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The Petrach Program at the Institute for European, Russian, and

Eurasian Studies invites you to the book talk event:




Putin's Revenge


Why Russia Invaded Ukraine



with author

Lucian Kim

Monday, January 13, 2025

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST


In-Person Event


Elliott School of International Affairs

1957 E St NW | Washington, DC 20052

Voesar Conference Room | 4th Floor

Light lunch and refreshments will be provided. The talk will also be

followed by a giveaway raffle, where one student will receive the book for free.


This event is on record and open to the media.

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In February 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine in a bloody escalation of a conflict that had begun eight years earlier. What drove Vladimir Putin to launch Europe’s largest land war since World War II?


Lucian Kim—an on-the-ground reporter in the region for decades—offers a gripping, definitive account of Russia’s path to war, from Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution and the 2014 Maidan uprising right up to the full-scale invasion. He examines the Kremlin’s motives, tracing Putin’s transformation from a seemingly pragmatic leader into an embittered tyrant who saw it as his historical mission to reconquer Ukraine. Kim places the war in the broader context of the Soviet Union’s collapse, arguing that it represents a clash between those who reject the Soviet past—like Volodymyr Zelensky and Alexei Navalny—and those who still identify with it. He debunks the Kremlin narrative that the West instigated the conflict, and he instead identifies the root causes of the war in the legacy of Russian imperialism and Putin’s dictatorial rule. At the same time, Kim is critical of the West’s empty promises to Ukraine, which made the country vulnerable to a revanchist Russia.


Putin’s Revenge features insight from Kim’s first-hand reporting on key moments, such as Russia’s occupation of Crimea and the beginning of the Russian-backed insurgency in eastern Ukraine. This book tells the story of the lead-up to the invasion with revelatory detail and fresh analysis, shedding new light on a conflict that has roiled the post–Cold War order.

Speaker

Lucian Kim currently works as a Ukraine analyst at International Crisis Group and has reported on Ukraine and Russia since Vladimir Putin’s first term in office. Based in Moscow and Berlin for more than twenty years, he covered central and eastern Europe as a correspondent for National Public Radio, Bloomberg News, and the Christian Science Monitor. He was the recipient of a Wilson Center Fellowship in Washington, DC, where he began writing this book.

Moderator

Dr. Henry Hale is the Director of the Petrach Program on Ukraine and Director of George Washington University’s Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies (IERES). He is a Professor of Political Science and International Affairs and his most recent books are The Zelensky Effect (Hurst/Oxford University Press 2022, co-authored with Olga Onuch) and Patronal Politics: Eurasian Regime Dynamics in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge, 2015). Prominent themes in his research include ethnic politics, political regimes, voting behavior, the public opinion dimension of international relations, and politics in post-Soviet countries, where he has conducted extensive field research.

The Petrach Program on Ukraine at GW condemns Russia's invasion of Ukraine and calls for the restoration of Ukraine's territorial sovereignty.

The Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (IERES)
Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University
1957 E Street, NW / Suite 412 / Washington, DC 20052
Tel (202) 994-6340 / Fax (202) 994-5436 / Email ieresgwu@gwu.edu