Imagine being trapped below ground for weeks, surrounded by soldiers, bombs dropping just a few feet above your head.
Food is scarce, rats are everywhere. Is survival possible? And what would it even look like? A trip back home, or to a Russian prison?
That was the situation during the siege of the Azovstal Steel Plant in Mariupol, Ukraine.
Michael Schwirtz of the New York Times has put together a comprehensive look at the siege, which is being called Ukraine’s Alamo and he’s joining us today to describe what he found.
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A Classical View of the Afghan Collapse
Steve Inskeep Is Back From Afghanistan
When Soldiers Tell the Pentagon That It's Wrong
When War Became a Crime
Who Is Viktor Bout?
Biden in Jerusalem
ICYMI: The Origins of Russia's War in Ukraine
ICYMI: The Roots of Political Violence
The Hooligans Fighting for Ukraine
On the Frontlines of Ukraine and a Roe Reaction in Real Time
Proud Boys, January 6, and When a U-Haul Is a Clown Car
The Dream of the Kurds Is Alive and in Danger
We All Believe Conspiracy Theories
When the Battlefield Is the Home Front
SPONSORED: The Mega-Tank of the Future
Checking In With The White House's New Disinformation Czar
Will There Be a Nuclear War?
"America Is an Idealist Power in a Reapolitik World"
Bucha, Chechnya, and Russian War Crimes
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