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Malaysia’s response to the latest South China Sea standoff shows a small state practising astute grand strategy.
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Towards a New Arctic: Changing Strategic Geography in the GIUK Gap
RUSI Journal, 27 May 2020Rebecca Pincus
The Arctic is increasingly linked to North Atlantic security issues.
Tags: RUSI Journal, UK Integrated Review 2021, US Defence Policy, NATO, Americas, Defence Policy, Climate Security, International Institutions, Maritime Forces, Europe
Artificial Intelligence, Drone Swarming and Escalation Risks in Future Warfare
RUSI Journal, 16 April 2020James Johnson
Artificial intelligence on the battlefield challenges key assumptions which underpin military planning.
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What Rivals Will Britain’s New T31e Corvette be Facing?
Commentary, 8 September 2017Peter Roberts
The launch this week of Britain’s national shipbuilding strategy, with an order of five vessels to be designed and built in English shipyards, sees the UK’s aspiration to compete in the global warship export market.
Tags: Defence Spending, UK, Maritime Forces, UK Defence, Europe
Is Sir John Parker Advocating a Snatch Land Rover for the Royal Navy?
Commentary, 1 March 2017Peter Roberts
The chairman of the independent review into Britain’s National Ship Building Strategy is advocating a ‘cheap and cheerful’ Royal Navy. However, Sir John Parker is unlikely to face action on the unsuitable ships he is proposing.
Tags: Defence Spending, UK, Maritime Forces, UK Defence, Europe
US Navy’s Unmanned Warfare Systems Office Went Swimmingly
Commentary, 10 February 2017Peter Roberts
The deputy commander of the US Navy, Admiral Bill Moran, has announced that its thinking on unmanned systems had changed. The systems now no longer needed their own separate office and its areas of interest and responsibilities would now be absorbed within existing structures. It’s the American way.
Tags: United States, US Defence Policy, Americas, Maritime Forces, TechnologyPages

China as an Atlantic Naval Power
RUSI Journal, 18 December 2019Ryan D Martinson
China has shown an interest in extending its reach to the Atlantic Ocean.
Tags: China, RUSI Journal, Maritime Forces
Novel Concepts for Amphibious Force Resupply
RUSI Defence Systems, 28 June 2019George Galdorisi
The United States continues to place a premium on amphibious forces as part of its global response capabilities. Unmanned surface vessels have recently been tested which offer a significant advance in the ability of amphibious forces to conduct important ship-shore resupply from standoff distances
Tags: Equipment and Acquisitions, RUSI Defence Systems, Maritime Forces
Mackinder, Spykman and the Geopolitical Significance of Ballistic Missile Defence
RUSI Newsbrief, 8 February 2019Peter Roberts and Sidharth Kaushal
As missile defence becomes a central feature of many states’ security postures, it is attendant to frame the enterprise in a wider strategic context to understand its importance. The classic geopolitical dichotomy between Heartland and Rimland states outlined by Halford Mackinder and Nicholas Spykman might help us understand the geopolitical significance of global allied missile defences.
Tags: Military Sciences, RUSI Newsbrief, Global Strategy and Commitments, Maritime Forces
The Politics of UK Accession to Pacific Free Trade Club
Rose Roth, language and youth
Failure to Lift Off: The UK’s Space Launch Ambitions