Cyber Strategy and Information Operations Working Group update

The Cyber Strategy and Information Operations Group meets every Wednesday from 15:30-17:00. It is hybrid meeting format, held in person at the Butler Room in Nuffield College (in person) and Microsoft Teams (online).

Working Group meetings explore a spread of topics concerning cyber strategy, including AI arms control, geopolitics, disinformation, cyber terrorism, and social media dynamics. The weekly sessions are led by a rotating student presenter, who will facilitate the week's discussion topic and suggest academic materials for participants to prepare in advance of the meeting. As part of the working group format, there will be opportunities for research collaboration, and group members will often share a working draft of relevant research for constructive feedback and further engagement.


Hilary Term 2022 Updates

1. Working Group Term Card (held on: Jan 26, Feb 2, Feb 16, Feb 23, Mar 9): 

In HT 2022, the Cyber Strategy and Information Operation Group will continue to run group discussions on a variety of cyber topics relevant to strategy and statecraft. Please see the attached Term Card for the tentative schedule, the topics of which will be confirmed a week in advance. Continuing from the previous term, these group discussions are open to the wider CCW community and interested researchers/postgraduate students. Discussions are led by doctoral students or occasionally professors, depending on the week, and may include working/draft papers. Preparatory materials will be sent in advance of the session, together with discussion questions for the session. Some background knowledge or experience of the topic is recommended but not required.

The Termcard can be found here.

2. New group output opportunities: 

An exciting new addition to this term will be the opportunity for group members to submit a written commentary on the week's discussion topic, which will be published on CCW's dedicated Cyber Strategy webpage. Interested members are required to attend the related group session(s) relevant to their writing topic and may write the brief in collaboration with others or individually. The short, original piece of writing (max 1000 words) should be sent to Julia Carver for review and approval, after which it may be published on the CCW website as an analytical essay.

CCW proceedings of Michaelmas term 2021

In Michaelmas term 2021, CCW sought to examine several major themes that encapsulate the changing character of war and confrontation, the two most prominent challenges for today’s statecraft and strategy. The discussions were played out against a background of three significant global developments. The first was the ongoing and evolving coronavirus pandemic. The second was the Russian build-up of conventional military forces on the Ukrainian border, amid claims from the Kremlin that they intended to prevent Kiev moving into the Western sphere. The third was China’s surprise development of a hypersonic missile capability, as well as heated rhetoric from Beijing that they intended to resolve the Taiwan question. The increase of air and maritime activity around the independent republic led to further discussions in the West about the deteriorating relationship with China and its strategic response.

Some conflicts attract fewer headlines or international interest, such as the Ethiopian civil war, the continued low intensity violence in Democratic Republic of Congo, a coup in Mali, fighting in northern Nigeria, the desultory conflict in Yemen, and the endless violent abuses by gangs, militias, and state authorities stretching from Mexico to North Korea. All of them produce that familiar and tragic cycle of civilian casualties, a culture of fear and oppression, and the desire for revenge, honour, and survival. Such conflicts seem to metaphorically mirror the global pandemic, with waves of new variants, immense human suffering, and intense efforts to mitigate the threat. Unfortunately, the devastating impact of CV19 has not passed unnoticed amongst malign actors who imagine the ways in which biology, through weaponised DNA, could be used in this century as a new generation of biological warfare.

In the UK, as in the US, considerable thought was given to the modernisation of defence to address these, and other, emerging challenges. It was assessed that climatic change would almost certainly produce new humanitarian crises. Unorthodox ways of operating by hostile states or by international terrorists were already manifest. Novel and emergent technologies demanded integration into existing systems, and, in some cases, their complete transformation. Of current interest was the question of information warfare, including the manipulation of data, news, and the electronic environment. Some perennial dilemmas remained, not least in getting government departments to work together, resolving procurement problems, allocating tight budgets, and managing public expectations.

Our first seminar session, a through, candid and professional perspective, investigated offensive or interventionist cyber. The language of cyber ‘attack’ or ‘offensive’ cyber has been a distinct problem for a facility which is largely concerned with intelligence gathering and only occasionally (and in limited duration) a tool of sabotage. There are very few cases of cyber sabotage, in open sources, that permit analysis with any hope of establishing typicality, but the range of outcomes and intentions adds further problems to our evaluations. The fear is of wholesale damage to one’s critical national infrastructure, commercial damage, or undermining confidence in democratic institutions. The reality is that crime is far more prevalent.

There are a host of demands associated with conducting cyber operations: the qualified team, time, stealth, and an up-to-date payload appropriate to its task. There is the need for a robust legal and ethical framework, as for all intelligence work, and some adroit forward planning. In terms of doctrine or concepts, some ideas of the past are inadequate, such as ‘deterrence’, but the notion of persistence (and advanced persistent threats) can be more helpful.

