• Research Fellow

Ruslan Trad

Ruslan Trad was a research fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab).

Trad specializes in Eurasia, Syria, conflicts, hybrid warfare, and mercenary groups. Before joining the DFRLab, he worked as a risk analyst, consultant, and freelance journalist. In recent years, his work has focused on open-source intelligence (OSINT) investigations and due diligence reporting. Trad is the author and co-author of three books and numerous articles on the Syrian civil war, Russian foreign policy, and security.

Trad is a member of the Association of European Journalists–Bulgaria and co-founder of De Re Militari, a Bulgarian online journal for conflict analysis. During his journalism career, he reported as a correspondent from countries including Lebanon, Turkey, Iraqi Kurdistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Thailand.

In 2014, Trad was awarded Activist of the Year by the Helsinki Committee for his coverage of the Syrian war. His work has appeared in outlets including Bellingcat, BBC, Carnegie Middle East Center, New Lines Magazine, Die Presse, European Eye on Radicalization, Vocal Europe, Bild, Vocativ, IB Times, Der Standard, Muftah, Internazionale, and Al Jazeera.

August 2023

Russian War Report: Co-founder of Russia’s most popular search engine condemns war in Ukraine

by Digital Forensic Research Lab

A co-founder of Yandex, Russia's primary search engine, issued a public statement of opposition to the war in Ukraine and acknowledging his "share of responsibility."
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August 2023

Russian War Report: Drones target central Moscow skyscrapers

by Digital Forensic Research Lab

Drone strikes hit central Moscow this week killing none but damaging a skyscraper. Meanwhile, TGStat has restricted access to a Telegram channel that tracks Russian casualties.
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July 2023

Russian War Report: Kremlin seeks stronger ties in Africa as Wagner eyes Niger coup

by Digital Forensic Research Lab

As Russian president Vladimir Putin attends the Russia-Africa Summit, he and his government are making moves to solidify regional cooperation. Amid this, Wagner seeks to capitalize on the coup in Niger.
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