The Megyn Kelly Show - How America Enabled Putin's Atrocities, and Democracy's Retreat, with Garry Kasparov | Ep. 294
Episode Date: April 6, 2022Megyn Kelly is joined by Garry Kasparov, Chairman of Renew Democracy Initiative and former chess champion, to talk about his correct predictions about Russia, Putin's next move, the true cost of the U...kraine crisis, Russia's revenge, how America's leaders enabled Putin's atrocities today, how the 80s and 90s led to the invasion of 2022, how Obama's foreign policy led to democracy's retreat, Obama's failed "reset" with Russia, Ukraine's economy and elections, how the lack of American response to Assad's use of chemical weapons helped Putin, the status of America's current response to the Ukraine invasion, what happens if Putin wins, why the Biden administration doesn't want to deal with foreign policy, how Kasparov became a chess champion at a young age, his rise to fame, and more.Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show.
Today, we are excited to welcome Garry Kasparov back to the program.
We're going to get his thoughts on the awful situation in Ukraine, but how things are going overall there. Also, new sanctions just announced moments ago against Russia in the wake of what's happened there this
week. But we're also going to touch in more depth on his remarkable, remarkable life and career from
chess prodigy to freedom fighter. And by the way, he has predicted what would happen in the Soviet
Union, then Soviet Union,
what would happen in Russia, what Putin's next move would be correctly for the better
part of Putin's entire time in office and prior to as well.
I mean, so you really my overall impression in preparing for this interview is we should
be listening to Garry Kasparov when it comes to what Putin's next move is.
I don't know that there's a better person to listen to. So just a bit about Gary before we bring him on. He was born in the former Soviet Union. By 12 years old, he would be the top child player in all of the USSR, the world under 20 champion at just 17. Look at him there. If you're watching on YouTube, it's like this little boy sitting there against grown men and the best player in the entire world by age 22. He would
remain at the top of his game for two decades. His matches were like something out of the movie
Rocky. But in this case, the Russian almost always won. And in this case, we're rooting for the Russian, too. By 1996, he would even
compete against IBM's supercomputer Deep Blue and win. I knew that I could learn much better
because my opponent would need more time to learn and to come back with a really sophisticated
counter strategy. But a year later, in a rematch, man lost to the machine, a defeat that would
haunt Gary for years. It was through the game of chess that Gary Kasparov's eyes were opened to the
West and to the power of democracy. It was life-changing, he says. By 2005, he decided to
call it a career, putting his chessboard away to join the fledgling pro-democracy movement in Russia. He wanted his
children to grow up in a truly free country. And to him, that meant a Russia without Vladimir Putin
in charge. He would protest. He would attempt to run for office in a country that makes that
virtually impossible against Putin, sometimes landing himself in jail. You're not allowed to
protest in the streets in Russia. Even there, he was so popular that the guards wanted his autograph. But by 2013,
it became clear he was no longer safe in his own country. And so he left his beloved Russia
and family members, including his mother, behind. He would settle in New York City,
where he told anyone and everyone as often as he possibly could about the threat Putin poses.
At times, he would be dismissed as an alarmist, but his warnings have proven right over and over again.
It's almost eerie.
In fact, he even wrote a book about all of this in 2015 after Putin's first invasion of Ukraine.
Winter is Coming was the name.
And yet six years later, here we are witnessing the worst crisis in Europe since World War II.
Gary Kasparov is the chairman of Renew Democracy Initiative.
Great to have you back, Gary.
Thanks for being here.
Thank you for inviting me, Megan.
Let me just start with winter is coming
because I heard you say,
you know, I wrote a whole book about this.
I've been talking about this for 20 years.
I talk about it as much as I can
about what Putin is likely to do.
And it's always the more bellicose course.
It's always the land grab.
It's always the, he doesn't respond to weakness. He only respects
strength. As you said to me the last time you were on, it's not a question of why, but why not for
him. And yet no one listened. Now they still look at you and people like you who are saying,
trust me, he's not going to back down. Trust me, he only responds to strength and say, well,
what's next? What's next? And you're kind of throwing your hands up in the air saying,
I've written it all down for you. Read the book. The path is right there.
Yes, you're right. And it doesn't make me feel happy that I was right all along,
because I thought that we could have learned from history, from the World War II, pre-World War II, appeasement policies in Europe
that failed so spectacularly. But nobody wanted to listen. I think it's part of human psychology,
because the language of appeasement sounds nice. And I think the biggest mistake the free world
made about Vladimir Putin and his regime, they knew he was corrupt. They knew it was some kind
of a mafia. They knew it was not a democracy, though they paid lip service and they called it some kind of hybrid democracy,
the special democracy, sovereign democracy, whatever. I always say that at the moment,
you see an adjective before the word democracy, it's something that's wrong.
But they never expected him to go that far that far because they thought oh he's already mega
billionaire they they have such a comfortable life they steal money in russia and they spend
money and and and park money in the free world why to risk all not paying attention to his true
intentions and i i'm not a shrink i couldn't read his mind so i'm not a parapsychologist
but i just listened to
vladimir putin and i grew up in the soviet union i met enough kgb who cannot counsel my life to know
how they thought and and i knew the moment i heard him minister and and uh a part of a successor back in 1999 when he addressed his um former kgb colleagues technically
former kgb colleagues at the headquarter in ljubljana saying no former kgb officers once
kgb always kgb that's you know for me was the first warning because i knew what it meant and
he immediately as a president of Russia, restored Soviet anthem.
That was another warning sign. So it was an indication of his plans. And the moment I heard him say the collapse of the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th
century, I knew he was up to something. And that's why I've been saying all along,
while Vladimir Putin was our problem in Russia in the first decade of the century,
eventually he would be everybody's problem if given the chance. And it's very unfortunate that
not only his words, and again, he had plenty of them said openly, like in Munich at Security
Conference in Europe in 2007, 15 years ago, when he talked openly about the spheres of influence that's a language
straight from the Malt of Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 and lay down his vision of Europe,
that is, what was NATO being pushed back to 1997 borders and Russia would claim its rights,
quote, unquote, for direct or indirect control of former Soviet republics and even Eastern
European former Soviet satellites.
And then he followed it with attack against Republic of Georgia in 2008.
With everything on display, I just couldn't understand what else was needed to understand
that this man had serious plans.
His intentions were not limited to becoming the richest.
He wanted to take revenge for the loss or defeat, Soviet defeat in the Cold War.
And also his philosophy, if you may use this word for his worldview, was based on the ideas that were so opposite to our values.
And one of the key elements was violence. Vladimir Putin believes, as his favorite
characters of history, Joseph Stalin or Ivan the Terrible, that violence is not just allowed,
but it's a desirable tool to control your subjects and also to spread your influence, both domestically and internationally.
You are unsparing in the book and very open and honest about U.S. leadership and how they've misjudged Putin from George W. Bush to Barack Obama to Donald Trump to Joe Biden, who came after your book.
But you've written
enough and said enough publicly about him. I know how you feel. Let's just go back and start there
for a bit, because I know with George W. Bush, you feel he backed himself into a corner with that.
I looked into his eyes and saw his soul remark in a way that sort of handicapped him from being
stronger against Putin. If you wouldn't mind just setting the stage for where Putin was in his leadership then,
because you talk about how the democracy experiment in Russia was about eight years,
took about eight years from the time the Soviet Union fell to the time they elected a KGB,
a former KGB agent, and he started to slowly eradicate all those democratic reforms bit by
bit. It didn't take him that long. So that's the young Putin at that time. And talk about what
happened after 9-11 and how George W. Bush really hamstrung the United States from being stronger
as he eroded those freedoms that had been budding not so long ago in Russia.
Since we have time, so I can afford a little detour in history. And I can say that I
have a pretty amazing record of criticizing six U.S. presidents. It started with my criticism of
Bush 41 and then followed with Bill Clinton. So that's why, you know, if I could present myself
as a truly bipartisan or nonpartisan critics of U.S. foreign policy based on facts. So that's why,
you know, when some people blame me after publication of my book, Winter's Coming,
for being so anti-Obama, I pointed out that, you know, I had a pretty good record of going after
any president who did, as I believe, something wrong vis-a-vis Russia, former Soviet Union, and this part of the world.
