Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 6/23/22 Should the U.S. Be Sending Weapons to Ukraine? Scott Horton vs. Cathy Young at the Soho Forum
Episode Date: July 7, 2022Should the U.S. give full military and political support to Ukraine in its war with Russia, short of sending troops? That was the subject of a Soho Forum debate held on Thursday, June 23, at the Porcu...pine Freedom Festival, or PorcFest, in Lancaster, New Hampshire. Cathy Young, a writer at the Bulwark and a contributing editor at Reason, is a Moscow-native who migrated to the U.S. as a teenager, argued that the U.S. government is correct to impose sanctions on Russia and to send military and economic support to Ukraine. Scott Horton, who's the host of Antiwar Radio, argued that U.S. backing of NATO provoked the Russian invasion and that imposing sanctions and sending weapons has brought more death and destruction. He says the only role for the Americans is to call for an immediate ceasefire followed by negotiations. The debate was moderated by Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of anti-war.com, author of the book, Fool's Aaron,
Time to End the War in Afghanistan, and The Brand New, Enough Already, Time to End the War on Terrorism.
And I've recorded more than 5,500 interviews since 2004.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton.4 you can sign up the podcast feed there
and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton's show
the u.s response to a russian invasion of another country should involve the provision of ample weapons
supplies and military intelligence to that country together with organizing aggressive economic
political and cultural sanctions on Russia.
Please vote yes, no, or undecided on that resolution.
Now, here to defend that resolution, Kathy Young.
Kathy, please come to the stage.
Yes, okay, Kathy's looking.
Taking the negative on that resolution,
I'll give you Scott Horton.
Scott, please come to the state.
All right. Conner, please close the voting.
Kathy, you have 15 minutes to defend the resolution.
You probably want to take the podium.
Kathy, take it away.
Hi everyone, it's great to be here.
This is my first visit to Porkfest, and it's really quite an exciting event.
So I want to start by saying that obviously everyone in the Liberty Movement can agree that
an interventionist state is dangerous to civil liberties at home, is dangerous to the Freedom
Project.
So I think we're all aware of the dangers of excessive interventionism.
And certainly we've learned some hard lessons over the past 20 years in exporting democracy
abroad to countries with little or no experience of liberty.
And we've all found out in Iraq and in Afghanistan that that is very rife with pitfalls.
So yeah, we've certainly learned cautionary tales about
the exporting democracy.
I would argue that what we face with Russia today
is very different, not only because no one
is really calling for direct intervention militarily
or direct military engagement between the US and Russia.
I think we all know some really good reason
that the reasons that that is not being advocated,
given the nuclear arsenal that both countries have.
But also I would say that with regard to a less sort of overtly military or less direct style of intervention, which is what we're debating here, which is aid with weapons, aid with intelligence, and sanctions in case of an actual Russian attack, I would say that this is a very different type of argument than the
kind of interventionism that we've seen the unfortunate results of in the past 20 years.
First of all, again, in this case, we are talking about situations in which there is a direct
aggression initiated by Russia.
And obviously, we're all thinking about Ukraine right now.
So that's sort of the paradigm at the moment.
And I think everyone will agree that whatever the history between Russia and Ukraine, there's
that was an unprovoked attack, which really
has brought to the European continent horrific scenes
of arguably genocide, which haven't been seen
since World War II.
But also the other difference, I think,
that is essential, is that Russian aggression
is directed toward neighboring countries, which
are on a course, however imperfect, of liberal democratic
development, and which do have very
genuine traditions of and aspiration toward freedom.
And those aspirations are being targeted
by an increasingly aggressive authoritarian
and arguably even totalitarian militaristic state
in Russia.
This is something that began in Georgia in 2008,
where it was preceded by the way, by the actual Russian invasion,
was preceded by years of Russian provocation in Georgia
in the sense of handing out Russian passports en masse to residents of South Ossetia,
which is a region that has separatist issues with Georgia,
and essentially creating a class of Russian citizens who were eligible sort of philosophically for Russian protection.
And it's really telling, by the way, that the Russian passports,
the South Ossetians got, were not, did not entitle them to actually live in Russia.
The only intent was to create a mass of people in South Ossetia on the territory of Georgia,
whom Russia could claim to act as the protector of.
Then, of course, we had the situation in Ukraine in 2014,
in which in response to what was really essentially a popular revolution,
the ouster of a pro-Russian regime that was growing increasingly authoritarian and alienated
from the people.
Russia not only seized Crimea, taking advantage of disarray in the Ukrainian forces, but also
initiated the creation of separatists, and I'm really putting separatists in quotation marks,
because these were not grassroots formations.
These were essentially gangster statelets that were driven
primarily by Russian citizens who were coming in and Russian organizers.
And then there were actual incursions of Russian troops
that continued for eight years with really preposterous excuses
where Russia claimed with a straight face
that Russian soldiers who were caught on Ukrainian territory
were actually on leave and volunteering to fight
for their Russian-speaking brethren in
in Ukraine, so, you know, this has been going on for some time
and of course culminating in the recent invasion.
I think this is a situation where, you know,
you can plausibly oppose on the grounds
of philosophical consistency, U.S. intervention,
and do it on principal grounds.
I will say that unfortunately,
from following the debate on interventionism
and anti-interventionism in this case.
I have found that in many, many cases,
maybe in the majority of cases,
anti-interventionists have resorted to arguments
that really distort facts
and make sort of specious claims
to discredit the case for Ukraine defense.
One of those is that
Ukraine's 2014 Revolution of Dignity was a coup engineered by the U.S. Deep State,
which is based on some very, very out of context tidbits from conversations between American diplomats
who were, in fact, involved in the, they were actually quite overtly involved in the negotiations
between the preceding regime and the opposition, which, you know, where they were trying to work out a deal.
So, you know, I think that there was some undiplomatic language that was used, but it really was not a conspiracy.
If you read a lot of primary sources, the revolution in Ukraine absolutely was a popular revolution that was driven by pro-freedom forces.
There were, yes, there were some extreme nationalist and authoritarian elements and, you know, arguably pro-fascist elements that were kind of glomming
on to it, which represented maybe like 1% of the people who were involved in the, you know,
the Euro-Maidan movement that led to this, to this revolution.
But of course, that also has been transformed into claims that the Ukrainian state is dominated by
basically a Nazi clique, which really would make it like the world's first Nazi regime
with a Jewish president, you know, that's, you know, that I think is really deeply ironic.
And this is really, by the way, all of this is just echoing essentially Russian, you know,
Kremlin talking points that have been out there for, you know, for eight years.
And of course, the other, the other argument that has been made with regard to both Georgia and Ukraine
is that it's really the fault of NATO expansion
and the intent announced under the Bush administration
to put both Georgia and Ukraine on a track toward NATO membership.
I think this is a complicated issue,
but what I will say is that even there was a fascinating article
that was written in 2008 at the time of the war in Georgia
by a Russian general named Vladimir Dvorkin,
who was part of the arms control negotiating team.
So this is a really high-level person,
who basically said that he was not a great fan
of the Bush administration's plan,
but he also felt that, again, given Russia's nuclear arsenal,
given the overall balance of power,
it's just preposterous to claim that NATO expansion
poses an actual threat to Russian security.
His argument was that the real threat that the Kremlin feels is that being surrounded by NATO countries
is going to push toward liberalization and push toward modernization in ways that the Russian government doesn't want.
I will say, by the way, you know, without getting into a big debate about NATO,
So NATO is primarily a defensive alliance.
