13 episodes

The Freewheeling Diplomat -- Colin Cleary -- served for over three decades in the U.S. Foreign Service.  Free now to speak for himself, he offers a practitioner's perspective on key U.S. Foreign Policy challenges.  Drawing on his years at U.S. Embassies in Ukraine, Russia and Poland -- as well as other postings -- he has been devoting particular attention to Russia's war on Ukraine.   As the podcast moves forward, the Freewheeling Diplomat will be expanding to other topics.   Colin Cleary is an Adjunct Professor of U.S. Foreign Policy at George Washington University. 

The Freewheeling Diplomat Colin Cleary

    • News
    • 4.3 • 11 Ratings

The Freewheeling Diplomat -- Colin Cleary -- served for over three decades in the U.S. Foreign Service.  Free now to speak for himself, he offers a practitioner's perspective on key U.S. Foreign Policy challenges.  Drawing on his years at U.S. Embassies in Ukraine, Russia and Poland -- as well as other postings -- he has been devoting particular attention to Russia's war on Ukraine.   As the podcast moves forward, the Freewheeling Diplomat will be expanding to other topics.   Colin Cleary is an Adjunct Professor of U.S. Foreign Policy at George Washington University. 

    Confronting Russia's Nuclear Weapons Threats: A Conversation with Tom Countryman

    Confronting Russia's Nuclear Weapons Threats: A Conversation with Tom Countryman

    You would not know if from the onslaught of nuclear weapons threats from Russian TV propagandists and political figures, but there is a 1973 Treaty between the USSR and the United States -- still in effect with Russia -- under which both sides agree to refrain from the use of nuclear weapons threats.    I spoke with Tom Countryman, Board Chair of the Arms Control Association, about how to understand and confront Russia's barrage of threats.   Tom knows of what he speaks.   His 35-year career in the Foreign Service culminated in positions as Assistant Secretary and Acting Undersecretary of State for International Security and Nonproliferation.   

    Topics included: The positions of China, India and the Global South on Russian nuclear threats; the possibilities for continued arms control with Russia despite its aggression and past treaty violations; the extreme danger of supposed limited nuclear weapons use leading to a strategic nuclear exchange; and the role of the Arms Control Association in advocating for a world without nuclear weapons. 

    • 33 min
    War Next Door: Romania's Security Challenges

    War Next Door: Romania's Security Challenges

    Romania plays an often under-appreciated role as a bulwark for NATO on its eastern flank.  I spoke with Black Sea security expert and George Washington University Professor Iulia Joja on June 14 about Romania's security challenges amid Russia's war on neighboring Ukraine.  Among the topics covered were: traditional Romanian attitudes toward Russia; issues in Romanian-Ukrainian bilateral relations; the changing NATO and US military presence in Romania; the threat to Moldova from Russia; the centrality of Crimea to the future security of Ukraine; the "Bucharest 9"; and the outlook at the upcoming NATO summit in Vilnius for signals on future Ukrainian membership in NATO. 

    • 1 hr 8 min
    El Salvador President Bukele's War on Gangs

    El Salvador President Bukele's War on Gangs

    President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador has declared an unprecedented and controversial war on the country's gangs.  Under a "State of Exception" in effect since March 2022, over 60,000 suspected gang members have been arrested.   Some human rights groups warn that the round up is coming at the expense of proper due process.  Bukele's supporters note a dramatic drop in the murder rate and the return of the rule of law on the streets.  Bukele's approval rating is over 80 percent.   Bukele's experiment is being watched closely in the region, where others are also at the mercy of gangs and cartels. 

    I spoke about Bukele and his anti-gang efforts with El Salvador native and elections expert Mario Velasquez.   Mario has been tracking politics in El Salvador since the 1970s.   From 1985-95 he was Executive Director of MAES - Medical Aid for El Salvador.   He was at one time affiliated with the leftist FMLN party.   

    • 40 min
    Russia's Information Warfare: Ukraine Holding Its Own

    Russia's Information Warfare: Ukraine Holding Its Own

    How is Russia's information war against Ukraine going?   What are the main propaganda and disinformation narratives Russia is pushing -- and are they working? What is happening in cyber space?   We explore these and other topics with Gavin Wilde,  Senior Fellow in the Technology and International Affairs program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.   Gavin is a noted Russia expert with broad experience in and out of government, including as a Director for Russia at the National Security Council.   We spoke on March 16.   Gavin had recently returned from a trip to Ukraine.  

    • 52 min
    Russia's War One Year On: Poland and (Most of) Central Europe Rise to the Challenge

    Russia's War One Year On: Poland and (Most of) Central Europe Rise to the Challenge

    We review what Russia's war on Ukraine has meant for Central Europe with Matt Boyse, who served as U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State responsible for coordinating policy toward Central Europe from 2018-2021.   Poland has emerged as a clear leader in the wake of the invasion, but we examine how the rest of the region, with the exception of Hungary, has risen to the challenge as well.  Putin's aggression has vindicated the warnings Poland and others in Central Europe have been making for decades - often to the chagrin of their Western partners - about the threat of resurgent Russian imperialism.   We will discuss how regional fora, such as the Bucharest-9, can enhance coordination and forge a bulwark in Europe's east - from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea - against further Russian encroachments. 

    • 40 min
    How Trump Enabled Nordstream 2

    How Trump Enabled Nordstream 2

    The Nordstream 2 natural gas pipeline -- Putin's project to make Germany energy dependent on Russia,  divide the Euro-Atlantic Community, bypass Ukraine, and make Europe subject to energy blackmail -- went from zero percent completed to 95 percent completed during the Trump Administration.  This took place despite bipartisan legislation from Congress in 2017 that called for the US to sanction Russia's energy export pipelines.  It happened despite urgent pleas from Ukraine, Poland and the Baltic countries, and others, for the US to implement sanctions against Nordstream 2.   And it happened despite Trump's own repeated public denunciations of the pipeline.   How?   And how today could Trump and Pompeo blame the Biden Administration for the fait accompli Trump left behind?   In fact, the Trump Administration only took concrete action to stop Nordstream 2  in December 2019 -- after Congress mandated than they do it and only after the pipeline was 95% complete.   We explore all of this in today's episode of the Freewheeling Diplomat podcast.   

    • 23 min

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5
11 Ratings

11 Ratings

Charles D. Lexington ,

Important Work

This podcast is so important in a time when media coverage of the Ukraine-Russia war has dropped off. Colin’s perspective is great, every episode is well researched and cited z I’m really happy with this podcast so far and look forward to more in the future!

Cat939 ,

One-Sided Propaganda

Another podcast focusing on a Russophobic one-sided view of the Ukraine war. Boring.

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