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Luke Harding
Luke Harding
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Luke Daniel Harding (born 21 April 1968) is a British journalist who is a foreign correspondent for The Guardian. He is known for his coverage of Russia under Vladimir Putin, WikiLeaks and Edward Snowden.

Key Information

He was based in Russia for The Guardian from 2007 until, returning from a stay in the UK on 5 February 2011, he was refused re-entry to Russia and deported the same day.[1] The Guardian said his expulsion was linked with his critical articles on Russia,[2] a claim denied by the Russian government. After the reversal of the decision on 9 February and the granting of a short-term visa, Harding chose not to seek a further visa extension.[2] His 2011 book Mafia State discusses his experience in Russia and the political system under Vladimir Putin, which he describes as a mafia state. His subsequent books include WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy and The Snowden Files.

Early life and career

[edit]

Harding was educated at the United World College of the Atlantic in South Wales,[3] then studied English at University College, Oxford. While there he edited the student newspaper Cherwell. He worked for The Sunday Correspondent, the Evening Argus in Brighton and then the Daily Mail before joining The Guardian in 1996.[4]

He has lived in and reported from Delhi, Berlin, and Moscow, and has covered wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya.[5] In 2014 he was the recipient of the James Cameron prize for his work on Russia, Ukraine, WikiLeaks, and Edward Snowden.[6]

In 2007, The Guardian retracted one of his articles for containing text "substantially similar to paragraphs" in another "article, published in May, in The eXile".[7]

Russian expulsion

[edit]

On 5 February 2011, Harding was refused re-entry into Russia. According to Harding, this made him the first foreign journalist to be expelled from Russia since the end of the Cold War. The Guardian said his expulsion was linked with his unflattering coverage of Russia, including speculation about Vladimir Putin's wealth and Putin's knowledge of the London assassination of ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.[2] The director of Index on Censorship, John Kampfner, said: "The Russian government's treatment of Luke Harding is petty and vindictive, and evidence – if more was needed – of the poor state of free expression in that country."[8] Elsa Vidal, head of the European and Central Asia desk at the media freedom watchdog, was quoted in The Washington Post as saying: "This is a serious and shocking step, unprecedented since the Cold War [...] It's an attempt to force correspondents working for foreign media in Moscow to engage in self-censorship."[9]

However, on the following day, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov explained at a press conference that no visa cancellation had taken place and the problem had been caused by the fact that Harding's visa had expired, a statement disputed by Harding due to his visa being valid until May of that year.[10] According to Lavrov, Harding had requested an exceptional visa extension until May which was approved. Lavrov also added that Harding had previously broken the rules of his press accreditation by visiting the area of counter-terrorism operations without informing the relevant security authorities.[11]

The expulsion preceded a visit to Britain by Lavrov, which led to suggestions from Labour MP Chris Bryant that the British government might rescind Lavrov's invitation.[12] On 9 February, Russia reversed the decision not to re-admit him[2] although it only granted him a short term visa. Harding chose not to seek a further visa and returned to the UK in February. Harding has said that during his time in Russia he was the subject of largely psychological harassment by the Federal Security Service, whom he alleges were unhappy at the stories he wrote.[13]

WikiLeaks

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In 2011, the book WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy, written by Harding and David Leigh, was published by Vintage Books in the US and Guardian Faber in the UK.[14] On 1 September 2011, it was revealed that an encrypted version of WikiLeaks' huge archive of un-redacted US State Department cables had been available via BitTorrent for months and that the decryption key had been published by Leigh and Harding in their book.[15][16][17] WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy was made into a Hollywood film, The Fifth Estate (2013). Wikileaks said that the film was "careful to avoid most criticism of US foreign policy actually revealed by WikiLeaks" and covered "almost none of the evidence WikiLeaks published ... of serious abuses within the US military and the State Department".[18]

Edward Snowden

[edit]

Harding's book on Edward Snowden, The Snowden Files (2014), was reviewed by The New York Times's Michiko Kakutani,[19] who observed that it "reads like a le Carré novel crossed with something by Kafka. . A fast-paced, almost novelistic narrative. . .. [The book] gives readers . . a succinct overview of the momentous events of the past year. . . . Leave[s] readers with an acute understanding of the serious issues involved". Additionally, it received positive reviews from several other major publications, including The Guardian,[20] the London Review of Books,[21] and the Washington Post,[22] as well as a mixed review from The Daily Telegraph's David Blair.[23] It was adapted into a film, Snowden, directed by Oliver Stone and starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, released in September 2016.