The famous Article 5 of the NATO Charter,
which says that the other countries are obliged
to come to the defense of a NATO country
that has been attacked.
It really stipulates that only in cases
where the attack is unprovoked
and not the result of an act of aggression
by the country itself.
So, you know, I think that really takes away the big part of the, sort of the idea that NATO would,
a NATO membership would enable aggression toward Russia.
I think what NATO expansion is a threat to, and specifically NATO membership for Ukraine,
is really the Kremlin's dreams of restoring the Russian Empire, of which it sees Ukraine and a number of other smaller countries as an essential partner.
Russia today is a country driven by ideologues like Alexander Dugin,
who is this really bizarre ultra-nationalist guru,
whose work is taught in the military academies,
who is close to a number of people very high in the regime,
who essentially argues that the only way that Russia can have true nationhood
by being an empire and expanding an empire.
So I really think that we're talking about
a really appreciable danger to freedom.
I don't think it's irrelevant for the liberty movement
in the United States, whether the world outside the US
is dominated by authoritarian or totalitarian powers
or by imperfect, but nonetheless,
you know, real liberal democratic countries.
And Russia, along with China,
is the primary authoritarian force in the world right now.
that has repeatedly shown aggression toward pro-democracy neighbors.
And I think that, you know, again, while no one wants direct military engagement with Russia,
I think the argument that we should do whatever we can to help those countries under attack
with arms, intelligence, and sanctions.
Oh, and hopefully along the way, promote meaningful change in Russia itself,
which is possible only if those imperial aspirations of the current regime are thwarted.
I think there's a very, very good argument to be made that that is, in fact, a pro-freedom course
and one that should be pursued.
And that's it.
Thank you, Kathy.
Speaking for the negative, Scott Horton, Scott, take it away, please.
Thank you.
We are in agreement that this war is an aggressive and illegal war launched by Russia into Ukraine.
I don't think there's any question about that.
I don't know of anyone who disagrees with that.
But it was not unprovoked.
And frankly, I'll disagree with virtually all of what you
you just heard. I don't know how much of it I'll be able to address here. But I want to start
with something that I learned when I was a kid about the aftermath of World War II and how
and this is, there's some myth making here, but bear with me, that America and the aftermath of
World War II befriended our enemies, the Japanese and the Germans helped rebuild their
countries and brought them into our defensive umbrella and whatever and friendship. And the
reason that they did that wasn't self-interested reasons is because and this is partially true you
have to admit this is true it is because they learned the lessons of versa and the lessons of versa
as we should have even learned in government school i learned this in government school
and that after world war one the allies mistreated germany so badly in the war reparations
and the stripping them of their outlying territories that this essentially laid the
groundwork for the rise of the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler. And of course, if you read Jim Powell's
great book, you see how American intervention in extending the war helped lead to the communist
revolution in the creation of a Soviet Union in the first place, and thus setting the stage for
World War II. And so we're not going to make that mistake again. We're going to befriend our enemies
and treat them with respect and all of these kinds of things. Even in the Japanese and the Germans,
of course, had been a couple of the most ruthless and murderous regimes in world history,
and yet we made friends with them because it was the right thing to do. But then what did we do
after the Cold War with the Soviet Union ended, and peacefully, almost entirely peacefully,
as Gorbachev and the Soviets essentially just abandoned the empire, set all of South Asia and
Eastern Europe free. Instead of heating those same lessons of Versailles, we kicked them while they're
down. And the Bill Clinton government immediately broke Bush Seniors' promises not to expand NATO
and brought in Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Poland in 1999, and three weeks later, launched an
aggressive war against the Serbs' close, the Russians' close allies, the Serbs, in order to break
off Kosovo. That was our defensive alliance. The United Nations wouldn't authorize it, of course,
because Russia has veto power.
So Bill Clinton just broke the law.
I'm sorry?
Sorry.
So Bill Clinton just broke the law.
And like George Bush's Coalition of the Willing,
he used NATO to do it,
and launched this aggressive war
in order to break off Kosovo
for a bunch of drug dealers and gangsters
and organ smugglers and criminals.
And that was the start of it.
And then, of course,
he also sent the heart.
Harvard boys to not rebuild their economy the way they had done with the Baltic states and with Poland and try to help them, but in fact, to essentially rape their economy, to liquidate everything and take all the money.
Life expectancy dropped by double digits in Russia in the 90s. Imagine a communist, a real, not just in name, but the government owned the economy, everything.
A real Marxist country fell and adopted American capital.
and life expectancy fell by double digits.
It was the world's greatest catastrophe and it was deliberate.
And Jeffrey Sachs, who was one of the Harvard boys, says today it was deliberate and he couldn't stop them.
You can take his word for it.
Then W. Bush comes in and even though Putin is the first man to call him,
the first world leader to call him on September 11th and say, I'm at your service,
he tears up, two months later, he tears up the anti-ballistic missile treaty.
treaty and says we're going to put anti-missile missiles in Romania and Poland in
violation of Clinton's promise that okay we're expanding NATO but we promise not to
expand our military equipment into the new NATO countries that he had said in
1997 that's out the window now we're doing this and Bush Jr. went on to bring
nine more nations into the NATO military alliance and as Ms. Young said he promised in
2008 to bring Ukraine and Georgia into NATO. And this was despite the fact that four months before
he promised that, his ambassador to Russia, our current CIA director, William Burns, wrote a memo,
we know this from Julian Assange, who right now is sitting in prison waiting to be extradited
and prosecuted for espionage for bringing us this information. And William Burns wrote to Condoleezza Rice,
Yet means yet.
I met today with Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister,
and he explained to me in absolutely explicit terms,
NATO expansion stops here.
And Lavrov is very polite, of course,
and uses his diplomatic language,
but he says, we absolutely will not tolerate the addition
of Ukraine or Georgia into the NATO military alliance.
If you do, it could cause a civil war in Ukraine,
and then we might have to intervene.
mean, which is a situation that we don't want to have to face.
So please don't do this.
And Fiona Hill, who you know from TV as a hawk from the Trump administration and
testified against him in his impeachment and all of that, she has said, because she was in
the W. Bush government then, that the CIA and the other intelligence agencies warned
W. Bush do not do this.
This was their high confidence professional assessment.
This is a bad policy that's going to be.
provoke Russia. And why didn't they just bring them into NATO then? It was because Germany and
France absolutely put their foot down. Why? For one reason, it'll unnecessarily provoke Russia.
You can call it a defensive alliance all you want, but from the Russian point of view looking
west, it doesn't look defensive at all. It looks like a steadily encroaching military
alliance right into their neighborhood. We have a Monroe Doctrine that now expands the entire planet,
But Russia is not allowed to have them in Roe Doctrine at all, not even in their closest neighbors.
And in fact, we did last time we tried to overthrow the government of Belarus was just a year and a half ago.
And Lyle Goldstein, who was at the Navy War College, wrote that he thought that was the final provocation.
They won't even leave Belarus alone.
They tried it in 2005 with a denim revolution.
They tried it again in 2020.
And he said it was then not just Putin, but all of Moscow's national security establishment said that's it.
The Americans are just relentless.
They'll never stop.
We have to draw the line somewhere.
And so we're going to start getting tough now.
And just think for a moment, regardless of slogans about a defensive alliance, just put the shoe on the other foot for a second.
