The Bulwark Podcast XX
[0] Hey guys, today we've got the threat from Russia in all its forms, foreign and domestic.
[1] First, Glenn Thrush of the New York Times, who's been reporting on Alexander Smyranoff and the disinformation that is being targeted at Joe and Hunter Biden.
[2] And then we have Tim Mack with the counteroffensive on substack.
[3] He's been reporting on human stories live from Kiev.
[4] It's a good one.
[5] Stick around for both.
[6] Hello and welcome to the Bullard podcast.
[7] I'm Tim Miller.
[8] I'm here with my old friend, Washington correspondent for the New York Times, Glenn Thrush.
[9] We pulled you at the last second because I am obsessed with Alexander Smyrinoff.
[10] You and me both, buddy.
[11] You have been reporting on Alexander Smearnoff for the DOJ.
[12] But before we get to what I think is really the big story of the month, maybe the year, I want to do a little memory lane with you, if that's okay.
[13] Sure.
[14] You once hosted a podcast.
[15] I don't know if it's as successful as one I'm currently hosting, but it's called Off Message, was at Politico, and you graciously had me on as a guest one time.
[16] And you asked me a question that has haunted my Google Fu for the intervening eight years.
[17] And so I want to, I want to play that for the audience.
[18] Let me ask you something.
[19] If Trump is the nominee and Hillary is indicted, one I think is more probable than the next.
[20] Hillary would beat him from jail.
[21] That's, okay, there we got.
[22] Hillary would beat him from jail.
[23] Thank you.
[24] We just have our headline.
[25] We can shut this thing down now.
[26] We can shut this thing down now.
[27] In more ways than once, my career was one thing that we could shut down after that.
[28] How young and naive we were, right?
[29] Young and how you were.
[30] You didn't seem to push back.
[31] I'll be that much.
[32] That seemed about right to you, too.
[33] At that point in time, we were actually organizing panels to discuss the future of the, whether or not the Republican Party could survive after Hillary's victory and Trump's defeat.
[34] Yeah.
[35] I'll never forget this.
[36] We were like, sort of like, as we were scheduling internal politico panels and stuff, that was like what we were talking about.
[37] and then took that fateful trip north on that windy November day, walked into the Javitt Center in my hometown, and here we are.
[38] We're still dealing with the aftershocks.
[39] Yeah, it's quite the time capsule listening to that interview.
[40] We went on for about 45 minutes.
[41] We do some gay stuff.
[42] Most of the interview is like us analyzing the state of the Republican Party.
[43] Can the Republicans do well in midterms?
[44] You know, might it be possible that when Hillary's president, you know, Republican D .L .C. will emerge.
[45] That was one topic we discussed.
[46] Maybe the Bill Clinton, a moderate centrist Republican DLC maybe will emerge.
[47] You know, if wishes were ponies.
[48] Somebody had not spiked our food with mushrooms or anything either.
[49] No. No, that was just what we thought.
[50] It really did capture the vibe, though, right?
[51] I mean, we've had so much Trump.
[52] The question that I find really interesting, and I know we want to talk about the other stuff, is what would have happened had Hillary won?
[53] would we have eventually had to reckon with this phenomenon whether Trump was leading it or someone else was leading it or not?
[54] Because the backlash was, as we now are very well aware, it was building.
[55] So I think if you're looking at kind of counterfactuals on history, that's an interesting one.
[56] I don't know.
[57] I think the more interesting counterfactual is what would have happened if Marco would have won the primary, you know, because I think if Hillary, honestly, I think Hillary beats Trump, we're still reckoning with some version of this.
[58] I don't think that like we're reckoning with the potential literal end of our democracy, but we're reckoning with this nationalist populist backlash that I think continues and gain steam, frankly, after another establishment Clinton presidency.
[59] We could have lived in a happier time, maybe not for some of our liberal listeners, we could have lived in a happier time where the autopsy candidate had emerged and probably beaten Hillary, probably beaten Hillary because of Hillary's, all of Hillary's various weaknesses that cost her versus Trump.
[60] But anyway, we can maybe do two hours on that imaginary history.
[61] That's not the one we're in.
[62] Instead, we're in a real -life Spies Like Us novel, where the spies are even stupider than Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase, and the Republicans are even more pliable than a fiction writer of an 80s Soviet movie could have ever even imagined.
[63] And we have this fellow named Alexander Smyranov as if the writers got bored with the name.
[64] I want to kind of lay out what I kind of see happened, and then I want to get through your reporting.
