Join us in welcoming Andrew Monaghan, in conversation with Helen Warrell, to celebrate the publication of 'Blitzkrieg and the Russian Art of War', a crucial insight in understanding Russia's resurgent role on the global stage and the devastating threat the country poses to the international order.
A cutting-edge investigation of how Russia makes war.Russian strategy in the twenty-first century has been described in terms of ‘hybrid’ warfare, an approach characterised by measures short of war, such as cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns. But as the invasion of Ukraine has brutally demonstrated, conventional armed violence remains a key element of Russian power.In Blitzkrieg and the Russian art of war, Andrew Monaghan offers a high-level view of Russian thinking about warfare. Drawing on extensive Russian sources, he addresses important questions that have been overlooked by most Western commentators: what is the military leadership’s distinctive idea of twenty-first-century blitzkrieg? How does it understand holistic territorial defence? How does it manage the shifting balance between offence and defence?Introducing key concepts from Russian military thinking, Blitzkrieg and the Russian art of war is a crucial resource for understanding Russia’s resurgent role on the global stage and the devastating threat the country poses to the international order.
Andrew Monaghan is Director of AM Leadmark Research Ltd. He is a Global Fellow at the Wilson Center's Kennan Institute in Washington, D.C., a Senior Associate Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London and a Senior Associate Fellow at the NATO Defense College in Rome. His previous books include The New Politics of Russia (2024), The Sea in Russian Strategy (2023) and Dealing with the Russians (2019).Helen Warrell is an investigative reporter at the Financial Times. She has written stories about anti-Russian wargames, Chinese digital espionage, counter-terrorism, and the work of European intelligence agencies. She was previously the defence and security editor and has also reported for the Financial Times as a political correspondent in Brussels and Westminster.