What if Reagan had spent America and our empire into bankruptcy in the 1980s could have happened?
and the Soviets had won the Cold War
and then they expanded their military alliance into Western Europe
and then they started expanding it into the Caribbean
and incorporating Mexico and stationing their troops and armed forces there
and then they overthrew the government of Canada
twice in 10 years
because the Canadians kept electing the wrong guys
who didn't want to join Russia's military alliance
and they hired a bunch of Hitler-loven neo-Nazis to help them do
a violent street push on the second one to do it.
Then they started threatening to kick America
out of our naval bases in Alaska.
And then they launch a bloody war on terrorism
against the people of Vancouver, British Columbia,
who refused to accept the new coup d'etal junta.
Now, what would the United States of America do about that?
I think everyone knows the answer is,
at the very least, we would absolutely invade
and crush the regime in Canada that had suborned,
itself to the Russians in this way.
And that's if we're very, very lucky,
because I think the average American president
would start launching hydrogen bombs at Moscow.
And I think we all know that.
I don't think the Russians would dare.
And yet we're to believe that Vladimir Putin
is the most dangerous psychopath on the planet
since David Koresh, but he should just sit there and take it
and be used to it and just know that we have him overmashed
and there's nothing he can do about it.
No matter how many times he says in his speeches at this security conference and that security
conference, for the love of God, will you please listen to me?
I have security concerns, and you keep encroaching and encroaching and encroaching.
And I think any reasonable person who listens to his declarations of war from February
the 22nd and 24th, you'll see that yes, he's angry.
But if you read the transcript through, it's far more reasoned argument than bluster and hatred.
and, you know, psychopathy or whatever.
And I'm not saying that his argument justifies what he did.
I'm not saying it's a reasonable argument
for launching a war.
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying it is 100% rational argument
right up until that point that this is the way
the Americans have intervened.
And you can listen to the Victoria Newland
and Jeffrey Pyatt phone call for yourself on YouTube
in various places.
on the internet, and you can hear them plotting the coup that took place two weeks later
on February the 21st, 2014. And yes, it was a violent street putched by forces in the street.
No one is saying it was CIA agents on the ground directing the mob in real time.
The point is the Americans were supporting that entire movement, and they had made a deal
through the Germans with the sitting government, the same guy that they had prevented from
taking office in the Orange Revolution of 2004.
that he would pull all his police forces back and would agree to early elections
if all the protesters on their side would be called back as well.
And instead, after he pulled his police back,
they just seized all the government buildings and chased him right out of town.
And George Friedman from Stratford called it the most obvious coup in world history.
And John J. Mearsheimer from the University of Chicago,
the dean of the realist school of foreign policy in America,
wrote an entire article about this for foreign affairs,
the most prestigious journal of the Council on Foreign Relations
in 2014 explaining this entire thing.
There's no question about this.
And he said at the time then,
that America is leading Ukraine down what he called the Primrose Path.
We're making them all these promises of what we're going to do for them.
But what we're really doing is we're getting them in deep, deep trouble with Russia,
and there's going to be a backlash.
And then after the coup, what happened?
was the first thing the new parliament did was outlaw russian as a second language and then three
former presidents four former presidents wrote a letter saying now is our chance to kick the russians
out of the svestopol naval base on crimea and only then did the russians leave their bases
and seize the crimean peninsula where they had a deal since the fall of soviet union 24 years
to lease the base and that was it and the reason they left the base and seized the
the peninsula without killing anyone. It was a coup to Maine without a single battle. They just
took over the thing. It was because the new government in Ukraine was threatening to kick them out of
there. And then the people in the east of the country, who were the heaviest supporters of
Yanukovych, the former president, said, well, if you guys can do a coup and overthrow our
democratically elected president from the election of 2010, well, then we can just occupy the
government buildings here in the Donbass and refused to recognize the legitimacy of the new
government. And then the new government launched what they called a war on terrorism and simply
attacked them. And, you know, she says, oh, whoever they were that seized power in the
Donbass at that time, they were just sock puppets or whatever. They weren't the people of the
Donbass. Well, that's just not true. They were. And in fact, they voted after they achieved their,
you know, de facto independence. They voted in a plebiscite to join the Russian Federation.
And Vladimir Putin told them no, said, I don't want you to join the Russian Federation.
He already had a deal with the Germans and the French, our closest allies supposedly, the Minsk one and then the Minsk two deals,
that the new government in Kiev would recognize essentially a strong federalism and autonomy for the Donbass region, Donetsk and Luhansk,
but they would stay within Ukraine and not join the Russian Federation.
And if you read, again, the declarations of war from last February, he talks about.
how the Americans made sure and intervened to prevent Kiev from ever implementing Minsk
too and they did pull back the heavy armed forces against them but there was what they
called low-level fighting for eight years well seven years after the worst of the fighting
where overall as many as 14,000 people were killed there and so and and all the while
as the Americans themselves admit they're normalizing
and integrating Ukraine's military into America's military forces.
It's being led by American military forces in a way that they even said themselves in the New York Times.
This is making them a de facto member of NATO.
And just real quick in 30 seconds, in 2008,
when Georgia launched that war against South Ossetia to reintegrate that territory
and killed Russian peacekeepers provoking the Russian response,
Dick Cheney proposed that George Bush launched missile strikes,
at the Rokey Tunnel to collapse the tunnel under and destroy the Russian armored columns
coming under the Caucasus Mountains, which could have led right to a nuclear war.
And that man was one heartbeat away from making the decision himself, and only the cool, patient
wisdom of George W. Bush prevented us from all being annihilated off of the face of the earth
right there.
And so I'm sorry I ran out of time, but I'll get a little bit more to the provocations
leading up to the current war in my rebuttal.
Thank you.
Thank you, Scott.
Thank you very much about.
Thank you very much.
Well, I think that, you know, Scott has thrown out a lot of assertions there,
which, you know, I would obviously need a lot more than five minutes to address some detail.
I'm not even going to get into the real causes of the war of the war intervention and surgery.
intervention in Serbia and whether, you know, that was as unreasonable as Scott claims it is.
I mean, you know, there were certain events that are widely recognized as a genocide, but we're not going to get into that.
I also want to, I really want to question this argument, and again, there's a lot of material there that the United States treated Russia horribly after.
after the end of the Cold War.
I mean, first of all, there was, like, $55 billion
given in various forms obeyed to Russia.
A lot of that went to corrupt officials.
There was a famous incident where Al Gore
was brought a report that basically said,
you know, be careful because a lot of this money
is going into, you know, to line the pockets
of various corrupt people.
And his response was to write bullshit
across the cover of the report in Semenbeck.
You know, there was famously,
like chummy relationship between Yeltsin and Bill Clinton,
you know, Russia was brought into the G7,
which it really was not of unqualified for
in terms of the performance of its economy.
In terms of NATO, you know, Russia was brought
into the Partnership for Peace,
which was a kind of expanded, you know,
NATO-related program where there are all sorts
of security programs were pursued together.
Russia was brought into the Russian NATO Council,
which was supposed to be coordinating with Russia
and addressing whatever security threats
Russia claimed that it perceived.
NATO, by the way, held joint exercises with Russia.
Until fairly recently, this is something
that you won't really hear, but NATO paid
for a lot of programs, for instance, in assistance
to decommissioned Russian officers.
So I think this is a very, very simplistic idea
that Russia was just trampled on the ground.
I think whatever Jeffrey Sachs says
really needs to be taken with a grain of salt,
because Jeffrey Sachs gets a lot of,
this is the Harvard economist who was involved
in the Russian economic reform,
and he routinely gets accused of being to blame
for the horrible way that, you know,
the really bad way that these reforms turned out.
