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Ukraine and Russia: what next

icon-calendar Monday February 24th 2025
Ukraine and Russia: what next

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Event overview

What do Donald Trump's direct talks with Vladimir Putin mean for Ukraine? How are European leaders and Volodymyr Zelensky seeking to influence a peace deal? And if a deal is agreed, what next? How has the war changed Ukraine, Russia and the world? Join our editors as they discuss the challenges and the choices. You will have the opportunity to ask the panel questions during the event or submit one in advance using the Q&A function below.

Speakers

  • Zanny Minton Beddoes
    Editor-in-chief
    Zanny Minton Beddoes is the editor-in-chief of The Economist. Prior to this role, she was the economics editor, overseeing the global economics coverage. Ms Minton Beddoes has written extensively about international financial issues, including the enlargement of the European Union, the future of the International Monetary Fund and economic reform in emerging economies. She has published in Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy, contributed chapters to several conference volumes and, in 1997, edited “Emerging Asia”, a book on the future of emerging markets in Asia. In May 1998, she testified before Congress on the introduction of the euro.
  • Edward Carr
    Deputy editor
    Edward Carr is the deputy editor responsible for editorial. He works alongside the editor-in-chief to oversee The Economist‘s journalism. He joined the newspaper as a science correspondent in 1987. After a series of jobs covering electronics, trade, energy and the environment, he moved to Paris to write about European business. In 2000, after a period as business editor, Mr Carr left for the Financial Times, where he worked latterly as news editor. He returned to The Economist 2005 as Britain editor, then became business affairs editor for a number of years. He was foreign editor (2009-15) before taking up his current role.
  • Shashank Joshi
    Defence editor
    Shashank Joshi is The Economist‘s defence editor. Prior to joining The Economist in 2018, he served as Senior Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) and Research Associate at Oxford University’s Changing Character of War Programme. He has published books on Iran’s nuclear programme and India’s armed forces, written for a wide range of newspapers and journals, and appeared regularly on radio and television. He holds degrees from Cambridge and Harvard, where he served as a Kennedy Scholar from Britain to the United States.
  • Arkady Ostrovsky
    Russia and eastern Europe editor
    Arkady Ostrovsky is Russia and eastern Europe editor for The Economist. Prior to this role, he was the Moscow bureau chief for The Economist reporting on the annexation of Crimea and the war in Ukraine among many other subjects. He joined the paper in March 2007 after ten years with the Financial Times where he covered Russian politics and business, including the Yukos affair. His articles were among the first to warn of the resurgence of the security state under Putin. At The Economist, Arkady also writes about Russia-American relations, European security, Russia and China, Ukraine, Georgia and other former Soviet republics.
  • Oliver Carroll
    Ukraine correspondent
    Oliver Carroll is Ukraine correspondent for The Economist. Over the past decade he has produced in-depth coverage of Russia's and Ukraine's political and military matters, reporting from both sides of the front-lines. He has been Moscow correspondent for The Independent, and a contributor to Newsweek, Politico, the Times of London, Die Zeit, BBC and others. He relocated to Ukraine in February 2014. In 2015-17 he was managing editor of the Moscow Times. He is the founding editor of the Russian version of Esquire in Moscow, where he first moved in 2004. He studied languages at Cambridge and politics and security at UCL, London.

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