And speaking about this meeting in Slovenia in June that you mentioned, I think that was
the beginning of Putin's rise as a leader of Russia who managed to charm his Western counterparts and uh he used his kgb knowledge
i think the tricks were quite primitive but it did work and uh we all know that one of the turning
points in the conversation between vladimir putin and and bush 43 was the the story that Putin told him, I believe invented, about him being baptized in the
Soviet Union and wearing the cross given by the mother and how he always had it on his
chest and had to hide it because it wouldn't be welcome in KGB.
Okay, baptized, cross in the KGB.
Okay, give me a break break so but it did work bush
a devoted christian he bought the story and it it created a bond and we should give putin credit you
know he knew how to work with people he's he could read psychology he could read people that's why he
was so successful in winning uh favors uh and
then um even friendship from some of the uh foreign leaders and eventually you know uh bringing them
to the site even using uh more direct means like bribes just to interject before you continue even
when I interviewed Putin and I spent a fair amount of time with him in three separate sit-downs um he
for one of the first things he said to me and he knew that I was the mother of three children,
was how much his mother meant to him, what a close relationship he had with her.
It was an obvious manipulation.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
He always, you know, tried to play, you know, for strength or witnesses of the opponent.
It's well known that his first meeting with angela merkel knowing that she she did dislike
dogs he brought his dog you know to the meeting so this is this is again he knew how to work with
with with individuals that you know this kgb school also probably lessons from the streets
of leningrad you know some of the sub-criminal culture was very important for survival to
actually read your counterpart to read your friend or your your
enemy and and it didn't work with bush and then these women came 9 11. he was the first foreign
leader calling bush uh it's he he knew that that's that was something that would stay in bush's mind
it doesn't matter what he said you know he, he just offered, you know, condolences and full support. And he knew that he had Bush, you know, on his side.
And anything he did afterwards, I think that Bush had great difficulty. Until the invasion of
Georgia in 2008, difficulty of looking at Putin's record, looking at not only his record, you know,
in KGB, you know, this pre-presidency, but also his record you know uh um in kgb you know this pre-presidents presidency
but also his record as a president the the second chechen war the hostage uh crisis in
nordost the theater in moscow when the hostages and terrorists were killed many uh 150 roughly
were killed by by this um uh uh nor uh north asian uhlan, the school was burned, also terrorist attack.
The school was burned to the ground with 335 people being killed,
more than half of them children.
And the murders of political opponents, including Litvinenko,
a former KGB spy who was poisoned by polonium-210 in London.
So everything that could point out at
putin's true colors bush ignored because i think the the power of the first uh um contact and also
the putin's uh uh willingness to always accommodate bush because they had many more meetings afterwards
and that's all you know uh helped put into neutralize uh America's opposition even
at the point where they went after yucos and Mikhail khodorkovsky the most successful oil
company in Russia the biggest one and it was about to merge was one of the largest U.S corporations
to create the mega company that would hopefully I thought change the course of Russia and would bring our country into this global trade as a partner, not a spoiler.
And Putin stopped it.
And President Khodorkovsky privatized or reprivatized the company, gave it to his own buddies.
And the U.S. administration, okay, shrugged their shoulders.
Because they seem to have an attitude of, look, all the stuff that's happening in Russia, that's Russia's problem. OK, shrug their shoulders. make the case, okay, that's one thing, 9-11, but we were, because you're a master strategist,
that's how you achieved all of these chess titles and victories all your life. We should have been,
as you write, quote, pressing our advantage as soon as the Berlin Wall came down. And instead,
as soon as it came down, we pressed the brakes, we retreated. And so it wasn't just, oh, after 9-11, we were
busy. The two previous presidents who you said you criticized, H.W. and Clinton, didn't handle
things the way they should have once we had the moral authority after the Berlin Wall fell.
Yes, going back to 1991, because it's relevant since one of the very important moments in
1991 was Bush's famous speech in Kiev, Chechen Kiev speech, a few months before the collapse
of the Soviet Union. of his rise, he warned Ukrainians about this pro-independence movement. He warned them not
to follow their nationalists because it could lead to the collapse of the Soviet Union. And then
that was a nightmare for Bush and his cabinet, for his Secretary of State, Jim Baker III.
So they were terrified by the potential collapse of the Soviet Union because they didn't know
how to handle it.
It was a chaos and they wanted to avoid it.
So that's-
Let me just give you, because we cut us out of that, knowing that you might reference
that.
And we have a little soundbite of Bush 41 in what you call again the chicken kiev speech um 1991 here he is
in moscow i outlined our approach we will support those in the center and the republics
who pursue freedom, and economic liberty. We will determine our support not on the basis
of personalities, but on the basis of principles. And we cannot tell you how to reform your
society. We will not try to pick winners and losers in political competition between republics
or between republics in the center. That is your business.
That's not the business of the United States of America.
Do not doubt our real commitment, however, to reform.
Do not think we can presume to solve your problems for you.
So what's he trying to say there, Gary?
Oh, it was a clear message.
Stay with Gorbachev.
Reform, but don't disintegrate.
And it's amazing.
I was young.
I was 28 in 1991.
But I knew that the Soviet Union was doomed. And I was, I have to admit, shocked by this all-powerful
American intelligence, because we heard stories about Pentagon
and about CIA, and just, you know, looking just at the wrong things
and making predictions that I knew would not materialize.
On November 15th, November 15th,
five weeks before the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Edward Shevardnadze,
who was reappointed Soviet foreign minister,
visited Washington, DC.
I was also there, just, you know,
I was receiving an award there.
And I saw on TV, this is the, it's a big celebration.
Bush and Baker and other members of cabinet, they received Shevardnadze.
And they talked about a new dawn in Soviet-American relations.
Again, five weeks before the collapse of the Soviet Union.
And why it's important, because now we're seeing the the it's like a repetition of history we are revisiting it
because i think one of the problems of this administration of of all relevant agencies uh like
pentagon cia the state is the same fear that if ukraine wins the war and putin's armies defeated
crimees return back to ukraine and putin regime collapses what happens
in russia so for me it's like you know seeing the the sequel and that's why i i i want to remind our
audience about about 1991 but it's amazing that now we are in 2022 we could have learned something
and as you said you know the collapse of the so Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War offered
America a unique opportunity to rebuild the world, to actually offer a new vision.
In 1992, America was all-powerful.
You could have reformed the United Nations.
You could have demanded that countries would not be simply paying lip service to democratic
procedures,
but will carry general reforms.
Democracy was a fashion.
Everybody wanted to be democratic or at least look democratic.
And then eight years, eight Clinton years, and then, Al Qaeda was ready to strike.
The attack on America in 2001 and 9-11, I think, was a result of failure of imagination.
What America needed is the same vision as Harry Truman administration had in 1946.
At that time, it was building institutions to oppose
communism, the threat of communism to Europe and the rest of the world. And these institutions
didn't work. They helped America to stop communism and then defeat it. And all presidents, Democrats
and Republicans alike, they pushed this agenda, relying on the institutions built by Harry Truman and his team. We needed
something similar, but Bill Clinton was not Harry Truman. But also, Americans had a very
different attitude. It's easy to blame the leader, but I think the mood of people who
were behind Harry Truman, people who won the World War II, beating Germany and Japan, and who were willing to make
sacrifices, was very different from the nation that was relieved in 1991, 1992, and thought about,
okay, comfortable life. It's not surprising that Francis Fukuyama book, The End of History,
was a bestseller. I have to admit, I also thought that we would never deal again with
the horrors of totalitarian past.
Yeah, you're making a good point, though, because the mood of the country does in large part dictate policy.
That would explain, if not excuse, Barack Obama's policy towards Putin, which really seemed to be almost on bended knee.
And I don't think the American people felt that way. But I do think
by the time he took office, we were war weary. You know, we were eight, right? We were seven
years into the war against Al Qaeda and so on. And he seemed to have this, you tell me, but just
this utopian view of what he was capable of and how if he just made nice, nice with guys like Putin, we'd have a kinder, gentler, better
world. Yes, I think Obama's foreign policy was based on his naive beliefs that the world could
be a better place if America retreat, if America, it's not just going back to the trenches, because
we had, you know, these shifts in US presidencies. You had more aggressive policy of Harry Truman,
then Eisenhower more or less going back to the trenches,
then JFK and Johnson, then even Nixon went back to the trenches
trying to stop the war in Vietnam, actually finishing this war in Vietnam.