[65] Essentially, the Republicans are desperate for any piece of information to demonstrate that Joe Biden is crooked, right?
[66] And they had determined that Burisma was the most likely example of this, this company in Ukraine, that Hunter was on the board of.
[67] And going all the way back to the perfect phone call was Zelensky, Republicans have been looking for something.
[68] And this FBI double agent emerges to give them exactly what they would dream of would be the case in a movie, right?
[69] is that Joe Biden did get this money from Burisma, and he has hit it in a series of secret bank accounts that you'd never be able to uncover and that he knows it because he worked with Burisma and they have their source.
[70] And the FBI kind of buys it.
[71] I want to hear your take on that, but the Republicans on the Hill buy it hook line and sinker and essentially use it as a central element of this impeachment inquiry.
[72] And it turns out that not only is a total lie, but it's probably seated by the Russians.
[73] How is that summary for you of essentially what has happened here?
[74] I mean, that's good.
[75] What do you want for me?
[76] That seems to have covered the entire warfare.
[77] I want you to kind of get under the skin for us here.
[78] How did this come to pass?
[79] Who is this person?
[80] He's not Yaakov Smirnoff, the 1980s comedian, though he does apparently share some significant characteristics with him.
[81] We know very, very little about him.
[82] I think that is by design.
[83] I don't know if he scrubbed his social media prior to becoming infamous.
[84] I can't find a picture of him.
[85] Have you seen a picture of him?
[86] Nope, nope.
[87] And he covered himself up as he was walking out of the courthouse.
[88] I'm sure Russian intelligence has a picture of him.
[89] Yeah.
[90] There's one going on to the Internet, but it's a guy that, like, this guy is supposedly 43, right?
[91] And this picture that people keep sending me is like a person that looks like he's 60.
[92] So maybe his spy work has aged this person poorly.
[93] There are a lot of Alexander Smirnoff's, not surprisingly, in New York.
[94] I grew up in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, which is the Ukrainian -slash -Russian enclave, and Smyranoff was a really common name.
[95] He is somebody who occupied this kind of shadow lands world in the old Soviet states of Eastern Europe and around Russia, of which our intelligence services and our law enforcement services need a lot of insight into.
[96] So the best way to kind of view this is from the Goodfellas perspective, right?
[97] I remember Sammy the Bull Gravana, who was John Gotti's associate who flipped, right?
[98] And I think he's a good guy to have in mind, not that Smirnoff knew as much or as is valuable.
[99] But back when the feds were trying to crack the mafia, after J. Edgar Hoover pretended they didn't exist for like half a century, they enlisted a ton of confidential informants.
[100] A lot of them were killers.
[101] A lot of them were serial liars.
[102] So the challenge was when you have these confidential informants is to sift through the crap and to get to the information you can verify or leads that you can later pursue.
[103] When you think of Smyranoff, think of him as being somebody who's sort of a flawed narrator, and they know he's a flawed narrator.
[104] Frank Costello.
[105] We've done two 80s movies reference us.
[106] Let's update it.
[107] Let's do Frank Custra.
[108] To early 2000s.
[109] Got it.
[110] He's Frank Costello.
[111] Right.
[112] So you have a guy who is innately flawed.
[113] That's cool.
[114] in terms of internal FBI and law enforcement deliberations, you're not presenting that to a grand jury.
[115] You're not throwing him out, his information out in public.
[116] Then what happens is somebody in the FBI, presumably somebody who's pretty pro -Trump, leaks this information, I believe, to Chuck Grassley, the senator from Iowa, who then does a classic Hill thing, which is like, we need information.
[117] Just in terms of brief timeline, this story gets very twisted and complicated.
[118] But all folks need to know is, I believe Smirnoff tells his handler at the FBI this information sometime in 2020.
[119] And it pertains to stuff that happened in 2015, 2016, 2017.
[120] He makes up this story, according to the indictment, that the Bidens were trying to shake down Burisma, this energy giant who was under investigation by the Prosecutor General in Ukraine at the time for $5 million each.
[121] They determined for various reasons right at the beginning that this is bullshit.
[122] This is according to the indictments and also according to the detention memos.
[123] Back in 2020, the feds knew immediately it was bullshit.
[124] And that not to go up the chain on this, that this didn't even warrant a second level of scrutiny.
[125] And there were various inconsistencies in his story that were flags.
[126] Like, for example, that Hunter Biden's never been to Ukraine.