Alexander Litvinenko

[edit]

In 2016, Harding published A Very Expensive Poison, an account of the murder of the Russian ex-KGB whistle-blower and Putin critic Alexander Litvinenko. The book garnered a positive response from reviewers, including from The Spectator,[24] The Guardian,[25] The Times,[26] and London Review of Books;[27] Robert Fox, writing for the Evening Standard described it as "one of the best political thrillers [he had] come across in years".[28] Lucy Prebble adapted the book for the stage. A production ran at The Old Vic theatre, London, from August to October 2019.[29]

Donald Trump and Russia

[edit]

In November 2017, Harding published Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win on the subject of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. The book examines the dossier by former British spy Christopher Steele, and alleges that Trump was the subject of at least five years of "cultivation" by Soviet/Russian intelligence services prior to his election, and possibly by the KGB as soon as 1987.[30][31] In May 2021, former The New York Times reporter Barry Meier published Spooked: The Trump Dossier, Black Cube, and the Rise of Private Spies, which cited the Steele dossier as a case study in how reporters can be manipulated by private intelligence sources; Meier named Harding and MSNBC's Rachel Maddow as examples.[32]

On 27 November 2018, Harding co-authored an anonymously sourced article for The Guardian claiming that Julian Assange and Paul Manafort met several times at the Ecuadorian embassy in 2013, 2015, and 2016 possibly in relation to the 2016 Democratic National Committee email leak.[33] Manafort and Assange both denied that they had ever met, and Manafort said The Guardian had "proceeded with this story even after being notified by my representatives that it was false".[34] According to Glenn Greenwald citing Tommy Vietor, "if Paul Manafort visited Assange at the Embassy, there would be ample amounts of video and other photographic proof demonstrating that this happened. The Guardian provides none of that."[35] No other news organization was able to corroborate the story,[36] and according to Paul Farhi of The Washington Post, "[T]he Guardian’s bombshell looks as though it could be a dud".[36]

In 2020, Luke Harding published the book Shadow State, covering Russian covert operations, from the poisoning of Sergei Skripal by the GRU, to digital influence operations.[37] Harding describes how, in his view, Trump has made the United States “uniquely vulnerable” to the disinformation techniques employed by the Kremlin. According to David Bond, Harding's Shadow State also "raises fresh questions about the way the UK government has handled claims of Kremlin interference in Britain’s democratic processes."[38]

In July 2021, Harding, Julian Borger, and Dan Sabbagh announced that The Guardian had received a document allegedly leaked from the Kremlin. The document, said to have been produced on January 22, 2016, appears to authorize Putin's plan for Russian interference in the 2016 US election on behalf of "mentally unstable" Donald Trump. The document apparently confirms the existence of kompromat on Trump and matches some incidental details already known about Russian interference.[39] According to Andrei Soldatov, the leaked material is "consistent with the procedures of the security services and the security council".[39] Philip Bump of the Washington Post was skeptical of the document's veracity because it was "convenient for generating enthusiasm", contains predictions of destabilization that would have been difficult to make in advance, and because the 2016 document contains discussion of "how Russia might insert 'media viruses' into American public life" when these efforts had in fact been underway since at least 2014.[40] Experts on Russian disinformation and propaganda encouraged caution.[41]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

[edit]

Harding published a book about the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 called Invasion, covering the first part of the conflict from February until September 2022 and based on Harding's reporting from the frontlines.[42]

