The Interpreter

The Interpreter is still active on Facebook and Twitter. The Interpreter was an online journal dedicated to analyzing and translating Russian media.

The archives are hosted by Free Russia Foundation and can be seen at https://www.interpretermag.com/ The Interpreter is a special project of the Free Russia Foundation. Founded in May 2013, this online journal set out with the modest goal of translating articles from the Russian press, the better to lower the language barrier that separates journalists, analysts, policymakers, diplomats and intere

sted laymen in the English-speaking world from events taking place inside the Russian Federation. Little did we realize then that The Interpreter would devote as much energy to covering what the Russian Federation got up to outside of its own borders. We grew into a leading real-time chronicle and analysis resource on all aspects of the crisis in Ukraine. Every day since violence first erupted in Kiev’s Independence Square, The Interpreter’s Ukraine live-blog documented a revolution that became a war on European soil, often breaking news stories about Russia’s annexation of Crimea, its maskirovka insurgency in the Donbass, its cross-border shelling of Ukraine, the downing of MH17, and the Minsk II “cease-fire.”

Our work has been cited in news outlets all over the world, by presidents and ambassadors. Under the generous patronage of the Institute of Modern Russia (IMR), the magazine was allowed to evolve organically into a more journalistic enterprise, while still adhering to its core remit of being an “Inopressa in reverse.” We owe everything to the incredibly supportive team at IMR, and particularly to Pavel Khodorkovsky, who saw the potential and urgency of this project in 2013. The Interpreter translated into English two major reports on the alleged corruption behind the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014; the first co-written by the Leonid Martinyuk and Boris Nemtsov, the latter of whom was brutally assassinated in Moscow a year later; the second by Alexey Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation. We also published two internationally discussed stand-alone studies, “The Menace of Unreality,” a look at contemporary Kremlin disinformation and propaganda, and “An Invasion by Any Other Name,” a near-comprehensive history of the Kremlin’s “dirty war” in Ukraine that relied heavily on what Russian investigators and activists had uncovered about their own government’s deception. Then, in October 2015, Russia intervened in Syria. Under the pretense of going to war against ISIS, Vladimir Putin has tried to prop up a flailing ally in the regime of Bashar al-Assad, targeting mostly non-ISIS targets and killing scores of civilians. So The Interpreter launched another news channel dedicated to covering yet another ambiguous Russian war, in three different languages.

17/09/2025

The long-hyped campaign ended with scattered assaults and troops abandoning vehicles in panic.

Russian Interior Ministry Stops Publishing Data on Deaths as the Result of Criminal Acts, as Moscow Restricts Release of...
01/09/2025

Russian Interior Ministry Stops Publishing Data on Deaths as the Result of Criminal Acts, as Moscow Restricts Release of Data from the Regions and Republics

Paul Goble Staunton, July 28 – The Russian government continues to cut back in the amount of data it publishes on sensitive is...

01/09/2025

The 79th Air Assault Brigade exposed and destroyed the rare Russian column movement.

28/08/2025
Two important articles from Freedom House, which has lost federal funding -- how to go on defending human rights abroad ...
28/08/2025

Two important articles from Freedom House, which has lost federal funding -- how to go on defending human rights abroad and at home?

https://freedomhouse.org/article/rethinking-human-rights-protection-crisis-response-sustainable-systems

The Human Rights Reports were released very late this year (August!) and were quite flawed:
https://freedomhouse.org/article/assessing-damage-changes-us-state-departments-human-rights-reports

The elimination of key sections and the diminishment of others will deal a heavy blow to US leadership on human rights, serve the interests of authoritarian powers, and leave policymakers and private-sector consumers with fewer resources to inform their work.

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