This past Sunday, host of CBS’ “Face the Nation” Margaret Brennan brought National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on for an interview.
As part of said interview, Brennan put forth the question about the timeline for Americans seeking to exit Ukraine due to the recent comments from Sullivan about getting out of the former Soviet state this past Friday.
“…you said on Friday in the White House Briefing Room, Americans should get out within the next 24 to 48 hours,” Brenna stated. “That puts us at today. What are you telling Americans who remain? Should they go underground? Is it too late to leave now?”
Sullivan quickly answered, stating that “as long as commercial transport options are available, Americans should take advantage of them.”
After he went on to highlight the fact that he hoped that most Americans had followed his previous warnings to get out of Ukraine, Sullivan stated, again, that Americans “should move out by air or rail or road as rapidly as possible” because should a conflict spark, the commander in chief has absolutely no plans to send any “forces to fight Russia in that war.”
These comments from Sullivan seem to go right along with the Level 4 travel advisory issued by the State Department that was officially put in place on Saturday. After pleading with Americans to get out of Ukraine, the advisory stated that “the U.S. government will not be able to evacuate U.S. citizens in the event of Russian military action anywhere in Ukraine.”
U.S officials warned Americans to get out of Ukraine 48 hours ago, is it too late for those remaining to vacate? “As long as commercial transport options are available, Americans should take advantage of them,” @JakeSullivan46 tells @margbrennan. pic.twitter.com/MGOy4hHYYY
— Face The Nation (@FaceTheNation) February 13, 2022
TRANSCRIPT:
BRENNAN: Right. I mean, you said on Friday in the White House Briefing Room, Americans should get out within the next 24 to 48 hours. That puts us at today. What are you telling Americans who remain? Should they go underground? Is it too late to leave now?
SULLIVAN: As long as commercial transport options are available, Americans should take advantage of them. We had hoped, based on our warnings, that Americans would have gotten out by now, but, as long as those commercial transit options are available, Americans should avail themselves of them. They should move out by air or rail or road as rapidly as possible, because, as I said also on Friday, if there is military action, if there is a war between Russia and Ukraine started by a Russian invasion of Ukraine, President Biden is not intending to send in American forces to fight Russia in that war. And Americans who have the opportunity to get out now should avail themselves of it.
BRENNAN: But airspace remains open right now. If Russia does carry out this invasion, you’ve talked about the consequences with sanctions, but are you committed to actually funding, arming, helping a Ukrainian insurgency?
SULLIVAN: Well, what the president has said is that we will continue to support Ukraine even after an invasion begins. And I’m not going to get into the specific details of what that will look like, but it is one of the three fundamental elements of our response — continue to support Ukraine as it seeks to resist Russian aggression, second, impose severe and swift economic measures, in concert with our allies and partners, that go at Russia’s financial system and at its defense industrial base, and then, third, reinforce, reassure, and deter. That is, reinforce NATO territory, reassure our allies on the eastern flank, and deter Russia from any action against NATO allies, to whom we have a sacred Article 5 commitment to defend. We are going to carry out all of those actions, in the event that Russia moves forward. And we’ve been very clear about that.