[127] Correct.
[128] Which just as a quick aside, does make it kind of weird that you're on the board of this company, never been to Ukraine, but that's more of a Hunter Biden issue.
[129] But anyway, also a big miss. Also, the sidecar on this is like Hunter Biden was engaged in activity that any reasonable outside observer would regard as being very, very questionable, right?
[130] And I think he himself has said that.
[131] So his hands are not necessarily entirely clean as evidenced by the two indictments currently again.
[132] But this guy's claims don't check out.
[133] They're not verified by anybody else.
[134] And he's also sending texts that say, I hate Joe Biden and I want to take him out, essentially.
[135] So he's got a political motivation.
[136] Fast forward to 2023.
[137] Grassley gets wind of this.
[138] Boom, puts out a press release.
[139] I believe in May of 23 that essentially says brands, this is Biden bribery and can we get to the bottom of this?
[140] Will the FBI release this form called a 1023, which is an informant report?
[141] Right.
[142] So over the next four or five months, the snowballs and it gets into the hands of James Comer, the head of the Oversight Committee, and Jim Jordan, and it just becomes kind of a Fox Newsmax branded allegation, right?
[143] Never mind that it has been dismissed by members of the FBI, never mind that they have gotten a briefing, according to Ken Buck, a Republican who sat in on the briefing in which red flags, were raised by the briefers about the veracity of this information, they just pumped it out into the public without the basic fact -checking procedures that - Yeah, they didn't just pump it out.
[144] Let's listen to how Elise Tophonic described this.
[145] We're going to continue doing our work as House Republicans to bring transparency and ultimately accountability.
[146] This is the biggest political corruption scandal, not only in my lifetime, but I would say the past 100 years.
[147] You have multiple members of the Biden family profiting illegally from foreign governments.
[148] You also have the bomb.
[149] shell reporting, including potential tapes that exist, of while Joe Biden was vice president, taking a bribe from Burisma.
[150] So this reeks of corruption, and we are going to make sure that we follow the facts.
[151] And I want to say that Jamie Comer, who is our chair of oversight and government reform, he's been doing a tremendous job following the facts, following the bank accounts so that there can be transparency for the American people.
[152] She's going to follow the facts, Glenn.
[153] Well, we've followed the facts now.
[154] Have we heard from Elise today, or in the last 24 hours?
[155] Have you guys heard from her about the new facts?
[156] No, but what I would say is one of the first things a senior Trump administration official told me when I was covering the White House in early 2017 is never, never admit that you've done anything wrong and never, never apologize.
[157] And that is really the playbook here.
[158] Comer and Jordan have just said, look, this is what it turned out to be.
[159] we were misled by the FBI who said this guy was credible.
[160] Nothing to see here.
[161] Let's move on as quickly as we possibly can.
[162] So like what Elise was saying in that interview, I think it's just important to think about Elisa's language.
[163] It wasn't like, oh, the FBI is looking into this.
[164] This could be the biggest scandal.
[165] She's like, this is the biggest scandal of my lifetime, maybe the biggest scandal in 100 years.
[166] And she's specifically referring to the Smearnoff allegations.
[167] Like she says the word Burisma.
[168] She says bribe.
[169] She talks about the taped phone call.
[170] that Smyranoff is bringing up that the FBI knew was untrue.
[171] Every single word she says is completely fabricated, right, by this one guy that doesn't like Joe Biden.
[172] You know, again, we're going to have to, I have to always retreat to that's what the prosecutors say, but they seem to have laid it out.
[173] And the other thing, very importantly, neither Comer nor Grassley nor Jordan are disputing that this guy's stuff was fabricated at this point in time.
[174] Just as a total aside, you know, you try to do the math on the hundred years thing, and I guess teapot dome is some is in there too.
[175] right, not just what I go.
[176] Which is like a direct bribery scandal.
[177] But this gets back to the smear enough of it all, right?
[178] Which is, okay.
[179] Now, the question is, this guy is dealing with Russian intel.
[180] Okay, he's a double agent, essentially, right?
[181] Right.
[182] And again, we can retreat to what the prosecutors say, but the prosecutors say that some element of the information that he provided was planted by Russian intel.
[183] So I described him in the first story as a human hall of mirrors.
[184] Yeah.
[185] Okay.
[186] And I think that's apt, obviously, because I wrote it.
[187] I find my writing very apt.
[188] I find my writing.
[189] It's like, it was the best thing.
