Lucian Kim
  • Archives
  • Blogs
  • About
  • Contact

Elections

Banned From Election, Putin Foe Navalny Pursues Politics By Other Means

Published February 8, 2018 in NPR Leave a comment

“I want to live in a normal country and refuse to accept talk about Russia being doomed to being bad, poor or servile,” said Alexei Navalny.

Read More

What Was Russia’s Role In 2016 U.S. Election? 2 Former KGB Officials Weigh In

Published November 11, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“I’m going to tell you something I’ve never told anyone before,” Gennady Gudkov, a retired KGB colonel, told me in his office in an old Moscow manor house.

Read More

In Moscow’s Local Elections, Opponents Of Putin Find A Glimmer Of Hope

Published October 10, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“There’s a huge demand among young people to go into politics, and there’s an understanding of how to do it.”

Read More

In Putin’s Russia, An ‘Adhocracy’ Marked By Ambiguity And Plausible Deniability

Published July 21, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

From Russian “volunteers” fighting in eastern Ukraine to “patriotic hackers,” nongovernment actors provide the Kremlin with a cushion of plausible deniability.

Read More

Far From Moscow, Thousands Turn Out To Protest Putin In Siberia’s Capital

Published June 12, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“I believed that Putin would make things better,” Galina Vorivoda, 62, said. “But it didn’t work out. He made things better only for a few people.”

Read More

Banned From Russian TV, A Putin Critic Gets His Message Out On YouTube

Published June 1, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

Navalny at 20:18 is part-Jon Stewart in its righteous skewering of the powers that be, but also part-Vladimir Putin in its know-it-all approach to that which ails Russia.

Read More

Potemkin Village

Published August 11, 2016 in Berlin Policy Journal Leave a comment

As a friend and I sat on one of Moscow’s ubiquitous summer verandas one evening, quaint trams trundled by. For a moment, it almost felt like Prague.

Read More

Trump Disciples Suddenly Showing Up In Russia

Published December 14, 2016 in NPR Leave a comment

“Trump doesn’t have to abide by the Obama foreign policy,” Jack Kingston said. “That gives him a fresh start.”

Read More

Playing to the Gallery

Published July 6, 2016 in Berlin Policy Journal Leave a comment

Renewed calls for rapprochement with the Kremlin bear the fingerprints of Gerhard Schröder, who still pulls considerable weight inside the SPD.

Read More

For Europe, the Party’s Over. It’s Not Clear What Comes Next.

Published May 24, 2016 in Reuters Leave a comment

The promise of Europe is over. Paradoxically, German hubris carries a good deal of the blame.

Read More

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Putin’s War on Young People

If Russia is ever to become a country that seeks peace with its neighbors and respects the rights of its own citizens, then such a future depends on Russia’s young people.

Read more

Popular Posts

Fables of the ReconstructionFables of the Reconstruction
The Baddest Town in RussiaThe Baddest Town in Russia
Face Without a ManFace Without a Man

About Lucian

Based in Berlin and Moscow, I reported from the former Soviet empire for 25 years for NPR, Reuters, Slate, Bloomberg, and others. My first book, Putin’s Revenge: Why Russia Invaded Ukraine, is now available from Columbia University Press.

Read more

© Lucian Kim, 2011-2026. All Rights Reserved.