So it was always a back and forth.
But Obama's decision to dramatically change American foreign policy
was based not only on the demand from the public. You're right. There was a mood. So people were
tired of these wars and they didn't understand. So what's it for america in iraq or in afghanistan but it's it was ideological and and
it's it was you know the growing segment of americans american society that demanded america's
not only retreat but apology and i think that's that led to two very dangerous um phenomena of of
um as i said significant segment of American society, believing that America was not
a solution, but rather a problem. And without America's playing an active role, they called
world policemen, the world would be a better place. You know, amazingly, it's this now when
these people are just, you know, laying down these arguments, they simply ignore the fact
that, you know the obama's retreat
and apologies and reset policy with russia and total you know um rejection of facts on the on
on the ground uh led to the retreat of democracy globally i don't think it's a mere coincidence
that when you look at the freedom house uh uh timeline, that last 16 years, democracy is on retreat.
Democracy has been steady losing ground.
And that's exactly the moment where Barack Obama laid down his vision of the future world and tried to make friends with all American force.
So from Russia to Iran to just you name it.
And it's interesting because you can't, you know, our viewers and listeners can't confuse
our trying to force democracy on lands that clearly had no interest in it, you know, places
like Iraq or Afghanistan. I mean, there's some interest, but it's, you know, these are not
countries that are going to become beacons of democracy. And a country like Russia, where they wanted democracy,
there was a baby democracy. There I go, I have a word before it, but there was until they elected
Putin, and then he started to roll back all the reforms. That's different. Those two things are
not the same. Yes, but I will be a little bit more, you know more generous to Iraqis and Afghanis.
So whatever we say about America's intervention in Afghanistan, I mean, it helped hundreds of thousands of Afghanis, especially women.
It had an effect.
And now, by the way, I'm confused when I see some far-left groups that know, that's that advocated for the for Americans
withdrawal at any cost from Afghanistan. Now they're complaining about the plight of Afghani
women, especially girls. Yeah, but it's this, can you just connect these two things together?
So, and just to clarify what I'm saying, you know, because there's a lot of the folks who
don't want us to get involved right now in Ukraine in any more meaningful ways, cite the
Bush policies, the years of 43, saying our attempts to spread democracy were disastrous
and cost a lot of American blood and treasure. And we should learn from our past and not go down
that path again. OK, that's one thing. We also have to learn from the Obama years and from the
Trump years. The Obama years on bended knee with roses towards guys like Putin
doesn't work. It leads him to be more aggressive in the region and not imposing severe consequences
on him is more provocative than peaceful. But I'm just trying to start at that first lesson
with respect to George W. Bush and his and Condi's and Cheney's attempts to spread democracy
throughout parts of the world that seem to have very little interest in it.
Go ahead.
Yes.
No, it's a very important point.
So now it's actually, I would put Ukraine as a separate case study because yeah, Ukraine
is not Iraq, it's not Afghanistan.
Ukrainians had their democracy.
And this is something that the audience should understand when When they look at Ukraine, Russia, now they can
understand the difference. But still, you know, they even can,
you know, they many, many know even the geography of Ukraine,
because you see the map, a great map and all these cities that
are being that's that are now in the center of global attention.
But many Ukrainians do speak Russian. And we hear arguments that, oh, Ukrainians
and Russians are the same people. They're very, very close, brothers, sisters, maybe
cousins. Yes and no. Its Ukrainian language is very close to Russian, but many Ukrainians
in the East and the South, they speak Russian, you know, the same Russian as Russians, as I do.
But Ukraine and Russia parted, not just in 1991 with the collapse of the Soviet Union, but the most important moment was in 1994, when Ukrainians had presidential elections and the sitting president, Leonid
Kravchuk, lost the elections and walked away.
So Ukraine had probably the most important element of a democracy, a peaceful transit
of power.
And that's made a hell of a difference because Russia never had it.
Yeltsin didn't want to leave power.
Election in 1996 was, yeah, it was free but not fair.
And, of course, you know, after Putin's appearance, it was no longer free or fair.
So we all knew the result of the elections.
That's why I said the difference between Russian politics and chess is that in chess we have fixed rules and unpredictable results in russia you know rules change but
results stay the same um it's not it's not a game that smart man plays yeah wait let me let me just
stand you by there for one second gary because i want to i want to squeeze in um something else
and then come back to this because this is important how we got here i mean i think you
can't understand where to go what the right next move is without understanding how we got
here that's where i want to pick it up in one minute so gary we talked about um sort of pre
41 we talked about uh well pre 43 i should say say 41 and then Bill Clinton and now 43 and his
comments about Putin's soul and so on. And now Obama had a couple of massive things happen during
his presidency with respect to this region of the world. 2008 was right before he came into office
when Putin took Georgia, when he when he invaded Georgia. And then 2014 is when he invaded Ukraine and got much more aggressive there. And
there were some sanctions placed on Putin that which I think the Obama defenders would say were
nice and severe and, you know, appropriate. But it was it was a nothing. And you had been
predicting all along. Listen to me. This is going to result in a more aggressive Putin.
He's not done. He doesn't respect responses like this. We've done absolutely nothing. You wait. He's going to do more. medvedev who was uh sitting there in four years and by the way that was also an important uh
part of putin's plan he was not ready to usurp power after his first two terms he he could sense
that the moment was not right so he needed someone who could give him his four years break and for me
the last indication of his plans to stay in power forever was his decision, Putin's decision, to stay as a prime minister.
If he decided, if he wanted to retire, if he wanted to enjoy life and he was already a mega billionaire, I'm sure he could have done that without any difficulties.
Even with all the crimes he committed before,'m sure he'll find you know um enough
understanding in the free world to close eyes for that and russia would move into into his new
medviz of era liberalization so it's the yeah that's what everybody expected uh but he stayed
behind medvedev uh technically by by russian uh constitution by by the law of the land Medvedev. Technically, by Russian constitution, by the law of the land, Medvedev
could have fired Putin with a strong lifespan. But in a mafia-like structures, in dictatorships,
it's not about official position, but it's about unofficial grip on power. Technically,
Stalin was never the head of the state, but he was calling all the shots same with putin and to my surprise
and horror americans and europeans have been spending years uh numerous attempts to court
medvedev and his entourage trying to sort of build relations and to offer medvedev some kind of political clout to make sure that Putin would never come back.
Of course, it failed.
And the aggression against the Republic of Georgia was the first sign that Putin was ready to move.
And his speech in Munich was not just a declaration, but it was a plan.
And Obama's first act was
a not for policy of reset. Yeah, the reset button with Hillary Clinton. We have that.
Yes, absolutely. She sat there and she gave this button that was supposed to say reset in Russian.
And I know you've pointed out, that's not what it said. We misspelled it.
What did it say, in fact? Yeah, it was overweight, actually.
Yes. It was totally opposite. They added two letters. Somebody in the State Department blew it up. Yeah. It was was a doomed policy and it started with a big mistake in definition.
Yeah.
And then you had Obama caught on tape saying to Medvedev, I just need more flexibility
after the election.
That was 2012 already.
It's the after attack on the Republic of Georgia, Americans basically ignored it.
Europeans spent months trying to make sure that the blame is split evenly between Russia
and Republic of Georgia, trying to find any plausible explanation to blame former president
of Georgia Mikhail Saakashvili for provoking Russia.
Because then we don't have to get involved. We don't have to get involved.
Oh yeah, but it's the, again,
Sakharov knew that it was imminent, invasion was imminent.
And after the invasion, in August, 2008,
I wrote an article in the Wall Street Journal
saying Ukraine would be next.
And when people asked me, how did I know?
I said, I looked at the map.
And it was very clear.
Putin wanted to make sure that, you know,
no former Soviet Republic, independent states now, would join NATO. And Georgia you could hear this growing frustration in the tone of Russian propaganda.
They have not attacked Ukraine yet because it's important to remember that since 1991
to 2014, all Russian presidents, Yeltsin, Putin, then Medvedev, and then Putin, signed
numerous treaties with Ukraine.
And Russia made no, not a single demand about Ukrainian territory, about an inch of Ukrainian territory.
And all these treaties, agreements have been ratified by several Russian parliaments.