[190] But anyway, essentially the problem is, and it's actually funny when you read the indictment, it's what makes it kind of like seed corn for a great HBO series, right, is that they don't know.
[191] So he claims to have had stuff that was planted by Russian intelligence.
[192] We have subsequently, through some of our reporting, determined that it was probably not the bribery allegation that he's referring to.
[193] It's probably the more recent intelligence.
[194] And for those of your listeners who are uninitiated, he had also more recently made the unverifiable claim that the Russians had bugged some hotel and had compromise on high -ranking U .S. officials, potentially some people who might be involved in the presidential campaign.
[195] So we talk about the Republicans airing this as being the catalyst.
[196] for this indictment, but it's also appropriate to say that another catalyst was, and they say this directly in the indictment, was that he was going to try to continue to intervene on behalf, they believed on behalf of Moscow to pump out missing permission.
[197] We're like now just kind of venturing into this hall of mirrors where it's hard to like draw a direct, you know, one to one.
[198] But like, at least in that clip is talking about recordings, like in the same vein that she's talking about the Hunter bribery with Burisma.
[199] And so, So, you know, it's not a huge jump to think that it was the recordings that Smyranov had sent on the dossier that she's referring to there.
[200] And that is apparently Russian intel disinfo.
[201] We don't know where it comes from.
[202] It's disinfo clearly, according to the indictment.
[203] The two things that pop into my head when I hear this stuff is, and I always, in covering Congress, which I did for a number of years, I've always thought about this.
[204] if something is a state would a statement be actionable in court would people be able to be sued if they said it without the protection of the speech and debate clause sure right if you made this allegation against a private citizen in the way that stephanic did would that open her up to civil exposure had she not had this blanket right and had she not been protected now i'm not arguing that she should be liable to any of that stuff, but just as sort of like an ethical standard.
[205] And I don't think it surmounts, I think if you said something without evidence about one private person to another, this is an overworked comparison.
[206] But we have seen in years past legislators making, taking the seed of an allegation that was leaked to them and spinning it and spinning it out that later turned out to be untrue.
[207] We had that experience in the 1950.
[208] and it destroyed a lot of people's lives.
[209] So I think it is an entirely legitimate question to go back because I do believe folks are trying to erase the tape on this.
[210] It is an entirely useful exercise to go back and play precisely what is what they said.
[211] Yeah, and maybe more than useful needed when you think about the broader context.
[212] And again, I don't want to, we're not getting over our skis here and being, you know, I don't want to get into P -Tape, you know, territory here.
[213] But like, there's certain things we know, right?
[214] In 2016, we know that Russia interfered in the election, that they hacked emails, that they wanted to create chaos, that they wanted to hurt Hillary.
[215] We know that that happened.
[216] We've seen Russia's actions in the intervening time, the invasion of Ukraine, the other, you know, countermeasures that they've undertaken.
[217] And we have this guy claiming that Russia was planting this info about the Bidens right now in the heat of another, of yet another campaign eight years later.
[218] And, you know, even if this wasn't like, oh, Putin ordered this one piece of info, go to the intelligence, and then go to Smirnoff, and then it ends up in Stefano.
[219] Like, even if it isn't that, just like the contextual, the environment around this is that these guys, the Republicans on the Hill, are uncritically advancing material that, like, very well seems to be sourced from Russia in order to create problems.
[220] And, like, there's no reflection about that.
[221] There's no qualms about that.
[222] And frankly, they seem excited to do it.
[223] Well, the one thing I would say is we need to verify that that is, in fact, the case.
[224] And I will say just categorically, I don't think any of the documents filed in the Smyranoff case by the government.
[225] I don't think that they make that connection clearly.
[226] Now, that might just be just sort of the circumspection of the prosecution.
[227] You mean the campaign interference speculation, yeah?
[228] Yeah, yeah.
[229] And the other thing about this is it is highly unlikely that we'd be hearing about this had the Republicans not publicize this.
[230] This would have been just something that the investigators would have pocketed and said, when you talk to current and former FBI people, they get all kinds of stuff pushed to them that they just kind of throw out with the garbage, right?
[231] So the only thing that really brought this thing into the public light was the fact that Republicans publicizes.
[232] This is from my sourcing in law enforcement.
[233] And then the other thing, it's really that might be lost to people who aren't necessarily thinking like law enforcement folks would.
[234] It is really highly unusual for the FBI to enthusiastically burn somebody who'd been on their payroll in public.
[235] That's an interesting point.
