The Bulwark Podcast - Bill Kristol and Michael Weiss: It's Showtime
Episode Date: August 19, 2024Kamala's first month as a presidential candidate before the Democratic convention has gone exceedingly well—she's been controlling the narrative, infuriating people like Ben Shapiro, and Trump can't... get her pretty face out of his head. Meanwhile, Putin talks a big game, but Ukraine has surprised everyone with its incursion into Russia. Bill Kristol and Michael Weiss join Tim Miller. show notes: Dan Pfeiffer piece Tim mentioned A.B.'s piece Tim referenced Michael's stories at The Insider WSJ story referenced by Michael (for Journal subscribers)
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Hey, everybody.
Big doubleheader show today.
I know it's convention week, but I've been totally remiss in covering what's been going on in Ukraine and their inclusion into Russia.
So we've got Michael Weiss in segment two with a very informative update on that up first bill
crystal and all week make sure you're checking us out on youtube because we'll have additional
bonus content over there we just hit half a million subscribers on youtube so we appreciate
you all for listening and watching and we'll be just giving you unlimited coconut content this week from Chicago.
Up next, your friend of mine, Bill Kristol.
Hello and welcome to the Bullard Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
It's Monday, August 19th.
The political world is headed back to Chicago. The host of more nominating conventions than any other city in America,
most famously that conflagration of 1968. To discuss it, Bill Kristol, who is already
middle-aged in 1968, editor-in-large of the Bullard, co-author of Morning Shot's newsletter.
How are you doing, Bill? I'm doing fine. And just in response to that cruel, cruel comment,
I'm just going to point out that more famous than 1968 probably was 1860.
Your first convention.
The first Republican convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln in 1932, the Democratic convention that nominated FDR.
So two major, both on fourth ballot, one case, sixth in the other, I think.
So both things that did not have to happen that happened and probably influenced history quite a lot.
And we might have that again this time.
Well, before I want to do a deep dive in the convention, but before we get there, it's
Monday.
I was by the pool yesterday, so we need a little palate cleanser.
You might have seen there was a cutesy video that Kamala Harris and Tim Walz put out where
they joke about what kind of tacos he likes.
He likes white guy tacos, and she didn't understand what that meant. Well, Ben Shapiro and Megyn Kelly and other right-wingers lost their mind over this little joke, and I just want to listen to a little bit of it.
By the way, not racist at all when the black vice president and presidential candidate is talking about the lack of flavor palette for white people because white people have no flavor palette.
Apparently, white people hate spices. I mean, apparently a white people, a white people taco is tuna and
mayonnaise. That's because white people don't like spicy food at all, which is presumably why
between the 15th and 17th centuries, multiple European countries fought a series of wars over
the spice route and the spice trade because they hate spices so darn much you know
tim wall says that he makes white guy tacos and kamala says what is that mayonnaise and tuna
like that is anti-white racism that is anti-white racism who was the first one tim that was ben
shapiro and then matt walsh both of the daily wire i like this difference between the two
the pseudo-intellectualism of Ben Shapiro is so wonderful.
Between the 15th and 17th centuries, I mean, how ludicrous can you get, right?
Yeah, the spice trade.
In defense of white people, Ben Shapiro acknowledges the imperialist efforts of white folks to travel the globe, co-opting spices from other parts of the world.
I don't know how these guys wake up every morning to just get upset about this.
Megyn Kelly attacked the bulwark over this on Twitter,
saying that Tim Walz is not a man's man like Mona Charon wrote.
A real man's man wouldn't make a self-deprecating joke about his palate.
I mean, what can you say, right?
I've rendered Bill Kristol speechless on Monday morning. I mean, palate jokes are all out of the question.
It's an awful lot of humor is going down the tubes here, you know?
This is racism.
This is racism.
Anti-white racism.
It is pernicious, and we're going to be seeing a lot of it in Chicago this week,
according to Ben Shapiro.
It was Harris' joke, right, in response to Walls?
Well, he was like, I like white guy tacos.
And she's like, what is that, like tuna?
Tuna and mayonnaise.
I thought that was quite a good,
as someone who hates mayonnaise, first of all,
I think that was an excellent line.
Just for me, there's excellent spicy tacos
and then very bad tuna fish and mayonnaise.
So I'm on the, I think I take it
that was kind of Kamala's point.
So I'm with her on that, you know?
Same, I'm not taking offense.
And if even non-white people want to like tuna fish and mayonnaise it's really you know what's
great about being a liberal these days is it's a free country if people can like whatever they want
yeah well brown people can like tuna and mayonnaise if they want i think i hear some of them do i
don't know yeah teach their own uh but you got to get mad about something when nothing's going
your way campaign wise and that's been the case for the you know ben shapiro crowd over the past month or so let's just actually let's do that let's start
with the polls first then we get into the dnc we had over the weekend uh new york times did a sun
belt poll uh that had harris plus five in arizona plus two in north carolina minus one in nevada
and then minus four in georg. Semaphore out this morning
with a whole battery of swing state polls. Harris plus seven in Michigan, plus six in Wisconsin,
plus six in Nevada. So Nevada kind of all over the map there. Plus one in North Carolina and PA,
minus one in Arizona, minus four in Georgia. So the main consistency there is Georgia is Trump's
best state. And the Southwest state's a little bit noisy with Harris doing better in the upper Midwest and kind of surprisingly well in North Carolina.
How do you how do you take the state of play?
Yeah, I think, you know, these especially state level polls, especially Nevada, which is a very hard state to poll, a lot of transients and stuff.
Culinary workers aren't sitting around answering their cell phones.
You know, they kind of work hard and they're, you know at strange hours and casinos and probably a little hard to
get in touch with if you average the polls she's what do you think a little bit ahead i would say
honestly election today she probably pulls it out with the midwestern states at least two of the
three and one or two sunbathe south states i mean but but close i mean 60 40 not 80 20 maybe 55 45
actually her in her favor if you add it all up.
Kind of consistent with what I think we said last week, that Biden was down about three nationally.
She's now up about three nationally.
That translates to up one or two in most of these swing states.
And that's kind of where the race is.
So it remains close.
She's ahead.
And that's why the convention either increases that lead or doesn't.