Publications

[edit]
  • The Liar: Fall of Jonathan Aitken, Penguin Books (1997), co-written with David Leigh and David Pallister.
  • WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy, Guardian Books (2011), ISBN 978-0-85265-239-8, co-written with David Leigh.
  • Mafia State: How One Reporter Became An Enemy Of The Brutal New Russiaa, Random House (NY, 2011), ISBN 978-0-85265-247-3.
  • Libya: Murder in Benghazi and the Fall of Gaddafi (2012), co-written with Martin Chulov.
  • The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man, Vintage Books (NY, 2014), ISBN 978-0804173520.
  • A Very Expensive Poison: the Definitive Story of the Murder of Litvinenko (2016) Guardian Faber, ISBN 978-1783350933.
  • Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win. Vintage. 2017. ISBN 978-0525562511.
  • Shadow State: Murder, Mayhem and Russia's Remaking of the West. Guardian Faber. 2020. ISBN 978-1783352050.
  • Invasion: The Inside Story of Russia's Bloody War and Ukraine's Fight for Survival. 2022. Vintage Press.

Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Luke Harding (born 21 April 1968) is a British journalist and author who has worked as a foreign correspondent for since 1996, with postings in , , and , where he served as bureau chief from 2007 until his expulsion by Russian authorities in 2011. He is the author of multiple books on Russian politics and intelligence operations, including (2017), which alleged extensive coordination between the Trump presidential campaign and Russian entities based partly on the —a document later discredited for lacking verifiable evidence—and (2016), detailing the assassination of . Harding's reporting on has highlighted corruption and harassment of journalists, but his claims, such as a 2018 Guardian story asserting Paul Manafort met in the Ecuadorian embassy (without corroboration), have faced scrutiny for errors and overreliance on anonymous sources amid broader questions about institutional biases in Western media coverage of Russia-related narratives.

Background

Early life and education

Luke Harding was born on 21 April 1968 in Nottingham, England. Harding studied English at University College, Oxford, where he first engaged in journalism by editing the student newspaper Cherwell. This early role provided his initial experience in reporting and editorial work, laying the groundwork for his professional career.

Initial career

Harding joined in 2000 as its correspondent, based in , where he reported on Indian politics, society, and regional developments. In this role, he covered events such as the and broader South Asian dynamics, drawing on his prior informal exposure to as a backpacker in the 1980s. During 2001, he spent three months embedded in and , documenting the U.S.-led military response to the , including operations against forces and the fall of . In September 2003, Harding transferred to as The Guardian's correspondent for European affairs, focusing on German politics, integration, and continental security issues amid the post-9/11 geopolitical shifts. His dispatches from this period included analysis of Germany's 2005 federal elections, which saw Angela Merkel's rise to chancellor, and broader coverage of transatlantic tensions over . This assignment honed his expertise in foreign reporting before his relocation to in 2007 as bureau chief.

Reporting in Russia

Moscow correspondence

Luke Harding was appointed The Guardian's in January 2007, focusing on the internal dynamics of Vladimir Putin's regime, including among elites and the consolidation of state authority. His dispatches highlighted the fusion of political power, oligarchic wealth, and official graft, drawing on court cases and leaked estimates to illustrate how state resources were allegedly redirected for personal gain. In December 2007, for instance, Harding cited intelligence sources estimating Putin's personal wealth at $40 billion, derived from influence over oil, gas, and other state-controlled sectors during his presidency and subsequent premiership. Harding's coverage of oligarchs emphasized their vulnerability to Kremlin pressure when challenging the regime. In July 2007, he reported on the Moscow trial of Boris Berezovsky, a self-exiled tycoon and vocal Putin critic, charged with embezzling $100 million from Aeroflot in the 1990s; Berezovsky faced extradition threats and portrayed the proceedings as politically motivated retribution for his opposition activities. Similarly, in interviews with figures like Alexander Lebedev, an oligarch critical of systemic corruption, Harding documented complaints that Putin's vertical power structure enabled top-down bribery and asset seizures, binding business leaders to state loyalty. On domestic unrest, Harding provided on-the-ground accounts of protests against and economic grievances, revealing the regime's reliance on forceful policing to maintain control. In April 2007, he described approximately 2,000 demonstrators marching in despite bans, culminating in the arrest of chess champion and opposition leader ; in St. Petersburg, deployed batons to disperse crowds, underscoring the limits on public dissent. By February 2010, he covered thousands protesting in —Russia's western exclave—over corruption and living costs, the largest such action since the Soviet collapse, prompting a special envoy's intervention to quell momentum. Harding's reporting extended to foreign policy flashpoints, such as the August 2008 war with Georgia, where he embedded near conflict zones to document Russian military operations. From the outskirts of Gori, he observed Russian forces occupying strategic points deep inside Georgian territory post-ceasefire, including the construction of trenches and fortifications near the , indicating intentions beyond a quick withdrawal. In , he reported crowds rallying amid reports of abandoned Georgian vehicles on escape routes and Russian advances that violated agreed pullback terms, portraying the incursion as a demonstration of Moscow's regional dominance tactics. These accounts relied on direct observation and local testimonies, contrasting official Russian narratives of defensive action with evidence of territorial entrenchment.

