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Episode 140: Can Kiev Combat Energy Corruption?

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Relevant Reading:

The High Stakes of Ukraine’s Energy Reforms
Edward C. Chow

Good evening, listeners! We have a great episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous discusses Ukraine’s progress (or lack thereof) in reforming its energy sector.

Edward Chow, a senior fellow in the energy and national security program of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, speaks about why energy reforms are so important for Ukraine’s immediate and long-term future, and argues that the United States needs to do much more to help kickstart stalled reform efforts.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes (and don’t forget to leave a review). Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 141: Ragtime and Kleptocrats

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Relevant Reading:

The Kleptocracy Curse: Rethinking Containment
Ben JudahThe Rag Man
John McWhorter

Good evening, listeners! We have an excellent episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Ben Judah about the nefarious global threat of kleptocracy, before discussing Scott Joplin’s musical legacy with John McWhorter.

First, Ben Judah, author of This Is London and Fragile Empire, comes on the show to discuss his recent report for the Hudson Institute that outlines the problems kleptocracy poses in the modern world, and what the U.S. ought to do about it.Then, Richard welcomes John McWhorter, who teaches linguistics, philosophy, American Studies, and music history at Columbia University, back to the program to look back on the music of the masterful American “King of Ragtime,” Scott Joplin.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes (and don’t forget to leave a review). Follow Ben Judah @b_judah, John McWhorter @JohnHMcWhorter, and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 142: Donald Ascendant

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What Just Happened?
Adam Garfinkle

Good evening, listeners. On this week’s episode, host Richard Aldous invites Walter Russell Mead, editor-at-large and director of The American Interest Online, to discuss—what else?—the election of Donald Trump as the next President of the United States last night.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes (and don’t forget to leave a review). Follow Walter Russell Mead @wrmead and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 143: The Trump Transition and Academia’s New Challenge

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Relevant Reading:

To An Anxious Friend…
Eliot A. CohenLiberal Academia in Donald Trump’s World
Artemis Seaford

Good evening, listeners! We have an excellent episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Eliot A. Cohen about the challenges facing Trump’s transition team—and those whom that team is attempting to hire—before discussing the task ahead for liberal college campuses over the next four years with Artemis Seaford.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes (and don’t forget to leave a review). Follow Eliot A. Cohen @EliotACohen, Artemis Seaford @ArtemisSeaford, and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 144: What to Expect from President Trump

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Good evening, listeners, and Happy Thanksgiving! We have another excellent episode for you this week, as our host Richard Aldous discusses what we can expect from a Trump Administration with Josef Joffe and Michael Mandelbaum.

First, Josef Joffe, a member of the TAI executive committee and professor of U.S. foreign policy at Stanford University, returns to the program to discuss the dangers of “economic and strategic isolationism” that seem the natural outcome of Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric.Then, Michael Mandelbaum, the Christian A. Herter Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy at The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and author of Mission Failure: America and the World in the Post-Cold War Era, looks at how President Trump could remake America’s role on the international stage in the post-World War II era.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 145: Francis Fukuyama on Donald Trump

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Good evening, listeners! We have a special treat for you this week as host Richard Aldous welcomes Francis Fukuyama back to the show to discuss—who else?—Donald Trump.

Fukuyama describes this election as a watershed moment for our country, saying that Trump marks a break from the postwar consensus both in economic and foreign policy terms. He also looks at how these latest election results were informed by the political decay he described in his most recent book, Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Globalization of Democracy, before discussing what he sees as an ongoing—and global—backlash against globalization.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Francis Fukuyama @FukuyamaFrancis and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 146: Sustaining American Grand Strategy

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Good evening, listeners! We have another excellent episode for you this week as our host, Richard Aldous, welcomes Hal Brands to the show to talk about American grand strategy.

Hal Brands is the Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies, and he joins the program to discuss American grand strategy in the post-Cold War era. He looks at the sorts of challenges Donald Trump will have to face in the foreign policy realm over the next four years, and what we might be able to expect of his administration.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 147: Can Trump Make Global Deals?

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Relevant Reading:

The Art of the Global Deal
Philip Zelikow

Good evening, listeners! We have another excellent episode for you this week as host Richard Aldous has a fascinating conversation with Philip Zelikow about American foreign policy under Trump.

Philip Zelikow, a professor of history at the University of Virginia, a lawyer, and former career diplomat, speaks about what options the new administration has for pursuing America’s foreign policy interests. He also takes a look at Rex Tillerson, Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State and the CEO of Exxon Mobil, and explains how Tillerson’s lack of foreign policy experience at the government level is both an advantage and a disadvantage.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 148: Will Trump Channel Kissinger?

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Relevant Reading:

Donald Trump’s New World Order
Niall Ferguson

Good evening, listeners! We have an excellent episode for you this week, as Niall Ferguson joins our host Richard Aldous to discuss Donald Trump’s foreign policy options.

