Escalation in Ukraine: what’s at stake for the West?


Escalation in Ukraine: what’s at stake for the West?

Date and time:

Wednesday 16 February, 2022
19:00 - 20:30

Location:

Swedenborg Hall
20-21 Bloomsbury Way
London WC1A 2TH

Ukraine has dominated the headlines over the past months. In spite of the numerous talks between world leaders, the threat of a full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine has not diminished. Almost eight years since the illegal annexation of Crimea and the start of Russian aggression in the Donbas region, what is at stake now is not only the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, but the question of the security of the entire European continent.

 

Join us to hear from world-class journalists and authors, James Meek, Nolan Peterson (who will be joining from Ukraine via Zoom), Anna Reid and Paul Mason on the situation at the frontline in Donbas, the reaction of western leaders to the Kremlin’s recent demands, and what the escalation of the war in Ukraine could mean for Europe and the world. This event will be moderated by Olesya Khromeychuk, Director of the Ukrainian Institute London.

 

 

Escalation in Ukraine: what’s at stake for the West?

£12 standard / £8 student/ Pay What You Can

Speaker

James Meek 

James Meek is an award-winning writer and journalist. As a foreign correspondent, he reported on the former Soviet Union for The Guardian between 1991 to 1999, including as the newspaper’s Moscow Bureau Chief. He has won several awards for his reporting from Iraq and Guantanamo Bay (including Foreign correspondent of the Year in Britain's Press Awards). Meek is the author of five novels, most recently The Heart Broke In, and two books of short stories, as well as Private Island, a collection of essays about privatisation in Britain. His novel The People's Act of Love won the Ondaatje Prize, was nominated for the Booker Prize, and has been translated into over 20 languages. Meek is a contributing editor to The London Review of Books.

 

Speaker

Paul Mason

Paul Mason is a journalist, writer and film-maker. As economics editor at both BBC Newsnight (2001-13) and Channel 4 News (2013-16) he covered the global financial crisis, the Arab Spring, the Gaza war and the Greek crisis. He writes weekly columns for both The New Statesman and The New European and contributes regularly to Social Europe and Frankfurter Rundschau. He is a frequent guest on opinion-forming TV and radio shows, including BBC Newsnight, DemocracyNow!, BBC Politics Live, Any Questions and BBC Question Time. He is the author of seven books, including How To Stop Fascism: History, Ideology, Resistance (2021).

Speaker

Nolan Peterson

Nolan Peterson is a war correspondent who has reported extensively from the front lines in eastern Ukraine since August 2014. A former US Air Force special operations pilot with combat experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, Peterson’s observations from Ukraine’s battlefields have influenced policymakers at the highest levels of US government. A 2004 graduate of the US Air Force Academy, Peterson speaks French and Russian and holds multiple master’s degrees. He resides in Kyiv and is currently a senior editor for Coffee or Die Magazine. Peterson’s military memoir, Why Soldiers Miss War, was published by Casemate Publishers in 2019. Nolan will join our discussion from Ukraine via Zoom.

Speaker

Anna Reid

Anna Reid is a journalist and historian. She worked as Kyiv correspondent for The Economist and the Daily Telegraph from 1993-5, and later covered the country for the Economist Intelligence Unit. From 2002-6 she ran the think tank Policy Exchange's foreign affairs programme. She is the author of Borderland: Journey through the History of Ukraine(Weidenfeld & Nicolson, third edition 2015), The Shaman's Coat: a Native History of Siberia (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2002), and Leningrad: Tragedy of a City under Siege, 1941-44 (Bloomsbury, 2011). Anna has been a trustee of the Ukrainian Institute London since 2016.