And of course, his response is to say,
well, that just happened,
because the US and the IMF didn't give more money.
I mean, I think it's really kind of telling
that Scott sees pro-democracy, pro-freedom movements
in places like Belarus as solely engineered by the US
and essentially attempted coups.
In terms of the Victoria Newland tape, yeah,
you can listen to it, but I think you really
have to remember the timing.
This was not a preparation for a coup.
this was a discussion of an ongoing deal.
I mean, they were talking about which people
in the Ukrainian opposition should join the government.
There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever
that this was being done in preparation for a coup.
This was being done as part of negotiations
between the victory in the Kovych,
the pro-Russian president,
and the opposition on forming a new government.
So, you know, there is that.
And I think, you know, I'll just add
One real quick thing in terms of this argument that, you know, what would the United States do if Russia was cultivating alliances in, you know, in the Western Hemisphere?
Well, it's been cultivating an alliance with Venezuela forever.
You know, we haven't invaded Venezuela as far as I can tell.
You may have heard of Bricks, which is the, you know, the alliance that includes Brazil, Russia, India, and China in South Africa.
So, you know, Brazil is part of a coalition with Russia, again, I don't see any American troops in Brazil.
So, I mean, this idea that, and, you know, I mean, the idea that we have to take everything that Vladimir Putin says as, you know, reflecting his real thinking, even.
I mean, Vladimir Putin has also said, among other things, that, you know, Madeline Albright made a statement that Siberia shouldn't belong to Russia,
because it just has too much natural wealth
to belong to one country, which is a complete kind of art.
This is something that Putin has repeated as a fact.
So I don't know if it is delusional.
I don't know if he's promoting these fictions
as a justification for words of aggression.
But I mean, I think giving Putin too much credence,
I think, is really unwanted.
So, you know, that's.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, first of all, regarding Madeline Albright there, I wouldn't put it past her.
I think price is worth it.
And look, yes, Bill Clinton was very chummy with Boris Yeltsin.
That was part of, and I'm sorry, I should have specified,
that was part of America kicking Russia while they were down,
was inflicting the regime of Boris Yeltsin
and leading to Vladimir Putin on the people of Russia.
People talk about what a gangster Vladimir Putin is.
How do you think he got the job?
And everyone knows, you might have even seen,
there's a movie with Jeff Goldblum
about how they rigged the election of 1996
for Boris Yeltsin.
They poured in billions of dollars,
they stuffed ballots, and they ran 1,000 focus groups
and public relations, you know, Madison Avenue,
full-scale campaign to re-elect Boris Yeltsin over the Russian people's dead body.
They already wanted rid of him so bad at that point.
And then of course it was Yelton who hired Putin to fight the war in Chechnya in two of them
in 97 and then again in 99, which is how he made his rise to power.
And in fact, as will be detailed in my book coming out whenever it finally comes out,
I have multiple very credible sources for it.
Bill Clinton's CIA was backing with the Saudis, backing the terrorists in Chechnya in 1999
in the war against the Russians to try to help disrupt the reopening of an old Soviet
oil pipeline that went through there.
As part of his dance with the devil at the same time, al-Qaeda was already attacking us.
Bill Clinton was still supporting them that whole decade long.
This was in Vladimir Putin's Declaration of War from February, too.
And you supported the terrorists in Chechnya in 1999 and 2000 against us, too.
You think we forgot that?
Now, that might sound like some Alex Jones BS, but it's not.
It's true.
And, of course, the Russians, even though the Americans might have forgotten it and don't care about it,
the Russians sure don't.
They consider it the height of importance.
Now, to me, right now, regardless of what anyone else in North America thinks,
I think that Joe Biden's refusal to send Anthony Blinken, our Secretary of State, to Geneva,
to meet with Sergei Lavrov to achieve some kind of ceasefire in this war
is the greatest political scandal of the 21st century and maybe in the last century.
This is, as John Mearsheimer said on the news hour, imagine the Cuban missile crisis,
but Kennedy refuses to talk to Khrushchev the whole time.
could have all been killed and that is the comparison here we're we're four months into this war
and anthony blinkin hasn't talked to sergey lavrov since february the 15 and that's because they
wanted this war to happen and i admit i fell down on the job and i wasn't paying close enough
attention in the run-up to the war to the different signs that the americans as serious as the
russians were we're not trying to stop this war biden's take
was you better not do it or else but he wasn't willing to negotiate we
know they refused to discuss NATO membership for Ukraine and other things and
you can find in the press where people like Admiral Stravrida said well listen we
don't know the first thing about defeating an insurgency he told the New York
Times but we sure know how to back one like we did in Afghanistan in the
1980s and like we did in Syria now this is just
four months after America finally left Afghanistan after the consequences of that operation in the 1980s.
And these people have Afghanistan in their mouth.
And the dirty war in Syria, Obama's dirty war that led directly to the rise of the Islamic State Caliphate and Iraq War III
and another half a million people killed.
And these Democrats say this is the model, this is what we want to bring to Eastern Europe.
We want to pour these arms in.
And their assumption was that the Ukrainian state would be defeated.
quickly and that they would be arming an insurgency led by yes hitler loving nazis the azov
battalion and the right sector and the adar battalion and these other guys who the western press
the new york times the washington post the bbc and and channel four and everybody else has
covered this for years the influence of the great grandsons of the galatian s s from world war
and their role in this war.
You know, in World War II, we allied with Stalin
to fight against the Nazis.
Now we're aligned with Nazis
against Republican, Russia.
Are you kidding me?
This is absolutely insane,
and it's risking nuclear war.
It has us closer or at least at the same risk
or worse of nuclear war as we've been
since the early 1980s in the height of Reagan's brigsmanship
or even the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.
And in her opening argument,
I know it's hard, short for time in a debate.
Yes, we should send in arms and coordinate Intel
and help Ukraine fight the war was just one throwaway line
without even the slightest regard
for what the possible consequences of that could be.
And in case you haven't looked it up on YouTube later,
just one H-bomb can kill your entire hometown.
That's it.
It's not a risk worth taking.
Thank you.
We come now, thank you to both.
We come now to the Q&A portion of the afternoon.
Line up with your questions.
And then please phrase your question,
as a question, no need to identify yourself.
If there's anybody in particular,
you're addressing a question to state that as well.
First question, please.
My question is for Scott.
You gave a great summary of the provocation.
What do you think Putin's other option would have
been? What would have been a better play?
That's a good question. And honestly, I plead guilty that I've really not thought very hard
about this and talked with other great experts about this. But I know just one throwaway line
that I saw on Twitter that made perfect sense to me just kind of right off the top of
a friend's head was, well, he could have just cut off all natural gas to Europe altogether
and said, you can see how serious I am about this. You know, it's like people said we should
have set off a nuke offshore to demonstrate to the Japanese before using one on their cities. You
this kind of thing. Maybe he could have gone a little bit further in demonstrating how serious
he was before ordering a full-scale attack like that. There had to be another way than to do
what he's done. And quite frankly, my only dog in this hunt is I'm on the side of the Ukrainians.
My wife is from Ukraine. She has family there now. And in fact, she has family in Russia as well,
a young man who's in danger of being conscripted into this war. Tens of thousands of people have been
killed. It's a total horror show.
it should have been something else.
Kathy, comment from you on the question and the answer.
Any comment, Kathy?
Well, I mean, I think that Putin could have just not invaded.
I think it's, you know, I really do not believe
that there was like any sort of imminent security threat
to Russia.
