The MeidasTouch Podcast - Alexander Vindman on Trump Ukraine Disaster
Episode Date: March 1, 2025MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas interviews Alexander Vindman, the author of the new book The Folly of Realism, about Trump’s disastrous press conference with Zelenskyy. Visit https://meidasplus.com ...for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. I'm joined by Alexander Vindman, retired United States Army Lieutenant Colonel.
Mr. Vindman, what did we just watch unfold in the Oval Office with Donald Trump attacking President Zelensky?
It was maybe one of the most shameful moments I think ever in American history.
You're Ukrainian. You have unique experience in this area as well. What do you make of it? It was a shit show. We've never
seen anything quite like it. Basically, the U.S. has been a supporter of Ukraine for,
even if it's been insufficiently supportive, it's been a supporter of Ukraine for three years, spending somewhere in the ballpark of $60 to $100 billion to help Ukraine ward off an aggressor, Russia.
And now we have a new Trump administration that invites Zelensky into kind of work out a deal, figure out how the U.S. might continue to support.
And in this discussion where Zelensky is saying, hey, this is what the Russians are doing to our troops. They just kidnapped 20,000 of our kids and are brainwashing them. Trump and Vance
attack Zelensky and say that he's not motivated to conduct peace and that Russia is not such a bad guy.
In this meeting, Trump basically sides with Russia and attacks Ukraine.
And Zelensky, in a very valiant way, stands his ground and tries to make the point that Russia can't be trusted.
Russia is the bad actor. The U.S. is in danger
by buying in, by constantly deceiving itself about Russia.
And that devolves further into accusations
that Ukraine's ungrateful.
It was just something that we haven't seen,
not just undiplomatic,
but a betrayal of Ukraine and our Western values and the way we interact with the world.
It's 180 degrees different than it has been with any administration preceding.
I'll show you. They're trying to spin this now on Fox a certain way.
They had Lindsey Graham, Senator Graham, MAGA Republican, go on moments ago.
Let me show you what he said and get your reaction to it.
Let's play it.
I told President Trump, I said, there's two ways to look at this.
Your interaction with Zelensky was maybe the best television I've ever seen.
But it's deeper than that.
The world is now watching how Trump behaves and acts when he's pressed. I thought
he stood up for America, that we're a good people, we want to help you, but we're going
to be respected. So I think Moscow is probably more afraid of Trump than ever. Hope the Chinese
are and I hope the Iranians are. As to Zelensky and Ukraine, to the Ukrainian people, America wants to help you. The way
the meeting went today, you made
it almost impossible to help
you. Again, I'll
ask you...
Alex, do you think that
Putin is more afraid
than ever? Is China more afraid than ever?
Is Iran more afraid than ever after
watching what just happened in the Oval Office?
It's been a constant parade. Those guys in Beijing and Kremlin have to be constantly drunk
because they're endlessly popping bottles of champagne at the wins that they score,
really without having to lift that much of a finger. I mean, all Putin had to do thus far is to
say that he's interested in peace. He, you know, he's interested in peace.
He hasn't shown that he's interested in peace. He hasn't started to ease the war, which he could do
without, by just issuing an order. He's the aggressor. And instead, what we have is Trump
constantly catering to Russia, saying that, signaling that he's willing to normalize
relationships, that Russia has been treated too harshly. And this is just really unacceptable
for somebody like Zelensky, whose country has suffered enormous losses and has enormous
suffering. And the Europeans also understand the the truth of the matter and have are
redoubling their support are interested in pitching in more to help Ukraine.
Ukraine is in their backyard.
They know that Russia is eyeing the West and eyeing some additional
territories. So Lindsey Graham is a, is an absolute coward.
Because Trump did not sound strong.
He was attacking a ally when he didn't need to.
This was just Zelensky saying that Trump can't trust Putin.
That's all he was saying.
That was the argument.
That's how the argument got started.
And J.D. Vance, I mean, he looked like an absolute clown.