Expulsion and harassment

In December 2010, Russian authorities denied renewal of Luke Harding's , citing unspecified violations of accreditation procedures. This administrative hurdle preceded his attempted re-entry to on February 5, 2011, when border guards at Domodedovo Airport detained him, annulled his existing visa (valid until May), and deported him without providing a detailed explanation beyond procedural non-compliance. Russian officials maintained that the action stemmed from Harding's failure to collect a required press credential during a prior visit, framing it as a routine bureaucratic enforcement rather than targeted retaliation. Harding contested this, attributing the measures to his recent coverage of U.S. diplomatic cables released by , which described as a "virtual state" rife with and ties. The incident marked the first expulsion of a Western journalist from Russia since the Cold War era, signaling a resurgence of restrictive tactics against foreign media perceived as adversarial. Harding was permitted to return on February 13, 2011, after reportedly rectifying the accreditation issue, though he departed Moscow permanently shortly thereafter. This sequence exemplifies Kremlin strategies for controlling narrative influence, where formal visa and accreditation denials serve as pretexts to disrupt reporting without overt censorship, often timed to coincide with politically sensitive publications. Prior to the expulsion, Harding documented a sustained campaign of harassment by Russia's (FSB) during his posting from 2007 to 2011. Incidents included overt , with unmarked vehicles and unidentified men tailing him and his family; repeated apartment break-ins where drawers were rifled but valuables left untouched, suggesting intimidation over theft; and psychological operations such as anonymous phone calls and letters threatening his wife and young children. These escalations correlated with his investigations into topics like elite corruption and state-linked murders, aligning with patterns of FSB-orchestrated pressure on journalists to deter critical coverage through personal discomfort rather than physical violence. Russian state responses dismissed such claims as exaggerated or unfounded, attributing reported anomalies to common in .

Key investigations

WikiLeaks

Harding co-authored the 2011 book WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy with David Leigh, both Guardian journalists who collaborated with WikiLeaks on publishing U.S. diplomatic cables. The work provides a detailed account of Assange's background, tracing his early activities as a teenage hacker in Australia under the pseudonym "Mendax" in the 1990s, which involved breaching systems like NASA's Nortel network, leading to a conviction for computer hacking in 1996. It chronicles WikiLeaks' founding in 2006 as a platform for anonymous document submissions and its escalation through releases such as the April 2010 "Collateral Murder" video depicting a U.S. Apache helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed civilians and Reuters staff, followed by the July 2010 Afghan war logs (over 90,000 documents) exposing unreported civilian casualties and Taliban tactics, and the October 2010 Iraq war logs (nearly 400,000 entries) revealing detainee abuse patterns. Through multiple interviews with Assange conducted during the Guardian's partnership, Harding and Leigh portrayed WikiLeaks' internal operations as marked by paranoia, interpersonal conflicts, and security vulnerabilities, including Assange's erratic leadership and the organization's reliance on a small, ideologically driven team. The book highlights Assange's vision of "scientific journalism" via unfiltered leaks to expose secrecy, but notes operational lapses, such as inadequate of informant names in early dumps, which risked lives according to U.S. assessments. The diplomatic cables release, dubbed "Cablegate" starting , 2010, comprised over 250,000 U.S. State Department documents from 1966 to 2010, revealing raw embassy insights like Saudi leaders privately urging U.S. action against Iran's nuclear program, Chinese state involvement in cyberattacks on , and critical U.S. views of allies such as Afghan President Karzai's and volatility. Harding's reporting assessed these as causing immediate diplomatic strains, with foreign contacts withdrawing trust due to exposure—evidenced by ambassadors reporting diminished candor in subsequent interactions—and prompting U.S. countermeasures like enhanced classification protocols, though no direct evidence linked the leaks to policy reversals or agent deaths. The disclosures empirically disrupted specific negotiations, such as revealing U.S. pressure on over detainee flights, but their broader causal impact on global diplomacy remains debated, with some cables confirming pre-existing public suspicions while others provided granular evidence of maneuvering.

