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defence
Books & Arts
The father of “soft power”
Graeme Dobell
28 March 2024
An eighty-year retrospective from the American academic who changed the way nations attract and argue
National Affairs
Spiky questions remain for AUKUS proponents
Sam Roggeveen
19 March 2024
There is an alternative, but the debate looks like taking some time to shift
National Affairs
Is security trumping democracy?
Richard Robison and Garry Rodan
8 September 2023
Australia’s foreign policy is falling victim to domestic conflicts between conservatism and social democracy
Books & Arts
Spiky questions about the US alliance
Hamish McDonald
26 August 2023
A seasoned analyst outlines the strategy Australia should have debated before the latest bout of defence spending
National Affairs
Quad erat demonstrandum?
Hamish McDonald
31 July 2023
A group of Japanese foreign policy experts has a message for the Australian government
National Affairs
A pause in the thaw?
Hamish McDonald
27 June 2023
Signs suggest the warming of Australia–China relations has slowed to a glacial pace
Books & Arts
Fire, ash and official secrecy
Graeme Dobell
5 June 2023
The authorised history of Australia’s role in East Timor’s 1999–2000 crisis reveals as much about Canberra as it does about Dili
National Affairs
Pink gin diplomacy
Hamish McDonald
4 May 2023
The government’s strategic review has left the commentariat puzzled
National Affairs
Torpedoes ahead!
Hamish McDonald
14 March 2023
The AUKUS submarine announcement has immediately raised thorny questions about cost, timing and design
National Affairs
Time to rethink the Morrison doctrine
Hamish McDonald
19 January 2023
Of all Scott Morrison’s poorly conceived initiatives, why has Labor stuck with AUKUS and its nuclear-powered submarines?
National Affairs
Why an invasion of Taiwan would fail
John Quiggin
14 September 2022
Russia’s disastrous miscalculations in Ukraine show why an invasion of Taiwan would be a grave mistake
Essays & Reportage
Diplomacy on the defensive
Hamish McDonald
7 September 2022
Has the Australian Strategic Policy Institute been pushed off course by the China hawks?
National Affairs
Going nuclear
Nicholas Stuart
23 September 2021
The AUKUS alliance represents a dramatic step away from multilateral diplomacy. Or is it a first step towards an independent nuclear deterrent?
National Affairs
Signing up
Hamish McDonald
19 September 2021
Has Australia committed itself to going to war over Taiwan? (And other awkward questions about this week’s submarine switch)
From the archive
The accidental senator
Hamish McDonald
20 August 2021
An independent from South Australia is exerting outsized influence in Canberra
National Affairs
The best form of defence?
Hamish McDonald
9 July 2021
Being an effective defence minister will require much more than Peter Dutton’s impulse to hang tough
National Affairs
China’s gift to transparency campaigners
James Panichi
7 May 2021
Foreign influence laws are highlighting the shortcomings of Australia’s rules for lobbyists
National Affairs
Is China’s claim to Taiwan approaching its end game?
Hamish McDonald
30 April 2021
And what would that mean for Australia?
National Affairs
Winging it to Japan
Hamish McDonald
18 November 2020
A new defence agreement with Japan raises as many questions as it answers
National Affairs
Weighing the costs of war
Paul Barratt
12 November 2020
With the federal government appointing a special war crimes prosecutor, it’s time to confront broader questions about armed interventions
Books & Arts
Carrying on till she’s carried out
Graeme Dobell
27 October 2020
Books
| Silence may be golden, says Madeleine Albright, but it won’t win many arguments
International
No cherry on Japan’s cake
Hamish McDonald
9 September 2020
The Japanese defence minister’s aspiration to join the Five Eyes agreement is seen as too far, too fast among members
National Affairs
Raising the price of war
Adam Triggs
6 July 2020
The government should focus less on war preparation and more on war prevention
National Affairs
Australia’s soft-power gap
Paul Barratt
2 July 2020
The launch of two new defence reports highlights the government’s preoccupation with military force and the American alliance
Books & Arts
In plain sight
Hamish McDonald
24 June 2020
Books
| Is Beijing really waging a successful war against the West?
Books & Arts
War by other means
Tom Uren
28 April 2020
Books
|
The Hacker and the State
vividly describes the growing importance of cyber operations in nation armouries
Books & Arts
The heart of a reconnected world
Graeme Dobell
23 March 2020
Books
| How the Asia-Pacific became the Indo-Pacific, with a brief stop-off in the Asian century
International
Doomsday postponed
Andy Butfoy
13 March 2020
Did a fifty-year-old treaty really increase the possibility of nuclear war?
International
The paradox of the People’s Liberation Army
Kerry Brown and Sophie Wushuang Yi
4 December 2019
Tightly controlled and generously funded, the PLA hasn’t seen battle overseas since 1979
National Affairs
China’s postmodern experiment
Hamish McDonald
3 September 2019
Xi Jinping’s strategy has become clearer, and it needs a more sophisticated response from the West
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