Mr Hannigan has spent much of his career in national security, having recently been director of GCHQ, the UK's largest intelligence and security agency. He was also a member of the National Security Council.

Mr Hannigan has spent much of his career in national security, having recently been director of GCHQ, the UK's largest intelligence and security agency. He was also a member of the National Security Council.
Neil Latham
The increasing size and international character of many defence companies and the growing development of dual use technologies for both military and civil purposes poses a number of important questions: does defence industry have a distinct identity; if so, what are its defining features; to what extent does a country need a defence industry; and how should governments interact with defence...
Tags: Defence, Industries and Society, UK Defence Policy, Whitehall Papers, Equipment and Acquisitions, UK, Defence Management, Defence Policy, Technology, UK Defence, EuropeKeith Hayward
The UK, the US and Europe are considering options in a number of key aspects of military space, and the time is therefore ripe to analyse the considerable British experience of military space and to examine the options facing a British government in this vital area of defence technology.
Tags: Aerospace, Air Power and Technology, Whitehall Papers, UK, Technology, EuropeMary FitzGerald
Why study Russian views on the new ‘revolution in military affairs’ (RMA)? First, Operation Desert Storm signalled the advent of a dramatic metamorphosis in warfare. Like its Soviet predecessor, the Russian military views RMA as the nucleus of future warfare.
Tags: Aerospace, Air Power and Technology, Land Operations, Military Sciences, Whitehall Papers, Russia, Defence Policy, Land Forces, Technology, Europe
New Zealand's Indo-Pacific Recalibration
The Budding Alliance Between Lockdown Critics and the Far-Right in Germany
FCAS: Is the Franco-German-Spanish Combat Air Programme Really in Trouble?