Edward Snowden

In June 2013, The Guardian, where Harding served as a correspondent, published initial revelations based on documents leaked by Edward Snowden, a former NSA contractor, exposing the PRISM program through which the agency collected user data from nine major U.S. technology companies including Microsoft, Google, and Apple under court orders issued by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Harding contributed to subsequent Guardian reporting on the leaks, particularly articles detailing the involvement of Britain's GCHQ in related surveillance operations like Tempora, which mirrored NSA efforts by intercepting fiber-optic cables for bulk data storage. These disclosures, drawn from over 58,000 classified files Snowden provided to journalists, revealed the scale of metadata collection on U.S. citizens' phone records and internet communications, prompting immediate legal challenges and congressional scrutiny. Harding's 2014 book, The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man, reconstructs Snowden's path from his NSA employment via contractor Booz Allen Hamilton—where he accessed top-secret systems in Hawaii and Maryland—to his decision to leak documents citing ethical concerns over unchecked surveillance expansion post-9/11. The narrative details Snowden's flight to Hong Kong in May 2013, his encrypted communications with Guardian reporters Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill, and his subsequent transit to Moscow on June 23, 2013, amid U.S. charges under the Espionage Act for unauthorized disclosure of national defense information. Harding draws on declassified U.S. government documents and interviews to explain PRISM's mechanics, including directives compelling companies to hand over data on foreign targets inadvertently capturing domestic communications, and broader implications for global privacy norms. The leaks, as chronicled by Harding, catalyzed verifiable policy shifts, including the U.S. government's termination of bulk telephone metadata collection under Section 215 of the , replaced by the signed on June 2, 2015, which required targeted warrants and greater transparency via annual reports. Declassified Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court rulings and Office of the summaries confirmed the programs' existence while highlighting compliance issues, such as over 21,000 violations in NSA data handling reported in 2012. Internationally, the revelations influenced stricter data protection frameworks, contributing to momentum for the EU's enacted in 2016, though causal attribution remains debated amid pre-existing advocacy. Harding's account emphasizes the causal chain from technical overreach—enabled by post-9/11 laws like the FISA Amendments Act of 2008—to public backlash, without endorsing Snowden's actions as , given his flight to and ongoing U.S. prosecution.

Alexander Litvinenko

Luke Harding, as The Guardian's Moscow correspondent from 2007 to 2011, began investigating the 2006 poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko, a former FSB lieutenant colonel who defected to the United Kingdom in 2000 after publicly accusing the agency of corruption and involvement in domestic bombings. Litvinenko, a vocal Kremlin critic who co-authored a book alleging President Vladimir Putin's role in the 1999 apartment bombings, was poisoned on November 1, 2006, when he ingested polonium-210 during tea with Russian contacts Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun at London's Millennium Hotel Pine Bar; forensic evidence later traced the rare isotope's production to Russia's Sarov nuclear facility and its transport via aircraft from Moscow, contaminating multiple sites including planes, hotels, and offices. Harding's reporting highlighted these FSB-linked trails, noting failed prior attempts to poison Litvinenko in October 2006 using the same substance. In his 2016 book A Very Expensive Poison: The Assassination of Alexander Litvinenko and Putin's War with the West, Harding synthesized witness interviews, autopsy details revealing Litvinenko's organs ravaged by alpha radiation, and declassified evidence from the UK public inquiry led by Sir Robert Owen, which concluded in January 2016 that the murder was a "state-sponsored" operation "probably approved" by Putin due to personal antagonism and Litvinenko's threats to Russian interests. The book reconstructs the timeline: Lugovoi and Kovtun, former KGB associates with FSB ties, obtained polonium under false pretenses, with traces detected on items like a hotel teapot holding the lethal dose estimated at 10 micrograms—enough to kill thousands given polonium-210's extreme toxicity (lethal dose under 1 microgram). Harding attributes causality to Litvinenko's exposés, including his collaboration with MI6 and allegations of Putin's orchestration of the 1999 blasts to justify the Second Chechen War, positioning the assassination as retaliation amid escalating Kremlin suppression of dissent. Harding's analysis underscores empirical inconsistencies in Russian denials, such as Lugovoi and Kovtun's initial alibis contradicted by radiation hotspots mapping their movements, and the inquiry's rejection of suicide or accident given polonium's weaponized rarity outside state labs. While Russia refused extradition and promoted Lugovoi to a State Duma seat, Harding's work, drawing on Litvinenko's widow Marina and British counterintelligence, frames the case as emblematic of FSB tradecraft favoring undetectable toxins over conventional methods, supported by parallel polonium detections in Germany and Italy linked to the suspects. The European Court of Human Rights later upheld the inquiry's findings in 2021, affirming inadequate UK investigation into state involvement but validating the poisoning's attribution.