In terms of like NATO membership for Ukraine,
I think it's been made very clear that it wasn't anywhere close to that.
I mean, right now as a result of Russia's attack, NATO was expanding.
So I mean, if Putin, if that was Putin's concern,
I think he's achieved the exact opposite
of whatever he said out supposedly to do.
In terms of looking out for the Ukrainian people,
I think right now something like, is it,
89% of Ukrainians say that they want to fight,
that they don't want to negotiate,
because negotiating basically means
that you're going to leave hundreds of thousands
of people under an incredibly brutal occupation,
that is currently, you know, taking Ukrainians
to Russia as slave labor, essentially.
I mean, this is like we're talking really,
like World War II Nazi, well, not,
I don't want to bring up the Nazis
because they're not sending people to gas chambers,
but I mean, I think that's concerning enough.
So I think, you know, right now, close to 90%,
if not more of Ukrainians say that they want to fight
and defend their country as long as it's humanly possible.
So I think, you know, if we want to respect
the witches of the Ukrainian people, this is certainly what they seem to want.
Okay, yeah, thank you. Next question.
Hi, this is directed at Kathy. Thank you for taking the position. I heard you
mentioned, and I'm obviously biased against sort of foreign entangling alliances and whatnot.
I'm wondering if you have some concrete examples of how Russia might be attempting to expand
the empire. You mentioned earlier that, you know, Russia is attempting to reestablish sort of the old
guard, and then mentioned sort of dismissively that they're in Brazil, I believe it was.
Is that an attempt to expand the empire, and is that something that is worth the entangling alliance
to prevent, or is it not a big deal?
Oh, I mean, I don't think it's a big deal.
I mean, I think that it's, you know, Russia clearly wants really, in large part, I think,
for the Kremlin elite self-esteem to be seen as a player.
as a big player on the international stage,
because I think that was really the great blow
to the Russian political establishment's ego
that suddenly they went from being an empire
and the other superpower to being viewed by many
as a second-rate, if not third-rate country.
I mean, I'm fine with Russia trying to maintain
foreign alliances as long as it does it in a peaceful way.
So, you know, I don't think that's
it's a problem. I have a problem when they try to bully countries around them from pursuing
the course of development that they want. Can I just add like a real quick, as Scott was quoting
John Mearsheimer before? And, you know, I mean, I think he's a respected scholar, but he does
have a very strong point of view that essentially large powers have the sort of natural right
to dominate countries around them and therefore, you know, Rushley is entitled to its sphere
of influence. So I think, you know, you just kind of have to remember that that's where
it comes from. I disagree with that. So, coming from you, Scott, on the question or the answer.
Comment from you, Scott. Sure. I, first of all, I think Mearsheimer's position is that that's the way
of the world, that major powers are going to do things like prevent a minor power next door to
them from a line with a major power far away or something like that. Not that that's right,
but that's the reality that we have to deal with. And people say, oh, Ukraine,
can join whatever alliance they want.
Well, can Mexico join whatever alliance they want?
No, they can't.
And that's the way of the world.
And that's simply a recognition of reality
as far as that goes.
But as far as the Ukrainians would rather keep fighting,
might that have something to do with the $50 billion
worth of arms and all the support and the intelligence
that were given them?
And might they have negotiated on better terms
for their own future months ago, if you
we were not intervening. For example, there's a real question now whether the Russians are
going to go all the way to Moldova and absorb the Transdenester, this breakaway province
on the Moldova and Ukrainian border. Well, they'd have to take Odessa and the entire southern
coast of Ukraine to do so. But that's far beyond what they were ever asking for in the first
place. That's far beyond if Ukraine had even given them the whole damn Donbass. And so now we
have essentially by making these promises to them, we've created this.
moral hazard and again let them further down the primrose path towards even worse danger and you
look at like the the baltic states don't have any current conflicts with russia there have been
you know some controversies over the rights of ethnic russians in there but nothing no no threats
of military intervention or anything like that except the government of lithuania speaking of
the lessons of versailles the government of lithuania has just closed the easement the corridor
between Russia and Kaliningrad, this little strip of land on the Baltic Sea between Lithuania
and Poland. And they used to have the right of this quarter. Well, that's how World War II started.
Was Hitler insisting on his corridor to Danzig, this German city that been stripped away
after World War I? Now we're recreating that same kind of situation. And this is a quote from
the New York Times. A Lithuanian defense official told the New York
New York Times that a Russian attack, quote, is highly unlikely because Lithuania is a member
of NATO.
If this were not the case, they probably would consider it.
In other words, Scrappy-Doo is out there trying to get us into a fight and we gave him
permission to do so.
And who even knows here the capitals of the Baltic states, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia.
You're willing to trade your hometown?
I see one hand, two hands in the air.
OK, five, you guys are pretty uneducated audience.
I would screw them up, you know, which one is Talon, et cetera.
So given what's come up, I just want to ask,
exercise moderator's prerogative to ask Kathy, a question.
Kathy, just to put a fine point on the idea of the double standard,
just hypothetically, grant the hypothetical,
the Soviet Union appoints Canada or Mexico,
to be a part of a Warsaw Pact defensive military group of nations.
The Soviet Union has some intervention
in the politics of Mexico or Canada.
Do you really think the US would not respond
militarily to such meddling in two countries
that are off our borders?
That's my hypothetical.
Well, yeah, I think that, first of all,
the Soviet Union, the Cold War and the Soviet Union
versus the Warsaw Pacts is an entirely different.
situation than anything we've had in recent years.
Just a hypothetical.
Russia establishes a military alliance with Mexico and gets politically involved in meddling
in Mexican political affairs or does the same thing in Canada.
Off our borders, Russia is directly involved in saying, oh, it's all defensive, just military
defenses in Mexico and Canada against the possible.
What would the U.S. do?
Do you think we would just accept it?
We wouldn't invade?
We wouldn't respond militarily?
I don't think we would respond militarily.
You mean like Russia, not the Soviet Union.
Russia, I said Russia.
That's Russia, the country.
I mean, I think that there would certainly
be a lot of very strong diplomacy.
I really could not see the US invading Canada,
the US invading Mexico.
I mean, Mexico, by the way, had extremely friendly relations
with Fidel Castro for all of the duration of the Soviet
empire.
We didn't invade Mexico over that.
So I mean, I think this idea that,
you know, we go around invading, like anyone who forms an alliance we don't like, I think is bizarre.
Okay, comment.
Sure, I just need a short amount of time for this one.
This is how we got into World War I, is the Zimmerman Telegram promised a German alliance with Mexico,
and we declared war against Germany.
That was it.
And by the way, who in the world again, who in the world in the middle of the world,
in the middle of World War I thought the Germans
were coming to Mexico to help them retake
the American Southwest.
But that was good enough for Woodrow Wilson.
Don't even think about it.
And because the lesson was the Germans
ought not to be talking that way,
not whether they could really accomplish
such a thing or not.
And then, you know, Cuba, they talk about Cuba.
Cuba wasn't the world empire.
Cuba was one of the satellite states of the Soviet Union.
So Mexico's more or less friendly relationship with them
is irrelevant.
It wasn't a military lines of any kind.
And America did do an illegal coup d'etat, which failed in the Bay of Pigs.
And we almost got into a nuclear war during the Cuban missile crisis when the Russians put nuclear missiles in Cuba.
And Jack Kennedy announced that he would burn the whole world to the ground before he let that continue.
Remove your missiles or else, he said, and forced him out.