We then turned to review the outcomes of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan for the United Kingdom. A deeply honest appraisal exposed the real victor of the Iraq war to be Iran, and that failures in strategic leadership created problems in intelligence, stabilisation, and equipment provision. Some of these failures appear to be unresolved, even 20 years on. There were obviously some successes in these campaigns – the notion of a smart siege (of Basra), the effect of surging military forces to dampen insurgency, the relative success of ‘clear-hold-build’ counter-insurgency, the value of air mobility, and the fighting performance of British and American units. However, there were multiple errors which led to the ignominious failure in Afghanistan. There were plenty of lessons to absorb too. The pace of adaptation must be faster than one’s adversary to have any chance of retaining the initiative and achieving one’s goals. There needs to be critical challenge (a verdict from the Iraq enquiry) to overcome the assumption that the creation of a plan alone will yield success.

There are perennial problems to counter in any conflict: friction, local actors with competing agendas, the adversaries’ skills and determination, and the unpredictability of war. Yet one verdict must be that armies are designed for fighting and not for armed policing or stabilisation. Attempts to use military forces in this way was a misuse of resources, angered locals and frustrated legitimate government and non-government organisations. Special Forces were highly effective at their pursuit of selected actors, but there was often too little liaison with other areas and fields, resulting in counter-productive effects. There is a distinct reminder, from these recent conflicts, that tactics and strategy interact. But, ultimately, the utility of force needs to be aligned appropriately to the strategic demands. Too often, in Iraq and Afghanistan, it was not.

Several of our seminars examined the UK’s 2021 Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Development and Foreign Policy. We first interrogated the drive towards integration, which has been commonplace in the discourse for much of the past decade. The inspiration for this concern is the emphasis often placed on AI and ‘integrating everything’ as the next generation’s solution to its strategic and data problems.

It is natural for humans to seek a singular explanation for complex problems, and at times we forget that, as Edmund Lorenz observed, a small interaction or intervention can change a condition entirely. This is a reminder that humans, even when equipped with advanced computing cannot predict effectively, even with ever more sensors. Randomisation continually defeats efforts to forecast. In simulations, what is being predicted is based on a set of known conditions. Worse, as humans, we are conditioned to not to see certain things and we have to be trained to see and not see. By way of example, Robert McNamara was dependent on metrics in the Vietnam War. Vast data sets were accumulated. It was hard not to see that metrics were not enough, and conditioning meant that certain choices were made.

The Integrated Review (IR) took on a new significance after the fall of Afghanistan in the summer of 2021. The assertiveness of China in economic and military terms heightened the UK government’s emphasis on the Indo Pacific ‘tilt’ (a largely economic programme, but one which included the maiden deployment of its Carrier Strike Group). There was therefore an examination of the IR in practice, as well as the making of it, as an illumination on strategy making. My own paper examined the past record of defence reviews, and offered some reflections. The verdict on the result is that there was a welcome uplift in defence spending, a modernisation of the UK nuclear deterrent, a commitment to the modernisation of the armed forces, a welcome attempt to fuse policymaking, and a stronger emphasis on informational and cyber threats. As criticisms, the IR leaves the UK armed forces too small and jeopardises the notion of a credible conventional deterrent. All three services are too small while strategic command has not yet delivered on an expanded Special Forces, a digital and cyber agile force, or a modernisation programme that can match the private sector in terms of AI and other technological developments. Indeed, in some areas the lack of progress is alarming.

Another paper in the term examined the process of making the IR in much more detail, showing where there was successful collaboration, red teaming, external engagement, continuities, and where, regrettably, other agendas intervened, such as budgetary constraints, the covid pandemic, the ‘fog of governance’, and competing departments or ministers.

This theme continued, with an examination of Grand Strategy, in global and comparative terms. The paper examined the concept, the methods of conducting comparative study of grand strategies, and the prominent cases or themes (scale, resources, control). Amongst the findings, we observe that domestic politics is far more influential than often assumed. There is a combination of objective and subjective factors at work (such as ‘prestige’ and threat perception). There are goals and there are different aspirations, enduring ends, behaviours, and resources. Above all, grand strategy appears to act as a guiding thread, consciously or subconsciously, on decision making.

During the term, we examined the posture of Iran and its relations with two other actors hostile to the West, namely China and Russia. The Iranian perspective appeared to be one that assumed Russia and China are prepared to support Iran and therefore prevent the isolation of Tehran. Technology transfers are a subsidiary benefit. Yet there is very little trust between these states. Neither Russia or China have backed Tehran in international fora. While Iran is a full member of SCO, its discussions on counter-terrorism are awkward for Tehran. There are regional problems too. Many Iraqis resent the Iranian influence. Turkey backed Azerbaijan in its war with Armenia in 2020, leaving Iran without influence. Its only compensation was a dispute between Turkey and Israel, and the Gulf States. Iran continues to believe it can maintain its influence through local networks, such as support for Hezbollah. While the US withdrawal from Afghanistan has come as a relief, the Taliban may prove a difficult neighbour. Currently, Iran feels that its tactics against the Gulf States has forced them to engage in talks or disrupted them, including in Yemen.   