Donald Trump and Russia

In his 2017 book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win, Luke Harding argued that the Trump presidential campaign engaged in a pattern of coordination with Russian entities to influence the 2016 U.S. election, drawing on interviews with former MI6 officer Christopher Steele and other sources to allege decades-long ties involving money laundering, kompromat, and back-channel communications. Harding highlighted technical anomalies such as repeated digital "pings" between a Trump Organization server and one linked to Russia's Alfa Bank, which he portrayed as potential evidence of covert contacts, though FBI investigations into these connections—initiated in 2016—ultimately yielded no substantiated links to election interference or collusion. Harding also emphasized contacts involving Trump campaign figures like Paul Manafort, who shared internal polling data with a Ukrainian oligarch with ties in 2016, and George Papadopoulos, who in March 2016 learned from a Russian-linked of potential access to damaging material on sourced from . Manafort, Trump's campaign chairman from March to August 2016, faced indictments in October 2017 for financial crimes tied to his prior work, including exceeding $18 million, but these charges centered on unreported foreign rather than direct campaign-Russia coordination. Papadopoulos pleaded guilty that month to lying to the FBI about the timing of his Russia-related discussions, admitting efforts to arrange a Trump-Putin meeting, yet no evidence emerged of follow-through or broader campaign involvement in Russian-sourced dirt. Central to Harding's narrative was the Steele dossier, a 35-page opposition research compilation funded initially by anti-Trump Republicans and later by the Clinton campaign via Fusion GPS, which Steele—whom Harding interviewed—claimed was 70-90% accurate based on his sub-sources' reliability. The dossier alleged salacious, unverified details like a "golden showers" incident involving Trump in Moscow and coordinated kompromat efforts, which Harding integrated into his reporting despite the document's raw, uncorroborated nature derived from hearsay and anonymous Russian contacts. Subsequent investigations tempered these claims: Special Counsel Robert Mueller's 2019 report, after examining over 500 witnesses and millions of documents, concluded there was insufficient evidence to establish that the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with Russia in its election interference efforts, though it documented 140+ campaign-Russia contacts and Russian hacking/social media operations aimed at aiding Trump. Special Counsel John Durham's 2023 report further critiqued the FBI's launch of Crossfire Hurricane in July 2016 as predicated on confirmation bias and a single vague tip about Papadopoulos, faulting agents for failing to verify Steele's information despite early doubts about its sourcing—including potential Clinton campaign fabrication—and for using it in FISA applications without adequate corroboration. These findings underscored verifiable Russian meddling but highlighted unproven allegations of campaign collusion, with Durham noting systemic FBI procedural lapses rather than orchestrated misconduct.

