It’s an important week overseas, as 31 world leaders, including President Biden, head to Vilnius, Lithuania to attend a NATO summit. As the war on Ukraine surpasses the 500-day mark, the group will likely focus on how they can continue effectively aiding Ukrainian allies and potentially increasing the group’s military spending to defeat Russia. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has returned from a trip to Beijing, where she bowed several times to a Chinese official — a move many condemned, claiming it demonstrated subservience on behalf of America. House Intelligence Committee Chairman and Head of the U.S. Delegation to the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, Congressman Mike Turner, has been heavily tuned into everything happening overseas. He joins the Rundown to discuss what he believes the key topics will be at this week’s NATO Summit, why there’s broad bipartisan agreement that the U.S. should continue aiding Ukraine, and his reaction to Secretary Yellen’s recent “disappointing” trip to China.
Kelsi Sheren enlisted in the Canadian Army at just 19 years old and eventually reached her goal of serving her country in Afghanistan. Her service experience in the Middle East left her with post-traumatic stress disorder and battling suicidal thoughts after being sent home because of her deteriorating mental health. Sheren says she still has her struggles with PTSD every day, but she has turned her pain into passion. On the Rundown, she shares the details of how her mental health journey led her to create a successful jewelry business, her advocacy on behalf of veterans for better support and resources, and talks about her new book, Brass & Unity: One Woman’s Journey Through the Hell of Afghanistan and Back.
Plus, commentary by FOX News contributor Deroy Murdock.