Judging Freedom - Larry Johnson : Putin Knows History; Does Trump?
Episode Date: August 11, 2025Larry Johnson : Putin Knows History; Does Trump?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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I don't know.
Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for judging freedom. Today is Monday, August 11th,
2025. Larry Johnson will be with us on just a moment on Putin knows his history. Does Donald Trump?
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dollars, but it can't print silver. Larry Johnson, welcome here, my dear.
friend what bargaining chips does don't trump have to negotiate with vladimir putt you and i have
been all through western russia the sanctions haven't laid a glove on them yeah none he has no
leverage um he has the ability to stop the bleeding of the ukrainians by putting uh into military
aid but you know there are no sanctions he can level levy on russia that's going to change anything
There's hardly any trade anymore between Russia and the United States.
So tariffs, you know, those are ineffective.
And his attempts to punish countries that have had close relationships with Russia through bricks,
especially India, Brazil, and China, all Trump has done is energize them to dig in deeper,
to make bricks more effective, more powerful, more potent.
You know, what was, if you would have asked me a year ago, looking into 2025,
Brooks was going to be under the control of President Lula of Brazil.
And I would have said, you know, that's going to be a year of inactivity and maybe going
backwards.
Turned out just the opposite.
Once Trump hit Lula with tariffs, not over economic reasons, but for domestic political
reasons in Brazil, it galvanized Lula.
to say, hey, we're going to push back.
And so they're making more steps to grow independent
of the U.S. ability to control via the dollar,
what goes on in those countries.
So Trump has no leverage here.
It's all in, you know, it's all in Putin's favor.
You, from your years in the State Department,
know the better than I, better than most people,
that when the heads of state get together,
there usually is some agreement made ahead of time
and the getting together is to formalize it
and let them take credit for it.
You think that some agreement has been made
ahead of time that we don't know about?
I doubt it.
You know, people that climb Mount Everest,
they always like to celebrate when they get to the top,
take the picture, but they get there because of the Sherpas,
the people who actually carry the heavy bags,
They carry the oxygen.
They ferry that up.
They build the bridges.
They put the ropes in place.
They make sure that all the ropes are properly anchored.
That's why in the diplomatic world, they call the people that meet beforehand to work out the agreements, to craft out the language.
They call them the Sherpas.
So there is a, you know, it's a parallel.
And there's no Sherper work here.
So this is Donald Trump foolishly trying to clown Mike Everest by himself.
It doesn't end well.
The Sherpas would normally be, correct me if I'm wrong, if this were a normal administration with normal relations with Russia, a team from the U.S. State Department and a team from the Russian Foreign Ministry going over every little detail, every undotted eye, every uncrossed T, so that nobody is surprised and their bosses can take credit for it.
That is not the case here, apparently.
Well, in fact, the state would be in the lead, but you'd probably also have, you know,
if you're going to be talking some economic issues, there'd be somebody from Treasury,
military matters, there'd be somebody or one or two somebody's from the Department of Defense.
So actually, people with real expertise that understand the issues and that can then craft
the appropriate language.
And you'd get that from the Russian side as well.
There have been reports of some meetings, but it's not clear that they've come up with anything.
Now, if it turns out that there's been this secret negotiations underway and that they're going to sign an agreement, then, you know, I'll be surprised.
But I do not envision, as many in the United States do, that Russia is going to entertain anything involving a ceasefire.
without its conditions that it's set forth very clearly multiple times for more than a year are met.
Those conditions specifically include the recognition that the Nets, Lohant, Zaporizia, Khrasan, Crimea,
are part of Russia.
They are constitutionally part of Russia.
And that NATO will never, Ukraine will never be a member of NATO,
or NATO will never put weapons in what remains of Ukraine.
That is really, I think, boiled down to two what had been five or six of the demands,
but it's essentially the same thing.
But it makes me wonder, what does Trump think he's going to get out of this,
other than the whole world watching them for a few hours?
Judging from what he said and what has been presented,
You know, part of this is based on Cy Hirsch's latest piece
where he's talking to someone in the intelligence community.
And so I have to assume that if this is coming from what the intelligence community is telling
Sy Hirsch, they're telling Donald Trump the same thing.
And that is Trump and his team believe that this is a territorial dispute.
This is an argument between Russia and Ukraine over territory,
that Russia just somehow needs the territory.
That's not it at all, not even close.
It has nothing to do with territory.
That is the real estate developer mentality of the president and of Mr. Whitkoff.
Yeah.
And he thinks, oh, we can cut a deal where you give up this piece and take that.
That's not it.