[236] The House Republicans went after FBI director Christopher Ray pretty directly on this by threatening to hold him in contempt if he didn't produce the documentation publicly on this.
[237] And my general sense is that didn't go over very well in the J. Edgar Hoover Building.
[238] Just my final thought on the Republican thing, because this is a good point.
[239] Had the Republicans not publicized this, we probably wouldn't be in this situation because, FBI is happy to keep the stuff under wraps.
[240] The FBI gets crazy accusations and leads all the time from sources, right?
[241] And so like the interesting thing is, and this is when you try to put this in the context of what is different about this, like what is notable, is that the Republicans lack of willingness to show any restraint, right?
[242] And their desperation to have something that is true is kind of how you end up here, right?
[243] Because in this other situation, you know, it's not as have passed Congress.
[244] It's not as of Newt Gingrich in 1994, couldn't have found some like random whitewater accusation from some FBI source that wasn't fully vetted and put it out, right?
[245] It's not like Nancy Pelosi couldn't have done that during the Trump years or whatever.
[246] It shows just a total willingness to want to put forth the nicest thing you could say is unvetted information about this administration.
[247] Tim, the other thing about this is, and we referenced it earlier, right?
[248] And again, And all this is sort of publicly available in terms of the various investigations and also journalism on this.
[249] There's a lot of really unflattering information about Hunter Biden in the public domain, legitimately in the public domain, that raises real questions about his behavior.
[250] And there's real, you know, and there are entirely legitimate questions to be asked about what is family new and when they knew it, right?
[251] And those factors, you know, it's perfectly appropriate to have the merit in the context of an election.
[252] I certainly know that the Times as an institution has been committed to sort of looking into these things and presenting the information as best as we can.
[253] We've covered the Hunter Biden case pretty thoroughly over the years.
[254] You know, we've been engaged in every twist and turn on this.
[255] But, you know, the point here is like what's the quality of information that's being pumped out into the public domain?
[256] You know, because it is actually, this is one of those rare instances where we can apply the standards we have as a news organization to the release.
[257] of public information, right?
[258] You know, you hear politicians talk about transparency all the time.
[259] And while that is very, very clearly, we are very much into transparency, right?
[260] But transparency isn't about making every single scrap of information that's scraped up from every single corner instantly public without curation, right?
[261] And I think that's what we're seeing here is like there's a big difference between transparency and sort of a responsible analysis of information.
[262] This is right.
[263] And this is, I think, the fundamental, and this kind of brings us full circle to the old Republican part.
[264] You can imagine a Mike Gallagher, an old type of Republican running an oversight committee and doing a real investigation into Hunter Biden.
[265] And did Joe Biden know?
[266] Like, were there a couple times where Joe met with his business partners where it may have been a little bit untoward and, you know, subpoena in people and taking that seriously?
[267] Like, you could imagine that oversight committee.
[268] And then what we have instead is this oversight committee, which is like, well may be Russian disinformation that is comically false, like very easily provably false, that has been rejected by the FBI for three years.
[269] And we're going to turn it into the central part of an impeachment inquiry.
[270] That's very different.
[271] The other thing about this, and I just have to throw this out as a caveat, is while we're seeing things in an indictment and while we're hearing what the FBI briefed members of Congress on, you know, there's always a possibility that, you know, some piece of information is going to pop up that verifies some of these claims.
[272] You know what I mean?
[273] And that's also part of this process, too.
[274] I mean, not the claim that Hunter Biden was in Ukraine.
[275] No, no. And not the claim that Joe Biden has like a web of bank accounts that are so secret that the CIA couldn't uncover it.
[276] But that was, I mean, those claims are going to be back.
[277] Exactly.
[278] Exactly.
[279] But the challenge, you know, from reporters who are trying to cover this thing in a balanced way is like even while you're being hit with this fusillade of exaggerations and sort of politicizing data points and taking them out of context, which is what.
[280] the feds are alleging, right?
[281] You also got to keep an open mind as to where an investigation might lead.
[282] So it actually makes it very hard for the journalists, you know, the quote -unquote mainstream journalists who are trying to cover this responsibly because you're getting just, you got to see my inbox, man. It's like, and so what you actually have to do is kind of filter out the noise about people's interpretation of data that comes into the public domain and just push that away and actually examine it in the context of what really happened.
[283] I was like, this is like the Rudy thing, and this goes back to the laptop originally.
[284] I mean, the originally, the Wall Street Journal was taking a serious look.
