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This is a disgusting situation where Americans are funding the slaughter in Ukraine. Some officials want to send family members to fight there, even though Ukraine isn't in NATO. Putin hasn't threatened Europe.

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Checklist for summary approach: - Identify the core claim: the war is not about NATO enlargement. - Extract the key supporting points and alleged facts. - Note recurring contrasts between “not about NATO” and “about democracy/sphere of influence.” - Preserve explicit claims about Ukraine’s actions (democracy issues) as stated. - Include notable comparisons and opinions voiced (Hitler analogies, emotional judgments) exactly as presented. - Mention any proposed causal chain (draft treaty, rejection, invasion). - Keep direct references concise and faithful to the original wording where possible. - Exclude evaluative judgments or truth-claims beyond what is stated. - Maintain 378–473 words. The transcript repeatedly states that the war in Ukraine is not about NATO enlargement. Speaker 0 notes that President Putin allegedly sent a draft treaty to NATO promising no more enlargement as a precondition for not invading Ukraine; the offer was rejected, and he proceeded with war to prevent NATO from nearing his borders. The ongoing refrain across speakers is that this is fundamentally not about NATO, and some insist it is about “democratic expansion” or Russia’s sphere of influence rather than alliance growth. Several voices argue that claims of NATO expansion are a distraction from Russia’s aims. One speaker asserts, “This is not about NATO expansion,” followed by others repeating variations: “It has nothing to do with NATO,” “NATO is not the reason,” and “NATO is just a fictitious imaginary adversary” used by Putin and Russia. In contrast, multiple speakers insist the issue concerns democracy and Russia’s expansionist motives: “This is about democratic expansion.” They allege Ukraine acts against democracy: “Ukraine bans religious organizations. We are protecting democracy right now. Ukraine is banning political parties. Because it's a democracy. Ukraine restricts books and music. It's about democracy. Ukraine won't hold elections.” A thread in the discussion ties Russia’s actions to a desire to rebuild influence. One speaker states, “This is about him trying to expand his sphere of influence,” while another notes, “If the West had not challenged Russian interests so directly, I think that there was a chance to avoid this war.” There is also a strong moralizing frame: Putin is described with adjectives like “evil,” “madman,” and compared to Hitler. The speakers evoke historical analogies: “Hitler,” “the Nazis invaded Poland,” and “Putin is reminiscent of Hitler,” with phrases such as “new Hitler.” One speaker characterizes Putin as a butcher “trying to kill people everywhere in the world, just not Ukraine,” and the discussion culminates with acknowledgment of Lindsey Graham’s remarks, signaling a transition to further commentary.

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- Democrats' spending caused inflation, and Biden's administration ignited global unrest after a peaceful period under Trump. Biden's Afghanistan withdrawal was botched, and NATO expansion talks provoked Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Opportunities for peace were rejected, leading to a prolonged war with mass casualties and depleted US stockpiles. - The US has a history of military interventions, including the bombing of Belgrade, and illegal wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, as well as involvement in the 2014 coup in Kyiv. The US government cannot be trusted. - NATO expansion was promised not to move "one inch eastward" but Clinton signed off on plans to expand NATO to Ukraine. The US unilaterally withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002, leading to missile systems in Eastern Europe that Russia views as a threat. - Putin sought to force Ukraine to negotiate neutrality, aiming to keep NATO off Russia's border. The US rejected negotiations, and a draft Russia-US security agreement proposing no NATO enlargement. - Germany has aligned with the US, supporting NATO expansion, but previously had an independent foreign policy. Merkel knew NATO expansion was a bad idea but gave in to US pressure. - The US is in a hot war with Russia, with US personnel on the ground in Ukraine. Russia could disable critical American infrastructure. - The war in Ukraine is a US-Russia conflict provoked by the US with the aim of NATO enlargement. The American people have been told the opposite. - The war started in 2014 with US involvement in the overthrow of Ukraine's government. The US rejected off-ramps and continues to fund the war, resulting in Ukrainian deaths and territorial losses. - The US should negotiate with Russia, acknowledging mutual security concerns and halting NATO enlargement. - The US is trying to destroy Russia through CIA operations in Ukraine. Russia is defending its right to survive. - Globalists aim to exploit Ukraine's resources and destroy Russia. The BRICS nations are moving towards a gold-backed currency. - The US has invested billions in Ukraine since 1991 to support a democratic government. Zelenskyy's team is adding fuel to the fire. - The US blew up the Nord Stream pipeline, as promised by Biden. - The US is turning Ukraine into a de facto member of NATO.

