruntled former employees,
and then they try to slash and burn people and ruin their reputations.
Not gonna work with me.
Yup, not gonna work with him.
And this is where I actually agree with the Secretary of Defense.
It is appalling when members of the media try and slash and burn patriotic Americans
simply for mishandling some classified information. Right, Mr. Hegseth?
If the top man in the job was to handle classified documents this flippantly for that long, why
was that the case?
Was it really that he didn't know?
Because when you take something out of a skiff, if you're a senator, you know exactly what
you're doing.
Any security professional, military, government or otherwise, would be fired on the
spot for this type of conduct and criminally prosecuted for being so reckless with this kind
of information. Oh no! First the pope is dead and now hypocrisy. Why? So the man who was widely
criticized as unqualified has shown himself to be just that. Seriously, this is the guy that we're
keeping around? Apparently to be the
Secretary of Defense, the person in charge of a proposed trillion-dollar budget, and
the largest military in the world. All you need to be is a white guy with a nice head
of hair and some broadcasting experience.
I'm coming for you, Pete. I don't know the guy.
I guess he's a humorist, but he certainly makes his point.
He does. There's a ton of hypocrisy to go around here.
As the clip pointed out, people like Peter Hexeth made a huge issue out of Democrats when they
mishandled classified information, namely Hillary Clinton's email server. And yeah, discussing war plans on a signal chat
is certainly, had Hillary Clinton done that,
her Republican detractors would have had a field day.
So there's a lot of hypocrisy.
And Pete Hegseth, his defense is,
well, the media lies all the time
and they carried out the Russia hoax, and that's true.
And because the Russia hoax was such a scam, I do think that will offer people
like Pete Hegs at the shield of protection because unfortunately, because of the
scale of fraud that it took to pull off Russia gate, a lot of people just don't
trust established media anymore and won't take their outrage about hypocrisy and
and the signal gate controversy very seriously.
outrage about hypocrisy and the Signalgate controversy very seriously.
And so that's why I do think this second term Trump team is more protected against
media so-called scandals than they were in their first term.
Interesting observation.
I thought when
when the New York Times reported that Hegseth sided with Vance and Gabbard
and advised Trump not to bomb Iran, I thought, gee, this is not the Hegseth I know. Maybe there's another side to him, a very desirable side.
And then three people were fired. And I thought, oh, he didn't want the world to know of this side
of them because it's not that much. Donald Trump, let's kill the other side side.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
It's hard to know what's going on inside this White House.
What we do know is that there are competing camps on all these issues
on Ukraine as well. Keith Kellogg, Marco Rubio, Mike Waltz.
I mean, these are career hawks.
And it's not as if they had some epiphany
and realized they wanted to be peacemakers all of a sudden.
Why is Kellogg still there after that nonsense of,
let's divide Ukraine up like the allies did Germany
after World War II?
I mean, that's inconceivable that Putin would go for that.
Why does he even put it out there?
It's a great question.
And especially given that Trump is delegating his friend,
Steve Wicoff, to do the jobs that everyone else
is supposed to have.
I mean, Marco Rubio is supposed to be the Secretary of State, yet Steve Wyckoff is both
meeting with Vladimir Putin and then jetting off to meet with the foreign minister of Iran.
So why is anybody else there if Steve Wyckoff is the one handling all these different portfolios?
It's a little chaotic.
But listen, great question.
I don't know why Keith Kellogg is still there, but sure.
I think we can safely say that he's not doing very much.
Uh, here's a clip from a former vice president Al Gore.
It's only about two hours old and it's going viral, uh, already.
Uh, he's addressing a climate group,
but he's going after Trump for his assault on the assaults
on civil liberties.
Number 15.
The scale and scope of the ongoing attacks on liberty are literally unprecedented.
With that in mind, I want to note that before I use what is not a precedent, I understand
very well why it is wrong to compare Adolf Hitler's Third Reich to any
other movement.
It was uniquely evil, full stop.
I get it.
But there are important lessons from the history of that emergent evil, and here is one that
I regard as essential.
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, a small group of philosophers who had escaped Hitler's murderous regime returned to Germany
and performed a kind of moral autopsy on the Third Right.
The most famous of the so-called Frankfurt School of Philosophers was a man named Jürgen
Habermas, best known I would say, but it was Habermas's mentor, Theodore Adorno, who wrote that the first
step in that nation's descent into hell was, and I quote, the conversion of all questions
of truth into questions of power.
