@RnaudBertrand
Independent geopolitical analyst and writer
Arnaud Bertrand is a French geopolitical analyst and commentator known for his critical views on Western foreign policy, particularly regarding China, Russia, and U.S. influence. He gained prominence on Twitter (now X) through threads debunking mainstream narratives on topics like the Ukraine conflict and China's economic rise. Active since at least 2019 based on archived activity, he has built a significant following by posting detailed analyses, often challenging media outlets like The Economist. Recent activities as of September 2025 include discussions on U.S. elections, Truth Social controversies, and international interference in politics, with posts garnering thousands of views. He monetizes content via subscriptions on X and maintains a blog for longer articles.
Bertrand is a credible voice for alternative geopolitical insights, particularly in highlighting underreported angles on China and U.S. policy, supported by referenced sources and consistent posting patterns. However, his work shows clear ideological leanings that may prioritize narrative over neutrality, leading to controversies and accusations of advocacy rather than objective analysis. Overall, suitable for diverse viewpoints but requires cross-verification with multiple sources due to potential bias.
Assessment by Grok AI
Bertrand's analyses are fact-based in sourcing but often interpretive, leading to disputes over selective framing. No major fact-checks confirming outright falsehoods, but corrections have been issued in responses to critics on topics like data manipulation in economic reports. Historical credibility is mixed: praised in alternative media for exposing biases, criticized in mainstream outlets for promoting narratives aligned with Chinese state interests without disclosure.
Recent posts and claims we've fact-checked from this author
@RnaudBertrand · Oct 27
This is strange: what are the odds of the US losing both a Sea Hawk helicopter and a F/A-18F fighter jet, in the South China Sea, within half an hour of each other, during "routine operations"?
@RnaudBertrand · Oct 7
I was studying other times in history when gold prices more than doubled in the reserve currency of the time, as they did in the past year: it's rare and almost always a sign of a profound loss of confidence in the existing monetary and political order, going all the way back to the Roman empire (the so-called "Crisis of the Third Century"). And it often marked the transition from one era of power to the next: the fall of Rome, Spain's decline from world power, the French Revolution and Terror, the end of Bretton Woods, etc. Interestingly, it's often actually as much a cause as a sign of these episodes, as this is effectively a transfer of real wealth from the poor to the rich elites who protect themselves with gold - this being what ignites the political upheaval. The weird aspect of the current episode is the relative silence around it: we're witnessing what may be one of the great pivotal moments in financial history yet it's being barely discussed.