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European Security and Defence Co-operation
RUSI Journal, 18 June 2004Defence Policy, International Institutions
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Simon Chelton
The UK and Japan are investing again in a relationship that brings mutual benefit to the security and defence of both nations
Tags: RUSI Journal, Defence Policy, Domestic Security, Global Security IssuesSteve Chisnall
Fresh thinking, which combines both accurate reflection on and articulation of the challenges facing air power, is needed now more than ever.
Tags: Aerospace, RUSI Journal, Defence PolicyMark Clegg
Has the increased prominence of force protection in UK political debates in the past decade resulted in a strategic cultural shift?
Tags: RUSI Journal, Defence Policy, Military Personnel, TerrorismThe Netherlands will also pursue international solutions from the outset – more so than in the past... international co-operation is the only way to increase the low returns on the sum of European defence expenditure.
Tags: RUSI Journal, International InstitutionsPost 9/11 NATO initiated a transformation process that would have profound consequences for its role as a collective defence organization, including its relations with the United Nations’ system of collective security.
Tags: RUSI Journal, International InstitutionsAlliances are less weighty, less solid than in the past. There is little point in bemoaning the fact: NATO is a product of our liquid times.
Tags: RUSI Journal, International Institutions
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