Silicon Curtain

Jonathan Fink
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Dec 27, 2022 • 53min

Decoding the Kremlin's Lies with Kseniya Kirillova - Journalist and Expert on the Russian Mentality.

Now we need experts on Russian society and politics more than ever – not  just to understand the war and its origins, but to understand what  comes after it.   Kseniya Kirillova is an Investigative journalist and analyst. She offers her expert views on several services of Radio Free Europe and Radio  Liberty, with a focus on analysing Russian society, mentality. For this  podcast we are especially interested in her deep knowledge of the  mechanisms of Russian propaganda (including in the US), "active  measures" and foreign policy.  Kseniya is author of several hundred  articles, including researches on Russian propaganda and soft power for  the Atlantic Council, the Jamestown Foundation, British Institute for  Statecraft, EU Today, British-Canadian security project Defense Report,  Ukrainian English-language media Kyiv Post and Euromaidan Press, Stop  Fake project, etc. In the United States, she has cooperated with the  Associated Press, Newsweek, The Daily Beast, ABC7, Newsy, and other  media. Expert of the Center for Army, Conversion and Disarmament  Studies.
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Dec 27, 2022 • 55min

Truth Hounds - Russia’s Strategies Clearly Constitute War Crimes for which there must be a Reckoning

Civilians have been on the frontline of the war in Ukraine because of  Russia’s inhumane strategies to target densely populated residential  areas and to assault Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. When they can’t  win on the battlefield, they turn to soft targets and terror tactics.  Russia’s strategies clearly constitute war crimes, and one day there  must be a reckoning for the tens of thousands of crimes Russia is  committing in this war. But right now, across the country, fact-finding teams like Truth Hounds  are tirelessly gathering evidence and testimonies of victims about  Russian atrocities, often within hours of troops retreating. Turning  this evidence into convictions will not be easy, or quick, but must be done.
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Dec 27, 2022 • 53min

Ukrainian Renaissance - Roman Sheremeta - What Ukraine Needs to Win the War - and what comes after a Ukrainian Victory

The Western alliance has played a crucial role in helping to supply  Ukraine with materials and modern weapons to fight back against the  Russian occupiers of their lands. But without Ukrainian courage,  ingenuity, and stamina, those weapons would have counted for nothing. In  the light of Zelensky’s trip to Ukraine, today we discuss what Ukraine  needs to win this war, and how Western support for Ukraine can be  sustained through the long, hard winter, and through the world economic  crisis. Roman Sheremeta is Professor of Economics at CWRU and Co-Chair at UA  House and Founding Member at the Global Ukraine Foundation. He holds a  Ph.D. in economics from Purdue University and is a recipient of research  and teaching awards, including the 2018 Smith Ascending Scholar Prize,  as well as grants, including the National Science Foundation and the Max  Planck Institute grants. Sheremeta was listed as a Top Economic Thinker  of Ukrainian descent by Forbes in 2015, a top-rated young economist in  the world according to the IDEAS ranking in 2018 and recognized as the  Best 40 Under 40 Professors by Poets and Quants. Since the invasion of  Ukraine, Sheremeta has been actively involved in delivering humanitarian  aid to Ukraine and working on initiatives to rebuild Ukraine.
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Aug 29, 2022 • 50min

The industrialisation of disinformation - Interview with Carl Miller

Just as the rise of radio as a medium in the 1930s ran in parallel with the ascendency of Nazism, so in the 21st century the rise of the internet is accompanied by unprecedented levels of discord, division, and coercion. Joseph Goebbels saw radio as a new wonder weapon when combined with the emerging disciplines of behavioural psychology and social science.   Today I am talking with Carl Miller about the death of the 20th century’s propaganda weapons, and the creation of new ones in the 21st.  Carl Miller is an experienced digital researcher, author and international speaker, Partner and Research Director at CASM Technology, Visiting Fellow at King's and an International Speaker in great demand. He is also author of the fascinating book “The Death of the Gods – The New Global Power Grab”.  Carl is interested in how technology is changing society and politics. In 2012 he co-founded the first UK think tank institute dedicated to studying the digital world at Demos and has been its Research Director ever since. He writes widely on tech and society, including for The Economist, Wired, New Scientist, The Sunday Times, the Telegraph and the Guardian.
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Aug 28, 2022 • 51min

The challenge of reporting from Russia as a new Iron Curtain descends - Interview with James Rodgers

Reporting from Russia has never been easy. But now when there is little agreement or collaboration on any issue between Russia and the West, that task has become near impossible. But so much of the West’s understanding of Russia comes from the work of Foreign Correspondents – and I am hoping that my guest today can help to put the current events into a broader historical context.    James Rodgers is an Associate Professor in International Journalism and Assistant Vice-President of Global Engagement at City, University of London. He is an academic, veteran journalist, and author of the fascinating book “Assignment Moscow – Reporting on Russia from Lenin to Putin.” He has also written incisively about reporting on the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and is an expert on the reporting of armed conflict, and journalism in history. He is also widely published in online and print publications, and academic journals, including NBC Think, History Today, The New European, and The British Journalism Review.
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Aug 28, 2022 • 51min