So the uniqueness of the Crimea annexation was that it had no diplomatic prelude.
Even Adolf Hitler or Saddam Hussein, they tried to pretend that they had claims. They were talking about dancing corridor as Hitler or Saddam Hussein, about Kuwait as being taken away from Iraq by British colonial powers.
Putin didn't even bother.
I knew that he would act when he thought he could do that. And obviously, Obama's
policy encouraged him, because prior to the Crimea, we had few
important moments that convinced Putin that Obama would not act.
One is, let's now again remind the audience, it's a green
revolution in Iran in 2009. I know that many Iranians waited for Americans at least to
offer moral support, nothing. They let Iranian mullahs to
destroy it. And I think the first months of the revolution,
the Iranian government, the Iranian dictatorship was very
cautious, ultra cautious, because they didn't know what
what would be American
reaction. Don't forget, American troops were standing next door in Iraq. So recognizing
America would not intervene, they crushed it. Then, of course, Arab Spring. And I think it was
quite a disastrous America's response, because again, it required policy. It was something that has been changing. And America
was, as we know, leading from behind. And I'm not talking about the tragedy of Benghazi.
Again, the turning point from Putin's perspective was Syria. That's where Americans could make all
the difference. And I have no doubt Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons from Putin's, having Putin's permission.
I think for Putin it was a test.
And America failed the test.
Obama was ready to strike and then backed off.
What about the ousting back, you know, in terms of our policy?
I mean, we are said to have helped oust the pro-Russian Ukrainian leader, Yanukovych, right, in what Russia and
Putin describe as a coup. And his defenders, Putin's defenders say, if I have my chronology
right, that's one of the reasons he took Crimea. It's just he'd had it. He was sick of being pushed
around and he was trying to restore the skills of justice. Okay, I'm just giving you the other side.
Look, Ukrainians had their first Maidan,
the first protest back in 2004.
Because as I mentioned already,
they elected a challenger to become a president in 1994.
So they hosted by ballot, not by bullets, by ballot,
the first president of Ukraine,
Leonid Kravchuk.
They were very sensitive to any attempts to stay in power against their will.
They knew that election in 2004 was stolen.
That's why we saw a protest on Maidan.
It was fairly peaceful because Yanukovych didn't have the same kind of backing from Russia.
And he agreed, you know, just to have a third ballot. And it was fair elections and he lost.
By the way, to tell you that Ukraine was a democracy, the same Yanukovych came back five
years later because Ukrainians were unhappy with Yushchenko and with his coalition.
So the country changed presidents, you you know as the gloves in in
in good or bad weather it's and that's again that's that's a democracy it was a free country
yes corrupt yeah it's it's you you can deny it uh not you know very successful economically yes
but it was a free country that's and that was a fundamental difference between ukrainians living
in the east of ukraine uh who had the same background as russians living on the other side of the border um spoke the same
language read probably same newspapers in the soviet union watch the same movies but they used
to live in a free country and they were very sensitive to any attempts to force them accepting a president, a ruler they didn't like. And also, yeah, and it's 2004.
Now, you talked about 2014. That was very violent because Yanukovych already had full backing of
Putin, and he wanted to push Ukraine back from what the nation wanted, joining Europe.
And he decided to denounce the agreement with the European Union,
and Ukrainians protested, and then he used force.
He shot some people.
And then we had a second Maidan.
It was not as peaceful as the first one.
No dances.
There was a fight.
Dozens of people, actually probably about 200, were killed.
But Ukrainians won the battle in Kyiv because the nation didn't want Yanukovych
to turn Ukraine into Russian satellite.
I didn't see Americans there.
And again, the moment when you hear Putin's argument,
oh, America was behind it,
I could see Russian troops in Syria.
I could see Russian bombers destroying rebel strongholds and carpet bombing
Aleppo. I could see now Russian militants across Africa. It's all prior to the latest
invasion of Ukraine. I didn't see Americans intervening directly in the Ukrainian Revolution.
Whether it was a support, maybe, but again, it's probably insignificant
because as someone who was involved in pro-democracy movement in Russia, I can tell you
we never had any direct or even indirect support from Americans. Yes, sympathy, yes. Yes,
being invited to Spasso House, the residence of American Ambassador, yes. Many Russian NGOs received some grants from
American-led organizations, though, again, my organization never did it. But again,
when you look at the amount of these grants, it's just a drop in the ocean compared to the
amounts of funds that Putin regime could rally to create some fake organizations that fought back.
And of course, the amount of money Putin had been using,
effectively supporting dictators around the world and buying
favors from Western politicians like Gerhard Schroeder. So going
back to 2013, that for me was a very important moment. Assad had
to be ousted. Because Obama said, President of the United
States said,
using chemical weapons, that's the red line.
That's the red line.
And he stopped.
He stopped short.
And I knew that's an open invitation to Putin.
I remember I was, I think it was a Donald show, The Last War, and we had an argument.
I said, that's something that would resonate, actually would have an effect beyond Middle East.
And I was dismissed.
Okay, Crimea was inevitable.
And also, a year late, a year earlier, you all remember debates, Obama-Romney.
And Mitt Romney said something that, you know, now nobody argues.
Russia was our, American, number one geopolitical fall.
Obama's reaction?
Ha, ha, ha. this is you are a dinosaur you just you know you belong to it to a political Stone Age it says
it's it's Cold War we live in a different era maybe you missed you know
that's this time it's a calendar it's 21st century okay I'm still think Obama
has to apologize yeah for for being so wrong. And again, that's a message that Putin got.
He has been remarkably silent in the course of the country. I mean, he sent out a couple of tweets.
That's it. He's been remarkably silent because these are his policies and Angela Merkel's
policies and Emmanuel Macron, right, to some extent, that are coming back to haunt us. Yeah, but Macron, I'm very critical of Macron, but the problem with Macron is that
he is a French president. And with all criticism for Macron, we should remember
that his opponents are much worse. When you look at the French presidential elections,
that in a few days' time. So Macron is a leading candidate and next second ballot will be him against Marine Le Pen.
But the next three candidates that combining vote of these Marine Le Pen, far left Melenchon and far, far right Zemmour, they combine 45, 46 percent.
They're all pro-Putin.
So nearly half of the French population supporting all pro-Putin. So nearly half of the French population is supporting openly pro-Putin candidates.
So that's why,
let's give Macron a little bit of credit
because he's not good,
he's not resolute,
but at least he prevents France
of joining Putin's camp.
It's about French voters.
Yeah, okay.
So I mean,
to me, this is very educational
because I do think there's still a belief, especially on in sort of more liberal America.
And maybe even now, you know, the factions are not that clear politically anymore.
Liberal, conservative, Democrat, Republican when it comes to this conflict.
But that if we just mind our own business, we don't do anything to antagonize Putin.
You know, this is their issue. Let's let stay out of it and let
them fight it out, that that somehow is going to protect America, that we can stay out of it.
We can be more isolationist now. You know, the Obama vision was friends. That's not happening.
And then I think the Trump vision was more like talk tough, but actually, you know, act tough,
but don't talk tough. And maybe that'll get us someplace.
Not exactly. And now here we are. And I think what we're learning is nothing's worked against
him except for muscle, muscle. He understands like any bully in the school ground.
Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. And I think we have now three consecutive presidencies, Obama, Trump, and now Biden, that had very different perspectives about America's role in the world down for Clinton policies or Bush 43 policies, they will view themselves as the leaders of the free world.
Obama, Trump, and until now, we'll see what happens with Biden administration.
But originally, Biden's administration was built to also look for domestic affairs.
That's the trend. And it's happened
first time when there are three consecutive presidencies that wanted America to be removed
from the world stage for different reasons. They were very isolationist. And of course,
it changed the balance in the world and emboldened Putin's and other tax and terrorists and dictators
to grab what's America left unprotected.
Yeah, we're seeing the effects of that foreign policy play out in front of our very eyes.
All right, stand by, quick break, and then back with Garry Kasparov, whose fascinating
life story has given him so much wisdom.
And we're lucky to have it here. And by the way, you can watch the show, you guys,
if you want to see it visually on our YouTube channel, youtube.com slash
Megan Kelly. So please check that out and download the podcast as well.
