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Dec 2006, Vol. 151, No. 6
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RUSI Journal

The RUSI Journal is the leading publication of the Institute. First published in 1857, it is now an internationally-recognized authority on defence and security issues.
Issue: Dec 2006, Vol. 151, No. 6
Shazad TanweerTransnational Terrorism: Defeating the Threat There is no path in reason or logic which connects disagreeing with military action against Saddam Hussein and setting out deliberately to kill civilians argues the UK Foreign Secretary.
Margaret Beckett
Information Operations MalayaLearning about Counter-Insurgency There is nothing new about insurgency – the nineteenth and twentieth centuries provide plenty of examples of this type of warfare – and, therefore, no shortage of opportunities to learn lessons. Given the latest case-study in Iraq and Afghanistan, what more can we learn?
John Kiszely
Afghan and US ArmyThe Lead Nation Approach: The Case of Afghanistan This case study focuses on security sector reform (SSR) in post-conflict Afghanistan, a process driven by foreign actors with insufficient co-ordination, domestic ownership and local capacitybuilding.
Emma Sky
Means DiagramThe Command, Leadership and Management Challenges of Contemporary Multinational Command Based on experience in Afghanstan, this article outlines the command, leadership and management skills necessary at the operational theatre level.
Roger Lane
British forces in IraqCIMIC in Iraq An Analysis of British-led Peace Support Operation in Iraq.
Louise Heywood
Private Security in IraqPrivate Security Companies in an Insecure World Private Security Companies operate in a changing context: from a situation of relative security to insecurity and a progressive mosaicization of a society.
Jeremy Greenstock
TridentTrident – The Balance of Costs and Benefits As we come to the end of a procurement cycle, this is the first real opportunity to address Britain's nuclear deterrent since the post-Suez Defence Review in 1957.
Michael MccGwire
Colonel Qadaffi (Gadaffi)Libya’s Nuclear Turnaround What Lies Beneath? Was Libya’s nuclear turnaround the result of multilateral negotiations, increasingly robust counter-proliferation measures, or domestic developments?
Målfrid Braut-Hegghammer
NATO FlagNATO Missile Defence: The Political and Operational Case for a Two-Base Structure Missile defence is now central to the security relationship between Europe and the United States, and NATO’s raison d’être. A European debate on BMD is overdue. This article is intended to help initiate such a debate.
Stephan Frühling and Svenja Sinjen
EU flagEU-Battlegroups: Some New Capabilities, Actually The concept of the EU Battlegroup has developed with unusual speed and the somewhat unorthodox solutions to the multilateral arrangements for some of them are distinctly new.
Niklas Granholm
Lord Nelson 1791Pursuing Nelson Author Roger Knight outlines the challenges of assembling a fully referenced biography of the Trafalgar hero.
Roger Knight
T E LawrenceReassessing T.E. Lawrence: Architect of a Guerrilla Campaign? Contrary to popular belief, T. E. Lawrence was not instrumental in the Arab revolt of 1916.
Tom Hill
Maritime Conference 2006The Royal Navy and the Indian Ocean Region since 1945 An understanding of Britain’s traditional role in the Indian Ocean region goes a long way to explaining the current situation in which British forces are regularly deployed east of Suez in order to perform a whole range of maritime tasks.
Ashley Jackson
Letters First World War pardons: the debate