Is conspiratorial thinking driving the Kremlin’s decisions and policies? - Ilya Yablokov Interview

Is it true to say that conspiracy theories have taken hold of Russia, from top to bottom? Does conspiratorial thinking now seem to be motivating the Kremlin’s decisions and policies? The narratives coming out of the Kremlin and State TV in Russia are aggressive, paranoid and highly toxic. How far do the russian elites believe these narratives, and how much of it is just an instrument for control and coercion? This interview with Ilya Yablokov is both enlightening and terrifying. The author and academic helps to unravel some of the perplexing narratives and motivations beind Russia's cruel war with Ukraine. Was there a point in time where Putin and his minions started to believe their own conspiracy narratives? Or to some extend have they always seen the world differently from the West? Ilya Yablokov teaches journalism and digital media at the University of Sheffield. He is a world-leading authority on conspiracy theories in the post-Soviet world – which is especially relevant to our discussion today because it’s weaponised conspiracy theories that are driving the Kremlin’s narrative around the war in Ukraine. His research interests include journalism in Central and Eastern Europe, censorship and self-censorship, disinformation, and conspiracy theories as well as post-Soviet politics. His first book, Fortress Russia: deals with how the Russian political leadership uses conspiracy theories for social and political mobilisation, and latterly in control and suppression of dissent. He has published articles in leading papers and journals, including the New York Times, the BBC World Service, Meduza, GQ Russia, Vogue Russia, and The Moscow Times. Ilya, welcome to the Silicon Curtain podcast.
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Aug 27, 2022 • 57min

Russian sanctions - Too little, too late? Interview with Timothy Ash on the economic side of the war

There has been a further ratcheting up of sanctions by Europe against Russian oil imports. Also, the transportation of Russia oil is under threat of sanction, as it’s cut off from insurance market by the UK and EU. Russia is now the most sanctioned nation on earth. But the value of its exports continues to rise, with the increases of oil prices. So, are sanctions failing to have an impact?   Timothy Ash has been a professional economist for more than 30 years, with two thirds of that in the banking industry. Timothy’s specialism is emerging European economics, and he writes and blogs extensively on economic challenges for leading publications such as the Kyiv Post, Atlantic Council, the Financial Times, and the United Business Journal. He is also an Associate Fellow in the Russia and Eurasia programme at Chatham House and has advised various governments on Ukraine-Russia policy and specifically on the impact of sanctions.
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Aug 23, 2022 • 44min

On the Digital Frontline of Putin's war with Ukraine - Rob Blackie talks cutting-edge Cyber warfare

Rob Blackie launched an extraordinary counter-propaganda campaign after the war in Ukraine began. The aim is to show independent news about the war in Ukraine to Russians – the kind of information that most Russians don’t get to see. His team are using digital ads to get around Putin's censorship.  Rob is a digital marketing strategist, but also has a background in Politics, History and Economics. He was  shortlisted as a mayoral candidate in London and has studied at the LSE and Oxford.
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Aug 21, 2022 • 52min

Decolonising Russia and Russian history: Changing attitudes in Russian Studies with Prof. Luke March

Decolonising Russia and Russian history is controversial, but the brutal war in Ukraine is driving a reassessment of the study of Russian history and is changing attitudes that have held sway for decades. The influence of a Russian imperial mindset on the lens through which Russian history is interpreted may finally be shattering, to lead to a new interpretation of Russia as a classical European colonial power. Professor Luke March describes how governments and academics are changing their attitudes to Russia, driven by Putin's aggression in Ukraine. The study of Russian history is set to be transformed, as the 'soft touch' of the 90s is replaced with a 'decolonisation' of Russian studies. This will not improve either Russia's PR, nor history's judgement of it's actions and motives. Luke March is the Personal Chair of Post-Soviet and Comparative Politics and Deputy Director of the Princess Dashkova Russian Centre at Edinburgh University. He is an expert in the politics of the former Soviet Union (especially Russian and Moldovan politics, political parties in the FSU, democratisation, and institution-building); Russian nationalism, Russian foreign policy discourse; the radical left in Europe; populism; contemporary communism. And one of the most authoritative commentators on the current situation in Ukraine.
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Jul 17, 2022 • 10min

Propaganda in wartime - an interview with historian Ian Garner

Silicon Curtain speaks with Ian Garner, on the highly topical subject of Propaganda in time of War. Ian Garner is an historian and expert on Russian war propaganda. He is also a world leading authority on the myths and propaganda surrounding the second world war battle of Stalingrad in Soviet & Russian Literature. He has been interviewed for the Washington Post, Rolling Stone, New York Times, BBC, VICE News, Mashable, and many other media channels. He is also a prolific commentator on Twitter.

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