And that's why I think it's actually a little more important than your typical convention.
Yeah, that's a tipping point in both.
If you looked at the New York Times, it'd be North Carolina plus two.
And Semaphore would be North Carolina and Pennsylvania plus one.
So not a landslide.
Not the landslide we'd be hoping for.
Still close in both of those.
But a complete flip.
I do think the North Carolina thing is interesting because it had been dismissed,
basically. We made silver on a week and a half ago, and he said he thought that it was being
underestimated as a sleeper. And the Democrats did better in North Carolina than Georgia and
Arizona in 08 and 12. Definitely better than Georgia in 16, maybe Arizona. It's not crazy
to think that a state that over-indexes a little more on college-educated white suburban voters because of the research triangle in Charlotte might end up doing a little bit better than people, you know, might have anticipated going into the year.
No, I'll say in my defense that, I mean, I was on a conversation with Elaine Kamarck, who does this stuff very well, Democratic operative and strategist and commentator. In May, March, Biden was, I think, just clinched the nomination.
Different era, right? And we actually discussing just the numbers. And I said at the time,
and we both said, North Carolina shouldn't be considered that different from Georgia and
Arizona. Biden lost North Carolina by 80,000 votes last time. He won those other two states
by 10,000. He won
Michigan by like 140,000, right? I mean, everyone understands Michigan's a swing state, but the
margin there was actually greater than the margin in North Carolina. And as you say, it's been
trending in that direction in any case. So I've always thought it should be considered more like
Georgia and Arizona than not. And they have that terrible Republican gubernatorial candidate,
the lieutenant governor, who probably reminds North Carolina voters that, gee, this party's gone a little crazy.
Whereas actually in Georgia, it's the opposite, right?
Brian Kemp sort of reminds Republican suburban voters that, well, there's a sane Republican party and Kemp thinks Trump's OK, even though he's a jackass.
So we should all vote for Trump. So, yeah, I think North Carolina is in play.
And so that expands the field a little bit.
And it's a frustrating state for the Democrats the last couple of cycles.
But these states are all frustrating, and then you break through, right?
That damn Cal Cunningham with those sects cost that Senate seat.
You know, that was a history-breaking sext.
Somebody that's pro-sex message, you should do whatever you want out there.
Not if you are in the tipping point state for the
senate you're running for senate like i forgot about that yeah cal cunningham that uh that
definitely cost uh across the democrats um all right let's look ahead to the dnc i kind of look
at this week as as like the end of the beginning of the harris campaign a bit it's like capstone
to a month-long sprint where they've been able to control the narrative completely almost i mean shocking how well it's gone and now they get to have this four-day set
piece i assume that we're just going to see much of the same of what we've seen the last three
weeks but what are you looking out for yes i agree with that though i would say it's also the bridge
to the next the three-week stretch which culminates in the september 10th debate assuming that happens
which it looks like it will so if you think about it as a kind of one big thing, she's had a very good four weeks, got from, let's just say, minus three to plus three-ish with momentum, with no drama particularly.
There may be some demonstrations in Chicago, but basically a pretty smooth field ahead, it looks like for the next for this convention and so i do think it would really help her to come out of it this is just to say the obvious but you know plus six ish to go into
those two weeks before the debate which will be huge i'll come back to that in a minute rather
than plus two ish or three ish i do think history suggests and my experience personally suggests
the presidential speech is 80 of what matters at these conventions there are four nights but one
night is different from the other three nights and And that night is Thursday night because it's the presidential, especially when it's someone who's not as well known like Harris.
I mean, people have seen clips of her, but I bet a very small percentage of voters have ever seen her give a speech, which is certainly not true of Trump.
I mean, the one reason the Republican convention didn't move things, even though we all analyzed it dutifully, that, well, it was pretty well done and this element was pretty good.
But then Trump sort of screwed it up on the last night.
People all know about trump they weren't going to like change their mind
radically because there was some decent nominating speech by so you know decent or second tier speech
by someone on wednesday night or even fairness it was a stabilizing thing i think the analysis
at the time when biden's still in the race is that he didn't blow himself up right which for
trump is always like a win he gets graded on this curve right like over the course of that four days they were they were relatively you know static
because and static was good enough for them then but what not now it was though i think they blew
in retrospect and maybe at the time we said this to the advanced nomination which was monday yes
another very different thing from this convention which won't have the normal vp nomination drama
which is often the weekend before the first day of, means that that's done. So what's the drama of this convention? It's just the Harris speech.
But I think the Vance pick actually hurt more than I realized at the time. If you think back,
he had the assassination attempt Saturday night. They set up a pretty good convention, really,
in terms of some of the secondary acts. And then the Vance pick became a focus for the first two
or three days and really, I think, hurt the momentum.
And then Trump sort of was OK, but not great on Thursday night. And he came out of the whole thing before Biden pulled out. So let's just say on Saturday, Saturday to Saturday assassination
attempt to the day before Biden pulled out. I don't have the impression Trump picked up much,
maybe a point. But I mean, he could have done more, I think, though harder because everyone
knows him already. Anyway, Harris, less well-known.
People haven't seen her give a full speech. There will be pretty big viewership, I should think,
on Thursday night. And so I think it's a pretty big moment for her. All the other stuff, I think,
secondary, President Obama, President Clinton, Secretary Clinton. I do think the Biden handoff,
Frank Lavin has a good piece on this at the Bulwark this morning, is those things are tricky.
Reagan did a good job with Bush in the 88, but Reagan was also a very popular president, so it was easier.
Biden is, I think, somewhat bitter about what happened. He's got to really shove that aside.
And I think, you know, let Harris take the baton. Don't look at all grudging. Don't look like you're
giving her instructions as you hand it off to her. Just give her the baton. Don't look at all grudging. Don't look like you're giving her instructions as you hand it off to her.
Just give her the baton tonight.
The Vance thing is just a good point.
Just one thought on that very briefly is you do just run a counterfactual of going back
and you pick somebody, a non-entity like Burgum or whatever, or Tim Scott.
And you do kind of carry that post-assassination attempt momenta.
Who knows?