This is about NATO expansion to the east.
and while Whitkoff is in Moscow trying to cajole Putin into a meeting,
and at the same time as that's happening,
Trump is preparing to welcome the presidents of leaders of Armenian-Isir-Bijan to Washington,
signing the deal, and the reports are within that deal is kept secret
is the intent to invite them and to make them members of NATO.
The goal of surrounding Russia, the United States, has not backed away,
from that. The United States is not interested in peaceful coexistence with Russia. And anybody
that thinks that that's the case has just not been paying attention to the U.S. actions.
I don't judge the words. I judge the actions. So has Trump totally abandoned Maga and
embraced the neocons? On this issue, yes. You know, he's, and the same with Israel,
you know, the supporting the genocide in Gaza.
This, you know, it'd be one thing if the day that Whitkoffs in Moscow talking that Trump,
you know, Trump issued that executive order declaring Russia an enemy,
a national security threat.
Yes.
Now, you know, you can say, well, I didn't really mean it.
What are you doing?
Now, the Russians are watching all of this, and, you know, I think they now realize that they are considered an enemy,
but Putin is trying to find a way to keep this from becoming a nuclear conflagration.
The reason Trump is now pushing, you know, remember his deadline was initially 50 days,
then it went down to 10 days or 12 days.
and then this urgency to get Whitkoff over there to beg Putin for a meeting.
Well, why did he do that?
He did that because the military situation on the ground is worsening much, much quicker for Ukraine than anyone anticipated.
And this is sort of, I call it, this is a revision of the Mence II ploy or the Battle of the Votsable.
Because back in January, February, 2015, the militias and the Donbos was support from the Wagner group that was backed by Russia, they were on the verge of defeating the Ukrainian army.
And Angela Merkel and Francois Hollande, the leader of France, they rushed to Moscow and beg Putin, oh, stop, stop, we'll sign an agreement.
And this agreement will ensure the peace.
And that was the beginning of mince, too.
Right.
And then Merkel later admits it was just a ploy.
It was a sham.
We fooled those stupid Russians because we wanted to give Ukraine time to build up.
That's what Trump's trying to pull off now.
He's trying to do.
I can't imagine.
I can't imagine President Putin being duped again.
Fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me twice.
Shame on me.
Correct.
Well, in fact, Putin.
acknowledged last year. He said, he admitted. He'd been fooled. He'd been naive. He'd been
trusting. I don't see him making that same mistake again. I think he's calculating that he can,
because you know as well as I do, the Donald Trump that you talk to one-on-one or in person
is a completely different character than the one that plays this character on television.
And Putin knows that because Putin's met with him before.
in a more private setting.
So Putin may be calculating that he might be able to talk some sense into Trump
in order to prevent this from going where it's headed,
which is going to be World War III.
Who stands the most to lose and who stands the most to gain between Putin and Trump
in Alaska?
Putin stands an enormous amount to lose if he in any way makes concessions to Donald Trump
and that involve any of the territory.
Number one, he doesn't have the legal authority to say,
okay, yeah, okay, we'll give you back Kersa and Zaporizia
in exchange for a ceasefire as long as Ukraine.
He can't make that kind of deal.
Those, it would be like Donald Trump going to, you know,
sitting down with Putin and saying,
okay, you know what, we're going to give you Alaska ban.
Trump doesn't have that power.
He could say that, but it wouldn't actually make it happen.
He couldn't return Alaska.
to Russia.
But, you know, I think ultimately, as I anticipate this will play out,
this would not be good for Donald Trump because it will expose him again as weak
and ineffective and not able to deliver on his much-ballahood promise that he was going
to end the war in 24 hours.
What do you think the Kremlin thinks of Trump's bluster, non-sequitur, self-bravado,
I mean, he's almost literally the polar opposite of President Putin when it comes to statements in public.
Well, I don't think the, I don't think the Kremlin gets his focused on the particular personality of the president.
Because they've got, you know, they were dealing with Bill Clinton and then George W. Bush, then Barack Obama, then Trump, then Biden.
then Biden and now Trump again, you know, different personalities.
But it's always the same result.
I think they've realized that every request Russia has ever made
to try to get the United States to stop expanding NATO
or to let Russia come into NATO and be a part of the club.
It's always been rebuffed and they've continued the aggressive action.
So I think, you know, I think there's just a hope.
hope pertain, you know, still hope that somehow Trump will back off from this.
But, you know, realistically, you know, I would hope that people like Lovroff and
Ribcoff, actually, Sergey Ribcoff in particular, I think they have a much clearer vision
that, you know, they'll talk to the United States, but they're not seeing any action to follow
up the nice words.
Do you think that the Kremlin was concerned about Trump's comments about nuclear submarines?
No, no, I think they probably laughed at that because they know the submarines are already out there.
And they probably haven't pinpointed where they are.