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If you're a patriotic American who does your research, how could you hate Donald Trump? He's the most popular businessman in American history. Before 2016, he had the most movie cameos. How can he be racist when he won an NAACP award? Didn't we have peace around the world when Trump was in office? Why are we giving Ukraine 60 billion when we have border problems? After the U.S. left a million guns in Afghanistan, Xi Jinping and Putin gave the Taliban legitimacy. Didn't Biden give Putin access to a gas pipeline, and then Putin went to war with Ukraine? Was it a coincidence that Brittney Griner was traded for Victor Boot after that? You voted for this over Trump? You need to wake up.

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Checklist: - Identify core claims: war in Ukraine not about NATO; Putin’s draft treaty; democracy vs. other motives; sphere of influence; West’s actions. - Remove repetition and filler; keep unique points. - Preserve key phrases and claims from the transcript where feasible. - Include notable comparisons (Hitler) and the Lindsey Graham reference. - Produce a concise, neutral summary within 378–473 words. Several speakers insist the war in Ukraine is not about NATO enlargement. Speaker 0 notes that President Putin sent a draft treaty to NATO promising no further enlargement as a precondition for not invading Ukraine; we rejected that, and he went to war to prevent NATO from closing near his borders. A flashback reinforces the point: “This is fundamentally not about NATO expansion,” with repeated lines such as “It’s not about NATO,” “Nothing to do with NATO,” and “NATO is not the reason.” Others push an alternative framing: the conflict is about democratic expansion rather than NATO. “This is not about NATO expansion,” one speaker repeats, followed by, “This is about democratic expansion” and “Ukraine is banning political parties… Ukraine restricts books and music… Ukraine won’t hold elections. It’s about democracy.” Still others insist the war has nothing to do with NATO, reiterating statements like “It has nothing to do with NATO” and “Nothing to do with NATO expansion,” while acknowledging that “security purposes” are claimed by some. A thread develops that Russia seeks a sphere of influence over Ukraine, and that the West’s challenges to Russian interests may have contributed to the conflict. “Hang on. I mean, the two are not mutually exclusive. Obviously, Russia has wished for a sphere of influence over Ukraine. But if the West had not challenged Russian interests so directly, I think that there there was a chance to avoid this war.” Putin’s demand for a binding pledge never to enlarge NATO is contrasted with the claim that the invasion is driven by broader ambitions. Moral condemnations appear: “The reason why Putin invaded Ukraine is because of his evil,” with references to “evil” and Putin’s goal to rebuild a Soviet empire, echoed by a comparison to Hitler. “Hitler… He’s a Hitler,” and “We’re back when the Nazis invaded Poland,” are invoked to describe Putin as a new Hitler, a butcher “trying to kill people everywhere in the world, just not Ukraine, Syria.” The discussion closes with thanks to Senator Lindsey Graham and a transition to the next segment: “Alright. Straight ahead.”

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With respect, I find it disrespectful that you come to the Oval Office and litigate this in front of the American media. You're forcing conscripts to the front lines due to manpower problems, and you should thank the President for trying to end this conflict. Have you even been to Ukraine? You bring people on propaganda tours. Do you disagree that you've had problems bringing people into your military? During war, everyone has problems, even you. You will feel it in the future, God bless. Don't tell us what we're going to feel. You're in no position to dictate that. You've allowed yourself to be in a bad position. From the beginning of the war, you haven't been in a good position. You don't have the cards right now. You're gambling with the lives of millions of people and with World War Three. Have you said thank you once? You campaigned for the opposition, offer some words of appreciation for the United States.

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We will now talk about the future of Ukraine with you, as it seems you are serious about it. Putin had asked the Americans in December 2021 for written confirmation on how to handle Ukraine, but President Biden refused to negotiate on this matter. There should have been an uproar on the German side, as a potential war would involve Germany in the issue.

