

Tom Ascott was previously the Digital Communications Manager at the Royal United Services Institute before leaving in February 2021. In... read more
Sneha Dawda
This Occasional Paper examines national cyber security strategies from around the world and identifies six recurring policy challenges to be considered when building a national cyber strategy.
Tags: Cyber Security, UK Integrated Review 2021, Occasional Papers, Information, TechnologyMalcolm Chalmers
The G7 summit this year is a key opportunity to reassert the importance of Western unity in international affairs. Here is an outline of how this could be done.
Tags: UKTony Comer
Enigma was broken at Bletchley Park because of the Polish decision in 1939 to share all they knew. That led to a radical transformation of British signals intelligence.
Tags: UK, History, IntelligenceWalter Ladwig
The UK and India are getting closer. But some of the key building blocks of the relationship still need to be laid.
Tags: UK Integrated Review 2021, India, UKDavid Hannay
The passing of the British diplomat who played a key role in the establishment of the UN is an apt moment to reflect on the condition of the organisation and the future of its peacekeeping operations.
Tags: United Nations, UKVuk Vuksanovic
Get ready for a new development: Chinese weapons systems in Europe.
Tags: Aerospace, China, Global Security Issues, Technology, EuropeAndrew Cainey and Veerle Nouwens
As the UK formulates its post-Brexit relationship with China, one key policy question is how to develop the bilateral commercial relationship most effectively. This requires not just an understanding of the business opportunities, but also of the political and foreign policy backdrop to UK–China relations.
Tags: China, International Security Studies, RUSI Newsbrief, UKBen Freeman and Tarun Krishnakumar
As it seeks to develop a transparency-based registration framework to counter foreign influence activities, the UK can learn from the rich experience of the US and the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
Tags: United States, RUSI Newsbrief, UK, Domestic Security, Law and EthicsStephen Watts
Stephen Watts reviews Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict, by Eli Berman, Joseph H Felter and Jacob N Shapiro.
Tags: RUSI Journal, Counterinsurgency, IntelligenceGeneral Sir Nicholas Carter, Chief of the General Staff, elaborates on some of the increasingly real threats that pose a risk to the UK’s way of life. He considers the implications of the evolving...
Tags: UK, Defence Policy, Land Forces, Military PersonnelCountering Money Laundering in an Evolving Technological Landscape
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies, AML/CTF, TechnologyArtificial intelligence (AI) will play a transformative role in the twenty-first century human experience – including conflict. What role exactly remains to be seen, yet we have already had a glimpse...
Tags: Cyber, Information, Law and Ethics, Technology
International Women’s Day: The Tasks Ahead
Diversity in the UK's Intelligence Agencies
Financing Right-Wing Extremism and Terrorism