And obviously, then the race shakes up
completely with harris but i do i think that they definitely cost themselves there the buying thing
tonight is interesting i mean it's scripted we're not just gossip mongering like reports indicate
that biden is a little bit bitter about what has happened it still has has some resentments but i
don't think it's towards harris right like there's been no indicates that it's towards her in any way and their event
that they had last week i thought they you know i mean this is armchair relationship psychologizing
but like they they looked like they had affection for each other there's been there's a whole gambit
of white house reporters that would love to write the story about how he is upset at her right and
we haven't seen any of that so i assume that that will be relatively clean tonight
the thing that worries me more is just the i almost feel like it'll be a nice night for the
people in the room like it'll be a valedictory thing for biden for democratic political obsessives
it will be a nice memorable thing where people might get some goosebumps but you're kind of
chalking up night one, right?
If the campaign is about how we're not going back and we have Hillary and Joe Biden speaking tonight and Joe Biden is like somewhat defending the record and all that, there's not a lot to be
gained out of tonight, but that's okay. I mean, a lot of conventions have a night or two where
there's nothing to be gained out of. And so I think that's kind of what we have happening tonight.
I think it's a slight risk if, you know, again, I think this is pretty marginal,
all these considerations, as you say, and there's no evidence of Biden personally feeling
at any resentful of Harris, except in the very broadest sense that he would like to have been
president for another four years or have run for president again. Second night is Obama,
who is a good speaker, obviously, but it's also the past. So I think it is a slightly past heavy
first two days for a convention of a campaign that's premised entirely on turning the page
and looking forward and don't look back. Isn't that literally the slogan they were using?
We're not going back. We're not going back. We're not going back. We're not going back.
Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama to start off our convention. So
that's okay as long as the pivot happens.
We're starting them off, and then we're not going back.
We're going to go back.
We're going back for 36 hours, and then we're not going back ever again.
All right?
The other thing I'd say, it's a very Democratic.
This sounds stupid.
Of course, it's a Democratic convention, but these are all Democratic presidents and candidates.
I think Adam Kinzinger will speak maybe Thursday night, but I think getting some of the Republican
or Republican-ish or nonpartisan types a little more featured, again, probably the last two nights, will be helpful to kind of broaden the tent a little bit for the independents and never-Trump Republican types.
She's won over some of it, clearly from those poll numbers, there's two or three or four more percent to win there who are important.
It's hard to believe at this point there are any Democrats who are still resisting Harris, honestly. So if you think she's at plus two and plus three and needs
to get to five or six, those are probably the, you know, independents and Republican-ish types,
right? Yeah, no, that's the camp we're not voters. Our friend Akil Ganel is going to speak,
who was one of the Capitol Police officers. So I think that there'll be some
other folks in that vein. Landlord telling you to just put on another sweater when your apartment
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Dan Pfeiffer of Crooked Media is out this morning for Obama Communications Director.
I thought his newsletter about the convention was interesting.
He wrote, for the first time in a long time,
Kamala Harris has made politics more than about Donald Trump. This convention will be different from the version
planned for Biden in 2024 or his 2016 and 2020 conventions. While we can never lose sight of the
existential threat Trump poses to democracy, a convention that spends more time on Kamala Harris
than Donald Trump is a welcome change and smart politics. A.B. Stoddard in the Bullock this morning
sort of was on the same wavelength of that,
writing that this week will be gutting for Trump.
He's about to face something he's never had in his nine years.
The Democrats convention will cement
that he's no longer the main character.
So I think both of those are true to an extent,
but the balance is interesting.
How are you going to be looking for that?
How much Kamala Wall's intro
and how much reminding people how insane Donald Trump is?
I think more Kamala Wall's intro and how much reminding people how insane Donald Trump is. I think more Kamala Wall's intro and development, not just intro, but also a little bit of
forward-looking policy in a broad sweep of things, a little bit of centrism, I hope,
in terms of the policy on some issues, at least. I think this is a case where, as they say,
you have to hold two different things in mind that are slightly intentional to one another. One is
this election is about Donald Trump. I mean, the actual existential issue is that Donald Trump cannot
be president again. Having said that, as a tactical and even strategic matter, I think it's
the case that the key thing to accomplish is the continuing and finishing, as it were, the
introduction of Kamala Harris and making her as favorable to as many voters as possible, as
acceptable to voters who aren't quite going to be favorable as possible to as many as possible. And she's the kind of unknown,
undefined element of this. People have already made up their minds about Trump. It's a little
confusing. I find this internally. It's like, Trump is the issue. We've got to just remind
people it's terrible. We can't afford to, he cannot be elected again after January 6th and
after everything else. And here's his latest outrage on the Medal of Honor winners. And I,
myself, I'm busy bragging about it and warning shots and tweeting about it, which
is fine.
I mean, I guess what people like us can and should do, obviously.
But I do think she's been very good, I think, so far in not obsessing about Trump.
If she can make people friendly to and comfortable with her and with Wallace, in a way, the Trump
side takes care of it by itself, maybe.
And also, as A.B. pointed out,
he gets a little crazed and therefore makes it remind, he will on his own remind people,
enough people, I think, why he shouldn't be president again, as long as people are okay
with Kamala Harris as the alternative. Do you agree with that? Or do you think?
I do. And maybe it's a job for Obama tomorrow is something I've been thinking about. He's very good
at, you know, delivering a political attack. And he's good at multiple things uh when it comes to speechifying that's that's his core
competency so he's gonna obviously have to talk about kamala and and and talk about her strengths
but i maybe more value there with some with some one-liners for tiktok from obama tomorrow night
you know that's really a good point i think because and he doesn't really i mean so not to get too pedantic of course he can speak and can't should speak about combo he doesn You know, that's really a good point, I think, because, and he doesn't really, I mean, not to get too pedantic, of course, he can speak and kind of should speak about Kamala,
he doesn't know her that well. I mean, he can't really personally testify to her strengths the
way that Biden could, obviously. In a way, it's more appropriate for him to say, look, I mean,
I've put it this way, but you know, in effect, I've been president, I know what it means. Here's
what a second term of Trump as president would mean. He can explain some of the Project 2025 stuff, some of the stuff that's a
little bit of the weeds sometimes, but that also has more resonance than I expected. He can explain
that in a pretty compelling way, I should think. Maybe a job for Obama tomorrow. We'll be watching
a ton of board coverage at the convention. We're not there, me and Bill aren't, but Sarah's there,
Mark Caputo, Sam Stein, Joe Perticone. So we'll have a bunch here on this podcast, also on our YouTube feed.