Niall Ferguson, Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History at Harvard, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and biographer of Henry Kissinger returns to the show to discuss what a Kissinger-inspired foreign policy strategy might look like.Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Niall Ferguson @nfergus and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 149: What Soft Power Can and Cannot Do

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Good evening, listeners! We have an excellent episode to start out the new year, as host Richard Aldous welcomes Eliot Cohen back to the program to discuss his new book.

Eliot Cohen is the Robert E. Osgood Professor of Strategic Studies at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and he’s also a regular columnist for TAI. He returns to the show to discuss his brand new book, The Big Stick: The Limits of Soft Power and the Necessity of Military Force. It’s a fascinating conversation about a bracing book, and just as it’s worth your time to tune in this week to hear the discussion, it will be well worth your time picking up Cohen’s latest work.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Eliot Cohen @EliotACohen and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 150: Superbugs and Putin’s Russia

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Relevant Reading:

The Criminal Russia Party
Ilya Yashin

Superbug Pandemics and How to Prevent Them
Kadiyali M. Srivatsa

Maya: Bring Tears of Happiness
Kadiyali M. Srivatsa

We have an excellent episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Ilya Yashin and Kadiyali Srivatsa.

First we welcome to the show Ilya Yashin, a Russian opposition activist and writer, and a leader of the liberal PARNAS party, who has recently written a report about Russia’s hybrid efforts at political control, especially with how it’s practiced on Ukraine. He discusses sanctions, Rex Tillerson, and the state of opposition politics in Russia today.

Then, Kadiyali M. Srivatsa, a doctor, inventor, and publisher who has worked in acute and intensive pediatric care in British hospitals, speaks with Richard about the dangers posed by antibiotic-resistant “superbugs.” He also introduces his free Dr. MAYA (Medical Advice You Access) app, which can help prevent pandemics by monitoring clusters of infections at the local level. Plus, tune in to learn why he suggests you might actually be better off in a dirty hospital than a hyper clean one.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 151: Trump’s Strategy Options

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Relevant Reading:

Same World, Lonely World, Cold World
Adam Garfinkle

We have another excellent episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Adam Garfinkle about his new essay on Donald Trump’s strategic options.

Adam Garfinkle, editor of The American Interest, tells Richard that Trump can take the country in one of three directions: towards the same world (a continuation), towards a lonely world (neo-isolationism), or towards a cold world (a return to realpolitik).

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 152: Trump, Weak States, and Immigration

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Good evening, listeners! We have a great episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Stephen Sestanovich about Donald Trump’s foreign policy position relative to those of his predecessors before discussing the problem of weak states with Seth Kaplan.

First, Stephen Sestanovich, professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs and senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, returns to the program to discuss how President Trump fits into the pattern of presidential foreign policy shifts described in his 2014 book Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama.

Then, Seth Kaplan, professorial lecturer in the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University and senior adviser for the Institute for Integrated Transitions (IFIT), makes his podcast debut to examine the dangers posed by weak states and their potential to set off risk cascades, before relating this problem to Donald Trump’s decision to halt immigration from six countries.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Stephen Sestanovich @SSestanovich and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 153: Communists, Trump, and Clement Attlee

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Good evening, listeners! We have an excellent episode for you this week as host Richard Aldous speaks with David Blankenhorn about Trump and American Communism before discussing the former British prime minister Clement Attlee with John Bew.

First, David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values, returns to the program to discuss what President Trump has in common with the Communist Party’s Daily Worker.

Then, John Bew, professor of History and Foreign Policy at the War Studies Department at King’s College London, makes his return to the podcast to discuss his new book, Clement Attlee: The Man Who Made Modern Britain.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow David Blankenhorn @blankenhorn3, John Bew @JohnBew and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 154: Mosul, Iraq, Ukraine, and Trump

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Relevant Reading:

Victory in Mosul Won’t Save Iraq
Jonathan Spyer

Ukraine Reckons With Trump
Sean Keeley

Good evening, listeners! We have another great episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Jonathan Spyer about his visit to Mosul before discussing how the Donald Trump presidency will affect Ukraine.

First, Jonathan Spyer, director of the Rubin Center for Research in International Affairs, IDC, Herzliya and a fellow at the Middle East Forum, speaks with Richard about a recent trip he took to Mosul. He summarizes the current state of play in the battle for the key Iraqi city, and describes the feeling of daily life there.

Then, Sean Keeley, a staff writer here at The American Interest, makes his podcast debut to discuss how the election of Donald Trump is affecting Ukraine. He makes the case that Kiev is in a worse bind than it was before January 20th, and assesses Ukraine’s chances of ever winning back the annexed territory of Crimea from Russia. He also looks at how Ukraine might figure in to any potential bilateral agreement between the new Trump administration and Vladimir Putin.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Jonathan Spyer @jonathan_spyer, Sean Keeley @seankeeley, and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.


