You are here
- Home
- Publications
- RUSI Journal
- Volume: 163
- No: 5
- Book Review: The Spy and the Traitor: The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War
Book Review: The Spy and the Traitor: The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War
Gill BennettRUSI Journal, 6 December 2018
Russia, UK
Continue Reading
Become A Member
To access the full text of this article and many other benefits, become a RUSI member.
Support Rusi Research
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Related

The Structural Bias for Sanctions
RUSI Newsbrief, 19 March 2021Steven Mann
Sanctions have become a preferred arm of statecraft, especially in Washington. Reasons for this include the West’s confusion in confronting new forms of Russian aggression and the fact that economic sanctions shift the implementation cost from the public to the private sector.
Tags: Sanctions, United States, RUSI Newsbrief, Russia
The UK’s Integrated Review: Seeing Through a Glass Darkly
Commentary, 18 March 2021Paul O'Neill
The UK looks at itself and sees only what it wants to see.
Tags: Military Sciences, UK Integrated Review 2021, UK
Going Ballistic: The UK’s Proposed Nuclear Build-up
Commentary, 16 March 2021Tom Plant and Matthew Harries
The most significant change in the UK’s nuclear posture in decades is controversial and has still not been properly debated in parliament.
Tags: Proliferation and Nuclear Policy, UK Integrated Review 2021, UKPages

Human Trafficking: The UK Needs to Improve Its Response
Commentary, 10 March 2021Keith Ditcham and Iisa Kosonen
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that the UK violated its international obligations to protect the victims of slavery and forced labour.
Tags: Organised Crime and Policing, UK, Law and Ethics
Diversity in the UK's Intelligence Agencies
Commentary, 5 March 2021Daniel Lomas
The UK’s intelligence agencies have been criticised for not reflecting the ‘makeup of modern Britain’. But significant improvements have been made.
Tags: UK, Intelligence
New UK Government Initiative to Support High-Risk, High-Reward Military Science Needs Refinement
Commentary, 4 March 2021Trevor Taylor and Rebecca Lucas
The initiative is clearly inspired by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, but the devil will be in the detail.
Tags: Defence, Industries and Society, Defence Spending, UK, TechnologyPages

Strengthening UK Support for Gender-Responsive, People-Centred Peacekeeping in Africa
RUSI Journal, 3 December 2020Georgina Holmes
The UK can play an important role in supporting the development of best practice in peacekeeping throughout Africa.
Tags: RUSI Journal, UK Integrated Review 2021, UK, Peacekeeping and Peacebuilding, Africa
Investigating the Information Commissioner’s Office: Is It Fit for Purpose?
RUSI Newsbrief, 13 November 2020Anjuli Shere and Miranda Melcher
The power and independence of the Information Commissioner’s Office appear to have been overstated. Downing Street has built-in oversight of funds and coronavirus data is not being protected.
Tags: RUSI Newsbrief, Coronavirus, UK, Information
Assessing the Options for Modernising the UK’s Heavy Armour
RUSI Newsbrief, 6 November 2020Jack Watling and Nick Reynolds
The UK has two options for modernising its armour: developing a Challenger 3 or procuring Leopard 2. The latter is an assured capability that will likely prove cheaper over the life of the programme. The former is risky but offers the UK an opportunity to develop valuable intellectual property.
Tags: Military Sciences, RUSI Newsbrief, Equipment and Acquisitions, UKPages

RUSI–The First Sea Lord's Sea Power Conference 2018
Conference, 24 May 2018The conference examined the opportunities and challenges involved in human-machine combat teaming for naval warfare in the future.
Tags: Military Sciences, UK, Maritime Forces, Technology
Services' Family Accommodation: The Home Front
Events, 19 April 2018This event will examine the Ministry of Defence’s Future Accommodation Model and the drivers for Service families’ accommodation provision.
Tags: Defence, Industries and Society, UK, Defence Management
Transatlantic Traumas: A discussion with Professor Stanley R. Sloan on the future of the West
Events, 16 April 2018Professor Stanley R. Sloan will discuss his latest book, Transatlantic traumas: Has illiberalism brought the West to the brink of collapse?, which examines the external threats and internal...
Tags: RUSI International, United States, Americas, Russia, UK, Global Security Issues
A Post Mortem of a Disintegrated Review
Revolutions Of War
Strengthening the UK’s National Resilience: The Tasks Ahead