[285] They had real reporters looking into the laptop, but they get so bored with that that they're just like, oh, we're just going to publish.
[286] Like, we're just going to put it out, you know, through someone else.
[287] And, you know, you could argue that, like, that was cutting off their nose despite their face, right?
[288] Like, I made it non -credible.
[289] That's back to my old work.
[290] That's the op -o work.
[291] That's the thinking of, like, well, how do you actually disseminate information in a way that is credible, makes people feel credible.
[292] Okay, Glenn Thrush, man, I'm so happy to see you.
[293] It's twice I've seen you now in the last 10 months.
[294] I miss you.
[295] I appreciate your work.
[296] Stay on it.
[297] I loved your article.
[298] We got into some of it.
[299] People should check out your article on the mysterious Alexander Smyranoffos in the Times this morning.
[300] And we'll be in touch.
[301] Great talking to you.
[302] All right.
[303] Thanks to Glenn Thrush.
[304] Up next, we've got Tim Mack based in Kiev with counteroffensive on substack.
[305] An update on the Ukraine war two years in.
[306] I'm going to tell you my story from the underground where I. I live, I'm watching here.
[307] Hey, welcome to Tim Mack, founder of the Counter Offensive, a new site on Substack, headquartered in Kiev.
[308] Mack's team is telling the personal stories of people threatened by authoritarianism.
[309] Welcome back to the Bullwark podcast, brother.
[310] It's good to see you.
[311] It's great to see you.
[312] We are coming up on the two -year anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
[313] I guess we're two days away from the two -year anniversary.
[314] Last weekend, the eastern city of Advika fell to Russia.
[315] This has been maybe their most significant territorial victory in, I don't know, nine, ten months.
[316] Talk to us about the state of play there and what you're seeing on the ground.
[317] Well, look, I've got to tell you that the morale in Ukraine is as low as I've seen it in a really, really long time.
[318] And a lot of this has to do, unfortunately, with the United States.
[319] And in particular, the United States in the West, saying that they would be with Ukraine at the end.
[320] and then not following through with those promises.
[321] There's a big feeling of betrayal right now in Ukraine, not to mention a lot of despair over the current battlefield situation.
[322] And so, you know, folks in Ukraine follow U .S. congressional procedures and legislation sometimes more closely than a lot of Americans, you know, because for them it's not just a matter of policy or legislation as a matter of actual lives, the lives of their family members, their cousins, their friends, their partners, it's life or death for them.
[323] And what is a real risk is what was originally an American strategic victory in Ukraine turning into a real risk of a strategic defeat.
[324] That is that Ukraine feeling sort of betrayed as it is could turn on the West, which they viewed as a friend and a close partner now as someone who can't be trusted.
[325] And that has implications not only for Ukraine, but all over the world, any place where the U .S. says, trust us will back you.
[326] Yeah, and this sense is fear of being abandoned by the U .S. and confusion about what's happening.
[327] I mean, there was the story that Zunsky was sharing in the briefing this week that kind of leaked out about the soldier who's on the ground, like looking at his phone for news about what's happening in the American Congress while all their bombs that are landing around them.
[328] Is that representative and in your conversations there, like how focused our people on what is happening in America and how critical is more quick action in America to trying to turn the momentum around.
[329] It really sometimes does stun me how much people outside the United States care about the minutia of what's happening in the U .S. Congress.
[330] Someone, you know, over lunch was saying to me, oh, you know, just like Newt Gingrich's contract with America in the mid -90s, just ruin a reference to that, you know, just events and, and Paul politics that a lot of Americans aren't even familiar with become really important to folks all over the world because the United States, it says that it's a beacon for freedom and stands for democracy.
[331] People have brought to take that really, really very seriously.
[332] And when we say that, when America says that, other folks pay attention to what we do after making those kinds of promises.
[333] And so bringing that back to what's happening in Ukraine, I think there's a great sense of imminent betrayal perhaps, but as the war kind of seems to be going against Ukrainian momentum, folks are going to want to find reasons and explanations and unfortunately people and institutions to blame.
[334] Obviously, so many people have gone to serve in this war, and I was just reading a book about World War I in the absence of men, just about the sense of the hollowed out cities while people are on the front lines.
[335] Like, what is happening?
[336] I know whether people are being conscripted.
[337] Is there a sense of like this absence of this huge part of the society that is either serving or that has, you know, died in the war?
[338] What's that like actually on the ground in Kiev?