Episode 155: Orson Welles and How the Media Sees Trump

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Good evening, listeners! We have another great episode for you this week as our host, Richard Aldous, speaks with Gabby Morrongiello about what it’s like to cover the Trump Administration before discussing Orson Welles with Colin Fleming.

First, Gabby Morrongiello, a White House reporter for the Washington Examiner, takes a look at President Trump’s fraught relationship with the press, and describes what it’s like to witness one of his famous (or perhaps infamous) pressers from a journalist’s perspective.

Then, Colin Fleming, a contributor to Commentary, Rolling Stone, and NPR’s Weekend Edition, speaks with Richard about some of Orson Welles’s lesser known films. He makes the argument that Welles was a great filmmaker even when you consider his works not named Citizen Kane.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Gabby Morrongiello @gabriellahope_ and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 156: Europe, NATO, and Kremlinology

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Relevant Reading:

Germany’s Dilemma
Andrew A. Michta

Understanding Putin’s Men
Anton Barbashin & Vladislav Inozemtsev

Good evening, listeners! We have another great episode for you this week. Our host, Richard Aldous, speaks with Andrew A. Michta about Europe and NATO in the age of Trump before hearing from Anton Barbashin about how better to understand the Kremlin.

First, Andrew A. Michta, the dean of the College of International and Security Studies at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, takes a look at how U.S. Defense Secretary Mattis’ recent discussions with NATO defense ministers in Brussels went earlier this month, before discussing the health of the treaty and the likelihood that we might soon see an end to the European Union.

Then, Anton Barbashin, a political analyst and the managing editor of Intersection, makes his debut on the podcast to lay out why dividing Vladimir Putin’s inner circle into liberals and statists is a poor way to try and understand why the Kremlin does what it does. He instead describes four general groups that surround Putin: progressives, neutrals, conservatives, and bigots.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review. Follow Andrew A. Michta @andrewmichta, Anton Barbashin @ABarbashin, and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 157: Macedonia’s Mess and Trump the Transatlanticist?

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Good evening, listeners! We have another great episode for you this week, as host Richard Aldous speaks with Josef Joffe about the Trump administration’s relationship with Europe before discussing Macedonia’s ongoing political crisis with Chris Deliso.

First up, Josef Joffe, founding member of The American Interest, editor of Die Zeit in Hamburg, and fellow of the Hoover Institution at Stanford, talks with Richard about the feeling in Europe towards President Trump, and describes the state of the Transatlantic alliance in 2017.

Then, Chris Deliso, director of the independent Balkanalysis.com website, returns to the program to describe the current political deadlock in Macedonia, and sets out some ways in which the Trump administration might change its tack towards the Balkan nation.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review, and follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 158: Therapy Culture and the Attack on Medvedev

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Good evening, listeners! Apologies for our one-day delay in publishing this week—we were worried about the snowstorm that hit the East Coast (with somewhat less force than expected). In any case, we have another great episode for you this week.

First, Karina Orlova, Echo of Moscow’s U.S. correspondent and TAI contributor, takes a look at an explosive exposé alleging vast corruption against the Russian Prime Minister, Dmitry Medvedev, and points out that the content of this new report might not be as important as the details surrounding its release.

Then, Frank Furedi, emeritus of sociology at the University of Kent in Canterbury England, returns to the show to discuss what he sees as an infantilization of higher education, making the argument that colleges and universities seem to be more concerned with the mental health of students than their eduction.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review, and follow Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

Episode 159: Homogenous Academia and the Putin/Erdogan Bromance

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Relevant Reading:

The Putin and Erdogan Show
Dimitar Bechev

Mind the Professors
Samuel J. Abrams

Good evening, listeners! We have another excellent episode for you this week as host Richard Aldous speaks with Dimitar Bechev about the relationship between Putin and Erdogan before inviting Samuel J. Abrams to discuss intellectual diversity (or lack of it) in modern higher education.

First, Dimitar Bechev, a Visiting Scholar at the Center for European Studies, Harvard, and the Director of the European Policy Institute, Sofia, returns to the program to discuss the “bromance” between Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, arguing that the relationship between the two Presidents is much shallower and more brittle than it may appear.

Then, Samuel J. Abrams, professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, and research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, makes his podcast debut to discuss the recent incident on Middlebury College’s campus in which sociologist Charles Murray and Professor Allison Stanger were attacked by student protestors. He examines the homogeneity of thought on college campuses today, and the critical role professors play in this phenomenon.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, where you can leave a review, and follow Dimitar Bechev @DimitarBechev and Richard Aldous @RJAldous on Twitter.

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