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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Bucha, Chechnya, and Russian War Crimes
You're Wrong. Tanks Aren't Done Yet
Russia and the West's Love/Hate History
Eastern Europe's Fascist Salad
UNLOCKED: Coping in the New Age of Nuclear Anxiety
What's Behind Putin's Nazi Bullshit
What the War Means for Russia
Russia's War in Ukraine Isn't Going to Plan
A Brief Apology and a Discussion of Sanctions
Russia and China Aren’t BFFs
The Weird Way Americans Talk About Ukraine As War Looms
It's Later Than You think. The Doomsday Clock at 75
Putin, Ukraine, and Russia's Daddy Issues
Why People Online Defend the Uighur Genocide
Inside Africa's ISIS Franchises
A War for the Former Soviet Union
ICYMI: Taliban Memories
ICYMI: Fake Journalists Are the Latest Disinformation Twist
Booze, Bribes, and Prostitutes: How Fat Leonard Seduced the U.S. Navy
How Assad Clings to Power
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