Okay, so Gary, just a little bit on the latest in Ukraine, where the war has definitely gone a lot
better for Ukraine than people could have hoped when it first started. I think the conventional wisdom was this will be over quickly
in Putin's favor, and it hasn't. That's not to say that we don't hear about these atrocities
coming out of Ukraine. I mean, yes, it's daily, but this week's news was particularly bad.
Out of Bucha, the town of Bucha, where there are shocking reports this week of
bodies littering the streets of the bodies having civilians, this is with hands tied behind their
backs, having been shot in the head in the back of the head. Now, Western leaders calling for
war crimes investigations. Of course, Russia, the Ministry of Defense says is all fake. This is
fake video and so on. That's what they said in Syria, too, when we saw similar atrocities.
But American reporters from CNN and other outlets are now personally reporting they observed mass graves in the town.
The mayor saying up to 300 victims may be buried there. President Zelensky is calling it genocide.
President Zelensky, again, with an emotional appeal to the West to pay attention to what we're seeing.
This was him speaking to the UN on Tuesday, has the voice of a female translator on it. Listen.
They killed entire families, adults and children, and they tried to burn the bodies.
So where is the security that the Security Council needs to guarantee? It's not there.
Ladies and gentlemen, are you ready to close the UN?
Do you think that the time of international law is gone?
If your answer is no, then you need to act immediately.
So here's what they've done, Gary.
This broke just as we came on the air.
U.S. just announcing new sanctions.
CNN reporting the U.S. announced new sanctions Wednesday on Russian financial institutions and individuals, including Putin's two adult daughters, as it aims to increase
economic pressure on Russia and Putin himself following what happened in Bucha. The U.S. also
announced sanctions on the wife and daughter of Putin's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov.
With respect to Putin's daughters, apparently we believe that he's been hiding his assets with
them. That's why they are being targeted.
I don't know.
Does that grab you as anything impressive?
Better than nothing.
But for me, it tells that there was no and still there is no strategy in confronting Putin, the Putin regime.
Strategy means, you know, the goal.
So going back to Harry S. Truman or FDR or Ronald Reagan,
you knew there was a strategy.
They laid down the strategy and they tried to accomplish it
by using various tools at their disposal.
Right now, America is still struggling to identify the goal of the war in Ukraine.
For me, it should be very clear.
We have to do absolutely everything to make Ukraine win
and to recover its territory. That means that we have to provide Ukraine with any weapons they need
to win the war. We're not doing that. And America is still in a stumbling block in this NATO
coalition. And we have to declare that all sanctions that are being now imposed on Russia
will not be lifted before Ukrainian
territorial integrity has been fully restored, Crimea included. That's a message that will,
I think, make a lot of people in Putin's entourage thinking hard about the future.
As of now, we see measures, tactics, so sanctions, first package second package third package it also tells us that
all stories from the white house and the state um that accompanied biden's um summit with putin and
i said summit because one summit was in person in geneva last june but then there were two very lengthy calls, video calls, that I would
also qualify as summits.
We were told that these calls and these meetings, the conversations, they were used by Biden
and his team to warn Putin against invading Ukraine.
It seemed to me that Putin didn't listen, or he just had an impression that it was just all talk
hot air and he attacked and uh while americans uh told the world and ukrainians that they prepared
some hellish sanctions it seems to me that you know now it's seven seven uh six weeks of war
so they're still you know bringing one package after another and
as for um military supply to ukraine we are way way behind uh uh of of the schedule that
that that was that had to be um met to make ukrainians uh uh ready to repel Russian attacks and now to advance.
And it's not just, you know, it's Biden administration.
It's easy to blame politicians.
But we know that Biden administration followed the advice from Pentagon and CIA.
American intelligence believed that the Kiev would fall in four days, 96 hours. General
Milley- And it hasn't. It still hasn't.
Yeah, it hasn't. Yeah. But General Milley, in the beginning of February, testified before
the House Committee. It was a closed meeting, but now remarks have been publicized. He told
American lawmakers that Ukrainian army would be destroyed
in three days amazing yeah and now general mill is telling us that the war would go for uh years
by the way this is the same pentagon that failed in afghanistan there was also it's it's it's
unbelievable failure to and to evaluate situation on the ground after so many years of being there.
So I wonder, for how long people that were so wrong recently and proved to be incapable of analyzing the information from the ground, from this most sensitive part of the global conflicts, they will continue giving advice to the administration.
And also, it's not just about General Milley.
It's about so many experts that were wrong all these years.
And now they are criticizing not only myself, but others who are advocating for more aggressive policy in Ukraine, support
for Ukraine, saying that, you know, we're trying to push free wealth into the open conflict
with Russia.
Again, ignoring the fact that their policies embolden Putin to become more and more aggressive.
In your 2015 book, you were saying he's going to go back.
He's going to invade Ukraine again.
He's going, trust me, he's not done.
And then you said, my detractors say the answer to my argument is,
well, we don't want World War III,
which is exactly what we're hearing now, right?
And I talked to the guys on the other side of you on this particular issue,
not you personally, but your positions.
And that is exactly what they're worried about. And I understand that concern. We don't want we
don't want World War Three. No one wants that. But you've been saying for a long time people
use that and it's a straw man are getting more involved in Ukraine. And you're not talking about
a full ground war with American infantry on the ground in Ukraine, but something more militarily than we're doing,
you're saying that that will not lead to World War III. In fact, it will help stave it off.
Look, sanctions that are now being in place, same sanctions, maybe half of them,
eight years ago, would have changed the game. Sanctions should be preventive. That's the
nature of sanctions. So you respond to some kind of aggression and your response includes sanctions
that will put a price tag on any further aggression. Unfortunately, when you look at
Putin's aggression, the history of Putin's aggression. All the sanctions, they were reactive and they were very weak.
Obama's bragging about American sanctions in 2014, 2015.
I think he said, oh, Russian economy is in tatters now.
Okay, give me a break.
So Putin was laughing loud.
So probably you can hear him laughing in in in in the united states uh uh and um um uh uh my point
was fairly simple uh either you have sanctions that could you know could uh make the cost of
aggression uh too high for putin uh or you help ukraine to re, to give them weapons to defend themselves, or you do both.
But you will make clear to Putin that you are in the game.
And that could have saved us from the disaster now.
Now, that was exactly the argument you mentioned.
Oh, you want us to be involved directly, it will drag us into World War III.
The problem is the wars, if you go back to World War Two, for
instance, the wars with dictators began not because of
this strength of the free world, but the opposite. The war is a
result of the miscalculation of a dictator who believes that he
could move far without meeting adequate response. And that's
why now we reached a point where we have to pay much higher
price. And that's why those in Germany or in Europe who saying,
Oh, it's we don't want to freeze. You know, we can't
afford a total embargo on Russian oil and gas exports.
Yes, but maybe you should recognize that it's your
policy uh two decades gerhard schroeder and under uncle merkel that made germany depend on the
russian gas and and now maybe you have to suffer a little bit maybe you have to pay uh for for your
mistakes uh for your willingness uh to do business with putin uh for your politicians
insisting that uh having north stream one or stream two would give german leverage over putin
not the other way around and now ukrainians are paying in blood in their lives for you can i ask
you the the it's not just ukrainians because me, but I think a lot of people are like, well, I don't want to pay more for my energy bill. And it's not my fault that my president struck a bad deal in Germany. And I have heart for the Ukrainians, but I got to worry about my own family, Ukrainians. But it's not just the Ukrainians. This is the point you've been trying to make all along. It's it's not going to stop there. That's what you've been warning. It's not going to stop there that's what you've been warning it's not going to stop
yes exactly this is it's because it's right now we have we have a chance to stop putin because
ukrainians are willing to make the sacrifices they have an army that can stop and destroy putin's war
machine because if putin god forbid wins in ukraine he'll move on. And then we come to the point where is NATO article five. And what's next?
