Clarissa Ward: ‘Fear and Panic Are Bedfellows’ in Ukraine

Clarissa Ward has had, as she puts it, a “long and very complicated relationship” with Russia. The chief international correspondent for CNN, she has had stints in Moscow since the beginning of her career, and has struggled to get a Russian visa since she investigated the 2020 poisoning of the Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny.

But that hasn’t stopped her from reporting on the region, and in particular on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Yet after months of war, it can be an uphill battle to keep the viewers’ attention on the front line. “Our job is to keep finding ways to make sure that we don’t become numb and desensitized to the horrors of war, because that is exactly how wars continue and grind on,” Ward says.

In this conversation, taped last week, Kara talks to Ward about her time reporting in Ukraine, what it’s like to “let fear sit in the passenger seat” when reporting from the front and how the hangover of war can leave correspondents detached from the “bourgeois and banal” normalcy of home.

You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more information for all episodes at nytimes.com/sway, and you can find Kara on Twitter @karaswisher.

2356 232

Suggested Podcasts

Daria Molchanova – Real Russian Club

NJIT Alumni Relations

Heather Khym, Michelle Benzinger, Sister Miriam James Heidland

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Writer Adhuri Hayat

spiritualindia.co

Kea Beauty

Snehal Nilesh Shastri

S Mcclenton