
How a Moscow archivist exposed the KGB, file by file
Gordon Corera’s account of the audacious counter-intelligence operative Vasili Mitrokhin is non-fiction that reads like a spy thriller.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Gordon Corera’s account of the audacious counter-intelligence operative Vasili Mitrokhin is non-fiction that reads like a spy thriller.
By Ian ThomsonLike the former communist bloc, Western liberalism is slowly disintegrating.
By John GrayThe Baltic leader has become the EU’s strongest advocate for an uncompromising response to Russia.
By Jeremy CliffeDividing global politics into camps of angels and demons is no longer fashionable.
By Sohrab AhmariAn interview with Peter Turchin.
By Will LloydTom Hollander plays the ambitious, politically well-connected billionaire Boris Berezovsky in this absorbing portrait of a power struggle.
By Megan GibsonThe Bulgarian novelist on the legacy of communism, the necessity of irony and why remembering is a political act.
By Ellen Peirson-HaggerThe self-deception that fuelled Bolshevism did not die with the end of the Cold War: it persists in Western liberals…
By John Gray14 December 1984: Mikhail Gorbachev, heir apparent to the then Soviet general secretary Konstantin Chernenko, paid a visit to London.
By Stephen CohenThe last Soviet leader, who died this week, accelerated the decline of the Soviet Union – but did so by…
By John LloydWhat does a country do with a man who changed it forever?
By Emily TamkinThe last leader of the Soviet Union, credited with ending the Cold War, died at the age of 91 in…
By Rachel WearmouthI was last on the Kremlin’s most recent list of people to be sanctioned. This suggested I was something of…
By Lawrence Freedman22 March 1963: The Soviet Union and China battle for control of world communism.
By KS KarolUnpicking the political name-calling on the British left.
By New Statesman