Are we going to defend Poland or Lithuania with American soldiers
now just you know, make no mistake. If America follows its
its obligations by NATO article five 5 it will have to bring not only the planes and missiles but
boots on the ground i don't think that it's going to happen article 5 is a piece of paper and i
believe there's any political will it's all about oh maybe we can give you create enough weapon
weapons to survive and i think that's wrong it's morally wrong it's it's politically wrong and for
those who say oh no-fly zone or any aggressive U.S policy of giving Ukraine advanced weapons
like missiles and hit Russian ships in the Black Sea by the way that's that's one of the biggest
you know the advantage of Russia because the most powerful missiles being fired from from
this warships in Black Sea oh he will bring us into
the war i don't think so there is a risk of putin you know using wmds yes there is a risk the
question is what we do to minimize the risk and my answer is exactly the opposite if we show weakness
he could get emboldened but not it's not only, it's his generals and admirals that will believe that
they can push the button, following Putin's order, use tactical nuclear or chemical weapons
without being punished instantly for that. And the opposite would be for America, for NATO,
making it very clear that any use of WMD will be met decisively by NATO.
And I bet you, again, I cannot bet my bottom dollar. I don't want us to come to this point.
But my instincts tell me that no Russian admiral, no Russian general will follow Putin's order if
he knows that he will be punished not in five years in hague at international criminal
court but in five minutes because a nata missile will come back same with russian pilots if there's
no fly zone i don't think russian pilots are kamikaze they'll be trained to die for putin
they're very good in bombing hospitals and and and uh and other uh civil other civil objects on the ground. But meeting NATO pilots
in the air, I doubt very much. So it's about hedging our risks. And my answer is that the
strong response now, which could be costly, could be risky, but that's a result of our
feckless policies over 15 years since Putin's declaration of his plans back in 2007.
So it's time to recognize.
We miss this moment now, the price goes up.
And if, God forbid, Putin, you know, crushes Ukrainian defense and goes around and attacks
NATO country, Lithuania or Poland, then we have
two choices, boots on the ground, and that will pay with the blood of American soldiers,
or total capitulation. The end of NATO and total triumph for Putin. And that's again,
that will resonate not only in Europe, that will resonate in the Middle East with Iran. And of
course, China will immediately look at Taiwan ready to strike.
Okay, I want to ask you about whether you think any of the sanctions that we've put
in place will lead to a different result.
Because I know early in this conflict, you were saying, if we don't respond forcefully,
we are going to see China take Taiwan, we are going to see Russia take more territory.
Of course, a lot's happened since then.
And there have been some pretty remarkable economic sanctions by, you know, all of the West. So I'm wondering whether you think even those will act as a deterrent right now to Putin in doing anything else, regardless of how Ukraine comes out, because that's a lot of pain that they may not let up on. But before I before you comment on that,
I just want to tell our audience, as you're speaking, I'm thinking about this. On March 16,
Jillian Tett in the Financial Times, she writes for the Financial Times, she's British, she posted
an article, quote, why I should have listened to Gary Kasparov about Putin. And she says you came
to dinner at her house in New York a few years ago, and it was, quote, a memorably intense evening.
She said, as we dug into dessert, Kasparov told the assembled group of American policymakers and financiers how Putin was becoming increasingly authoritarian.
This is years ago, isolated from the West and as a result, likely to lash out as neighbor at neighbors such as Ukraine in a dangerous way.
She writes that the rest of the table, quote, rowdily dismissed his catastrophizing and Kasparov became heated. She said, she writes, given Kasparov's
acuity in predicting current events, I called him up. I apologized for the way that we didn't listen.
And I asked what he thinks might happen next. He believes Putin has already lost this battle
in the sense that his key objective of swiftly annexing Ukraine has failed and said, I don't
think a Ukrainian leader can
accept anything less than the return of the land in Crimea. This war will end with a Ukrainian flag
on Sevastopol. But my point is, you've been dismissed by too many with your warnings about
what Putin will do next. And here you are warning if he wins, if he's allowed to declare victory,
if he's allowed to keep the territories he annexed or more, I mean, God forbid, all of Ukraine, you're saying now he'll go further.
There will be more countries he'll attack, like Poland.
And that's why we need to listen to you right now.
So has your prediction on that front changed at all, given the economic sanctions that the West has imposed on him?
Hopefully. So we see that the Western response to Putin's aggression is getting stronger and stronger. Again, it's still, you know, leading from behind because we could see more atrocities.
And by the way, Bucha is a first of many. It's a relatively small town. Wait until Mariupol
will be liberated. And I don't know what we'll find out there.
So Ukrainians are paying massive price in human lives. We're talking about thousands already.
It will be in tens of thousands of lives. And they're still willing to fight. And Putin failed
to take over Kiev. He failed to destroy Ukrainian sovereignty. Volodymyr Zelensky emerged as the greatest hero of our time.
But Putin still has enough military to win battles in the East and the South and to cut Ukraine from the sea and, as you said correctly, declare victory.
That's enough for him.
Because regimes like Putin's cannot survive military defeat. That's why it's very important for America and NATO to declare our goal of
making Ukraine win this war and offering Ukraine any assistance they need. Sanctions will not
be lifted until Ukrainian territory has been cleared from Russian occupation forces, Crimea
and Sevastopol included. That's the strategy that I believe can lead to the collapse
of Putin's regime in Russia. That's all we need because as long as Putin stays in power, there
will be no peace. I don't want to predict his next move, Lithuania, Poland, maybe Estonia,
but he will not offer us any lasting peace because he needs conflict.
You just have to listen to Russian propaganda.
It goes back to Nazi time, to Stalin's time,
and it's probably worse because at least in the 30s or 40s,
nobody could verify these lies.
Now they're lying and they know that we can check it.
Just push the button on our device so we can look at the screen
and we know that it's all lies.
They don't care.
So I think as long as this regime continues its push against free will,
against our civilization, so we have to recognize it's an existential threat
because, as I said, the world's it's the world is is getting
smaller and smaller the the battle in Ukraine which is a front line of freedom today will
resonate in the Middle East in in the Far East you know China Taiwan everywhere in the world
so we have been seeing the steady advance of forces of darkness, totalitarianism and terrorism over the last 16 years.
Ukraine can help us to turn the tide, but we have to help Ukraine.
And that's why we should not, you know, do it, you know, step by step.
We have to come up with the most powerful thrust.
The West can do that.
And I think China, by the way, is sitting now on the fence
because they saw that while the West is not doing enough for Ukraine to win,
but it's enough to punish Putin and his economy. I don't think China is ready for the same challenge. But again, the outcome of the battle for Ukraine, it will define the outcome
of the global battle that will continue for many years between forces of freedom and tyranny.
Risa Goluboffa There are reports that we're more interested
in ending it than winning it, you know, that we just want Ukraine to end it, not to win it,
and that the U.S. is pushing for a result that would look like maybe Putin gets to keep
the territories he's already annexed. You know, he keeps Crimea, he keeps these territories
and then retreats, and then he gets to declare victory.
We've got to give him the opportunity to save face or he won't stop, is the thinking. And Ukraine
can say, OK, we've got the territory we have left. They didn't take Kiev. Zelensky is still in power
and probably they won't be allowed to join the European Union or NATO. Two things that were not
they were not guaranteed.
We should point out to the audience, there's a lot you have to do in order to join the
EU or join NATO.
And there are all sorts of requirements that Ukraine, you know, may not necessarily meet
and hasn't met so far.
So it was never a lock.
Anyway, that's what it seems we may be pushing.
Like, just give up those territories, let them have those territories, and everyone
will just
call it a day um yes it's um i don't know it's for a fact but it looks like there's a powerful
uh factions in this administration that would like to end the war because they see it as a
destruction uh we talked about u.s foreign policy changing from Obama to Trump to
Biden. And now Biden is just, it's at a nexus. He is forced to take much larger role that he wanted.
