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Requirements for the UK’s Amphibious Forces in the Future Operating Environment
Occasional Papers, 20 November 2019Sidharth Kaushal and Jack Watling
This paper outlines the role that littoral areas will have in the Future Operating Environment and the strategic requirements that will drive the development of the littoral strike concept and the Future Commando Force.
Tags: Armed Forces, Military Sciences, Occasional Papers, Equipment and Acquisitions, Global Strategy and Commitments, UK, Defence Policy, Land Forces, Maritime Forces, UK Defence, Europe
Crossing the River by Feeling the Stones: The Trajectory of China's Maritime Transformation
Occasional Papers, 14 October 2019Sidharth Kaushal and Magdalena Markiewicz
This Occasional Paper examines China's maritime strategy by placing its contemporary evolution in context.
Tags: Armed Forces, Asia, China, Military Sciences, Occasional Papers, Equipment and Acquisitions, Maritime Forces, Military Personnel, Technology, Pacific
Sea Training: An Oft Overlooked Strategic Asset
Commentary, 11 October 2019Peter Roberts and Sidharth Kaushal
Rumours abound that the Royal Navy is to gut its globally respected Operational Sea Training organisation in order to reallocate cash across defence. It is not simply the UK’s martial reputation that would be at stake; the evidence states that operational sea training is a crucial asset on which the Royal Navy should not skimp.
Tags: Military Sciences, UK Defence Policy, UK, Defence Management, Maritime Forces, Military Personnel, National SecurityPages

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 Forces
Europe’s ‘Principled Pragmatism’ on the South China Sea
Commentary, 12 July 2016Theresa Fallon
Following the technical ruling in favour of the Philippines by the Permanent Court of Arbitration, and with China increasingly flexing its muscles in the South China Sea, the EU is trying to balance supporting the rule of law with a pragmatic desire to maintain good relations with Beijing.
Tags: China, Maritime ForcesPages

Australia’s Aegis Destroyer Will Improve its Defensive Capabilities
RUSI Defence Systems, 13 August 2018Debalina Ghoshal
The Royal Australian Navy is leveraging the latest Aegis combat system, SM-6 interceptor missiles and its new Hobart-class destroyers to limit its vulnerability to proliferating ballistic and cruise missile threats in the Indo-Pacific region. This has implications for interoperability with allies and deterrence.
Tags: RUSI Defence Systems, Maritime Forces, Pacific
Book Review: The Naval War in the Baltic 1939–1945
RUSI Journal, 19 March 2018Neil Kent
Neil Kent reviews The Naval War in the Baltic 1939–1945, by Poul Grooss.
Tags: RUSI Journal, History, Maritime Forces, Europe
UK Basing Posture Renews Naval Capability
RUSI Defence Systems, 7 March 2018James Shinnie
With new UK facilities opening in Oman and Bahrain, an examination of these future bases offers helpful insights into the shape of UK strategic international engagements post-Brexit.
Tags: The Gulf Region, RUSI Defence Systems, Maritime Forces
A Post Mortem of a Disintegrated Review
Revolutions Of War
Strengthening the UK’s National Resilience: The Tasks Ahead