Make sure to check that out all week.
I'll be up in New York later this week doing Late Night on MSNBC.
If you just haven't had enough of me and you just need the 1 a.m.
Tim as well, then that'll be your opportunity.
As you pointed out, Bill, Trump might just be doing the job for us as far as reminding
people that he's crazy.
He had a rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania this weekend. There are a million clips I could play
from it. It was not a focused speech by any stretch of the imagination, but I think here
was maybe the low watermark for Donald Trump. Let's listen to him talk about Kamala Harris's looks.
But she said one thing that got me. She said Kamala has one big advantage. She's a very
beautiful woman. She's a beautiful woman. So I decided to go back and reread the clause. I'm
not saying he's, but I say that I am much better looking than her. I think I'm much better.
Much better.
I'm a better looking person than Kamala.
No, I couldn't believe it.
She said, you know, I had never heard that one.
They said, no, her biggest advantage is that she's a beautiful woman.
I'm going, huh.
I never thought of that.
I'm better looking than she is.
He's wrapped around the axle there about a Peggy Noonan column. That's who's referencing there.
I mean, can the gender gap get any wider? What the fuck?
I don't want to speak for every man. A lot of men think Kamala Harris is an attractive middle-aged woman, young, little more attractive.
So you're saying you find kamala more attractive than trump i mean i don't know that's just i could men could agree with women on that i assume women
believe that too i mean it shows how much she's gotten in his head right don't you think i mean
he just can't stand it she's beating him people like her more her favorable numbers are better
she's getting better press i he just can't deal with it apparently right no he's obsessed i mean every i've i've
suffered through every trump public remark since like the walls pick because i just wanted to kind
of see for myself you know because sometimes hard to tell trump is we'll speak for two hours and
then you'll watch two 40 second clips and you'll be like oh he's he's crazed but then if you watch
the two hours you're like oh well i mean for trump actually it wasn't no he's pissed he is aggrieved he's grumpy and he's obsessed like he's mentioned how how pretty
she is and i think every public remark since the time cover that came out like he's talked about
how pretty how the time made her too pretty and he's resentful and he's upset that you know the
people in his stories aren't aren't complimenting him
anymore and they're talking about her instead it goes back to the main character thing that ab
wrote about this morning you kind of referenced earlier the medal of honor recipient thing from
last week i think it's also just worth mentioning again we talked about it on friday with brian
boitler but and you wrote about it for the newsletter Friday. But like, as that ties to the
convention stuff this week, I do think that is another area for contrast, right? Where Harris
and Walsh can kind of take the mantle of patriotism being on the side of the troops,
and he's really throwing them some softballs on this front.
Yeah, I think it's really set up for this Democratic convention to be the
patriotic convention in a kind of healthy way, if I can put it that way.
Pro-U.S., but pro-diversity in the U.S.
Pro-military, but not pro-the military of 80 years ago, but pro-today's military.
I mean, it's pro-the Medal of Honor winners, who, incidentally, are quite a diverse bunch.
I looked a lot of them up Friday morning when I was writing the morning shots. Yeah, I think it's a pretty good opportunity for the Democrats to regain some of that ground that
they sort of did under Clinton and Obama, but not quite. Kerry tried, but then it blew up because
of the Swift vote fast. So they've never quite gotten back to being the, if I can put it simple,
the pro-American party. Jinker Patrick did a lot of damage to them in 1984, blame America first.
It's utterly
clear that the republicans under trump are now at the blame america first party i mean that's
literally what trump does for much of his speeches and didn't he say something also you follow this
stuff more closely he really loves he thinks it's a beautiful phrase to say that america is a failing
nation or something like that i missed the word whether that was the word beautiful was in there
but it was something it was a wonderful he really like he embraced that. He's proud of having, as he thinks, thought up the notion that this is a failed country or something like that.
I mean, of course, there's a big wrong track number.
So it's not crazy to think politically you're better off being on the side of things aren't going well than they are going well.
But it's one thing to be on the side of things aren't going well or as well as they could be going.
Something to say that America is a failed country.
And that is their position and i think harris and walsh should and will embrace the other side of
that equation yeah absolutely and you saw a little bit of this like at the earlier trump conventions
was kazir khan speech for example um you know you remember from the democratic convention about how
trump sacrificed nothing and no one it's on a t for them to hit it this week
and and i think that trump did himself like some good actually just by lying about the john kelly
thing and saying that he never said the suckers and losers remark and then got away with that
at the debate you know because of biden's inability to parry him and then to go out
and essentially say the same thing, right,
to Miriam Adelson saying that, you know, your medal is actually better than theirs because
you're not a sucker and loser like them with injuries. I just think re-ups that whole bag
of worms for him in a way that I think that the Democrats hopefully should be able to take
advantage of. It should. I mean, he deserves all the criticism in the world for that and uh it's so appalling miriam i mean the medal of freedom
is a fine thing my father as i wrote in the morning chance my father received one was honored
to in 2002 and it was wonderful to be there and he was there with with other uh mr rogers got one
that and and and hank aaron both my father and i were kind of thrilled to meet actually
and so there was a nice group of people.
Irving, Hank, and Fred.
What a crew.
Yeah.
And others, too, were there, obviously.
So that's fine.
It's a nice thing.
And the Medal of Freedom, I have no problem with it.
John Kennedy invented that Medal of Freedom in 63 to kind of give civilians,
so the president could give civilians an award, too.
But the idea that it's in any way comparable to the Medal of Honor is so jaw-dropping and appalling and so deeply revealing that Trump said it and
deeply revealing that he's got people, his own people are defending it. I saw your friend,
Corey Lewandowski was saying, well, you know, the civilians deserve medals too, not just the
military. It's like, really? Yeah, he won some medal for the stab victims that he claims that
he, people that he claims to he uh people that he claims that he
killed in a stabbing while he was flirting with the married woman at the addiction awareness
fundraiser okay we're gonna get to michael weiss with some serious business about ukraine next but
i have to it's monday so so we need to give people a little bit of humor on the way out before we get
to michael if you want a sense for just how bad donald trump is unraveling and where his head is
at about the state of the race here here is a song that he posted.
