
Future Discontinuous Can history explain Putin’s war, Sergey Radchenko?
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Dec 3, 2025 In this engaging discussion, historian Sergey Radchenko, a leading authority on Soviet and Cold War foreign policy, reveals the complexities of Russian history. He sheds light on Stalin's pragmatic aspirations in Eastern Europe and the critical role of Poland as a buffer state. Radchenko explores the historical roots of Russia's invasion fears and critiques Putin's current geopolitical strategy. He emphasizes the strategic gains for China amid Russia's isolation and warns of the dire consequences of Putin's gamble in Ukraine.
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Archive Breakthrough Rewrote Cold War
- Sergey Radchenko accessed newly opened Soviet party archives in the 2010s and found hundreds of thousands of unseen pages.
- Those documents humanize leaders and allow a major rewrite of Cold War history.
Stalin Wanted Legitimacy, Not Ideology
- Stalin lacked a single blueprint for Eastern Europe and tailored policy by country.
- He sought a 19th-century style great-power concert and wanted American recognition for legitimacy.
Why Poland Mattered To Stalin
- Poland mattered because it was a historical invasion corridor and rich in resources like coal.
- Stalin combined security, economic extraction, and historical memory in his Polish policy.