Russian invasion of Ukraine

Harding initiated on-the-ground coverage of the brewing conflict in Ukraine from December 2021, arriving in Kyiv shortly before Russia's full-scale invasion commenced on February 24, 2022. His dispatches captured the tense prelude, including Russian military mobilizations along the border exceeding 100,000 troops and Ukrainian fortification efforts in anticipation of assault. Present in the capital during the initial bombardment, Harding reported on the rapid Russian push toward Kyiv, which involved armored columns advancing within 30 kilometers of the city center by late February but faltered due to supply line vulnerabilities and Ukrainian ambushes. In November 2022, Harding published : The Inside Story of Russia's Bloody War and Ukraine's Fight for Survival, synthesizing his frontline observations from the invasion's outset through mid-2022. The book details the uncovering of mass civilian executions in Bucha after Russian forces withdrew on March 31, 2022, revealing over 400 bodies in streets and basements amid evidence of systematic killings. It chronicles Ukrainian resistance that compelled Russian retreats from northern regions, including Kyiv's outskirts by 2022, underscoring operational failures such as inadequate reconnaissance and overreliance on conscripted units prone to low morale. Harding attributes these setbacks to Putin's erroneous assumptions of swift capitulation, ignoring Ukraine's decentralized command and motivated defenses, which instead inflicted heavy attrition on invaders through asymmetric tactics. Harding's subsequent Guardian reporting extended into 2023, focusing on the November 11, 2022, Ukrainian liberation of Kherson city via encirclement and artillery dominance, followed by intensified Russian cross-river shelling that displaced thousands. By 2024 and 2025, his dispatches from eastern fronts highlighted the proliferation of drone warfare, with Ukrainian units employing reconnaissance and strike drones to neutralize Russian armor and logistics, as seen in operations targeting Crimea infrastructure like the Kerch Bridge. These accounts emphasize observable impacts of Western military assistance, including precision-guided munitions and air defense systems, enabling Ukrainian forces to sustain defenses against Russian incremental advances, such as village captures near Dobropillia in August 2025 amid barrages of kamikaze drones and glide bombs. Harding's analyses stress causal factors like Russian overextension and Ukrainian adaptability, grounded in battlefield outcomes rather than speculative forecasts.

Publications

Major books

Mafia State: How One Reporter Became an Enemy of the Brutal New Russia, published in 2011 by Faber & Faber, chronicles Harding's tenure as The Guardian's Moscow bureau chief from 2007 to 2011, portraying Russia's transformation into a kleptocratic regime under through personal anecdotes of , visa denials, and state intimidation. A Very Expensive Poison: The Assassination of Alexander Litvinenko and Putin's War with the West, issued in 2016 by , reconstructs the 2006 poisoning of ex-FSB officer in , linking it to orchestration based on inquiry evidence and witness accounts. The work inspired Lucy Prebble's 2019 theatrical adaptation at Theatre, which received the 2020 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for its dramatic retelling. Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Helped Win the White House, released in November 2017 by , draws on the and public records to argue Russian interference favored the 2016 Trump campaign, achieving #1 status on the New York Times bestseller list. Invasion: The Inside Story of 's Bloody War and Ukraine's Fight for Survival, published in November 2022 by , offers a firsthand narrative of the February 2022 Russian invasion, incorporating interviews with Ukrainian officials and battlefield dispatches to highlight strategic miscalculations by .

Other writings

Harding has produced extensive journalism for beyond his books, including regular columns and feature articles centered on Russian foreign policy, , and the ongoing conflict in . His output encompasses dispatches from conflict zones, analyses of geopolitical developments, and interviews with key figures, often highlighting Russian actions and Ukrainian resilience. Following his 2011 expulsion from Russia, Harding contributed series of pieces examining tactics, , and post-Soviet influences in . In recent years, his reporting has intensified on the Russia-Ukraine war, with articles published throughout 2024 and 2025. Examples include a October 25, 2025, account of a clandestine underground hospital in treating soldiers wounded by Russian drones, and collaborative pieces on Ukraine's sustained firepower amid fluctuating Western aid in March 2025, as well as allied military pledges totaling €21 billion in April 2025. These works underscore themes of , covert operations, and the strategic dynamics of Russian advances and Ukrainian countermeasures.