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Okay, so from the start of the war, everyone's facing problems. You might feel okay now because you have the ocean, but you will feel the effects later. Don't tell us how we're going to feel. We're going to feel very good and very strong. You're not in a good position right now. You're gambling with the lives of millions and risking World War III. It's disrespectful to this country; I've been more supportive than many others would have been. Have you said thank you at all during this meeting? You campaigned against us. Show some appreciation to the U.S. and the president trying to save your country. You are saying if you speak loudly about the war... He's not speaking loudly, your country is in big trouble, and you're not winning. We're staying strong and thankful, even though we've been alone since the beginning. You haven't been alone. We gave your president $350 billion for equipment. Without our military equipment, this war would've ended in two weeks or three days. I heard that from Putin. Can you just say thank you to the American people? Let's work through disagreements instead of fighting it out in the media when you're wrong.

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Speaker 0: The speaker questions the pretexts for international interventions, starting with Yugoslavia. “В какой предлог? Что, санкции Совета безопасности, что ли? Где Югославия, где США? Уничтожили страну.” The speaker acknowledges internal conflict in Yugoslavia but asks who gave the right to strike the European capital, insisting, “Никто. Просто так решили,” with satellite powers following and cheering. They label this as “всё международное право.” Next, the speaker asks about the pretext for entering Iraq (referred to as “Рак”). They describe the action as “Разработка оружия массового уничтожения” used to invade, destroy the country, and create “очаг международного терроризма,” only to later claim that a mistake had been made. They recount the line: “нас разведка подвела. Ничего себе! Разрушили страну разведка подвела.” They say, “И всё объяснение,” arguing that “Оказывается, не было там никакого массового оружия поражения, никто не готовил.” They state, “Наоборот, когда-то было всё как положено уничтожили.” Finally, they ask about Syria: “А в Сирию как зашли? Что санкций Советой безопасности? Нет. Что хотят, то и делают.” The speaker contends that in Syria, as with the previous cases, the actions were taken without regard to UNSC sanctions, with force used to satisfy unspecified objectives. In summary, the speaker challenges the legitimacy of military interventions by citing Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Syria, highlighting claimed pretexts of weapons of mass destruction, UNSC sanctions, and the perceived disregard for international law, suggesting that decisions are made arbitrarily while authorities and precedents are cited as justification.

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"Peace in Ukraine is possible now." "The war started eleven years ago when The United States backed a violent coup to overthrow the Ukrainian government of president Viktor Yanukovych." "Why did The United States want NATO enlargement? Because The United States wanted to dominate Russia." "It was based on autonomy for Eastern Ukraine, the ethnically Russian part of Ukraine." "The United States and Germany ignored the treaty." "Do not accept neutrality. Fight on." "The Ukraine war can end now based on neutrality of Ukraine. Just say it. Neutrality." "Diplomacy where Europe and Russia sit down and undertake collective security, recognizing that Russia does not want NATO or NATO troops on its border, and Russia recognizing that Europe does not want Russian troops in Ukraine."

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Speaker 0: In, say, Britain, they've banned CGTN, the Chinese channel, from broadcasting RT, famously. Why is it that, do you think Russia thinks it's fine? I think Sergei Lavrov this week giving a press conference allowing Western reporters, accreditation, whereas in The United States, they obviously don't ban media in The US because of the First Amendment. Certainly in Europe, obviously, there's mass banning of, journalists and journalism. What what's behind, that? And that surely does depart somewhat from manufacturing consent where they didn't wanna ban anything. They just knew that lower selling outlets would fail to engage the populace in dissident opinion? Speaker 1: Well, I think first of all that's quite normal. You look through the, say the take a more recent event, the Iraq war, not that far back. Anyone who dares to say that the Iraq War was the major crime of this century, which it certainly was, is bitterly denounced and condemned. If you look at discussion in the mainstream, you'll be hard put to find anyone who can reach the mainstream who will say the elementary truth, indisputable truth, that the Iraq war was an example of what the Nuremberg Tribunal called the supreme international crime, crime of aggression, differs from other war crimes only in that it includes all of the evil that follows. So find somebody who says President Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney were guilty of the crimes for which people were hanged at Nuremberg. Instead what you have is celebration of George Bush, the great criminal who invaded Iraq and Afghanistan and destroyed them, Celebration of him as a lovely person, it's called a goofy grandpa who plays with his grandchildren, paints pictures. Just a delightful person. Well, that's the Iraq War. It's quite striking that anyone who dares to compare the Iraq War with the Russian invasion of Ukraine is viciously denounced.

