What A Day - Zelensky's Address To Congress And The View From Lviv
Episode Date: March 17, 2022Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky addressed U.S. Congress on Wednesday to ask for a number of things including a no-fly-zone over his country. The Biden administration did not agree to that reque...st, but it did announce $800 million in military aid to Ukraine including anti-aircraft and anti-tank missiles, drones, and more. Christopher Miller, a correspondent for BuzzFeed News currently in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, joins us to discuss what things look like on the ground.And in headlines: The Federal Reserve bumped up a key interest rate by 0.25 percent, a 7.4 magnitude earthquake rocked eastern Japan, and nearly 23,000 mail votes were thrown out in the Texas primary election.Show Notes:Christopher Miller on Twitter – https://twitter.com/ChristopherJM“This Ukrainian Mother Buried Both Of Her Sons Just Six Days Apart” by Christoper Miller – https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/christopherm51/ukraine-brothers-killed-same-familyFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whatadayFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is Thursday, March 17th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi. And this is What A Day, where we are wearing green for St. Patrick's Day,
but also because our intervals between doing laundry have gotten a lot longer during the pandemic.
Yes, some of my clothes have taken on a green hue. And for me, that just makes me more respectful of this holiday.
Yeah, it feels great to admit this to all of you who can't see us right now.
On today's show, the Federal Reserve tackles rising inflation by hiking up interest rates.
Plus, Texas threw out a record 23,000 mail-in ballots from the primary.
But first, let's go in depth on the Russia-Ukraine war.
Yesterday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky addressed the U.S. Congress asking for a number of things, including a no-fly zone over
the country. Here is part of what he said through a translator. Right now, the destiny of our country
is being decided. The destiny of our people, whether Ukrainians will be free, whether they will be able to preserve
their democracy. The Biden administration didn't agree to the no-fly zone request,
but it did announce $800 million in military aid to Ukraine, including anti-aircraft and
anti-tank missiles, drones, and more. Additionally, while Biden was leaving an unrelated event,
a reporter asked if he would consider Putin a war criminal. He first said no, but then went back and said this.
Oh, I think he is a war criminal.
Such an interesting inflection on going back and saying it again.
Yeah, like actually.
Yeah. So as for some of what happened on the ground in Ukraine, as of our recording at 930 Eastern Wednesday night, Ukrainian officials said yesterday that a Russian airstrike hit a theater in Mariupol, where hundreds of residents had been seeking shelter in the past few days.
That's actually not what Biden was being asked about in that exchange.
One detail about that, the New York Times reviewed satellite imagery showing the word children had been written in Russian in the front and back of the building around Saturday. We are still awaiting
more details on that entire situation. Also, a follow up to a story that we shared this week,
where Russian forces abducted the mayor of the city of Melitopol and replaced him with a pro
Putin mayor. A Ukrainian official said yesterday that they were able to free the mayor in exchange
for nine captured Russian soldiers. So for more updates on the ground, we spoke with Christopher
Miller, a correspondent for BuzzFeed News, who is currently in the western city of Lviv.
And he started with this compelling account of what it's like to be there right now.
Compared to much of the rest of the country, there is a sense of relative normalcy. This evening myself
and a group of journalists went out and had dinner at a burger bar in central
Lviv which is I think only the second time in a little over three weeks that
I've eaten out at a restaurant because around much of the rest of the country
and in Kiev restaurants are closed here in Lviv, it's become this, well, thought to be safe place,
a place of sanctuary for Ukrainians around the country whose cities have been attacked or worse,
besieged. The center of the city has been untouched so far, but air raid sirens sound
a few times a day, at least. I've heard them just once today, but they rang three times before midday yesterday
and during a funeral service,
which was a really jarring experience,
hearing these priests and mourners sing
while air raid sirens and warnings over loudspeakers
like blasted throughout the city,
telling people or warning people rather to get indoors, to get underground if possible. It's been difficult to sort of wrap my head around.
I've lived and worked in this country since 2010. And, you know, even in the past eight years,
while Ukraine has been at war, it's been predominantly in the east of the country.
But now, you know, Russian missiles are falling just about everywhere.
It seemed as though there was a sentiment in Lviv that it would be, you know, safer
for a little while longer, super west in the country.
But Russia hit a military base close to the Polish border on Sunday.
So how is that affecting, you know, how it's feeling where you are and what are you hearing
from the people who you're around?
