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Taiwan’s Interest in Aegis Warships: Would They Make Operational Sense During Cross-Strait Hostilities?
RUSI Defence Systems, 31 October 2016Ben Wan Beng Ho and Shang-Su Wu
Taiwan has unveiled a $15-billion indigenous naval shipbuilding plan that seeks to wean the Republic of China Navy (RoCN) off foreign acquisitions and deliver twelve new platform initiatives between 2017 and 2040. Particularly eye-catching amongst these programmes is the idea of an Aegis warship
Tags: China, RUSI Defence Systems, Maritime Forces
Russia and Japan: Wrong Premise, Unrealistic Expectations
Commentary, 20 October 2016Jonathan Eyal
Japan is putting too much faith in its ability to woo Russia. Tokyo will be disappointed, since its strategy is both erratically pursued, and fundamentally unrealistic.
Tags: China, RUSI International, Japan, Russia, Global Security Issues, Maritime Forces, Pacific
What's Behind the Sino-Russian Exercises in the South China Sea?
Commentary, 22 September 2016Sarah Lain and Veerle Nouwens
Recent Sino–Russian naval drills in the South China Sea were touted by both states as an example of an alignment in each side’s interests. But the reality is more modest, as the two powers carefully balance the strategic advantages and liabilities of their relationship.
Tags: China, International Security Studies, Maritime ForcesPages

The UK’s Independent Strategic Nuclear Deterrent and the White Paper
Commentary, 4 December 2006The Significance of the White Paper Today’s White Paper constitutes the most comprehensive and open official review of the UK’s nuclear deterrence policy, posture and capability since the end of the Cold War. Presentation of Government plans for the future of the UK’s independent strategic deterrent in this depth is not only important for a full Parliamentary debate over the...
Tags: Defence Policy, Global Security Issues, Maritime Forces, Europe
Factors Contributing to the Trident Decision
Commentary, 2 August 2006The controversy surrounding the UK’s nuclear deterrent continues with the publication in June 2006 of the House of Commons Defence Committee’s report The Future of the UK’s Strategic Nuclear Deterrent: the Strategic Context. The report is published amidst fresh debate ignited by Chancellor Gordon Brown’s recent statement that the UK will stay strong in its commitment to...
Tags: Defence Policy, Global Security Issues, Maritime Forces, Europe
Power Growth in Naval Surface Combatants
Commentary, 18 October 2005Installed power on naval surface combatants has steadily grown over the past few decades. The principal reasons for this are two fold: ships have got larger and faster, and ships have more power demanding mission-systems. This paper examines the technical drivers behind the trends.
Tags: Maritime Forces, Technology, EuropePages

The Shadow over the Indian Navy: Accidents and Equipment Gaps
RUSI Newsbrief, 2 July 2014Despite renewed attention to its blue-water capabilities, the Indian Navy continues to be plagued by a poor safety record and structural weakness in its leadership
Tags: RUSI Newsbrief, Maritime Forces
Mass versus Technology: The Littoral Combat Ship
RUSI Newsbrief, 2 July 2014Cuts to the US Navy's littoral combat ship programme have reignited the longstanding debate over mass versus technology in naval combat doctrine
Tags: RUSI Newsbrief, Maritime Forces, Technology
Sea Power is Benign Power: The International Case for a Maritime Posture
RUSI Journal, 30 June 2014David Blagden
International-relations theory suggests the UK should return to the less aggressive, maritime-focused strategy of offshore balancing
Tags: RUSI Journal, UK, Maritime Forces, UK Defence, Europe
Dependent Deterrent? US Support for the UK’s New Nuclear Warhead
New Zealand's Indo-Pacific Recalibration
The Budding Alliance Between Lockdown Critics and the Far-Right in Germany