The Americans debacle or just retreat, stampede from Afghanistan was a result of this ideological
oppression. This administration was built to address exclusively domestic affairs. It was
built on a belief that America should do as little as possible outside of the United States,
in the rest of the world, and concentrate on the ills of the American society and push an agenda
that's, to my taste, is too far left. Now, this agenda is dead. It's for many reasons. You talked about high price of gallon of gas and, of course, inflation and related economic issues. The war in Ukraine definitely has an effect. But this administration is still resisting calls to boost american domestic production i mean i
understand that we know we have you know pressure from from the um green new deal activists but
right now we're talking about president we're talking about you know economic hardship in this
country and also about you know the global um crisis and and we know that Putin's regime, among many other dictators, is being funded by this
high oil prices. So that's the extracting more oil from American soil will help directly and
indirectly in America, but also will deny Putin some of the benefits of his oil export, which
unfortunately is still not banned. and of course you know it's
very difficult to talk about other important issues as police brutality when you look at
bucha and mariupol so that's why i i'm i'm under impression that biden is is you know always have
to make choices and he's pressured by by forces in his administration to find any solution that could end the war and let them go back to
domestic agenda. I think they already missed this moment, frankly speaking. I think that after
Bucha, it's impossible to force Ukrainians to accept any deal that will look like Putin's
victory. So even those who would like to give Putin off-ramp, I think they are no longer
calling the shots. And it seems to me that Biden's remarks about Putin being a war criminal
and Putin's not staying in power, for God's sake, he is managing to not stay in power,
and then backtracked by the administration and some members of the administration,
and then him repeating it, I think it's just it's an indication that there's a fight inside
inside the white house and other agencies about the um policy told russia and somehow i
sense that joe biden who was a creature of the cold war he was elected in the senate half a
century ago i think his heart is in the right place and he's trying to push it in the right Biden, when he gets back to the microphone, says, I meant every word.
It's like, wait a minute, who's who is in charge? Who's actually calling the shots here?
All right, listen, stand by because I really next.
We've got to get into your background.
It's so amazing.
It's so fascinating.
And I've watched so much stuff about your upbringing
and your chess accomplishments.
I've got to ask you about man versus machine and all of it.
We're going to do that right after this quick break.
Gary Kasparov stays with us.
Just a bit about Gary.
We told you some at the top of the show.
Now, 58 years old, born in Baku, Azerbaijan in the Soviet Union in 1963.
Now you live in New York City.
But when you were a child, you became the under 18 chess champion of the USSR
at just age 12, 12.
And the world under 20 champion at age 17,
then to the surprise of no one,
at the age of 22,
the youngest world chess champion in history,
world, at age 22, world chess champion in 1985.
You defended that title five times.
So what like what did your parents know that starting you in chess at a very young age was important and could develop you?
I mean, I realize it was very much prized in the former Soviet Union as a sign of intellectual power and greatness.
And that was one of the reasons that the USSR really loved
to have all the chess champions.
But is that what made your parents push you into it?
Or did you show a natural aptitude right from the beginning or both?
No, it was accidental.
So you're right stating that chess in the USSR
was a very important ideological tool.
It was supported by the state to demonstrate the intellectual superiority of the
communist regime over the decade and west. So, of course, I benefited from this state support, but
it started at one of the winter evenings at home. I was five and a half, getting close to six years old
and watched my parents
trying to solve a chess puzzle
from a local newspaper because all
newspapers had small chess
section. And I was
immediately fascinated by this
chess, by the pieces. I didn't know
chess or what, just wooden
pieces. And I watched
them moving these pieces,
and then I learned how to make the moves. And to their surprise, I made them just an offer. So
I was quite aggressive in pushing the idea. And so my father immediately recognized that I had a different mindset because all members of my Jewish side, my father's family, so they were all musicians, except my father.
He graduated the violin class, but he ended up as being an engineer.
That's how he met my mother, who was also an engineer.
And his last decision in his life, because tragically, he died when I was seven, so I'm from cancer, just at age 39.
So the decision that he made, telling my mother that we had to send him to a chess club, not a music school.
And that's how I entered the chess network in the Soviet Union at age seven.
And I climbed very, very rapidly on this on this
chess ladder. So by age 10, I was already one of the strongest juniors in my city, Baku, which was
the fourth largest city in the Soviet Union, just all the way down south. And as you mentioned, at age 12, I was the junior champion under 18. So that was
the best indication of a great future laying ahead of me.
So you became a celebrity within the Soviet Union. I mean, people must have known you on the street.
You became a worldwide celebrity. But what was that like for you? Did you know that you were a celebrity,
that you were famous,
that you had power that few had?
Look, chess was very popular
in the Soviet Union
and being world champion
and I became world champion,
as you mentioned,
in 1985 at age 22,
gave me a unique stature. Also, it was a time of a big change in the Soviet
Union. Gorbachev took over and he talked about openness and about changes in Soviet domestic
policy, though they were much less than people thought in the free world. But
still, it was like a fresh wind. So after years of stagnation on the Brezhnev and his followers,
two short-lived heads of the Communist Party in Ropovan Chernenko. So Gorbachev was very,
very different. And I had a sense that my new status, this prominence had to be used to
help my country to get better. Not that I had many ideas about democracy and how we can achieve it in russia but i already
had a pretty good idea about the rest of the world because my first trip abroad was in 1976 when i
was just 13 to france to play a world championship under 16. and then in 1977 i had another trip to
france to play just the same event a year later uh and uh i came back knowing that you know there
was something wrong in the soviet union because i could immediately see the difference and i um
i felt that you know we had to we had to make changes to um to turn our country into something more pleasant because I had to play by the rules.
I wanted to become world champion, but in the back of my mind, I thought that the moment
would come when I could use my acquired glory to help others to rally for the support of democracy.
And that's what I did.
Little did that, Gary Kasparov, know that within 30 years,
you would be allegedly on an assassination list
from the Russian president who is said to want to target you
because you've been so outspoken in pushing for democracy.
That's hand critic and critical of him. I mean, that's it's crazy to think of. You know,
it's not something anybody over here would ever worry about with respect to a U.S. president.
But it's just underscores the difference between how our two countries have chosen to live or are
living. One of the things I've heard you talk about in playing the chess, which I thought was
very interesting, because I don't know anything about chess, but you're fascinating, is how
much exertion goes on during especially, well, for you, every match is big, but during the
big matches in particular, the number of calories that are burnt, the number of stress that
you're under, that there have been studies of this.
Because I see two guys sitting playing chess.
I don't think of exertion. I think of sitting playing chess. I don't think of exertion.
I think of mental taxation, but I don't think of exertion.
Can you talk about that?
Yeah, it seems very innocuous when, as you said, you know, two guys sitting there just,
you know, in front of each other playing chess, you know, or it could be, you know, two girls
or just a boy and a girl playing chess but there's a huge pressure because
uh the mental pressure uh just you know somehow affects your body and uh if it's a long match
uh uh when i say long match it's you play many games so 12 games 14 games against the same
opponent when i played anatoly carpool we played we played 24 games. So that took weeks.
So it was rest days.
Every second day was a rest day.
So we played for two or three months.
And our first match, actually, it was unlimited number of games.
We played for nearly five and a half months.
So it's not just a game.
It's the several hours you spend on the board.
It's about preparation.
It's about leaving them with pressure because you go back to bed and you're still thinking
about the moves you made in the previous game or the moves you will make in the next game.
You eat.
Your mind is still very much, you know,
it's very tense.
And it's, you know, the way I played, you know,
I just couldn't escape from the images of chess pieces.
And I was always working.
For me, the whole tournament, the whole match, 10 games, 12 games,
so this is two weeks, a month.
It was always like one event.
So that's why it was a physical exertion.
And I burned calories.
I lost weight.
But I did a lot of physical exercise.
So the reason I stayed on top for nearly 20 years,
it's because even in my late 30s, so I was better prepared for these physical
challenges than my younger opponents.
Lila Gleitmanis Do men ever play against women?
Paolo Zanonni Yeah, we just play. So this is most of the
games, you know, just it's won by men. But Judith Polgar, the strongest female player
ever.
Lila Gleitmanis Why is that though? Why do you think that
is? Because it's not something that, it's not like an obvious thing where, you know, if a man plays a woman in competitive elite tennis, he's going to crush her. And we all understand why. But, you know, just, you know, here just to analyze the details of this outcome.
But the fact is that, you know, it's this, there was only one female player that made it to top 10, Judith Polgar,
so Hungarian grandmaster, and she stayed there for quite a while.
So she was probably at the best moment, number eight in the world seven right in the in the world and no other female player made it uh uh it's probably just the chinese champion
uh uh who you found she made it to probably top 80. uh but other female players they are
yes between top 100 to 200. though i have to say that when we look at the trend, it has been,
the gap has been closing
because at the days
of Bobby Fischer,
Bobby Fischer believed
that he could beat
any female player
by giving the handicap
of a whole piece.
Now,
no serious player
would be considering
giving any handicap.
