What happens when an American journalist spends four years reporting from the front lines of Europe’s largest war since World War II?
In this episode of Peace and Power Ukraine, host Gary Marx is joined by JP Lindsley, editor of Under Fire News and one of the only American journalists to report daily from Ukraine throughout the full-scale war. Speaking shortly after leaving Ukraine for the first time since 2022, Lindsley reflects on the personal challenges of reporting from a war zone, the resilience of the Ukrainian people, and the lessons the West still has yet to learn from the conflict.
Drawing on years of firsthand experience in Kyiv, Kharkiv, and across Ukraine, Lindsley offers a unique perspective on the war, the information battle surrounding it, and the evolving relationship between Ukraine, Europe, and the United States.
The conversation covers:
• Leaving Ukraine after four years of wartime reporting
• The psychological impact of living under constant missile attacks
• Translating Ukraine’s experience for American audiences
• Russian propaganda and misconceptions about Ukraine in the United States
• The role of conservative media and political narratives surrounding the war
• Ukraine’s growing drone dominance and military innovation
• Russia’s vulnerabilities and the future of the conflict
• Crimea’s strategic importance and the changing battlefield
• NATO, Romania, and Russia’s testing of Western resolve
• Why Kharkiv remains one of Ukraine’s most important cities
• What Americans and Europeans can learn from Ukraine’s resilience
Lindsley also discusses how Ukrainian innovators are reshaping modern warfare through rapid adaptation, drone technology, and battlefield feedback loops that are increasingly influencing military thinking in Washington and across NATO.
The discussion explores the importance of language, messaging, and public understanding in wartime, including how narratives can shape support for Ukraine both in the United States and abroad.
Throughout the episode, Lindsley argues that Ukraine’s greatest strength is not simply its military capability, but the determination of its people to remain free despite years of relentless attacks.
The episode concludes with a powerful reflection on Kharkiv, a city located just miles from the Russian border that continues to embody the resilience, independence, and spirit of the Ukrainian people.
00:00 — The psychological cost of war
00:23 — Intro + JP Lindsley joins
01:18 — Leaving Ukraine after four years
04:01 — Processing life outside a war zone
08:05 — Translating Ukraine for American audiences
10:36 — Russian propaganda and American politics
13:34 — The Hunter Biden narrative and Ukraine skepticism
16:25 — Winning the information war
18:22 — Russia’s major attack on Kyiv
20:18 — Ukraine’s battlefield advantages
23:25 — Why Ukraine must avoid complacency
24:08 — “The cards” debate and political messaging
26:51 — Crimea, drones, and changing warfare
31:08 — Drone dominance and military innovation
37:12 — Russia, NATO, and the Romania incident
39:22 — Concerns about future Baltic threats
41:16 — Why Kharkiv matters
45:52 — What the West can learn from Ukraine
46:58 — Closing thoughts