I don't understand why Trump allowed Vance, I mean, he looked like an absolute clown. I don't understand
why Trump allowed Vance to blow up his deal. I mean, the deal was there. The initial part of
the press conference was totally fine. They both had their comments, you know, a series of questions
unfolded. And then when it came around to whether Putin could be trusted. Zelensky said, no, they've constantly broken the
deal. And Vance took that as the opportunity to side again with Putin and criticize Zelensky,
and he blew up Trump's deal. I mean, that is how this whole thing started to devolve.
And then at that point, it got very emotional. Zelensky trying to point out that
his country is suffering through a war, that they were not an aggressor. And it was the most shameful
interaction that the U.S. has had on the public stage with regards to foreign policy,
you know, in decades. I can't think of another example in which we behaved like this, behaved as such a
poor ally. And so simply, actually, we behaved like idiots because we can't simply understand
the basic truths that Russia is the aggressor. We know that's the fact. We can't accept the
basic truth that Putin is untrustworthy. And this has nothing to do with
dealmaking. If we wanted to make a deal to end the war, we would recognize that it's the Russians
that need to compromise, not the Ukrainians, that the Russians are the ones that are feeling
quite a bit of pain. Yes, the Ukrainians are also, but they can't go on forever. Kremlin can't
sustain these kinds of losses. And all we need to do is, you know, continue to support Ukraine for a bit longer. Instead, we're shifting stances, being a friend to our enemies and an
enemy to our friends. You know, your background, of course, you were in the European Council,
you were a leader in this area, United States National Security Council for European Affairs,
you know, your background, being born Ukrainian.
What's your message to Ukraine right now, to the people of Europe who are seeing this?
I think, you know, I guess even before we get there, I'll just point out that, you know,
this book was undertaken after I was forced out of my military service after 22 years. I was forced out of the White House after reporting Donald Trump's corruption and the scheming way back in
2019 and testifying. And then I wanted to understand why we keep making the same mistakes
over and over. And the subtitle of this book really says it all. It's how the U.S. continues
to deceive itself about Russia and betrays Ukraine. I wish I'd used the present
tense and not past tense. I said deceived and betrayed. It's deceived and betrays. It continues
to do that to this day. And it's to our own detriment. It is not the fact that we are helping
Ukraine to be just to be a good actor, it's because we understand the importance of Ukraine holding back the Russians from further aggression, helping to stabilize Europe.
And my own experience, I mean, I left the Soviet Union as a refugee at the age of four.
So my own experience has been entirely as an American serving in the U.S. military,
serving in embassies in Moscow, in Kiev, in the
Pentagon, where I wrote the Russia strategy, how we contend with Russia as an adversary, where I was
invited to the White House to be able to continue to do the work of advancing the U.S. national
security interests. It is about the U.S. And it's shocking that we are now at this poison Kool-Aid stage of our relationship with Russia,
appeasing them, accommodating them, always getting burned in the process,
instead of learning the lessons of the past and doing better,
where we are far off from what I recommend, which is U.S. moral leadership
and the centrality of values to interests. It has a positive. I mean, I really lay out a positive case where it's going to take us to survive Trump.
But on the back end, when we start to correct for all the damage that was done,
that we recapture moral leadership by saying that, you know,
we shouldn't be focusing on the bright, shiny object that, you know,
Trump is falling for right now with Putin saying, hey, I might be interested in peace.
There might be some other deals we could work
and never paying off when we should be focusing
on the things that matter, like European security,
because it's there for us when we are attacked.
Europeans, because they're our largest training partner
and they enable our prosperity.
So to me, it's about the U.S. and how the U.S.
can be safer. And we just made it a lot more dangerous for the U.S.
I'll show everybody the book right here. It's called The Folly of Realism,
How the West Deceived Itself About Russia and Betrayed Ukraine. I've read this before doing
this interview. I'd encourage everybody to read it because it gives a roadmap of even how we got here. And I don't want to give away what you say in the epilogue,
but literally you predicted exactly what happened today, almost word for word, it's in the epilogue.