Though again,
it's the male players that dominate the game and it's. Though again, it's the male players that
dominate the game. And it's probably again, it's about traditions. It's about the roots
of the game. So as any game, it has been played by men. And if we continue with the same path,
so seeing the gap is getting closer and closer. So we can see that at one point, you know, it will become more competitive than now.
Is there ever any chit-chat with your opponent?
Like could a romance blossom?
I'm just wondering.
It seems like all those weeks together, something could happen.
Yeah.
Look, the game, you know, it's the serious game if we're talking about serious games.
So you don't communicate with your opponent so that's that's that's a bad taste um
and um uh if you play some exhibition matches yeah that's another story but uh i mean you talk
you talk to your opponents if you wish after the game and this is often we analyze together, but the game itself, it's a serious
challenge.
It's a battle.
Okay, so this is no place for women to get their MRS degree.
What's that?
Megan, I stopped playing professional chess 17 years ago, though I still do just appearances.
I play exhibition matches, but I think that this is with so many changes in the game of chess, this, you know, this rule of just not communicating to the opponent, you know, it's still stays.
Well, I know that I've heard you say, you can't compare today's chess players to
the Gary Kasparovs or the Bobby Fishers of the world, because we know so much more about chess
today than we used to. And some of what we know came from you, you know, came from people watching
you. And what do you mean by that? Explain that explain that oh that's it's about a knowledge
that is just being accumulated it's just you know think of of a student you know that's a
college student who's studying physics uh or math so um i mean he or she knows much more than than newton or einstein but it's not
the result of them being a genius but it's the fact that there's so much data had been accumulated
and they just you know they they they know how to apply it same with chess um bobby fisher played
chess 50 plus years ago and he came up with new ideas that were revolutionary.
This idea is now just a part of the common knowledge of a 12-year-old international master.
They also have computers now.
This is one of the biggest shifts in the game of chess was use of the computers because
now you have machines that can help you to prepare for the game of chess was use of the computers because now you have machines that
can help you to prepare for the game. Of course, it's illegal to use machines during the game,
though that's one of the challenges for modern chess, how to make sure that there's no communication
between a player and a remote computer or just a phone. Because if you have now chess app on your phone, it's stronger than Deep Blue.
But machines force top players, actually all professional players, to reconsider the way they're preparing for the game.
So that's why, you know, you have now young players, and I've been working a lot with them.
So Kasparov Chess Foundation has been founded in this country in America 20 years ago.
We'll celebrate our 20th anniversary next November. uh so kasparov just foundation has been uh founded in this country in america 20 years ago we'll
celebrate our 20th anniversary uh um next next next november and for the last 17 years we've
been working with talented american kids so i can proudly say we had 17 grandmasters actually it's
in the united states that came out of our program uh and um and i could see this quite a dramatic change in their attitude,
the way they look at the position, they analyze it.
I'm not saying it's good or bad, better or worse.
It's just different because I used to rely on my intuition.
I try to always go deep down to understand the the rationale of
certain moves and certain patterns they they very much depend on on on on on the machine it's it's
like you know following the computer you know makes them somehow more mechanized uh it's and
it's not only about chess it's just you know it's i think it's it. A lot of people, you know, they can't take their eyes away from computer.
And that's what I believe makes the difference between, you know, an average decision maker and a great decision maker.
Because the great decision maker knows this is the moment where I have to stop looking at the screen and make a decision.
Stop collecting data and decide how to apply my human intuition.
So to add human qualities into the overall
process. That's fascinating. Well, because one of the things that makes you so brilliant and
interesting to listen to, and probably the reason that you've gotten so many predictions right,
is you're not just a chess grandmaster, you're a strategy grandmaster. That's really what an
amazing chess player is a master of strategy
and being able to see several moves ahead and anticipate the other person's moves.
That's, that's what you're an expert in. And so it seems to me that that's a skill you have
been able to apply outside of the chess world to great advantage in your life.
Yeah. Okay. It's if you consider, you know, being dismissed for 15 plus years as advantage. Okay. If you're considering being dismissed for 15 plus years as an advantage, yes.
Yes. All right. Yes. Yeah. Look, I-
Well, it's not your fault people haven't listened.
Yeah. Look, I try to see the big picture. I mean, I also know the limitations of my knowledge. So,
that's again, the limits of my ignorance. So So I'm not very good at micromanagement
and I just, you know,
I stay away from things
that I'm not comfortable with
to exercise my authority
and my, you know,
I know where my credibility ends.
But I'm very good
at looking at the big picture
and especially geopolitical picture.
And I've been now,
everything I said now,
so I've been saying today, so it's a result of this analysis.
Not necessarily I'm right all the time, but I can feel the trends and I can see the patterns.
And I know that some of the predictions, they sound too aggressive.
It's like this very bellicose because the language of of of deterrence
is is a rough one this is it's not soft it's not comfortable it's not appeasement it's not let's
leave in peace and do business but you know it's it's about us recognizing that there's certain
moments in history where it's it's black and white I heard it so many times Mr Caspar if you're a
chess player you don't understand that the life is not about black and white. It's gray. It's a 50 shades of gray.
You have to accept this fact. Your direct approach, good or bad, good and evil,
that doesn't apply. I agree that in many instances, you you have to be uh very cautious in in in offering radical solutions
but we are out right now at a point where it's all black and white so it's it's as simple as good and
evil and and and and ukrainian war simply demonstrated us that you know we we we have
we reached a point for like a climax the the moment in history where we have to make some big decisions.
But unlike chess, still black and white, but no draw.
You cannot end this game in a tie.
Right.
Because when you have our values, our belief in freedom, you know, in the rights of individuals
to, okay, life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness.
And on the other side, you have something totally opposite.
Believe in violence and the rights of those in power to subjugate others
and to attack others at the moment they think they can get away with that.
So there's no tie.
We cannot end this game.
Moral relativism can be dangerous.
No, absolutely.
This is no moral relativism.
This is, again, this is not the game where you have black and white pieces
because it's not about same pieces of different color.
It's about set of values that cannot coexist.
Okay, so last question.
Was it hard to hang it up?
Because I know you did it for so many years. You were the world champion for I mean, your name is synonymous with chess and you brought it into the mainstream with that match against the IBM computer and all that.
One, the first one of which he won, noted for the record, and only the second one that went the wrong way. The whole movies have been made about that, by the way. But forget that. Forget that.
Was it hard to hang it up?
Because I know you did it for a good purpose, but was it hard?
Look, by the way, speaking about the second match was IBM.
Yes, I was really angry and upset by losing in 1997.
And I thought it would be a curse that would haunt me for the rest of my life.
Now, I believe it was a blessing because I was the first human
being who had his job threatened by a machine. So this is an intelligent worker. And I could live
with this knowledge and I could learn a lot and eventually I've become a proponent of fuel machine collaboration so that's again that's about
you know your failures and your ability to learn from the failure so that's that's why i think now
it was more like a blessing that i was part of this experiment and now i could i could uh um
share my my unique uh um expertise with others now speaking about 2005 decision to leave chess, no, it was not that difficult because
what I learned from my early days, from my late mother, was that it's not just about
winning.
Yeah, of course it was winning, but it's not just winning.
It's about making a difference.
It's about making contribution to the game.
It's about expanding horizons.
And I knew by 840 that
I almost exhausted my ability to make a difference. Winning still, I could have done probably
for a few more years, but what's the point? So I saw an opportunity to apply my fame and
my expertise, my analytical skills, my energy for a better cause. And that was my desperate attempt to save Russian democracy,
feeble democracy, but save it from an impending disaster
because I already saw the rise of darkness
and I had no doubt that Vladimir Putin would become an existential threat
not only for Russian democracy,
but for the rest of the world, if given the chance. Well, I'm quite certain that there are
many, many Russians who are so grateful to you for using your platform in the way you have.
And we're grateful to you for being with us again today. Gary Kasparov, what a pleasure.
Thank you so much for being here. Thank you very much for inviting me.
Wow. Fascinating, right? Tomorrow,
we're going to dig deep into the Hunter Biden story and the updates in it that the mainstream
media has been burying, you know, the laptop and all the evidence on it. Well, there's a lot more
to the story that you won't see reported on CNN, but we're going to get into it when Senator Ron
Johnson, who's been sort of running herd on this, joins us to bring us the latest directly. Don't forget to download The Megyn Kelly Show on Apple, Pandora,
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