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Speaker 0: It is an indictment of your own leadership. And in countries across Europe, the leaders feel that way. Russia is an embarrassment to them because it is, relatively speaking, thriving. And so they all, as one, backed the Biden administration's plan to have a war with Russia. And let's stop lying. This was not an unprovoked invasion. Putin just randomly went over the line into Eastern Ukraine and stole these oblast. He stole this land that belonged to another people. That's a total lie, and it's not a defense of Putin to call it out as a lie because it is, and everybody knows it now. The truth is that in 2001, Putin, same guy, same leader, asked the Bush administration in person directly to George W. Bush, I would like to join NATO. I would like to join the defensive alliance that exists to keep me from moving west into Western Europe. In other words, you won. I'm joining your team. And due in part to his own limitations as a leader and due in part to the counsel that he received from Condoleezza Rice at the time, George w Bush turned down that offer and prevented Russia from joining NATO. And the guest we're gonna speak to in a moment, if you're wondering if he has a good track record of calling future events, said at the time, this decision to turn down Vladimir Putin's it's twenty five years ago, Vladimir Putin's request to join NATO, to join the West, to all be in it together, to work together, this decision made by the Bush administration guarantees a collision with the West. We are now on a collision course. And, of course, he was absolutely right because NATO didn't want Russia because NATO wanted a war with Russia, and boy, they got it. And so from 2001 all the way to 2022, twenty one years, NATO moved inexorably east surrounding Russia. And many times, again, this is not a defense of Russia. It's just a fact. Many times, the Russian government under Putin said, woah. Woah. Woah. Woah. Woah. Are threatening our core national interest, which is not to have other people's missiles on our borders back off. And then in 2014, the Obama administration overthrew the government of Ukraine to put an American puppet in there, thereby sealing the fate of nations. When that happened, and Sergei Karganov said it at the time, you have just guaranteed a war in Ukraine that will destroy Ukraine.

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We are in Moscow to interview Russian President Vladimir Putin. The war in Ukraine has had significant global impacts, reshaping military alliances and the world economy. However, many English-speaking countries remain unaware of these changes due to corrupt and biased media outlets. While numerous interviews have been conducted with Ukrainian President Zelensky, no Western journalist has interviewed Putin. Americans have the right to know about a war they are involved in, and we have the right to inform them. Despite attempts to suppress this interview, it can be watched for free on our website. We encourage viewers to watch and make their own judgments.

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Bucha massacre. I've been to Bucha, so I want to play this clip. So I don't believe that Bucha was a war crime. I believe it belongs in the long line of false flag operations used to trigger war False flag? Absolutely. It was a massacre carried out. Have you been there? No. It was a Have you spoken to the people? There. I'd be killed if I went be killed by been to Besiktivas Russia. It's because you're chilling for him. Zelenskyy would have me killed if I went there. I am absolutely certain that the people who were massacred at Bucha were massacred by the Nazis that are the foundation stone of the existing Ukrainian state.

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I think we should be thanking the president for trying to bring this up at the conference. Have you even been to Ukraine to know what problems we have? I've been there, and I've seen the stories. I know that you bring people there on a propaganda tour, Mr. President. Do you disagree that you've had problems?

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Russia is consistently portrayed as acting against American interests, particularly with its alliance with China and its invasion of Ukraine. This action, while wrong, was driven by Russia's concern over Ukraine potentially joining NATO and becoming a satellite of the United States with American weapons. The speaker argues that Ukraine's government isn't fully sovereign, alleging it was installed by a CIA coup. They highlight that during peace talks in Istanbul, a potential agreement was disrupted by the US, leading to further devastation and loss of life in Ukraine. The speaker questions why the U.S. is at war with Russia.