So I'd ask people to read this and it's important to understand how we got here again. Make sure you all check it out, Midas Mighty. But I'll leave with this. Obviously, this is a very devastating
time right now. If you're in Europe, especially if you're in Ukraine, we see Europe, the new
Chancellor of Germany, for example, and others even talking about just pushing away from the United States totally just building a Europe first security force and basically may not even show up at NATO in June when the next major kind of conferences.
So what do you think is going to happen? And just what's your message to, I guess, our former allies in Europe and Ukraine?
We are burning bridges as fast as we can find them. You know,
the issue here is that I think what ultimately offended Trump is he has a slogan of make America
great, make America strong. And Zelensky is pointing out by siding with Russia that actually the U.S. is in danger. Completely 100% valid point. But it burst the
bubble of Trump being the strongman and Trump making us more safe and more prosperous. That
was an absolutely honest assessment from Zelensky. He knows what he's talking about.
And I think the fact is that other allies now look at what happened with the U.S. going so hard in for Putin and abandoning our allies that we are completely unreliable.
I hope I'm wrong.
I unfortunately tend to be right about these things, and it makes me sick that I see this train wreck unfolding.
But I think we're burning bridges and we're creating opportunities for our enemies and um it is putting our troops in danger
it is making this country weaker uh and we have to at this point we just have to weather the storm
and uh come back uh try to institute some accountability, you know, with our elections in the future and try to rein
in these knuckleheads and get rid of, you know, folks like Lindsey Graham and all these yes men
that embolden and, you know, pander to Trump and drive them to make the worst decisions that
I've seen thus far, frankly.
You know, so Graham, other MAGAs are saying what needs to happen is Zelensky needs to go to Mar-a-Lago and apologize and say, I'm sorry, that was a big misunderstanding. I don't know,
doesn't that play right into kind of Trump's God complex? And has Trump doubled down? Or
is that a smart geopolitical move to pretend and keep the folly going?
Well, if Zelensky was watching now, what would your advice be?
I may have already passed this to some folks, but the bottom line is that this was highly cinematic.
Zelensky looked very strong.
You know, Trump could spin it as if as he stood his ground.
Also, I think what what this really there's an opportunity here.
You know, he they're on the cusp of a big deal, a big real estate deal.
Both parties kind of walk away from the negotiation.
There's an opportunity to bring folks together and do a handshake at the end of this thing that looks really good for TV. And if it means that
Ukraine could keep the U.S. on side a little bit longer, I mean, it might be just a little bit
longer because the fact is that you could see the orientation of Trump consistently. If they
could keep him on a little bit longer, give the Ukrainians additional support and the Europeans
step up, that is a pragmatic step. I'm not going to stand in the way of pragmatism.
But if we could, again, keep the U.S. from siding with Putin, easing sanctions, there might be some sort of play here.
This deal, this minerals deal, was not a bad thing.
Vance just kept his mouth shut.
Things would have went on fine.
There would have been a signed deal at the end.
Now there's an opportunity to both sides walk away looking pretty strong, maybe get what they want.
But Zelensky is not one to bend the knee and fold like Lindsey Graham constantly does.
He's been there recently, actually, to Ukraine and met
with Zelensky at Munich Security Conference and things of that nature. So he says one thing to
Zelensky, and then he goes back around and just, I don't know, I don't want to be crude, but he
does some pretty disgusting things to ingratiate himself with Trump.
Alex Vindman, thank you for joining us.
I know a difficult day for you and so many. Everybody, make sure you get this book,
The Folly of Realism. I read it. I hope you read it too. It was always right here,
right on my desk. Finish it up before the interview. Alex, thank you.
Thank you. Looking forward to the next time and appreciate the opportunity to communicate with your viewers and listeners. Your audience can
make the difference. We appreciate it. Everybody hit subscribe. Let's get to 5 million subscribers.
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