Main content

7. The Suspicion Business

Mysterious deaths in Soviet Russia and what they might tell us about the origin of Covid. Should we treat information from inside authoritarian states with trust - or suspicion?

Mysterious deaths in Soviet Russia and what they might tell us about the origin of Covid.

When US intelligence agencies blamed a spate of unexplained Russian deaths in 1979 on a leak from a bioweapons facility, the Soviet government responded angrily, saying the cause was natural. A top US scientist stepped in to find the truth - and was given anything but. Does pointing the finger of blame creative a disincentive for governments to cooperate more fully? Or should information from inside authoritarian states be treated with suspicion? A Chinese insider has a set of striking revelations and someone who dismissed conspiracy theories now has one of his own.

Archive: CBS; The White House; C-SPAN; New Yorker; New York Times.

Presenter: John Sudworth
Series producer: Simon Maybin
Editor: Richard Vadon
Sound design and mix: James Beard
Commissioning editor: Dan Clarke
Science advice: Julian Siddle and Victoria Gill
Extra production: Eva Artesona and Kathy Long
Research support: Zisheng Xu and 大象传媒 Monitoring
Production coordinators: Siobhan Reed, Helena Warwick-Cross, Sophie Hill, and Debbie Richford
Theme and original music: Pete Cunningham, with trumpet by Joss Murray
Radio 4 Editor of Editorial Standards: Roger Mahony
Head of 大象传媒 News - Long Form Audio: Emma Rippon

Available now

29 minutes

Last on

Mon 17 Jul 2023 21:00

Broadcasts

  • Tue 11 Jul 2023 11:00
  • Mon 17 Jul 2023 21:00

Podcast