Yeah, that really brought the war home for a lot of people here.
This military base was an international security and peacekeeping center where NATO forces had been present for several years. Just last month, I visited and saw the Florida National Guard training Ukrainian soldiers on bunker buster missiles. And it was only days after that, that the US ordered them to withdraw. And a lot of the
Ukrainians that were there that were injured or killed are from this region or from this city of
Lviv. And yesterday, I went to a funeral for four of the Ukrainian soldiers who were killed in that
attack and followed one of the families back to their
home village and met this family that hadn't even finished grieving the death of their youngest son,
who was killed in Southern Mykolaiv region on March 3rd and buried on March 9th,
when they had to bury his older brother yesterday, who was killed in the Yavarov attack.
And it was a really, really emotional ceremony.
And you could see, you know, on the faces of people
that they were very, very, very worried.
It's really horrific to hear about.
And for people that have made their way
from other parts of the country over to Lviv,
is there a sense that they want to stay there for now?
Do they want to try to make a movement to somewhere else?
What's the sentiment around that?
I think according to the United Nations, we've seen 3 million people flee the country.
Right.
Which, I mean, is the largest mass migration of people, I think, since the Second World War.
That's a huge number of people in a very short window of time.
There are people who are not prepared to leave the country, whether it is a level of defiance, not wanting to leave, wanting to in some way stand their ground, if not at their home in Kiev, then at least on Ukrainian soil, or of people don't want to live like refugees. And also where they
can be useful, you know, making netting to cover a frontline position to better hide it from the
enemy, or cooking in a kitchen to serve food that can be transported to the soldiers. In one way or
another, you know, it seems like almost everyone is doing their part. There was reporting yesterday
that there are Ukrainian counter offenses beginning beginning in Kyiv and Kherson.
What have you been hearing about that?
And then what is the significance of those kind of starting?
I was in Kyiv just a few days ago and in the captured town now of Irpin.
And what the Ukrainian soldiers there told me was that the Russians were running out of artillery.
They didn't expect to
have such a drawn out war. They thought they would be able to win this fight in a matter of days,
a week at most. And so what we're seeing is, according to the Ukrainian military,
resupplying and more logistical efforts to prolong this fight. And, you know, these counteroffensives are
an attempt on the Ukrainian side to push Russian forces further away from strategic points of
entry into Kiev and into other cities like Odessa, for example. You know, there is a really high
morale right now, which is another big part of it. The Ukrainians want to go on this
counter offensive. They're in very high spirits. They're very confident about their abilities.
They have a stockpile of weapons that they're ready to use. Anecdotally, I was in Kiev and
stopped by a couple of restaurants to see some friends and some sources. And I walked into one
kitchen that had stopped serving food and had began stocking British
NLAW anti-tank systems.
So there are a lot of them just sitting around the Capitol waiting for tanks to roll in or
now moving further out on the outskirts of the city in order to use them in order to
beat back Russian armor.
Where did the stuff that was supposed to be in the kitchen actually go when they had swapped that out?
So a lot of restaurants, high-end restaurants, have turned their once swanky fine dining establishments and kitchens into essentially food courts or food halls for soldiers, medics on the front line, who are either able to come and pick it up from there, or the food is being delivered to places
along the front line or bomb shelters, hospitals, children hospitals, for example. There were,
I think we went to three or four different restaurants that were some of the best in the
city and places I frequented that have now all moved to humanitarian efforts. And, you know,
the first things that went from these kitchens were all the perishable items. And And, you know, the first things that went from these kitchens were all the
perishable items. And then, you know, now they're using, they're pulling stuff from their large
refrigerators and freezers. And it's all going out to feed and power the defense. There's this
really famous Ukrainian chef named Yevgeny Klopotenko. And he's kind of like the Gordon Ramsay of Ukraine.
And he said, I was talking to him about how he's turned in his kitchen into the center to feed the
troops. And he said, you know, peeling a potato in war is just as important as pulling a trigger.
The soldiers need to stay fueled and they can't fight hungry. And so, you know, they look at
themselves as soldiers or like,
you know, Ukrainians that are that are also very much on the front line.
That's amazing. I want to go back to stuff that's been going on in the last 24 hours.
One of the things that President Zelensky was emphasizing in his address to Congress on
Wednesday, asking for more help. One of the bigger asks, though, was for this no-fly zone.