Ron Philip Kausi has been monitoring his Truth Social feed.
Over the past day, he's posted about 30 times on Truth Social.
He compared himself to Lincoln.
He posted AI pics of people that are Taylor Swift fans saying that they're for Trump.
That's fake.
But this video is the one that really caught my eye the most let's let's just take a quick listen
she just giggles.
Fake the ballots, fake on election day.
No matter who votes, can't come to take.
Spent her whole damn life down on her knees.
Spent her whole life down on her knees.
That's how she got to be commander in chief.
Willie Brown.
Isn't it moronic?
Isn't it moronic?
Don't you think?
A little too moronic.
Yeah, I really can't think.
It's very presidential there.
Blowjob jokes and talking about how votes aren't going to matter.
That's what the Republican nominee for president was posting on social media over the weekend. Bill,
is that reminiscent of anything that George H.W. did when you were in there?
Yeah, right. What can one say? It's good that Ron Felipkowski monitors the truth social account
there. But I don't know. Of course, we've said a million times that's really unbelievable.
They're doing this and he keeps on doing it. Yeah, I think he's a little more disturbed than he was, though.
And he's a little older than he was, especially the thing with Harris.
He was really he had the Biden race figured out in his head and for quite a long time.
You think he knew he was he figured he would dispatch to Santa's.
So he figured he's running against Biden for two years. And he had that pretty well worked out.
And I think lots of Vita and Susie Wallace had it pretty well worked out about how they're they had Trump on board of how they were going to do that.
In that respect, I mean, anyone would be disrupted by looking up and discovering you have a different opponent in the presidential race, you know, in mid-July.
But to be fair.
But I think in this case, the disruption is so much greater because of trump
and he's old and he's not that adaptable and then the psychology of losing to kamala harris and
that's really let's hope that continues to really bother him and this is the lash out this yeah the
beginning of that video was about how joe left and so i think he's very sad to lose joe and now
he's really struggling to deal with the kamala thing. And in order to cope with it, to grapple with it,
he needs to fall back on his old binkies of,
well, it must be just women sleeping to the top and election thievery.
It's the only thing that could explain my total face plant over the last month.
Apologies to our Gen X listeners for that Alanis Morissette parody.
But I felt like if I had to listen to it, you had to listen to it.
Bill Kristol, we'll be seeing you later this week
with convention coverage.
Enjoy the beach with your family.
That's a beautiful beach backdrop you've got there.
No books, no Hume, no Thucydides.
Yeah, exactly.
You think I should have brought,
I should have brought books out here to be,
to keep the brand.
If I were Trump, I would have the fake,
the fake book, you know,
spines, right?
You know, lined up wherever I went.
I should think about that in the future.
You should think about that.
Bill Kristol, thank you so much.
Up next, Michael Weiss with an update on Ukraine. Landlord telling you to just put on another sweater when your apartment is below 21 degrees?
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Learn more at toronto.ca slash RentSafeTO.
We are back with Michael Weiss, editor of The Insider, which is a Russia-focused independent media outlet.
He's also the host of the Foreign Office podcast, former investigative reporter for CNN. He's got an upcoming book about the GRU next year,
2026. We don't know, but it's going to be good. How are you doing, Michael?
I'm good. Thanks for having me on, Tim.
Hey, man. Thanks for coming by. I monitor your stuff closely, and I've felt extremely remiss
since, I don't know, just picking a date out of a hat, June 27th. And to my efforts on this podcast to cover things other than the 2024 presidential campaign
and with all that's been going on in Ukraine, I thought the folks would appreciate an update.
So biggest picture, talk to me like I just haven't been reading your media outlet.
Like Ukraine has made an incursion into Russia.
Like what is the latest state of play on the ground?
Yeah, so against all expectations and by complete surprise, Ukraine launched this midsummer offensive,
not to retake territory in its own sovereign borders, but to essentially create a buffer zone,
as President Zelensky has now described it, in southern Russia in the region of Kursk. And initially, this looked to be
another cross-border raid of the kind that we've seen innumerable times in the last 18 months.
Usually what the Ukrainians have done is they've recruited a group of Russian fighters, proxies,
flying under the mantle of an independent, free, anti-Putin Russia. And they just do PR ops,
right? They go across the border, they shoot some stuff up, they take selfies with their flags,
and they go home. And so it looked like this could be the start of another one of those.
And it's true, they use those proxies as kind of the vanguard or the tip of the spear for this
incursion. But this has turned out to be a major operation with as many as four, perhaps not full, Ukrainian brigades committed to it,
including two very elite units, the airborne assault units. And this shows no indications
of them packing up and going home. Quite the opposite. It looks like they're fortifying their
lines, digging in. I've seen evidence of excavators, so presumably they're going to
start to build trenches, the way the Russians are now doing farther back along the line to keep the Ukrainians from advancing farther.
Best estimate that I've seen from very clever mapmakers and military analysts is that the
Ukrainians are now in control of something like 1200 square kilometers of territory, which,
if this is true, means that they've captured in the space of two weeks more
territory than Russia has been able to capture in Ukraine in the space of eight months to a year.
So that's a pretty significant accomplishment. Now, there are pitfalls or hazards ahead,
namely, what happens when the Russians really come in and try to boot them out? A lot of people
thought this would have happened already. Some of the stuff we're tracking at the Insider suggests that the level of discombobulation and utter chaos
and incompetence on the Russian side is, you know, it sort of beggars belief, even for those of us
who go in assuming there's going to be levels of discombobulation, incompetence, and chaos.