And as Putin said in his speech, he said when he declared war, again, I'm not saying this is a good enough reason to declare war.
but i'm saying it's a reasonable argument he said and he ticked off the times your what you call
missiles if they were placed in her kiv could get here in 15 minutes your tomahawks could get here in
10 and if you installed hypersonic missiles in herkiv they could be in moscow in five minutes he
said this is like a knife at our throat what are we supposed to do nothing if anyone was talking
about installing missiles and in kia american missiles in kiev then that would actually be a
argument, but I don't know why we've been discussing the hypothetical when...
Well, Bill Clinton promised not to put military equipment into the countries that he brought
into the military lines, and then he did it anyway.
And in fact, you guys will remember that when Putin in his demands last December said,
I want all NATO military forces that have been expanded into Eastern Europe and the new NATO
countries brought back to where they were in 1997, they treated 1997 like it was 1897.
Are you crazy?
not going back. What's 1997 have to do with anything? Oh, it was just Bill Clinton's solemn oath
that, yes, we're expanding our alliance, but we promise not to move our equipment in. So now
Vladimir Putin is supposed to accept that we're making Ukraine a de facto member of NATO,
even in the words of American officials in the New York Times. But no, don't worry, we promise
never to put missiles in. And if we do, it'll be too late for you to do anything about it,
because there'll be five minutes from Moscow. So again, I'm not saying that's
good enough reason to invade but it's just ridiculous to say that's not a
legitimate security concern that's just a hollow excuse come on well you've got
a chance to come in let me let me question here yes sir I would just like to
add first before my question if I made to the comments make it sure please I'll
make it sure first of all three words military industrial complex money our
Our president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, who ran World War II, basically, came into office.
On his way going out, he said the greatest threat to America and the world as a whole is the military industrial complex.
If Kennedy had listened to the military industrial complex who said, take out those missiles in Cuba now before they're active,
we would not be having this conversation because they were already active and they were told the first sign of aggression.
to hit that button.
Twice.
Is it correct?
So my question, my question is, we were told by Mr. Putin what his legacy was going to be,
way ahead of time.
His legacy was to rebuild the motherland.
What's the question?
Well, here's what it is, sir.
They have to add lead into this.
That included his incursion into Crimea.
That included his inclusion in 2008 into Georgia,
1st, Crimea, 2nd, and then into the Ukraine 3rd.
the Ukraine third. Each one of those times, he was acting on what he said he was going to do, first
of all. Why did we put that pipeline in when we already had plans drawn up for a pipeline from
underneath the East Mediterranean Sea with vast resources that was going to go across Italy
and supply the needs of the future of Europe for the long term? You know why? Because of the
industrial military conflict. Okay, is that your question, Dwight? Okay. Look, I think essentially
that that's correct. Well, the last, the first thing and the last thing you said kind of
gate the second thing you said that what it is you're not what it is what it is sir sir you'll
have to sit down you've spoken your peace thank you very much but go ahead yeah no what what it is is
because of the military industrial complex and because of the american empire for one example
they had this policy beginning with bill clinton to stick as many straws in the caspian basin
as they could and suck that energy south east west anywhere but through russia to get to the world's
customers. This is why Bill Clinton's government backed the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan
in 1996, is they wanted the Taliban to take over the whole country and guarantee security
for a pipeline from Turkmenistan down to the port of Karachi in Pakistan. And this was, you know,
part of, and this goes to why it negates the second thing you said about Putin's imperial
ambitions. I don't know what exactly it is that you're quoting that he supposedly said,
But in the case of Georgia and in the case of Crimea and the rest of what's gone on in Ukraine
and for that matter in the case of Russian intervention in Syria, it was all America's fault
in the first place. Russia, for example, in Crimea, again, as I said in the debate, had 24 years
after the fall of the Soviet Union had maintained a lease on the Sevastopol naval base.
It wasn't until the Kudetah junta threatened to kick them out of there, that they said, no, thank you.
And in fact, Putin actually did an interview where he said, you know, sarcastically, he said, you know, we thought about how nice it would be to go and visit our friends, the NATO sailors down there at the new naval base, their new naval base in Sevastopol.
And then we thought, no, we rather that you come and visit us at our base instead, and we'll just keep the base.
And so that was simply what happened there.
Imagine some foreign power trying to take San Diego from the United States of America.
What do you think would happen to them?
Ultimate violence.
A comment from you, Kathy.
Well, I want to say that, first of all, I'm not even really sure where the San Diego example comes in, because that is actually...
It's an important naval port.
It's U.S. territory.
I mean, I think we can argue about whether Ukraine had a good reason to repeal the lease.
at that point, considering Russia's actions toward Ukraine.
I completely reject the idea that it was, you know, a hoon to a coup.
You know, I really don't want to get into the whole, you know, azov battalion thing.
Of course you don't want to get into the Azov Battalion.
Well, I could.
Tell me, tell me on a scale of one to ten how much they love Adolf Hitler.
Go.
Yeah, right.
Well, let's, I mean, that would probably take us an hour.
It's 10.
They love Adolf Hitler 10 on a scale of 1 to 10.
You can read it in the BBC, where they said they're here to rid the world of the Jewish-led Unter mention and save the white race.
One of the major militias is called C-14.
That stands for the 14 words of the slogan of the white supremacist.
Give me a break.
Yeah, that was written by a guy who co-founded the Azab Battalion.
I it is really not I mean the fact that there were some bad people involved with co-founding
what is currently a regiment in the Ukrainian army really doesn't mean that it's a Nazi outfit today
he doesn't have anything to do with it today it's of all it's which is why you know we really
can't have this argument because it would really take way too much discussion of the specifics
of you know what happened with the Ukrainian they're moderate reform Nazis we can accept that
Right, guys?
Do you want to talk about the Russian fascists who run Donbass?
I mean, do you want to talk about the fact that, like, the guy who was the first, first
all, do you want to talk about the fact that the first defense minister and the first president
of the so-called Denetsk Republic were both Russian citizens, both of them with extensive ties
to fascist groups?
I mean, do you want to talk about the fact that the guy who was the self-appointed people's
governor of the Netsk, who co-founded the separatist republic?
was part of the Russian national unity, which has a fascist logo.
I mean, you know, do you want to talk about Alexander Dugin
and his extremely intimate involvement with the whole, you know,
Novoresea project, which is the, you know, the retaking of Eastern Ukraine for Russia?
I mean, this is like, this is fascist times 10, you know.
This is, I mean, not to mention that those, you know,
the Donetska and Lujansk republics actually are run as fascist states,
I mean, the fact that you take seriously the plebiscites that happened in these places is just mind-boggling.
I mean, there's an actual, if you want to talk about recordings, there's an actual recording of one of the separatist leaders talking to one of his Russian handlers and saying that, well, you know, there's a war going on.
We can't really do a referendum right now.
And the Russian guy says, wait, like, you're actually serious about doing this fucking referendum?
you're going to like go and like have people actually like write things down and
Bolton's like fuck it just write that 90% of the people voted for for the
independent republic and that's it and that's and by the way that I think he said
like 99% and then he said oh no no no let's make it 89% and that actually
happens to be like the actual number that supposedly voted for an independent
republic I mean you know who are we kidding these are not I mean you know no sane
person takes these, quote, plebiscite seriously. I mean, these are places that are essentially
run as torture camps. Do you think that Yanukovych won the election of 2010? That was verified
by the EU? Who voted for him? Actually, yeah. He won it with a false promise of, you know, facilitating
because he had rebranded from a Kremlin ally to the centrists who was going to maintain a good
relationship with both Russia and the EU, and, you know, then he screwed the people who supported
them by saying, no, we're not going to do this deal with the EU, which was not going to put
Ukraine on track to a full EU membership, but was going to definitely be about integrating Ukraine
into Europe, which is when, you know, which is when the people came out on the square.