Can you talk about why that is and why there is reticence to
create it? The Ukrainians want a no-fly zone because the Russian Air Force has used airstrikes
to a devastating degree. Russian planes buzz over top of Kiev and pretty much everywhere else across
the country all the time. That's why we're hearing these air raid sirens. One of the scary things is when you hear these sirens, you don't know exactly where the bombs are going to fall. And so everyone
scatters. Closing the skies in the minds of Ukrainians would mean aerial assaults stopping
and the war moving to more of a ground game.
And that is where the Ukrainians feel they're at their strongest.
What we have seen over the last few weeks is Russia has really underestimated the strength of the Ukrainian army,
the number of people willing to take up arms and come out and fight.
I think Putin had in his mind that the Ukrainian army was something that still resembled what it was in 2014,
which is not the case. There is great concern in Washington that closing the skies wouldn't mean
Russia leaving them, but rather flying in them and provoking an attack by NATO that could in turn
spark a World War III type scenario. Yeah. And in addition to the no fly zone part of this,
what did you make of the rest of Biden's response? You know, as somebody who's seen,
you know, how the military has performed on the ground here and knowing very well what Ukraine
needs, I think Ukraine is going to be pleased by the ammunition that they're going to get,
the drones that they're going to get, anti-armor weaponry and air defense systems, apparently. And,
you know, that's one of the really big asks.
The foreign minister, Dmitry Kuleba,
who's somebody I know well and I've interviewed
several times since December,
has told me that, you know,
they've been begging and pleading
for air defense systems for months,
and they really wish they would have had them
before the invasion kicked off.
Then there might not be this urgent demand
to close the skies.
Right.
There were also continued talks between representatives for Russia and Ukraine.
Russia's foreign minister was, you know, voicing some optimism.
There was even this draft proposal that was being reported by the Financial Times.
What do you make of all of that?
And what could the contours of an agreement end up looking like?
I think it depends on if you speak to the Russians versus if you speak to the Ukrainians.
The response just a couple of hours or less after that from the Ukrainian presidential administration was the Financial Times story shows what are the Russian positions.
And ours are not necessarily the same things.
And this was an advisor of President Zelensky that tweeted this
in Russian, Ukrainian and English, and essentially said, you know, for us, the big things are a
ceasefire, which is part of this discussion. But there are many things that the Ukrainian side
demands that are not in the Financial Times reporting. And those things are still being
ironed out.
Essentially, what the Ukrainians want is not anything that would be perceived as capitulating to Moscow.
I think where we're seeing some agreement is on Ukraine possibly agreeing to a neutral
status, not aspiring to join NATO.
One of the differences could end up being this Russian language issue.
Right now, Russian language is not an official language in Ukraine. There is just one,
and that is Ukrainian. But I think the Russian proposal and what the Financial Times had reported
is that was something that the Russians were pushing for. And I'm not sure the Ukrainians
would want to do that. Although in the grand scheme of things, that might be one of the easier things to agree upon,
rather than, say, the acceptance of Crimea as a part of Russia.
So I don't think the sides are ready to put their names on the dotted line and say,
we've agreed to all of this and let's end this war.
There's still going to be quite a bit of negotiating.
And I think it's also important to note Putin's speech today, which was, again,
very inflammatory. And I don't think we should be so willing or prepared to believe what Russia's
foreign ministry or the Kremlin says until Russian troops have left the territory of Ukraine.
That was our chat yesterday with Christopher Miller,
a correspondent for BuzzFeed News,
currently in the Western Ukrainian city of Lviv.
We'll include a link to Christopher's most recent story
that he was referencing in the interview,
as well as his Twitter,
where you can follow all of his work in our show notes.
That is the latest for now.
We will be back after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines. Headlines.
The Federal Reserve bumped up a key interest rate by a quarter of a percent yesterday,
and it says that six more hikes will come this year as well. Yikes.