So, low expectations are not even being met. Yes, exactly and funnily enough we we published
yesterday an intercepted conversation with a municipal official in kursk who just kind of
lambaste everybody at all levels the regional government the military he said they're sending
in conscripts these unwashed 18 year olds who had two magazines apiece never seen combat before
and instead of protecting the
civilians the civilians had to evacuate the troops when they were being pulled back he said wherever
we would turn up you know the next village over the ukrainians were already there that's how quick
that's how how much of a lightning advance this was there's still a lot of fog of war here and
there's still a lot i can't speak with any authority about it's like is ukraine holding the territory that they you know have cast so far they are yeah but like so they as
they keep moving forward what they're like they're keeping some of the units back yeah i mean you
know it's it's it's sort of extraordinary cnn had one of their correspondents actually in bed with
the ukrainians as they seamlessly just rolled across the border from sumi which is the ukrainian
oblast to the south of Kursk,
right into Kursk. It's the first time CNN's embedded with Ukraine going into Russia,
right? Which is a deep humiliation for Putin. Now, to what extent he gives a shit, I don't know.
It seems that he's sort of shrugging around this, right? The Wall Street Journal did a good piece
about what is the Kremlin response to Kursk, and really they kind of see it as no big deal.
It's couched now, their
attempt to recapture their territory as an anti-terrorist operation. And that's for very
specific reasons, because if they were to declare all out war against Ukraine, which by the way,
up until this point, two and a half years into a war, they still have not done, that calls in
sort of strategic doctrine, which means possible use of nuclear weapons and all the rest of it.
So if it's an anti-terror operation, that means it's ceded to our old friends in the FSB,
who, speaking of discombobulation and competence and corruption,
that is possibly very good news for the Ukrainian side,
because they have managed to get the better of that service time and time again.
How this thing ends, I have no idea.
I don't think anybody does.
I've seen a lot of people get ahead of their skis on this,
saying this is going to be a calamity, this is going to backfire. Why are they doing this? They're taking badly needed resources from the Eastern Front in Donbass, when we've interviewed them, they are hopeful that the Russians will begin to deploy some of
their critical resources from other points along the contact line into Kursk because,
again, they simply cannot sustain or withstand this using 18-year-old conscripts who basically
were assured they're going to get to sit out the war and just do their mandatory military
service, right? Now, in fact, they're going to have to enter into a hot war zone where,
I should add, the Ukrainians are using American, British, Lithuanian, Polish, German armor.
They are using HIMARS, and the rockets provided with the HIMARS, the Gimlers, they're not using
ATAKAMs because we won't let them do that in Russian territory. And they're using a swarm of first person view drones, which have become a
really lethal, modernized piece of hardware on the battlefield. I mean, these things, you know,
you can actually see as they chase Russian soldiers, and then suddenly the camera goes
dark because they've impacted. I mean, Russians are terrified of these FPVs. To some extent,
they've actually been committing suicide before allowing an FPV to strike them,
because it's a horrible way to die. So yeah, I mean, they're in it to win it, it seems.
So then their theory of the case here is that this is not like you just an effort to humiliate
Putin, right? That it's a strategic move to hopefully force Russia to change their,
you know, that, you know, where they're distributing their forces,
etc? I think it's a combination of things. Number one, there is a PR or propaganda element
involved in this. We're talking about Ukraine invading Russia, right? That alone, unfathomable
in January of 2022, or even in March of 2022, when they started to push the Russians out of Kiev. So this
is a deep humiliation. They're exploiting it for all it's worth. They're showing footage of, I mean,
they've got Ukrainian correspondents in Kursk interviewing civilians who say, oh, the Ukrainians
are treating us great. You know, they tell us, go about your business, and we're here to protect you,
and, you know, welcome to the People's Republic of Kursk, and all this kind of thing. So they've
turned, flipped the script incredibly well.
It's a much-needed shot in the arm, too, for Ukrainian morale.
So one of the problems that they've been facing in terms of manpower in the last year, especially since their failed summer counteroffensive last summer, is a lot of people don't want to fight because they saw this as kind of a wasted effort. Why am I going to go sit in a trench, get killed,
and then my comrades can't even take my corpse from the battlefield
because there's not enough suppressive fire, right?
There was a shortfall of ammunition.
Their drones were being hit with electronic warfare from the Russian side.
So for the first time in the war, we began to see a flagging morale on the Ukrainian side.
Well, this operation, which, by the way, is also fielding freshly mobilized Ukrainian troops who've been trained and sent into battle for the first
time inside Russia and are now doing incredibly well there. This is, this is going to bolster.
And I think there's some indications that already has bolstered morale on the Ukrainian side.
There's this other argument that, Hey, territory for territory. If Donald Trump should be elected
in November and there's pressure put on Kiev to do some kind of deal that they don't want to do,
they'd much rather do it from an advantageous position of saying, we'll give you back a slice
of sovereign Russia if you give us back a slice of sovereign Ukraine. I mentioned the redeployment
of resources, hoping that they're going to stretch Russian lines and supply lines, logistics,
and all the rest of it.
There's that.
Right now, we're looking at a situation where Ukraine has destroyed three bridges across
a river in Kursk, and the Russians have one pontoon bridge left.
If they lose that bridge, they have no way of rescuing something like 700 of their troops
who will be in a pocket, basically, trapped.
So this is another thing the Ukrainians have said. They are capturing POW after POW, upwards of 1000 as
of now. Imagine they get those 700 guys, 1700 Russian POWs. Those are good assets to be traded
for Ukrainian POWs. Yeah. So this is kind of a, there's a series of arguments to be made, I think, of different motivating factors behind this. But so far, it's working. The question is, how long will it work? And, you know, if the Ukrainians are eventually pushed out, which has been kind of a predominant theme of this
conflict since even before the actual invasion in February of 2022. I think anybody who's arguing
fear of escalation at this point really needs to have their head examined. Well, this one's going
to be my next question. We're still holding them back, right? I guess there was news last week,
or maybe over the weekend, that Ukraine wanted to use some British weapons to fire into Russia,
and we're blocking them from that?
What's the story with that?
The American government, the Biden administration, I should say, does not want to see American missiles impacting Russian strategic air bases inside Russian territory.
They don't want to see missiles being used against Russian military installations inside Russia.
I understand that.
I understand it from a political level. I understand
it from, you know, the level of, well, hey, this is still a nuclear power. We don't want to upset
them unduly. But you have to proceed from evidence, right? Not from sort of grand IR theory,
much of which I have to say, you know, I give a lot of credit to the Ukrainians, not just for
besting supposedly the greatest army in Europe and
humiliating them again and again. I give them credit for debunking a lot of received wisdom
and myths that have been built up since during the Cold War, but certainly that have obtained
beyond the Cold War into the post-Soviet era. If you punch the Russians in the face and you
bloody their nose, it does not lead to World War III.