He described how the Nazis, and I quote again, attacked the very heart of the distinction
between true and false.
Our constitution written by our founders is intended to protect us against a threat identical
to Donald Trump.
Someone who seeks power at all costs to get more power.
Well Harvard University is listening to him.
He's a graduate of Harvard.
By the way, the lead defendant in Harvard University, in the Harvard University case,
the lead defendant is also a graduate of Harvard, RFK Jr.
I guess he's just a nominal defendant since he actually disperses a lot of the funds. Are we getting to the point where we take for granted or as Al Gore argued, who cares about due process, we're getting rid of bad people, whatever Trump wants to do? Is the sensitivity for due process slipping out of our hands?
process slipping out of our hands?
Well, there has been more Democratic Party push back against the denial of due process to undocumented
immigrants and there has been to Trump's cracking down on
free speech. And so I do think and also the Supreme Court.
Will be weighing on cases like this and judges have already weighed against
Trump on the issue of due process. So personally, I'm not alarmed at that being in fatal jeopardy.
I am about free speech though, where foreign students can be basically kidnapped and imprisoned
and deported because they write op-eds critical of Israel. That to me is the more serious danger.
As for example, we're seeing now the Trump administration
press ahead with its deportation cases.
Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia student,
his wife just gave birth and his legal team petitioned
immigration enforcement to let him just be released
on a probationary basis, just to be there for the birth of his child, you know, with monitors and ankle monitoring all that stuff.
And within, you know, half an hour, the request was denied. So the termination is going to extreme lengths to punish people for free speech, foreigners. So that's the major assault on civil liberties that I'm most concerned
about. Not that this due process issue isn't a serious issue. It is. But you are seeing
at least Democrats push back on that more forcefully. Senator Chris Van Hollen going
to El Salvador to press the case, and more Democrats, I think, are following suit. But
the free speech issue, that's not something we can take for granted anymore. The US really
stands apart historically in its protection of free speech, and that is under assault.
Maybe because I'm too close to the Russia gate issue because I covered it for so long,
Democrats have responsibility for this as well because Democrats helped normalize the
culture where people who hold dissenting perspectives on the Cold War conflict with
Russia were smeared as Russian agents.
Foreign nationals, people like Maria Butina, who is a foreign national, she was jailed
for a very, very long time in this country simply because basically she had a Russian
passport and the government needed her to make it look as if Russia was interfering
in our politics.
So someone like Maria Butina spent a long time in prison for being an unregistered foreign agent
And really that case was just ridiculous. So I'm not excusing what Trump is doing. I think he's taking it to a new extreme
Democrats have been a part of that as well and it would be I think it would help contribute to the culture of
Civility and some sort of
reconciliation in this country if Democrats could finally acknowledge that they framed Trump as a Russian agent,
and there are a lot of negative consequences of that, because we're still dealing
with the polarization that has resulted from that.
You talk about unregistered foreign agents.
I'm going to guess that you are aware of this woman that Mike Waltz just hired to run the Israel-Iran
desk at the National Security Council. She has joint American-Israeli citizenship and she's a
former official of the Israeli Defense Ministry. I mean, this is really over the top. Why isn't this lady a foreign agent?
That's a great question. Now, as I understand it, her position is advisory. So she helps,
you know, advise on what the policy toward Iran and Israel should be. But I mean, what is she
going to recommend when, you know, AIPAC and other Israel lobbyists funnel their proposals, their agenda
through the National Security Council
and she gets her proposals, is she gonna reject them
having formerly worked with the Israeli Foreign Ministry?
Of course not.
So you might as well hire the Israeli Foreign Minister
to work in the US government
if you're gonna be hiring former Israeli officials
and Israeli colleagues like she is to set policy.
It's a joke. And again, if someone,
unfortunately, Democrats, they're so obsessed with Russia fear monitoring that if
someone ran a comparative position
inside the US government having worked for Russia,
of course, this would be a massive scandal because it's Israel.
So far, really, it's passed without much attention.
Aaron, thank you very much for your time, my dear friend, much appreciated.
We'll look forward to seeing you next week.
All the best. Thanks, Judge.
Of course.
Coming up at three o'clock on all of these topics, especially the Al Gore topic,
and particularly, do we still have a functioning democracy?
Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. MUSIC