The Trialogue
A podcast by Peter Slezkine - Fridays
33 Episodes
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Curtis Yarvin (Part 2): The Empire of Love
Published: 8/2/2025 -
Xiang Lanxin: Is Trump Good for China?
Published: 7/25/2025 -
Sunjoy Joshi: The View from India
Published: 7/18/2025 -
Curtis Yarvin: The Empire of Love (Part 1)
Published: 7/11/2025 -
Samuel Charap: Russia Policy in Retrospect
Published: 6/20/2025 -
Maksim Suchkov: What Does Russia Want?
Published: 5/30/2025 -
Emma Ashford: Where do American interests end?
Published: 5/16/2025 -
Da Wei: Will the US and China Decouple or Rebalance?
Published: 5/9/2025 -
Robert Agee: An American Businessman in Moscow
Published: 4/25/2025 -
Dynkin and Voitolovsky: Welcome to Washington
Published: 4/18/2025 -
The Trialogue Live: April 8, 2025
Published: 4/17/2025 -
Reinhard Krumm: How Boxed In is Berlin?
Published: 4/11/2025 -
Christopher Caldwell: The Right since Reagan
Published: 4/4/2025 -
Zhao Long: Is Beijing Worried about US-Russia Rapprochement?
Published: 3/21/2025 -
Anastasia Likhacheva: Surviving “sanctions from hell”
Published: 3/14/2025 -
Fyodor Lukyanov: What in the world is the “world majority”?
Published: 3/7/2025 -
Andrew Roth: A decade of reporting from Russia
Published: 2/28/2025 -
ZHOU Bo: How many military bases does Beijing need?
Published: 2/21/2025 -
Philani Mthembu: South Africa’s attitudes toward Russia, China, and BRICS
Published: 2/14/2025 -
Dmitry Stefanovich: Nuclear deterrence during the war in Ukraine
Published: 1/31/2025
Peter Slezkine, the Director of the USA-Russia-China Trialogue project at the Stimson Center, hosts a series of conversations with experts and ex-officials from the United States, Russia, China and beyond to discuss cold wars past and present, potential areas of conflict and cooperation, and alternative visions of global order, among other subjects. Since the middle of the 20th century, the shifting relationship among the United States, Russia, and China has had a profound impact on each country separately and on the world as a whole. Yet the breakdown of contacts, combined with political, cultural, and linguistic barriers, have hindered the study of the full trilateral dynamic. At a time when even bilateral channels of communication have begun to break down, the Trialogue offers a new and necessary perspective on the defining geopolitical relationship of our time. *The Trialogue Podcast is hosted by the Stimson Center and produced by University FM. **The first twelve episodes of this podcast were published by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey.