The Lawfare Podcast: Arkady Ostrovsky on Russia’s Wild Wild Far East
Vladimir Putin’s government is often painted as an all powerful, centralized regime. But, in reality, it’s far from that: in Russia’s Far East, Moscow is either resented or disregarded by many, and the security services are the only agents fully loyal to Moscow.
Published by The Lawfare Institute
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Vladimir Putin’s government is often painted as an all powerful, centralized regime. But, in reality, it’s far from that: in Russia’s Far East, Moscow is either resented or disregarded by many, and the security services are the only agents fully loyal to Moscow. This week, guest host Alina Polyakova interviews Arkady Ostrovsky, the author of “The Invention of Russia: The Rise of Putin and the Age of Fake News” and the Russia and Eastern Europe editor at the Economist, on life Russia’s wild Far East, the tensions between the Kremlin and its far flung provinces, and what it all means for the limits of Putin’s power and his deepest fears.
This is the second podcast in a new series with Alina Polyakova designed to shed light on Russian politics and society in an effort to understand the Kremlin’s intentions toward and engagement with the West.