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The speaker claims: "we overthrew, Iraq with military force coming in from across the globe to overthrow Iraq." "We have gone in, and we have overthrown, Ukraine, with military force from the other side of the globe." "and, we we were the source of both of these conflicts, and it's very unfortunate because the American people are not are not like this." "It's just it's the foreign policy establishment." "Zelensky is a is a puppet." "He does what he is told, when he is told, and they you know, the the people who control him decided that if they put him in a green T shirt, he would look like a hero, so they they had him wear a green T shirt." "This is a fellow who is a comedy actor." "He is a creation of the media out of whole cloth." "He he really didn't exist as as anything until the media created an image of him, very much like a like a play actor."

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Checklist: - Identify the core sequence: Putin’s draft treaty, rejection, and invasion. - Distill the recurring claim that the issue is not NATO expansion, despite strong emphasis on NATO. - Capture the claimed democracy-related actions in Ukraine cited by speakers. - Note the discussion of Putin’s aims (sphere of influence) and the the rhetorical comparisons (evil, Hitler). - Include the brief, non-substantive program switch at the end (Lindsey Graham appearance). - Preserve key phrases and the overall stance without adding new judgments. President Putin sent a draft treaty that he wanted NATO to sign to promise no more NATO enlargement, a precondition for not invading Ukraine; we didn’t sign that, so he went to war to prevent NATO across his borders. Flashback framing is used to emphasize that this is not fundamentally about NATO enlargement. Several speakers insist, repeatedly, that this is not about NATO expansion. “This is not about NATO expansion,” and similar lines are stressed, arguing that NATO is not the reason for the conflict. They acknowledge, however, that Russia’s aim is to expand its sphere of influence, with one speaker noting that the two goals are not mutually exclusive and that a Western challenge to Russian interests may have opened a path to war. Amid this, a contrasting claim is asserted: the war is about democracy in Ukraine. Ukraine is depicted as banning religious organizations, restricting books and music, and not holding elections, framed as evidence that the conflict concerns Ukraine’s democratic trajectory rather than NATO. The refrain remains that the issue is not about NATO expansion, and that NATO is a fictitious adversary used by Putin. Rhetorical intensity shifts to moral judgments about Putin. Claims of evil and sickness are voiced, with references to Putin allegedly wanting to rebuild a Soviet empire and be like Hitler. Some speakers compare him to Hitler, noting historic aggression such as the invasion of Poland and referencing him as the new Hitler, a metaphor used to describe his alleged brutality and aims. A brief exchange acknowledges complexity: “the two are not mutually exclusive”—Russia’s desire for a sphere of influence and Western challenges to Russian interests are seen as connected. The segment closes with a transition cue: Senator Lindsey Graham is thanked, followed by “Straight ahead.”

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Putin knew that Ukraine was stealing money we sent them when Biden was in office. Trump will stop that, and the fighting will stop. I stand by my statement that Trump will stop us from throwing money down the drain in a war we have nothing to do with. Their own president said they don't know where half the money went. You're paying off the war machine to prolong this war, and men are dying because of it. That's wrong and Trump will stop it. At the beginning of the war, we were on both sides with gas contracts with Russia and giving money to Ukraine. Putin is responsible for the war. But why isn't there outrage about China's mistreatment of people? Because everything is made in China, and it's all about the dollars.

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He broke agreements and killed our people, refusing prisoner exchanges. What diplomacy is that? We're trying to prevent your country's destruction. Have you even been to Ukraine to understand our problems? During war, everyone faces issues. Don't dictate what we'll feel. We'll be strong. You're gambling with lives and risking World War III, showing disrespect to the country that has supported you. Have you even said thank you? You campaigned against us. Do you think speaking loudly changes things? You're not winning. We've given you billions in aid and military equipment. Without our help, the war would have ended quickly. Just say thank you, accept disagreements, and discuss them instead of fighting in the media when you're wrong. It's important for Americans to see this. You're running low on soldiers, and you should want a ceasefire to stop the bloodshed.