I mean, I started noticing this in August of 2022, the first summer of the full-scale invasion.
The Ukrainians somehow destroyed upwards of 50% of the Black Sea Fleet's naval aviation group with some strike on Saki Air Base.
There's footage of this where you have a bunch of Russian beachgoers, all of a sudden this plume of smoke behind them, and they're all run scattering. Before this attack, Dmitry Medvedev, who was the former
president of Russia, now he's the deputy chairman of their National Security Council,
alcoholic and big time drunk. Good drunk tweeter. Good drunk tweeter. He had put up on Telegram some
rant saying that if the Ukrainians think of doing anything to crimea it'll be
armageddon saki airbase goes boom the russian government official response was oh it was a
smoking accident somebody lit up a sig next to a oil tanker and that's what happened it's the only
thing they've denied the ukrainians have done by the way which is interesting what did medvedev do
he deleted his telegram post right that's a critical piece of data right there. They talk a big game of threatening to reduce the West to radioactive ash and they're going to invade NATO countries and tanks will roll into Berlin. Well, no, actually, German tanks are rolling into Russia right now. And the response is, well, it's a counterterrorism operation. We'll get it sorted in due course, but we have other things to worry about. Okay, so you've shown your cards. You really can take it and it's not going
to be the end of the world. And I think we need to sort of alter our perception of security
assistance and act accordingly. I mean, yeah, absolutely. They should be allowed to use
storm shadow against Russian planes sitting on the tarmac planes that, should they take off,
are going to do what? They're going to rain fire on Ukrainian cities and kill loads of civilians.
I mean, we would not fight a war this way with one hand tied behind our back.
You know, if the US government position, which I think is very good and moral,
is, well, it's fine for Ukraine to invade Russia. This is their part of their defense.
They're the victim here. Russia is the aggressor. You have to take the fight to the aggressor on its own soil.
Well, then it stands to reason they should be allowed to do that with the full panoply
of kit they've been provided.
And again, I fail to see the distinction.
Putin and his regime couch this as they're not fighting Ukraine.
And they do this for very understandable psychological reasons.
They consider the Ukrainians to be inferior.
They're almost a subspecies. They're not real people. They don't really have a culture and a
nation. There's nothing there. They're just Russians who haven't realized it yet. So they
say we're fighting NATO. Okay. So then if you're fighting NATO already, it doesn't matter if a
storm shadow slams into one of your airfields, right? Because you've been doing this for two
and a half years. So I think we have to kind of learn how to call the bluff a little bit better.
Okay, so let's just set aside the dystopia of Donald Trump winning and what an end game might
look like there and think instead of kind of the current trajectory we're on, let's say that Harris
wins reelection. I'm curious, first, like your thoughts about, okay, you know, that would
obviously be a key inflection point. Clearly, the Russians are waiting and hoping for their
their man in Mar-a-Lago. So how might that change? What's the balance of power? You know,
how would that look then? And then after that, I want to talk a little bit more about Kamala's
foreign policy, but just in the Ukraine, Russia side of things, like what do you think would be
a potential step to end game if
Kamala is elected? Well, okay, let me just start by saying, when Biden was still in the race,
and it looked like this was going to be a walk for Trump back into the White House,
the most optimistic appraisal I heard from the Ukrainian side, but also from,
I think, understandably traumatized and let's put some lipstick on the pig type, you know,
analysts in the West, including in the United States, including from Democrats, by the way,
who were very worried about where this was headed, is well, yeah, he'll try to do a deal.
But then, you know, Putin will rat fuck him as Putin always does. And then Trump will get upset,
and he'll just give all the weapons except nukes to the Ukrainians. I found this to be very, very
naively optimistic about Trump. I don't think Trump knows anything about Ukrainians. I found this to be very, very naively optimistic about Trump.
I don't think Trump knows anything about this conflict. I mean, he couldn't tell you what
piece of territory is under whose control. He doesn't care about Donbass. Which country
Kursk is in. He doesn't know where Kursk is. He probably thinks it's somewhere in Nebraska,
and it's ruled by a communist cadre led by Tim Walz. You know, whatever.
Like, this is not somebody I want to barter with the fate of nations and a lot of people who are living under occupation, which if you know what's happening in the occupied territories of Ukraine, it's barbaric.
Women and children are being tortured and raped.
Children are being disappeared and stolen and brought into Russia
to be essentially auctioned off as orphans to adoptive parents, told that their parents don't
exist in Ukraine. I mean, it's really horrific. This is not somebody I want trying to sort this
out. Now, the question you ask is, if it's Kamala Harris, how to think? I think it's mostly going to
be a continuation of the Biden administration policy.
Her national security advisor, or I forget the term of art that's used if you're vice president.
Phil Gordon.
So Phil Gordon, I have mixed feelings about because I remember quite well his view on Syria, which I spent 10 years covering.
And the book I wrote on ISIS was, I'd really set out to write a book about the Syrian revolution and that civil war. And it became a book about jihad, because unfortunately,
this conflict evolved into a jihadist. He was dovish on Syria, right?
Well, more than dovish. I mean, he basically thought we shouldn't do anything. He thought
Obama even articulating the so-called red line on chemical weapons was folly. He then gave an
interview with Jeff Goldberg in the Atlantic saying, well, if you're going to makecalled red line on chemical weapons was folly. He then gave an interview with Jeff Goldberg in the Atlantic saying,
well, if you're going to make a red line and it gets violated,
you have to uphold it.
So he said we should have done those strikes, whatever.
He didn't want to help Syrian rebels.
That's a fair point.
Yeah, no, that is a fair point.
We should have either done it or not, shatter, get off the pot.
That's not that bad.