Reception and controversies

Achievements and praise

Harding was awarded the Prize for International Reporting in 2014 for his coverage of , , , and . His book Invasion: The Inside Story of 's Bloody War and 's Fight for Survival (2022) was shortlisted for the for political writing and received 's Journalism Book of the Year award in 2023. The 2017 book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win, detailing alleged Trump-Russia ties, reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list. It drew praise from author John le Carré, who described it as "a superb piece of work, wonderfully done and essential reading for anyone who wants to understand how the Trump phenomenon came about." Harding's A Very Expensive Poison (2016) on the Alexander Litvinenko assassination was noted for reiterating the UK public inquiry's findings that Russian President Vladimir Putin "probably" approved the killing, contributing to broader awareness of state-sponsored operations. Harding's reporting has been credited with shaping discourse on Russian influence abroad, including citations in discussions of UK inquiries into Litvinenko's death. In 2024, he conducted multiple speaking engagements on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, including at the University of Exeter on October 9 and events hosted by the Norwegian Helsinki Committee on September 25.

Criticisms of accuracy

Harding's 2017 book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win the White House prominently featured claims from the Steele dossier, including allegations of kompromat held by Russia over Trump and coordination between his campaign and Russian intelligence. The dossier, compiled by former MI6 officer Christopher Steele, was presented by Harding as largely credible, with Steele estimating in the book that 70-90% of its content was accurate. However, subsequent U.S. investigations contradicted or failed to substantiate these core assertions. The Mueller report, released on April 18, 2019, explicitly stated that its probe "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities," despite examining dossier-related leads. The 2023 Durham report further highlighted discrepancies, finding "no corroboration" for any of Steele's key claims and criticizing the FBI for relying on the unverified dossier in its Trump-Russia probe, attributing this to "confirmation bias" that ignored exculpatory evidence. Harding's narrative of active collusion was undermined by these findings, as independent journalist Aaron Maté noted in a 2017 interview where Harding could not cite a single specific instance of such coordination when pressed for evidence. Critics, including Maté, have pointed to this as emblematic of unsubstantiated reporting, with Harding's later 2021 Guardian article alleging "Kremlin papers" proving a Putin-orchestrated Trump plot similarly dismissed for lacking verifiable support. No post-publication retractions or corrections to Collusion have been issued by Harding or his publisher, despite these empirical contradictions. Russian officials have rebutted Harding's Moscow-based reporting, such as on the 2006 Litvinenko poisoning, by revoking his journalistic accreditation in February 2011 for alleged violations including failure to collect an extended credential before departing the country. Foreign Minister stated Harding had broken "security rules," framing the expulsion as enforcement rather than retaliation, though Harding attributed it to his critical coverage. This incident underscores disputes over the reliability of his on-the-ground sourcing in , where access was curtailed amid claims of biased or erroneous portrayals of actions.

Allegations of bias and sensationalism

Critics have accused Luke Harding of an anti-Russia ideological slant, particularly in his coverage portraying Donald Trump as a potential asset of Vladimir Putin, as detailed in his 2017 book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win, which alleges decades of shadowy ties despite the Mueller investigation's 2019 conclusion that it "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities." This persistence in amplifying unverified threats, without resulting charges against Trump for collusion, has been cited by skeptics of mainstream Russiagate narratives as evidence of bias favoring adversarial framing over empirical restraint. Harding's reporting has also faced claims of sensationalism, with reviews of Mafia State: How One Reporter Became an Enemy of the Brutal New Russia (2011) noting its heavy reliance on anecdotal personal experiences of harassment and dramatic vignettes of corruption, which blend memoir with exposé in a manner prioritizing narrative flair over systematic analysis. Such stylistic choices, while engaging, are argued to heighten perceptions of Russia as an existential "mafia" threat, echoing broader institutional media tendencies toward alarmism in foreign policy coverage. Russian state-affiliated outlets like RT have countered by depicting Harding as an anti-Kremlin propagandist, accusing his work of speculative distortions and historical bias against Russia, including unsubstantiated claims of inherent evil in its geopolitical aims, while highlighting instances of alleged plagiarism to undermine his credibility. These portrayals frame his Guardian tenure as part of a Western echo chamber, though verifiable left-leaning alignments in mainstream outlets render such critiques from Moscow symmetrically partisan. Harding's views, while aligning with prevailing anti-authoritarian stances in Western journalism, have drawn limited dissent from left-leaning sources, underscoring a normalized consensus on Russia as aggressor in narratives from outlets like The Guardian.

References

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