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 St George’s, University of London.

The author in Berlin, February 2023. Photo © Kevin Cummins

Tag: Journalism

Misfits on the Frontline of Churchill’s Secret Propaganda War

A review of Believable Lies: The Misfits Who Fought Churchill’s Secret Propaganda War by Terry Stiastny (WH Allen, 2025) IN A CITY STUNNED BY DEFEAT IN WAR the government official I spoke to was clear, and defiant. He had used words, not weapons, when his country fought against a...

Out Now: The BBC And The Challenge of Reporting from Cold War Moscow

I have written a chapter for this new book, Conflict Resolution and the Cold War: Media Encounters Across the Iron Curtain published on 22nd January. My contribution is called, The next most important British personage in Moscow? The BBC and Soviet Union during the early decades of the Cold...

Journalism in a world of more media and less freedom

This is my latest piece for The Conversation, reflecting on journalism’s enduring importance in a world where it is increasingly under attack. You can read the version on The Conversation website here. On December 10, the year 2025 reached a murderous milestone. In 2024, the Committee to Protect Journalists...

Review of New Book: Don’t Shoot The Journalists

This post is my review of Don’t Shoot the Journalists: Migrating to Stay Alive as published in the academic journal ‘Journalism’. You can see the online version of the article here Book Review: Don’t Shoot the Journalists: Migrating to Stay Alive – James Rodgers, 2025 . On Sunday 10...

Our Dear Friends in Moscow: A Story of Russia And A Warning to the West

This post reviews Our Dear Friends in Moscow: The Inside Story of a Broken Generation by Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan (Public Affairs, 2025) RIGHT FROM THE DAWN OF THIS CENTURY, in the early days of their careers as journalists, Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan saw where power was...

New Books Network Podcast on ‘Assignment Moscow’

On 18 August, I spoke to Paul Starobin for his ‘America and Beyond’ podcast (part of the New Books Network). Paul and I spoke for almost an hour about Assignment Moscow, and more. We talked about the experiences of foreign correspondents in Russia during Russia’s revolutionary year of 1917,...

Simple And Moving: In Ukraine, A Story of Deaths, Not Degrees

CHANGING KREMLIN POLICY SHAPED MY EDUCATION. In the fall of 1984, I went to university in England to study Modern Languages: Russian and French. The Cold War was in its most terrifying stage since the Cuban Missile crisis of 1962. The United States and Soviet Union were engaged in...

Grozny 2000: the Start of Putin’s 25 Years of War

This post is an extract from an article published earlier this week by The New European . I wrote it to mark the 25th anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s first victory in a Russian presidential election. The day of the vote, I was reporting for the BBC from Grozny, a...

At The Frontline Club in London: 25 Years of Putin

Russian soldiers in Grozny. Chechnya, March 2000. © James Rodgers Are you in London on March 26? If so, please join us at the Frontline Club for a discussion marking 25 years since Vladimir Putin was first elected president of Russia.On 26 March 2000, I was reporting for the...

Chechnya: 30 Years Since The Start of Modern Russia’s Wars

The centre of Grozny, Chechnya, Russian Federation, spring 1995 © James Rodgers Thirty years ago this week, the Russian army began its assault on Grozny at the start of the Chechen War. In a world currently suffering several wars, including Russia’s war on Ukraine, it is not surprising this...