Actually, what happened was the EU changed the deal on him at the last minute at the meeting
when he showed up to sign it.
He said, I feel like a bride who showed up at my wedding
to be greeted with a prenuptial agreement.
And I don't think I'm in love with you anymore,
and I'm going home.
So it's completely irrelevant that at the same time,
Putin was strong arming him into rejecting this deal
and offering and claiming to offer him a better deal.
I mean, you know, that's...
Okay.
Seriously, nothing is ever Putin's fault.
I mean, he is only ever the put upon victim.
I mean, was Yanukovych legitimately impeached,
by the way, by the time he was.
was ousted. Okay. He was impeached by the Ukrainian parliament, which was also legitimately elected.
This is when he decided to beat it and, you know, ran off to Russia taking wagon loads of stolen wealth with him.
So, you know, next question.
Question for the bold view. Do sanctions work and who they hurt? Thank you.
What's the question again?
Do sanctions work and who they hurt? Do the sanctions. Okay. Yeah, you want to talk about sanctions? I'll talk about sanctions.
Yes, they work, but not for the stated purpose.
They do not, in very, very rare cases, do they compel changes in behavior by the subject governments.
But if your purpose is to simply crush the Iranian or Syrian economy and keep it crushed, then they're very good for that.
In this case, it seems like the sanctions regime against Russia is already backfiring and strengthening their economy.
I mean, they're oil exporters.
So, you know, help create a brand new crimp in supply and global supply,
jack up the price even higher than price inflation was already causing.
And they have a huge windfall.
And even the Biden government anonymously,
Biden government officials were complaining about this to the Wall Street Journal last week,
that, geez, it seems to be backfiring against us.
But overall, it's meant to be,
war of course against helpless civilians. In the 1980s, pardon me in the 1990s they
would say about the blockade against Iraq that well everybody knows with the
oil for food program that Saddam Hussein is taking all the money and he's
spending it all on his palaces. That was a cliche he's spending it all on
his palaces. Well then maybe we should lift the blockade and reopen
trade with the country and figure out a different way to proceed. If he is not
suffering at all you're telling me he's redecorating while people are star
to death, then it's not working for what you said it was supposed to accomplish.
It's just accomplishing all horror show.
And by the way, this was of course one of the main reasons cited by bin Laden for attacking
the United States.
America maintaining bases in Saudi to wage this blockade and the no-fly zone bombing campaign
against Iraq and starving the people of Iraq all through the 1990s.
That's how those towers came down.
Comment from you, Kathy?
Right.
Well, first of all, I think the sanctions in this case have been
actually pretty carefully targeted to primarily hurt a lot of people in the Russian
oligarchy and the Russian establishment and target their personal wealth.
So I think these sanctions actually have been better calibrated to, you know, hit the people
who deserve to be hit.
In terms of, I mean, are they working perfectly?
No, certainly not.
And I mean, I think the dependency of Western Europe on Russian oil.
and gas is scandalous.
I think this is a situation that Western Europe
should have never gotten into.
And I don't want to get started on nuclear power,
because this is going to take us in a whole other direction.
But I mean, this is something that really should not be even,
like, should not be taking place.
Obviously, as long as the dependency continues,
the sanctions are not going to have, like, real bite.
But yeah, I mean, I think that,
I think it's a good thing right now to signal to Russia that it is a pariah state,
because I think Russia is, the Russian establishment is very, very concerned about its ego and its international image.
So, you know, I mean, I think that is it possible that there will be some sort of regime change because of this?
I don't know. I mean, I'm actually not, like, at all blind to the possibility that regime change in Russia could have.
could pose serious dangers.
I mean, I think this is something
that needs to be considered
very, very carefully. But, at
the same time, I mean, can a country be allowed
to behave as Russia is currently
behaving? Absolutely not.
I mean...
Can I just... Okay, go ahead.
This is the point. This is
what they have said over and over again, anonymously
and officially, even the Secretary of State and Secretary
of Defense, have said we're trying to
weaken Russia. We're trying to prolong
this war. We're pouring these weapons
to prolong this war to weaken Russia.
even to the point of regime change in Moscow,
which they somehow think would be beneficial
rather than what would occur to any average person anywhere
as taking an absolutely extraordinary risk of the apocalypse
over political differences with a country
that is no longer run by the evil communists,
but instead by essentially corrupt conservative Republicans
who we ought to be able to live with and deal with.
Coming from you, Kathy, no.
Well, I don't think that trying to crush the country next door
because of political differences with it
is something that we can regard as acceptable political differences
with the current regime in Russia.
I think there is huge evidence of Russia's interventions everywhere
to promote incidentally fascist forces.
I mean, Russia is really positioning itself currently as the sort of head of the illiberal
international, where, you know, it's allied, like every anti-liberal force that you can find,
whether it's communist or fascist, you will find usually Russian financing behind it.
So I think, you know, Russia is a huge perpetrator right now of...
I want footnotes for that other than just anonymous CIA claims in the post.
Okay, well, next, I think this will probably have to be a final question.
Laying on us, sir.
Okay, this is for both of you.
Given the Putin-head initiative, do you think the Ukrainians should give up in surrender to stop slaughter?
I guess that's...
I don't hear that very well. Sorry.
Well, should the Putin have to say, should the Ukrainians give up and surrender?
Is that your question?
Yeah.
Okay. Kathy, your answer.
Well, you know, obviously, I don't think so.
I mean, the vast majority of Ukrainians believe that.
that they want to stand and fight as long as they can.
I don't think it has, I mean, would they surrender
if they weren't given weapons?
Yeah, they would have no other choice.
But I mean, I think clearly no one wants to go to war
just for the hell of it just because they give you weapons.
I mean, I think they're seeing,
I mean, Russia is very clear right now
that it wants to stamp out of Ukrainian national identity,
that the Ukrainian national identity as such
is a threat to real.
Russia supposedly. I mean, they're very, very explicit about this at the moment, so I don't know
what we're talking about. You know, that's, you know, clearly the Ukrainians want to fight,
and they have the will and capacity to fight, and I think they've demonstrated incredible,
you know, bravery and stamina in fighting back. So, you know, the fact that maybe like
half of one percent of their fighting forces involved with a regiment that has a dubious
history with a, you know, white supremacist founder is unfortunate, but, you know, I don't
think that that should really materially influence the course of our support for Ukraine.
A comment from you, Scott.
I want a footnote for that low percentage, too.
Listen, the international fascists are all going to Ukraine to fight on Ukraine side against
the Russians, including Nazis who participated in the riots at Charlottesville and who were
arrested by the FBI, including Nazis from all over Europe.
It's just a lie that the Nazis of the West
are on Russia's side in this thing.
It just isn't true.
And what should happen now, because this is a proxy war.
America is the world empire.
And Ukraine is our client state.
And America, our Secretary's State, should be in Geneva
trying to hash out a deal to end the fighting immediately
with the Russians right now.
And if the Ukrainians want to play like
Ahmad Karzai or whatever and refuse to go along with that and keep the war going, then that
should be their problem and America should cease all intervention immediately.
But the fact of the matter is that before this war broke out, Putin's demands were reasonable.
He wanted it in writing that Ukraine won't join NATO.
