
At the moment, it’s as hard to write and broadcast about the death of Alexei Navalny — as tragic as it was inevitable — as it is not to be consumed by it. Still, I’ve produced a few things of relevance that I thought I would assemble here.
On his death
First of all, some recent responses.Here’s a video I recorded the day after, less cooly rational analysis and moe an expression of my sorrow and anger:
I was also asked to write a long piece for the Sunday Times, which was a good chance for me to try and put his life and death in perspective:
Why did Navalny go back to Russia? His final revenge is legacy of hope
Finally, I also recorded the latest episode of my In Moscow’s Shadows podcast exploring how Navalny’s awful death helps illustrate how late Putinism in its ‘banana republic’ phase comes to resemble the later Soviet era — and what this may mean for its future.
In Moscow’s Shadows 135: Navalny in the late Soviet Union
Earlier works
Some earlier episodes of In Moscow’s Shadows:
In Moscow’s Shadows 110: Why Navalny Doesn’t Hate The Goat
He may have just been sentenced to another 19 years, now in a ‘special regime colony’, but the indomitable Alexei Navalny has just produced a broadside against the ‘reformists’ of the 1990s – whom he considers nothing of the sort, but instead the architects of kleptocracy and authoritarianism. And it’s hard to disagree with that. I go through what is in effect his manifesto, with lots of quotes and also lots of my own marginalia, and conclude by questioning whether Navalny’s very purity of purpose may be a problem – and the lessons for the West.
In Moscow’s Shadows 25: Navalny in Prison
A short. ‘one act’ special: with the news (still unconfirmed) that Navalny is being sent to IK-2 penal colony in Vladimir region, I look at the prison, and what that may mean for him.
In Moscow’s Shadows 19: The Navalny Hit
An impressively detailed investigation by Bellingcat and The Insider meticulously details the Russian Federal Security Service operation against Alexei Navalny, so here is a short podcast episode devoted to this case and some implications.
To pick a few columns of mine from the Spectator blog:
Will Navalny’s gamble backfire? (20 Jan. 2021)
The Kremlin is still afraid of Alexei Navalny (20 June 2023)
Despite three years in prison, Navalny still scares Putin (20 Jan. 2024)
I also looked at Russia’s Murderous Adhocracy for the Moscow Times (22 Aug. 2020) and recorded the episode Poison, Prison, Protests: The Continued Saga of Alexei Navalny with Mark Galeotti for the Slavic Connexion podcast (3 Feb. 2021).
Finally, I’d note my slightly longer-form paper for the European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats (Hybrid CoE) from October 2020:
The Navalny Poisoning Case through the Hybrid Warfare Lens
PS: There are also a number of posts on this blog (you can find them using the Search bar to the right), such as this one: Updated after Biryulevo: Is Navalny a Revolutionary? If So, Which One?





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