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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The Second American Civil War Is (Not) Coming
Drinking With the Russians Who Fled to Georgia
Iran's Cycle of Protest and Suppression
The Report the U.N. Didn't Want You to See
How Ukraine Routed the Russian Military
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
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