But my bigger point is if it were up to Phil Gordon,
they wouldn't have even that right sort of criterion
for intervention so anyway on the middle east you know he's anti-intervention he wrote a book about
the folly of regimes i mean i wrote a book my isis book is as much about the the catastrophe of iraq
and what led to you know aqi's essentially it's the advent of aqi and so much unpleasantness
from there but syria was always different because it
was bottom up and there was a genuine groundswell. Anyway, I don't want to relitigate this, but I
will say in Phil Gordon's defense, what's interesting is he was one of the first
democratic policymakers, advisor types, who I think in 2018 co-wrote a piece in Foreign Affairs, where he called for sending
higher grade military equipment to Ukraine, including, I think, armored personnel carriers
and other things. So Phil Gordon, he's a Francophile, he's a West European guy. And
that's kind of his bailiwick. And insofar as now, I think the major crisis that any president is going to inherit is still in Europe.
This is not altogether a bad thing.
And I think he would be perhaps even more forward leaning on Ukraine than some elements within the Biden administration.
The Biden administration is not monolithic, by the way.
You know, you can do a Kremlin ology of who is terrified of nuclear war versus who wants well we should all
be terrified of nuclear war but i mean like who thinks an attack comes hit inside russia will lead
to world war three versus who thinks essentially what i was saying which is no i mean they can take
it and they've shown that they could take it you know it remains to be seen i i always query we
have this estonian military analyst called carl i can't say who he
is because he chooses to remain anonymous and he's developed a mystique even within estonia
such that the prime minister wants to know where is carl and what does he think but you can tell
us that it's not tomas ilves is you know kind of it's not he doesn't have a secret alternate name
carl if you follow tomas on on twitter, you know that he is uncorked and does
not need any kind of veil of anonymity whatsoever. But no, Carl seems to think actually that
Kamala Harris, shall we say, will be unburdened by all that has been with respect to Ukraine.
It might actually be, you know, there'll be fresh blood in the administration, people who will say,
come on, like, you know, let's take the gloves off a little bit. Let's let's hit the Russians. I don't know. Let's dream with me for a
second. Let's say that's true. Right. Like, what is the Ukrainian pitch for how to get this to,
you know, some kind of closure, right? Like if even if they even if you gave them everything
they wanted, like then what? Okay, well, the brochure answer in Ukraine is all 1991 borders yeah i was there in january of 2022 with a simple
journalistic ask of myself why is it that nobody in this country is panicking and everybody elsewhere
is saying war is imminent yeah and the answer i got was i mean russia they're not that crazy
they know that if they invade us full scale i mean we'll bleed them to death well they turned
out to be right about that so they were wrong about the war happening, but for the right reason.
But the other thing that they would say kind of sotto voce is, listen, you know, between you and
me, Michael, the Russians sort of did us a favor in 2014 by invading and taking over the two parts
of our country that are the most predominant with ethnic Russians and people who
tend to lean toward Moscow rather than toward the West. So in other words, Putin kind of pent up all
the fifth colonists such that it allowed a decade for Ukraine to politically kind of develop this
level of cohesion and integration, which is one of the reasons that I think they're going to be
within the European Union much sooner than they will be in NATO.
Now, that's not to say that they don't want their terrain back.
Donbass, they see as this sort of blighted black hole.
Most of the cities and towns and settlements are in utter ruins.
It's a pocked moonscape.
There's no infrastructure there.
To rebuild will take years, if not decades.
And they sort of acknowledge, like, this should not be our priority. We don't want the Russians to take more of our territory, but recapturing Donbass,
and then also creeping up that much closer to the Russian border so that they'll constantly
reinvade us. Maybe that's not in the offing. Crimea, however, they see as a big, viable,
juicy target. And even before the summer counteroffensive, I was hearing,
look south, young man, because that's where we're going. And that's indeed, I mean,
the main axis was to sever the line of communication between mainland Russia and Crimea,
chip away at Russian positions and logistics in Kherson, Zaporizhia region, and then ultimately
with the aim of recapturing Crimea. And if you notice, and unfortunately, this has not got as much news attention as it deserved in the last year. It's been eclipsed by a lot of
dooming and pessimism about Ukraine's prospects. In the last year, Ukraine has done something kind
of extraordinary. They have all but neutralized the Black Sea Fleet, most of which has now
repaired to Novorossiysk in Russia, to another port in mainland Russia. So they're out of Sevastopol. They have been destroying systematically, using, by the way, Atacoms and Storm
Shadows and their own homebrew fleet of seaborne drones and aerial drones, advanced Russian air
defense systems like the S-300, the S-400 platform in Crimea. They've been conducting these sort of
stealth raids in Crimea. These are shaping
exercises for what I think will be the next big battle or the next big play, which is let's
recapture the peninsula, which strategically, economically for them, is much more valuable than
parts of Donetsk and Lugansk. Now, they're not going to say that publicly, and I'm sure I'm
going to get a lot of flack for saying it publicly, But it's it's sort of kind of the not so secret goal, I think, or at least it was maybe it's changed now that they
have cursed. Maybe they want to take Moscow next. All right, now now we're talking. Welcome to the
podcast. We're marching on Moscow. All right, Michael Weiss, hopefully, we'll be in the coconut
grove come winter.
And I can have you back more and we can nerd out more rather than having to care so much about the Alanis Morissette videos that Donald Trump is bleeding on his social media feed.
And I would appreciate having you back.
I'm just waiting for Ryan Reynolds to come out and tweet that
that version of the song is not about him either.
It was not me.
Me and Alanis never had a thing.
I was great to her.
All right, Michael Weiss, thank you so much.
Come back soon.
Everybody go check out The Insider
if you want to nerd out on what is happening in Russia.
We'll be back tomorrow with convention coverage,
review of the Biden speech,
and the dreamiest man in democratic politics.
We'll see you all then.
Peace.
Just one more tear to cry One tear dropped from my eye We'll see y'all then. Peace. White, and a true but all, remember 24
And when I'm back in Chicago, I feel it
Another version of me
I was in it, I wave goodbye to the end of beginning
This song has started now, and you're just finding out
Now isn't that a laugh?
A major sacrifice, but clueless at the time
And to Caroline, just trust me you'll be fine.
And when I'm back in Chicago, I feel it.
Another version of me, I was in it.
I wave goodbye to the end of beginning
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, goodbye
You take the man out of the city, not the city of the man
You take the man out of the city, not the city of the man
You take the man out of the city, not the city of the man The Bullwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.