00:00How do you feel, particularly with a suggestion from Brandon that perhaps this frontier is no longer the U.S.'s priorities,
00:09considering it has other issues on its doorstep that the president is now turning his attention to?
00:16If that's the case, is this the best deal Ukraine is going to get, in which case should it take it?
00:23Well, first of all, it makes sense to negotiate with someone when you are sure that you can reach a result.
00:29And this person will comply with a rich compromise, a rich agreement.
00:34But this is exactly not the case with Putin.
00:37He had violated all possible agreements, including Minsk Accords, including Budapest Memorandum,
00:43including bilateral treaty respecting sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.
00:50So it makes absolutely no sense even to negotiate with Putin, because he will never, never comply with a rich agreement.
00:57It makes no sense.
00:59Second, with regard to security guarantees, we have this and continue to have this security guarantees from the United States.
01:06It's called the Budapest Memorandum.
01:09We had given up our, the only deterrent factor, our nuclear arsenal, one of the biggest in the world.
01:16And we hope that the United States will do everything to prevent Russia from attacking us.
01:22So what kind of lesson are the countries should learn from this so that they should have their own nuclear arsenal, like North Korea, or to do something else?
01:33Finally, you know, I believe in the United States.
01:37I don't think that the United States is a weak country.
01:41It's a, it's a giant in terms of economic power, in terms of military industrial complex.
01:47I don't believe that the United States doesn't have it so weak, supposedly, that it doesn't have enough weaponry to share with Ukraine.
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