“They’re Not Like Us”: Michael McFaul on Autocrats vs. Democrats and the Fight for the Twenty-First Century | Peter Robinson | Hoover Institution

《他们与我们不同》:迈克尔·麦克福尔论独裁者与民主人士,以及21世纪的斗争 | 彼得·罗宾逊 | 休厄尔研究所

Uncommon Knowledge

2026-03-03

1 小时 12 分钟
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Former US ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul returns to Uncommon Knowledge with Peter Robinson to discuss his new book, Autocrats vs. Democrats: China, Russia, America, and the New Global Disorder. McFaul explains why Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, and today’s autocratic leaders fundamentally do not think like we do—and why that misunderstanding has shaped some of America’s most consequential foreign-policy mistakes. Drawing on decades of scholarship and firsthand experience inside the Kremlin, McFaul traces Russia’s post–Cold War slide back into autocracy; challenges the claim that NATO expansion caused the rupture with Moscow; and argues that the true threat to authoritarian regimes is democratic example rather than Western military power. He examines the war in Ukraine, its implications for Taiwan, the limits of transactional diplomacy with ideologues like Putin, and the enduring lessons of Cold War statecraft. He also reflects on his unlikely journey from Butte, Montana, to Spaso House —the Moscow home of the U.S. ambassador to Russia— and why he remains convinced that democracy, however fragile, is still the West’s greatest strategic advantage. Subscribe to Uncommon Knowledge at hoover.org/uk
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  • From Butte, Montana to Spazo House, the residence of the Ambassador of the United States to Russia.

  • Ambassador Michael McFaul on Uncommon Knowledge, now.

  • Welcome to Uncommon Knowledge, I'm Peter Robinson.

  • A native of Montana, Michael McFaul is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

  • a senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies,

  • and a professor of international studies, all here at Stanford.

  • He served on the National Security Council during the first three years of the Obama administration,

  • and then as ambassador to Russia from 2012 to 2014.

  • Professor McFaul's most recent book, Autocrats versus Democrats,

  • China, Russia, America, and the New Global Disorder.

  • Mike, welcome.

  • to uncommon knowledge.

  • Thanks for having me.

  • From autocrats versus Democrats,

  • while American power has declined in relative terms since its peak in 1990s,

  • the US remains the most powerful country in the world.

  • It is likely to maintain that position for the foreseeable future.

  • We have four time zones.

  • Russia has 11.

  • We have a population of 340 million.