ABOUT

This is a site about the books and other writing by James Rodgers, author of Assignment Moscow: Reporting on Russia From Lenin to Putin (new edition 2023; first published July 2020); Headlines from the Holy Land (2015 and 2017); No Road Home: Fighting for Land and Faith in Gaza (2013); Reporting Conflict (2012). My work looks at how stories of international affairs, especially armed conflict, are told to the world.

BIOGRAPHY

I am an author and journalist. During two decades of covering international news, I reported on the end of the Soviet Union; the wars in Chechnya; the coming to power of Vladimir Putin; 9/11; the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; the 2003 war in Iraq; Russia’s war with Georgia in 2008. I completed correspondent postings for the BBC in Moscow, Brussels, and Gaza. I now teach in the Journalism Department at City, University of London.

Russia and Ukraine: 12 months in the media war

A view of the Moscow Radio Tower, March 2019 (© James Rodgers).
Russia’s media war has incorporated 20th century techniques to control the media into 21st century conflict

THE MEDIA WAR THAT HAS ACCOMPANIED RUSSIA’S INVASION OF UKRAINE has shown how important a part of 21st century conflict journalism is, and also demonstrated the power authoritarian regimes possess to restrict reporting–even in the age of smartphones and social media.

In a move that echoed the draconian censorship laws of earlier ages, the Russian government declared its media war just days after it invaded its neighbour. New legislation meant journalists risked gaol if they refused to follow dutifully the official line that the war was ‘a special military operation’, and not a war at all.

As the BBC director-general, Tim Davie, said at the time the legislation ‘appears to criminalize the process of independent journalism.’ The BBC temporarily suspended its reporting from Russia, presumably while it sought to establish the real extent of the risk to its reporters.

Eventually, they resumed their work, with Steve Rosenberg and his colleagues bringing to international audiences stories such as that of Denis Skopin, a university lecturer in Saint Petersburg, sacked for his protest against the war. For The Guardian, Andrew Roth has also reported on anti-war activism, including the quiet defiance of those who mourn Ukrainian victims of the Kremlin’s war machine.

Many others, though, left–often when their editors felt it no longer safe for them to stay–and are yet to return.

RUSSIA’S LAWS ON JOURNALISM ECHO BOLSHEVIKS’ BAN IN THE 1920s

What is in effect a ban on independent journalism may be seen as a kind of compliment: a testament to the power that reporters have to challenge the Kremlin’s justification for making war.

Combined with the inaccessibility of many international news websites and social media platforms since the start of the war, the effect is that reliable reporting from Russia is more restricted than at any time since before the era of reform and openness that characterized the late Soviet period.

In fact, the situation today bears comparison with that of a century ago, when the fledgling Bolshevik government had banned international correspondents from Russia on the basis that their governments and newspapers had supported the wrong–i.e. counter-revolutionary, ‘White’–side in the civil war. Then, as now by some correspondents, events in Russia were reported from Riga in Latvia.

With the threats of punishment and prison, Russia’s approach to the media war has been crude–and also, in some respects, as explained below, effective.

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine delivers a video address to Ukrainian students in the U.K., June 2022.
© James Rodgers

ZELENSKY THE MEDIA PERFORMER

In others, much less so. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine has shown great skill—and presumably drawn on his previous acting career—in using modern media and formats (his WWII ‘Victory Day’ video being a great example). Putin’s presentation, by contrast, has seemed stuck in the last century–as I argued in an interview with Al-Jazeera’s ‘The Listening Post’ in June 2022.

Zelensky’s sure-footed and engaging media appearances have contrasted with videos of Putin that have prompted British tabloid speculation both about his health, and whether he is using actors in some of his TV appearances.

Ukraine may be winning the war for western public opinion, but Russia seems to be successfully shoring up public support at home.

A mural on an apartment block in central Moscow in 2019 shows a soldier with the caption, ‘I defend my motherland’.
Photo © James Rodgers

THE MILITARY, MEDIA, AND HOW RUSSIA USES THEM IN WARTIME

This has been a long process. On a trip to Russia in 2019, I was in Moscow for the 5th anniversary of the 2014 annexation of Crimea–and I was struck by the prevalence of militaristic imagery and sentiment not only in the news media, but in murals overlooking the streets of Moscow and other cities I visited. This combination of media and militarism has been an indispensable, integral, part of Russia’s use of war in international relations in the Putin era, as my co-author, Dr Alexander Lanoszka, and I argued in our 2021 paper ‘Russia’s rising military and communication power: From Chechnya to Crimea’.

The Kremlin’s biggest success has been placing 20th century controls on 21st century media. Yes, these can be circumvented. Russia is a highly technologically literate society (think how many incidents of hacking are blamed on Russians) and those who want to read news from the west can do so if they put in a little effort.

Many do not seem bothered to try. As Steve Rosenberg discovered in a report for the BBC from Belgorod on 10th February, official messaging seems largely to be taken at face value. ‘The West has always wanted to destroy Russia,’ one resident of the city, not far from the Russian border with Ukraine, told him.

This is the stage which, after 12 months since Russia’s large-scale invasion (Ukrainians will rightly point out that the war itself really began in 2014) the media war has reached. The rapid victory the Kremlin seems originally to have envisaged not having happened, the war has now been reframed–on the basis not only of Putin-approved versions of history, but also deliveries of western weapons to Ukraine–as a conflict between Russia and the west.

THE NEXT STAGE OF THE RUSSIA UKRAINE MEDIA WAR

Where does the media war go from here? Ukraine will need to keep international news organizations engaged. Zelensky’s speech in London on February 8th that appeared so greatly to inspire the British parliamentarians who heard it had to be on television and social media to have the desired impact–and for the visual gesture of handing over an airman’s helmet to make the desired impression.

One western policy that should change in the next stage of the media war, though I have little hope it will. The European Union and the UK were wrong to ban Sputnik and RT. It invested them with greater reach and influence than they ever enjoyed. It allowed them the chance to masquerade–however absurdly–as martyrs for free speech. Western audiences need to see what Russian audiences are being told. In a media war, as in any war, the more you know of your enemy, the better.

A detail of the exterior of the Central Telegraph building in Moscow. In the 20th century, foreign correspondents’ reports, having been censored, were transmitted from here. © James Rodgers

Vladislav Zubok, professor of international history at the LSE, and author of ‘Collapse: The Fall of the Soviet Union‘ pointed out recently, ‘We still find even at the worst moments of the Cold War journalists talking to each other and acting as intermediaries. These people met. These people had a dialogue. Not any more.’

That should change. One day this war will end, and the US, UK, EU and others will have to forge a new relationship with Russia. It is unlikely to be one of friendship–but even one accepting distance, division, and discord can better be managed by the kind of dialogue of which journalism can be the starting point. Let not understanding be yet another casualty of this media war. Let journalists do their jobs.

All text and photos © James Rodgers

A new edition of my book, Assignment Moscow: Reporting on Russia from Lenin to Putin, updated with the start of the war in Ukraine, will be published in the UK and US in May 2023.

It is already available for pre-order via the link above.