MARIA BARTIROMO (ANCHOR): Let's start on Russia, and your reaction to this changing course. Look, over the weekend, the State Department was hyping everything up, telling us to get out of Ukraine immediately. The leakers actually gave us a specific date that Russia would be invading Ukraine — today. And of course, yesterday we see that Russia started pulling troops back. Your thoughts?
ARNOLD PUNARO (RETIRED MARINE GENERAL): Well, Maria, it's always a privilege to be with you. And I would say in the military we look at capabilities, not intentions. And Putin has put a massive invasion force at a razor’s age, encircling Ukraine on three flanks — the northern flank through Belarus, the eastern flank through Russia, and the southern flank through Crimea with a naval armada, with naval gunfire and cruise missiles. And they’re at a razor’s edge, with a snap of his finger Putin could have them go immediately into Ukraine. So, we have to look at that as the capability that’s still there, no matter what they say. And should he invade, it’s a lose-lose-lose-lose situation for everybody involved.
…
PUNARO: This is a reckless individual. I’m certainly not an expert on how Putin thinks and operates but, again, you’ve got to look at the capabilities he's had there, and you’ve got to look at the fact that he’s amassing huge surpluses because he's driven the price of oil up, and gas up. And so, I think, you know, that military, the Russian military remains at the ready, and Putin is playing us to a certain extent and it's having an effect.
BARTIROMO: Yeah, well, I mean, he’s playing us. The State Department may also be playing us, because this hysteria over the weekend was obviously an opportunity to take the conversation away from Hillary Clinton paying an outside technology company to spy on President Trump, which is an incredible national security issue in and of itself.