[339] Well, you won't talk to a single person who hasn't been affected in a deeply personal way by deaths and injuries in Ukraine.
[340] I mean, everyone knows someone.
[341] And this is one of those wars that has been extremely personal.
[342] You'll remember in the early days of the invasion.
[343] the Russians surrounded Kiev and were bombing places in the city.
[344] So it's deeply intimate for folks.
[345] They have gone through it.
[346] It's not some sort of far off event that's occurring.
[347] You know, there are air raids and air raid alerts almost every day.
[348] It kind of becomes in this strange way integrated into all aspects of your lot.
[349] You know, there's an app for that.
[350] There's actually an app that will ring when the air alerts are sounding in your region.
[351] it's one of those things where not only are there the you know the physical traumas of amputations and injuries and death but it's this terrible mental trauma that's accumulating and it's cascading from person to person you can tell i mean i've seen so many people who earlier in the war i would have pegged as people who were you know absolutely rock solid folks who you can't imagine them breaking under psychological pressure and i'm seeing them break i'm seeing them be really affected by the cumulative effects of this war.
[352] It's really heartbreaking to see.
[353] But it's one of those things that we're trying to give voice to at the counterments.
[354] We're trying to tell these deeply reported human stories that illustrate what's happening in a way that other news outlets aren't in order to try to cut through this idea of Ukraine fatigue, writing these stories that would be interesting to read whether they were set in Ukraine or not.
[355] I mean, I'm deeply passionate about that.
[356] Do you have a most memorable story that you've been working on since you started?
[357] the counteroffensive?
[358] We've done a lot of really important stories outside of the mainstream.
[359] I mean, one of our most recent stories was about Ukrainian folk music player who lost one of his arms in a drone attack and how he is trying to change this Ukrainian folk music string instrument in order to be able to play again.
[360] We've done these deep stories about what it's like for Ukrainian comedians near the front line as well as medics evacuating.
[361] from eastern Ukraine, the Donbass, all the way to central Ukraine.
[362] We've done stories about Russian persecution of occupied Christian pastors in formerly Ukrainian held territories and now Russian health territories.
[363] So we've done story after story about individuals going through the war in order to make it feel more intimate and more real for folks who are reading thousands of miles away.
[364] I was struck by the story about the persecuted pastors because there have been been, you know, accusations going both ways on this, right?
[365] The Russophile right in America has made, you know, claims that it's actually Zelensky that's been persecuting Russian Orthodox ministers.
[366] And your story about, boy, I'm not even going to try to pronounce his name correctly.
[367] Well, I'll give it a shot.
[368] Then you can give it right.
[369] Teamwork Kosebekov.
[370] I thought that just really struck me the degree to which the, you know, maybe non -denomination, non -Russian Orthodox, Protestant, religious officers are being targeted by Russia.
[371] Could you talk about that story a bit?
[372] Yeah, so, for example, folks who are part of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church or the Baptist ministry, which is very popular in Ukraine, are seen by Russians as suspect, as under suspicion.
[373] They think that they might be under the control of, you know, Western intelligence or something like that, and without any evidence to support it.
[374] And it's really interesting because, of course, some of the things.
[375] folks that Ukraine realizes that it needs to win over is the evangelical right and Protestants in the U .S. who might be skeptical towards their cause.
[376] So it's one of those topics that really strikes through not only on a personal lens, but also may have some appeal with some of the folks who are on the right in the United States who may be either on the fence or unsure about how to view Ukraine and Russia, but this might change some minds.
[377] In the before times maybe it would change some minds, right?
[378] You would hope that it would change some minds, but the nature of just how entrenched the right has gotten.
[379] We're talking about this also in the podcast today about the false stories about Biden and Burisma that got pushed by Russian intelligence.
[380] You know, we saw Tucker Carlson last week in Russia.
[381] I mean, Ukrainians that you talk to have to just be absolutely exacerbated by this, right?
[382] Like, how is it the Ronald Reagan's party has gotten so deep into kind of the Russian propaganda mill.
[383] I assume people in Ukraine are much more familiar with the Russian methods, right?
[384] So, like, what are, what are folks saying there about what's been happening?
[385] Well, I think you're right that they're familiar with Russian methods.
[386] And so, you know, for them, nothing is new under the sun, right?
[387] But there's still a consternation about Tucker Carlson, who's seen in Ukraine as kind of a useful idiot for for Putin.
[388] But there's also like a lot of confusion and anger towards people like Elon Musk and people like Donald Trump.
