『Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State』のカバーアート

Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State

Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State

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(00:00:00) Glasnost Meets the Reactor: How Chernobyl Broke the Soviet Information State
(00:01:13) What Happened at Reactor Number Four
(00:02:57) The Coverup and Its Collapse
(00:04:45) Glasnost Meets the Reactor
(00:06:29) The Credibility That Couldn't Be Rebuilt
(00:07:56) The Broader Context Chernobyl Accelerated
(00:09:44) Gorbachev's Impossible Position
(00:11:08) What Chernobyl Left Behind

On the 26th of April 1986, a reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded — and the Soviet state's first instinct was to call it a fire. Not a reactor explosion. A fire. That single act of minimisation, rational inside a bureaucratic culture that punished bad news, set in motion something the party could not control.

This episode traces the full arc of the Chernobyl disaster as a political event: the design flaw that was a state secret, the safety culture that prioritised targets over truth, the thirty-six-hour delay before Pripyat was evacuated, and the moment Sweden's nuclear monitors told the world what Moscow wouldn't. Fourteen seconds on Soviet state television described a minor accident under control. It was not under control.

But the deeper story is what happened when Gorbachev's glasnost — his policy of controlled openness — collided head-on with the scale of the catastrophe. Soviet journalists began reporting honestly for the first time. Doctors described the real medical situation. The liquidators, sent in with minimal protection, became a visible human cost the state could no longer hide. Every honest report about Chernobyl was simultaneously a report about the Soviet system's structural inability to protect its own citizens.

Chernobyl didn't just break the nuclear safety myth. It broke the information state. The fiction that the party knew best, that official truth was trustworthy truth, had survived decades of private doubt. After Chernobyl, the doubt went public — and it never went back. This is the chapter where the ceiling comes down.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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