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The British Historian: Prof. Mark Galeotti

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Manage episode 500316968 series 3664376
Content provided by TA Mullis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by TA Mullis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of Dictators v Democrats: Why We Fight, we’re joined by Professor Mark Galeotti, one of the world’s leading experts on modern Russia, for a sweeping conversation on authoritarianism, democracy, and the future of Putin’s regime.

We explore:

  • Why democracy failed in post-Soviet Russia
  • The real legacy of Boris Yeltsin and the 1990s
  • How Putin rebuilt an authoritarian state with elite loyalty and public apathy
  • Russia’s strategic culture and the "first punch" doctrine
  • What comes after Putin—and how the war in Ukraine might end
  • Grey zone warfare, gangsters as proxies, and Russia’s criminal statecraft
  • How democracies can resist authoritarian influence without sacrificing their values
  • Why Russian disinformation works—and why fact-checking alone won’t stop it

Key Takeaways:

  • “You can have rule of law without democracy, but not democracy without rule of law.”
  • Putin's Russia is a hybrid of medieval court politics and 21st-century bureaucracy.
  • The West enabled Russian authoritarianism by endorsing rigged elections and prioritising short-term stability over long-term democratic development.
  • Today’s global struggle isn’t just military—it’s narrative, emotional, and psychological.
  • Disinformation thrives where trust in institutions has already collapsed.
  • Fixing democracy’s reputation means fixing democratic systems themselves.
  • Russia’s alliances with Iran, China, and others are transactional—not ideological.
  • “Democracy is a frustrating, unstable beast—but it can do amazing things if we fight for it.”

Mark Galeotti’s Latest Book:
Homo Criminalis — out now in the UK and Netherlands. U.S. release coming soon.

Listen to Mark’s podcast: In Moscow’s Shadows

Support the Show

This podcast is entirely self-funded. If you value this work:

Buy Me a Coffee
Join our Patreon

Support the show

  continue reading

19 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 500316968 series 3664376
Content provided by TA Mullis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by TA Mullis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of Dictators v Democrats: Why We Fight, we’re joined by Professor Mark Galeotti, one of the world’s leading experts on modern Russia, for a sweeping conversation on authoritarianism, democracy, and the future of Putin’s regime.

We explore:

  • Why democracy failed in post-Soviet Russia
  • The real legacy of Boris Yeltsin and the 1990s
  • How Putin rebuilt an authoritarian state with elite loyalty and public apathy
  • Russia’s strategic culture and the "first punch" doctrine
  • What comes after Putin—and how the war in Ukraine might end
  • Grey zone warfare, gangsters as proxies, and Russia’s criminal statecraft
  • How democracies can resist authoritarian influence without sacrificing their values
  • Why Russian disinformation works—and why fact-checking alone won’t stop it

Key Takeaways:

  • “You can have rule of law without democracy, but not democracy without rule of law.”
  • Putin's Russia is a hybrid of medieval court politics and 21st-century bureaucracy.
  • The West enabled Russian authoritarianism by endorsing rigged elections and prioritising short-term stability over long-term democratic development.
  • Today’s global struggle isn’t just military—it’s narrative, emotional, and psychological.
  • Disinformation thrives where trust in institutions has already collapsed.
  • Fixing democracy’s reputation means fixing democratic systems themselves.
  • Russia’s alliances with Iran, China, and others are transactional—not ideological.
  • “Democracy is a frustrating, unstable beast—but it can do amazing things if we fight for it.”

Mark Galeotti’s Latest Book:
Homo Criminalis — out now in the UK and Netherlands. U.S. release coming soon.

Listen to Mark’s podcast: In Moscow’s Shadows

Support the Show

This podcast is entirely self-funded. If you value this work:

Buy Me a Coffee
Join our Patreon

Support the show

  continue reading

19 episodes

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