[389] I mean, there's a lot of fear.
[390] I mean, if we just take a step back strategically, one of Ukraine's biggest fears is the election of Donald Trump, because not only will U .S. support likely stall in that scenario, but Russia will very much feel empowered to do whatever they want with impunity should that occur.
[391] European leaders are also deeply, deeply concerned about that kind of scenario.
[392] The idea of Trump getting reelected, I mean, like when you say the Ukrainians fear it, yeah, of course they fear it.
[393] I mean, is this war sustainable if Donald Trump becomes president and there's no U .S. support anymore?
[394] And we're already seeing the tangible results of the U .S. delays in support.
[395] What happens if U .S. support ends?
[396] I mean, there's a real risk that Ukraine could lose the war.
[397] I mean, resistance will continue.
[398] I mean, there's an old saying that as long as there's a 12 -year -old boy with a plastic fork in Ukraine, they'll continue to be resistance against Russian occupation.
[399] But it could mean that major cities fall.
[400] It could mean that Kiev is threatened again.
[401] I mean, Russia has made no secret of its intentions, which is to dominate and subjectate as much of Ukraine as possible.
[402] The city of Harkeyev is, you know, 25 kilometers from the Russian border.
[403] If they had the ability and war down Ukraine forces and defenses, they could go after the second largest city in Ukraine, Harki, surround it, besiege it, and then put millions of people through this terrible suffering from the Russian perspective with a view towards occupying and controlling it.
[404] These are the consequences if the United States and the rest of the West doesn't fulfill its obligations and its promises to Ukraine.
[405] And that's a real worry among Ukrainians about how they're going to continue militarily and economically without the support of the West.
[406] Yeah, there are a couple of specific stories I want to get your, you know, have you share a little more color with us on.
[407] This morning, you have a story looking back at the battle of Antonov Airfield and the kind of deep reporting that you guys did.
[408] It's one of the early battles of the invasion.
[409] Talk just about what you learned and what that experience was like.
[410] Yeah, so we spent the better part of the last year interviewing dozens and dozens of people who were present at this battle of Antonov Airfield, which took place in the first 72 hours or so of the full -scale invasion.
[411] And, you know, this really relates to what I was saying about, you know, a 12 -year -old boy with a plastic fork.
[412] There's a story in our reporting about a member of the Ukraine armed forces that lacking ammo saw a bunch of Russian soldiers in the airfield and decided to try to run them over with this car, which he and his convoy did repeatedly in order to fight back.
[413] This is the nature of Ukrainian resistance, and you will see it continue.
[414] Now, do we want to put our Ukrainian partners in a position where they need to be fighting with plastic forks and BMWs?
[415] Obviously not.
[416] They need artillery.
[417] They need drones.
[418] They need armored vehicles.
[419] Essentially, they need what the United States promised from the very beginning.
[420] And you could see a narrative forming, particularly among Russian propagandists, talking to Ukrainian, saying, the Americans, they encouraged you to fight.
[421] they said we'd back you and then just at the moment where you're most vulnerable they walked away and you can see that being a very effective narrative right if things go badly you've just been doing so much once against the counteroffensive on substack people should be reading more about these stories well here's so much about the kidnapping of the children from russia and how that impact has been on ukraine what have you kind of learned about that and the extent of it and and you know the negotiations upon getting some of these children back.
[422] What's the latest on that story?
[423] Well, look, it's one of those stories that really illustrates what happens behind enemy lines.
[424] It's one of those stories that shows what Russia intends to do with people in areas that it's occupied.
[425] It's a story about children, of course, which is particularly horrific.
[426] But Russia really wants to apply this sort of propagandistic method of, you know, so -called patriotic education, not only the children, but to adults, erase the very idea of the Ukrainian citizenship and nationhood.
[427] And for Russia, it's not a matter about children per se.
[428] It's a matter of extinguishing a culture and a language and an identity, which they don't believe has any right to exist.
[429] Russia wants to subjectate Ukraine, not merely for the territory and for the economic resources that it might hold.
[430] It's really very fertile agricultural sector and that sort of thing.
[431] But it really is driven by Putin's ideological opposition to the very concept of an independent Ukraine that exists separate and apart from Russia.
[432] Thank you to Tim Mack.
[433] I really, really admire the work you're doing with counteroffensive and I hope to get you back here next time with maybe a more uplifting report about the status in Ukraine.
[434] Thanks, brother.
[435] the answer