He wanted to pull the military back like in the 1997 deal.
He wanted a guarantee we weren't going to put missiles into Ukraine and these kinds of things.
He wanted the Minsk two-piece deal to be implemented in a real ceasefire in the east of the
country.
And I'm sure his demands are a little bit broader than that now, but all of that was reasonable
in the first place.
And there should be, essentially Russia has been appeasing the United States this whole time,
and then they finally quit.
And it's time for us to recognize that we're enough in the wrong that we can climb down
a few pegs on the ladder as well and make a deal with it.
Sounds like you're going to do summation.
Okay, guys, okay, we're gonna give you,
have to give you just four minutes for summation
rather than five, because we wanna respect the next event
and we wanted some time for voting.
So you'll get the chance to talk to the debaters afterwards.
Kathy, take it away with your four minutes of summary.
Take the podium.
You want to do it from here?
Sure, yeah, absolutely.
All right, sure, yeah.
Four minutes, four minutes.
Right, well, as far as I could,
until, you know, Scott's position is basically that, again, you know, everything that Putin
says and does needs to be absolutely taken at face value. You know, everything that Putin does
is completely defensive. He is the innocent victim, who is only ever, you know, put upon
by the United States and American allies. I think, first of all, it is worth pointing out,
by the way, that the conditions that Putin imposed included not only a guarantee that Ukraine
will not join NATO, but also a guarantee that it will not join the European Union, which,
you know, what security concern does that pose to Russia?
I mean, clearly, it is just really overwhelmingly clear that Russia's real concern is Ukraine
sort of leaving its sphere of influence and not being available to become a building block
for this, you know, reinvented Russian Empire that Putin has been talking about for, you know,
for ages, really, and that his ideologues have been talking about.
I think it's really very full-hearting not to notice that, yes, while Putin made some friendly overtures
to the United States early in his role,
He also showed signs very early on of wanting to reinvent the Soviet slash Russian Empire,
complete with, among other things, even just symbolically bringing back the music of the Soviet anthem
and bringing back the red flag as the official banner of the Russian army.
The initial quarrel between Russia and Ukraine was basically that Russia was backsliding
toward authoritarianism and Ukraine wanted to be on a Western path of development.
If you look at the conflict in Ukraine today, Donbos is the region that is still stuck in the
Soviet heavy industry mode.
I mean, to the extent that the people in Donbos,
are like authentic local separatists. They are the people who are Soviet
nostalgia. You know, they are the people who really just won the Soviet Union
back the way it was. I mean, they brought back these, you know, young people's
communist organizations. By the way, Russian soldiers today in the Ukrainian
towns that they're taking, they're putting up statues of Vladimir Lenin. I mean, I
don't know how much more explicit you can get about the fact that this is about
rebuilding some sort of simulacrum of, you know, the Soviet Union slash the Russian Empire.
I think clearly, again, Ukraine wants to fight for its existence.
Ukraine is facing a situation where its citizens are being kidnapped and forcibly taken to Russia.
I mean, that's been very well documented.
In terms of the, I just want to say about the war in Donbass, again, these were gangster statelets.
about other things kidnapping Ukrainian citizens.
I mean, this is not a completely aggressive war
of attack by the Ukrainians on these separatist republics,
which, yes, were led initially very much by Russian citizens.
So, you know, I think that the,
I don't want to say that Ukraine
have been completely blameless in all of this.
By the way, just real quick, another factoid,
that Scott mentioned, the law that bad,
the early on then were, you know, demoted Russian language
from the status of second official language
that was vetoed by the president at the time.
Has Ukraine made some mistakes?
Yes, but it is an aspiring democracy
that is being attacked by an authoritarian neighbor,
and I think that's really clear.
Thank you, Kathy.
Four minutes of summary, Scott.
I'm sorry.
Sorry, to go ahead.
Scott, four minutes.
They're Nazis and their commies, which is pretty bad.
Now, I got these, for my summation here, I got these talking points directly from Putin as an innocent angel talking points.com.
Dot, dot net, dot net.
Because my loyalty is to him.
Anyway, one time I was driving on the freeway in 2015, I was.
I was listening to NPR News.
You ever listen to NPR News?
I know you do.
You have to, don't you?
You masochists.
And being interviewed by Robert Siegel was Ivo Dodler,
the former American ambassador or something, I forget.
And he was part of a study.
I think it was the Brookings Institution,
had a study with a lot of big names on it,
that said we should be pouring arms into Ukraine.
Now, Obama, the first black president to support
a Nazi kuretah junta in power was afraid to arm them and there are multiple sources for he knew
how radical and how bad the guys were that he just helped to put in power and he was afraid to dump in arms
and so this think tank was demanding that we need to hurry up and do this as they put it to start sending russians
home in body bags now russia had not invaded at that time but they had sent special operations
forces essentially across the border to assist in the separatists, you know, holding out
defense against the attack by Kiev. And he said, we have to start sending body bags home
to Russia. And Robert Siegel said, well, and then what's going to happen? And he said, well,
that will cause the debate to go up in Russia. And something about how they'll
all blame Putin rather than blaming us for killing their sons. And they'll all blame the government
and want to come home immediately rather than wanting to double down and get some revenge for
those who've spilled their blood. The debate will go up. And Robert Siegel said,
oh, the debate will go up. I get it. That's good. And you see the same level of thoughtfulness
in the policy that led to the war in Ukraine just last winter.
In December, the Biden government told the New York Times,
well, what we're doing in is we're escalating the amount of weapons
that we're pouring into Ukraine.
Trump had started it.
I don't want to leave that out.
Trump had poured in the weapons.
But the Biden government said last December,
we're pouring in the weapons,
but we're carefully calibrating the amount
so that it's enough to deter Russia so they won't invade,
but it's not too much to provoke them that they will invade.
Well, now here we are, six months later.
And tens of thousands of people have been killed.
So either they were lying about that
and they were deliberately trying to provoke a war
or they really, really suck at calibrating
how much offensive force to bring to bear
on Russia's border,
1,200 miles east of the Elbe River,
which used to be this.
dividing line back in the days of the old Cold War. We'll send Russians home in
body bags. Question mark, question mark, question mark. And then after that it'd be
great. The debate will go up. That's your security force. That's who's in
charge. Joe Biden and his men. And with that I'll let you know that right after
this at the Mises tent I'm signing copies of enough already in my book about the
terror war. And next week I'm coming out with
the brand new book. It's called
Hotter Than the Sun. Time to
abolish nuclear weapons, which is
a collection of interviews of experts
all about nuclear weapons going back 10,
15 years on the show there. I know you guys are really
going to like it. And with that, thank you very
much. Thank you, Scott.
Okay.
Connor,
okay, please.
Conner, please sit down and start voting.
I don't, I forgot to bring the
Soul Forum, Tutsi World, with me, but it will be
sent, the special, will be sent to
winner. The debate is open. Please vote yes, no, or undecided on the U.S. response to
Russian invasion of another country involving the provision of ample weapons and complete
support. Vote yes, no, are undecided. Okay. Interestingly enough, the yes vote,
picked up one, yes one initially had 1.6% of the vote. It was at 1.6%. It's only one,
but it did not pick up any votes, the yes vote.
So that's the statement to beat, did it pick up votes?
The no vote went from 76.6% to 96.7%.
So, so, so, but thank you, both.
The Scott Horton show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK, 90.7,
FM in L.A.
APSRadio.com,
anti-war.com,
Scott Horton.org,
and Libertarian Institute.org.