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Bucha massacre. I've been to Bucha, so I want to play this clip. So I don't believe that Bucha was a war crime. I believe it belongs in the long line of false flag operations used to trigger war False flag? Absolutely. It was a massacre carried out. Have you been there? No. It was a Have you spoken to the people? There. I'd be killed if I went be killed by been to Besiktivas Russia. It's because you're chilling for him. Zelenskyy would have me killed if I went there. I am absolutely certain that the people who were massacred at Bucha were massacred by the Nazis that are the foundation stone of the existing Ukrainian state.

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- "This is a war that should have never happened." - "The major thing they wanted was for us to keep NATO out of the Ukraine." - "March 2022, we committed a 113,000,000,000." - "it's not really going to Ukraine. It is going to American defense manufacturers. So he just admitted it's a money laundering scheme." - "And who do you think owns every one of those companies? Blackrock." - "Ukraine has to put all of its government owned assets up for sale to multinational corporations, including all of its agricultural land, the biggest single asset in Europe." - "500,000 kids almost. Ukrainian kids have died to keep that land as part of Ukraine." - "And then in December, president Biden gave out the contract to rebuild Ukraine. And who do you think got that contract? Lakhra."

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Bucha massacre. I've been to Bucha, so I want to play this clip. So I don't believe that Bucha was a war crime. I believe it belongs in the long line of false flag operations used to trigger war False flag? Absolutely. It was a massacre carried out. Have you been there? No. It was a Have you spoken to the people? There. I'd be killed if I went be killed by been to Besiktivas Russia. It's because you're chilling for him. Zelenskyy would have me killed if I went there. I am absolutely certain that the people who were massacred at Bucha were massacred by the Nazis that are the foundation stone of the existing Ukrainian state.

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Checklist for summary approach: - Extract the core thesis and the primary motivation attributed to the actions described. - Preserve key verbatim phrases from the speakers where they express the main claims (noting repeated lines about NATO). - Consolidate related points into cohesive statements, avoiding repetition. - Retain the contrasting frames (NATO-centric vs. democracy/territorial influence) and the Hitler comparisons as presented. - Exclude evaluative judgments; reproduce claims as stated and keep the sequence of major assertions. - Translate only if needed; here, keep English original. Summary: The transcript centers on a recurring assertion that the Ukraine war is not about NATO enlargement. One speaker notes that Putin “actually sent a draft treaty that he wanted NATO to sign to promise no more NATO enlargement,” which was rejected, and that “he went to war to prevent NATO, more NATO close to his borders.” Across multiple voices, the refrain is stated many times: “This war in Ukraine … is not about NATO,” “It’s not about NATO expansion,” “NATO is not the reason,” and “NATO is just as a fictitious imaginary adversary for mister Putin and for Russia.” The discussion elevates alternative explanations: the war is framed as about “democratic expansion” and, more broadly, about Russia’s effort to expand its sphere of influence. One speaker argues, “This is not about NATO expansion. This is about democratic expansion,” while another insists, “This is about him trying to expand his sphere of influence.” A contrasting account acknowledges that “the two are not mutually exclusive,” noting that Russia has long desired influence over Ukraine and suggesting that Western challenges to Russian interests may have contributed to the war’s outbreak. Support for the democratic framing includes claims about Ukraine: “Ukraine bans religious organizations,” “Ukraine is banning political parties,” and “Ukraine restricts books and music,” followed by the statement, “It’s about democracy. Ukraine won’t hold elections.” A separate thread emphasizes that the security objective cited by Russia is not credible, with repeated insistence that “NATO is not the reason,” and “NATO is not really about NATO.” The dialogue then shifts to moral judgments about Putin, with assertions such as “The reason why Putin invaded Ukraine is because of his evil,” and “Putin wants to rebuild Soviet empire of evil,” alongside comparisons to Adolf Hitler: “People are comparing him to Hitler,” “Hitler… invaded Poland,” “This is exactly the same, what Hitler was doing to Jews,” and “Putin is reminiscent of Hitler,” including “new Hitler.” A caller describes Putin as a “butcher,” and an exchange ends with a nod to Senator Lindsey Graham before transitioning.

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You should thank the president for trying to bring it into this conference. Have you been to Ukraine? You say what problems we have? I have been to one. I've actually watched and seen the stories. What happens is you bring people on a propaganda tour, Mr. President. Do you disagree that you've had problems?
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