Feels like a lot. Yes. The move was aimed at slowing down inflation, which is at a 40-year
high. As much as we all love being mad every time we go to the grocery store, it would be nice for
prices to stop being so surprising. So here is your Econ 101 explanation of how the interest
hike is supposed to work. I'm sure I will get part of this wrong. If interest rates are higher, that makes loans across the board more expensive. So that means that some people
or businesses might hold off on taking loans out. Then without that extra cash to spend,
people might buy less. That in turn leads to a lower demand for goods. And so the inflated price
of those goods might come down or at least stop going up as fast as it is now. It has been four
years since the Federal
Reserve raised the interest rate, and the rate's been at near zero since March 2020 at the start
of the pandemic. But don't expect this new hike to pop ballooning inflation right away. The Fed
is estimating that it's going to take more than a year for its tactics to finally slow things down
to a level it believes is more manageable. A 7.4 magnitude earthquake hit eastern Japan last night,
killing at least four people and injuring at least 97 others. The shakes caused a loss of power to
over 2.2 million homes, as well as two small tsunami waves, and the extent of the damage
remains unclear. This region is no stranger to these kinds of disasters. Sadly, back in 2011,
a 9.1 magnitude earthquake in the same region resulted in a devastating tsunami.
Over 22,000 people died or went missing after that disaster, and it caused a nuclear reactor meltdown.
Residents waited hours after this quake to see if the same would happen once again, but it's looking like that will not be the case.
Japan's meteorological agency did originally issue tsunami advisories for the Fukushima and Miyagi provinces, but earlier this morning, they were canceled.
Yeah, really scary.
The hunt for the mythic, never-before-seen creature known as voter fraud has led nearly 23,000 mail votes to be thrown out in the Texas primary election.
Yeah, that is 13% of mail votes cast across 187 counties, according to a new analysis by the Associated
Press. This data shows that the unusually high rejection rate is a direct result of the state's
new GOP-backed voter restriction laws. According to Texas election officials,
most of the rejected ballots did not meet the state's new ID requirements passed last year.
That is probably because those requirements are insanely confusing. Under the new law, mail voters must include a personal identification number on their ballot,
such as their social security number or their driver's license number.
So that may sound easy enough, but the number that you provide also has to match your voter registration record that you probably filed years ago.
And then there is more.
On top of that, the field where you enter that number on your mail ballot was underneath the envelope flap, making it really easy to miss.
There is intentionality here.
These findings in Texas have serious implications for the Democratic process.
As we head further into the midterms, at least 17 other states will host primary elections this year under tougher election laws adopted after the 2020 presidential election.
We report on these types of stories pretty frequently. elections this year under tougher election laws adopted after the 2020 presidential election.
We report on these types of stories pretty frequently. This should be a thing that angers and incenses and like outrages every person that listens to this podcast. This is
extremely unfair and terrifying that this is happening at this point. Yes. In our country.
Staying in Texas, the place known for its large size and the large holes in the brains of its conservative lawmakers,
the state's National Butterfly Center partially reopened on Monday
after a series of attacks from right-wing conspiracy theorists,
both in person and online.
The center is located along the Texas-Mexico border,
and it had to close its doors last month amid baseless accusations of sex trafficking,
which led to gun-toting alt-righters showing up at its doorstep.
It's hard to imagine what beef they could possibly have with a butterfly conservatory,
a place that seems to transcend politics,
and simply ask the question,
do you want to see some beautiful bugs?
But it all started back in 2019,
when then-Trump advisor Steve Bannon
joined forces with some right-wingers to form We Build the Wall,
a crowdfunding platform made with the express purpose of illegally building
segments of Trump's border wall using private money.
Bannon and friends decided to build a section right next to the center,
and the conservatory sued to get them to stop.
We Build the Wall retaliated by spreading conspiracy theories online
that the Butterfly Sanctuary
was a cover-up for Mexican drug cartels
smuggling people across the border.
Oh, how did they come up with this stuff?
Some call it Butterflygate
and it became so widespread
that armed militia members
showed up at the center in January
and threatened its staff.
Thankfully, tensions have died down since then
and the conservatory reopened its doors
to members only for now, pending any other right wing attacks.
All of the people who spread rumors about this place and its beautiful butterflies should have to go and work a shift where they preserve the little sanctuary areas where the butterflies are.
That's just my proposal.
No. Oh, my God.
They do not deserve to be with the beautiful butterflies. Absolutely not. The
butterflies are treasures and these people are trash. We have a difference in opinion
that we will resolve offline. And those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
look at a gorgeous bug and and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just your Econ 101 textbook like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And your green outfit looks good.
Sure.
Just like the Chicago River.
It's a tough color to pull off, but you know what?
You're killing it.
You guys are doing it.
We can see all of you as you listen.
Surprise.
And we appreciate the spirit.
We do.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance,
Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran
and me, Gideon Resnick.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.
