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Christopher Bort
Nonresident Scholar, Russia and Eurasia Program

about


Chris Bort is a nonresident scholar with Carnegie’s Russia and Eurasia Program. His research focus is on Russian foreign policy trends.

Chris Bort was the national intelligence officer (NIO) for Russia and Eurasia on the National Intelligence Council from 2017 to 2021.  As NIO, he served as the senior subject matter expert on the region for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.  He also served as deputy NIO from 2010 to 2013. Chris Bort has been an analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency specializing in political, social, and foreign policy developments in Eurasia since 1998, and has been a member of the CIA’s Senior Analytic Service since 2002.  He has served in a variety of supervisory and analytic positions since joining the Intelligence Community in 1981.  He has an MA in Russian language and literature from George Washington University, a BA from the University of Maryland, and is government-certified in six languages.


All work from Christopher Bort

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ussia's President Vladimir Putin visits the destroyed school, where in 2004 Chechen militants took more than 1,000 people hostage, in Beslan, North Ossetia on August 20, 2024, to commemorate the killing of more than 330 people, mostly children, in the hostage siege
article
How the Traumas of 2004 Blinded Putin

A terrorist attack in 2004 shaped Vladimir Putin’s understanding of external actors and other countries. The influence can be felt even today.

· November 18, 2024
article
Why the Kremlin Treats Its Own Citizens With Contempt

Russian leaders have historically placed their own ambitions above the rights of ordinary Russians, but it isn’t impossible that a post-Putin Russia could look different.

· May 12, 2022
article
Why The Kremlin Lies: Understanding Its Loose Relationship With the Truth

Russian leaders have used deception for strategic ends in ways that shed light on their geopolitical goals

· January 6, 2022
commentary
How the Kremlin Learned to Defeat Its Opposition

Russia’s September 2021 parliamentary elections demonstrated the lengths to which the Kremlin will go to crack down on opposition groups. Where did this strategy come from—and how far will the Kremlin take it?

· October 25, 2021