So, you know, there are already submarines in position just as Russia has submarines and position off our coasts.
I mean, again, it's Trump, Trump says that.
things like this that, you know, for informed people, makes him sound pretty stupid.
Is, um, how close is Russia to achieving its military objectives in Ukraine?
General staff is telling Putin two to three months. So by the end of October, they could
conceivably have, you know, completely broken
the defensive line.
This area that's in western Dombos, or western Dhanesk, Krammator, Slaviansk,
Pukovsk, there are three or four, this is like the last line of defense,
where defensive emplacements that Ukraine has had in position.
There's really nothing like it in other parts of,
Ukraine that are on the battlefront, once Russia breaches that, and the initial thought was
that they might take Pachros by the end of September, it looks like they might take Pachrosk by the
end of next week.
So it's accelerated dramatically, and that is why Trump rushed to have this meeting with Putin.
They're trying to forestall Russia from breaking through and take it.
taking control of Ukraine, all of Ukraine, east of the NEPA River.
What happens if, as Zelensky tries to show up?
Does the U.S. authorities even let them land?
Yeah.
I anticipate that this meeting is going to take place on one of the U.S. military bases in Alaska.
And so not every, those don't have regular commercial air flights.
So any plane that would be carrying Zelensky, number one, how's it going to get there?
Russia's not going to let it fly across Russia.
And you basically got seven time zones to go through to get there from Ukraine.
Or if they fly, if, you know, he flies from the United, from Ukraine into Alaska,
well then they got a really long flight you know but I don't think I don't think
they're gonna let me think that why do you think the US leaked I who knows of it if
they actually did this they leaked that Trump had invited Zelensky who knows
if Trump actually did but they did the White House did leak that why did they do that
well because Trump doesn't have control over the White House so you got people like
Kellogg in particular doing, you know, doing their own thing, or pushing the pro-Ukrainian line.
Again, this is the kind of chaos that is, if you're watching it,
particularly if you're the Russian government, you're really not sure who's in charge.
And there certainly is no discipline on messaging.
As we speak, I understand General Kellogg is on his way to Kyiv.
I'm not what promises is he giving Zelensky.
Yeah, well, he may be reassuring him going to say,
don't worry, we got your back.
Thank you.
At that point, I'd be afraid.
Thank you, Boris Johnson.
Here's your favorite senator from South Carolina commenting on this
on one of the talk shows yesterday, Chris, cut number three.
No, I'm very okay with President Trump,
meeting with President Putin in Alaska, I think everybody knows that how this war ends
can be a good thing or a bad thing. If it ends in a way, it looks like that Putin's overly
rewarded, there goes Taiwan. You can't end a war without talking. I do hope that Zelensky
can be part of the process. I'll leave that up to the White House, but I have every confidence
in the world that the president is going to go to meet Putin from a position of strength,
that he's going to look out for Europe
and Ukrainian needs
to end this war honorably
and it's time to end this war honorably
but how we do it will
be historical
what is he talking about
the president is going there
from a position of strength
he doesn't even have the basics right
yeah we we can't produce
enough artillery shells to supply Ukraine
we don't have any more air defense
systems to give them
the weapons that were promising that will sell to Ukraine via the, you know,
the Europeans will buy it from us and then they'll give it to Ukraine.
Some of those weapons systems won't be produced for seven years.
So, you know, Trump's going at a time when the reality is the United States is weaker economically
than at any time in his first or second term.
and the part of the why Trump has been using the tariffs and sanctions Ukraine
Ukraine in a way is a bit of a side show because what he's really trying to do is disrupt bricks
because the demand for dollars is dropping and one of the reasons for that is these bricks
countries which have significant economies are shifting their purchases they're not using
dollars. Or in some cases, what you find is the Chinese are holding some dollars that they're
using to fund projects in Africa, but that's not benefiting the United States. So from an economic
standpoint, Bricks is the real threat to the United States. And that may be what preoccupies Trump,
but he's not, as he told Zelensky, you don't have any Trump cards. Well, Donald Trump doesn't
have any cards either to play with Vladimir Putin.
Thank you, Larry. A pleasure, my dear man. When we're together with Ray at the end of the week,
we still won't know what, if any, the outcome in Alaska is because of the time zone
difference. They're not going to make announcements until late in the day, our time. But
we may have to come back on air and analyze it if something spectacular comes out of it or even
if it's just bluster. Whatever it is, we'll get to it. We'll see you at the end of the week.
Thank you, Larry. All right, Judge. Thank you. All the best. Coming up at 1 o'clock this afternoon,
live from Moscow, Scott Ritter and Russian officials with him from a television studio there.
And at 145, Professor Jeffrey Sachs, Judge Lepa Teno for Judging Freedom.
Thank you.