While the ‘security dilemma’ is well known (the more one increases security measures, the more other actors grow anxious and increase their own, forcing further measures), CCW had a presentation on dispute inflation, that is, where perceptions and emotions take over from escalation, and indeed, induce it. The paper focussed on how disputes are projected upon, extrapolated from, and made into abstractions towards escalation (such as domino theory). The exacerbating factors were domestic incentives, the security dilemma itself, a power transition (such as shifts of power to another actor), or broader climates (such as a sense of irredentism). The insights can be applied to the issue of the Senkaku islands or to the South China Sea.

Midway through the term, we had a detailed examination of space defence, investigating a variety of ASAT systems, and the various ways in which one can exercise space situational awareness. The presentation was extremely timely, given Russia’s use of an ASAT missile days beforehand, with all the resulting debris; the challenges of cataloguing debris objects; and the Chinese completion of their own global position satellite network in November 2020.

Continuing the theme of technology and its impact, another presentation examined the changing character of war and tech’, challenging the usual revolution in military affairs approach. The paper examined the impact of time, as sequencing, surges in developments, the compression of decision making, and the potential impact on time of AI (and multi-domain integration where sensors/weapons ‘talk’ to each other, potentially). The paper also evaluated the importance of space, as physical space but also as vertical space, with a greater dependence on space itself. The third area the paper explored was the changing perception of self, given the likely impact of AI on physical and cognitive human integrity. Looking to the distant future, one can foresee significant changes being incentivised in how humans enhance themselves.

From these developments, we asked: are our strategic concepts fit for the future that lies ahead? Do deterrence, compellence or a credible commitment work when a state possesses only conventional forces against an AI-enabled system? Are shaping and influence operations central to the outcomes, and how does artificial intelligence make that decisive? The solutions lie in matters such as civil-military fusion, better data management, an awareness of proliferation in AI technologies (including to non-state and hostile state actors), systems integration, legal parameters and even the motivation of soldiers and elites. Crucially, military education is now vital, and must include technical training, specialisations (just as were demanded in the 19th and 20th centuries), and combined civil-military education.

We concluded the term with the formal launch of the edited volume Military Strategy in the 21st Century. This work examines, thematically and through selected NATO countries, how military strategy is perceived and utilised, within the alliance. The volume indicates that a specifically military strategy is downplayed, and frequently misunderstood, by political leaders eager to retain maximum freedom of action, minimise the costs and burdens of defence, and preserve civil primacy over policy. The panel discussed the overarching challenges and limitations for NATO, but also the threat that the Western world now faces in contrast to the situation just a decade ago. It examined the specificity of the high north, and relations between civilian and military authorities.

The CCW Annual Lecture, much delayed by the global pandemic was very well attended and gave us the opportunity to reflect on UK defence reviews and UK foreign policy since the early 1980s. This 40 year period was marked by changes in the strategic environment, to which the UK had to respond and prepare as best it could, often with diminishing resources. Perhaps all the reviews underestimated the speed at which changes could occur, from the invasion of the Falklands in 1982 to the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union. There were sometimes bold cuts, but generally attempts to maintain the same shape of defence on a smaller budget rather than a radical shift. There were many continuities, such as membership of NATO, a nuclear deterrent, bilateral relationships, a presence in the Middle East, and steady upward costs in personnel and equipment. Criticisms can be levelled at the results. Too often service chiefs got locked into a struggle to preserve particular equipment programmes.  There was an abundance of commitments but without the commensurate increase in mass, and threats were often wrongly couched in terms that were manageable or palatable. Cyber, for example, is largely an intelligence threat, but traditional defence structures do not protect data. National resilience is given less attention than traditional expeditionary armed services even though it is a critical defence issue. This was exposed most starkly by the covid pandemic, as well as Russian threats to undersea communications cables. Moreover, China’s economic and political warfare, and its informational campaigns, now accompanied by a vast rearmament programme, appears to outmanoeuvre or dwarf the UK’s own defences. In the future, climatic and political stability challenges will take on a new significance.

In addition to the seminar series, CCW supported some other initiatives, examining the future of nuclear deterrence, information warfare courses, assisting the All Party Parliamentary Group for New Tech in Defence and Security with a new report (APPG III), and work on subthreshold threats. CCW also completed a report for the Australian Army on future warfare in December 2021, examining the future operating environment and the responses, in strategic terms and in the operational dimension. A second paper was given to the Australian security community at the ‘How Wars End’ conference. CCW offered a typology on wars, illustrating how the various categories we use are formulated, the differences in disciplinary interpretations, and their influence on how wars are concluded. Both papers will be published in 2022.

Finally, in the autumn of 2021, CCW provided insights on theories of decision and strategic thinking for the UK government, and gave a number of lectures and papers to NATO, UK defence personnel at Wilton Park, and the CENTCOM team in the United States.

Tribute must be paid to the research team of the term. There were papers and discussions on command and control for air forces, naval strategies, on cyber, and information warfare in the various research team meetings and the working group in CCW.

Taken together, the intensity of activity and the outcomes indicate just how much richness and vitality there is in CCW, and how extensive the interest in our work is within the University of Oxford and the wider community. It is also, perhaps, an indication of the seriousness and urgency of our work. Many of the issues addressed in the term’s programme are of immediate relevance and utility to those in government and the armed forces. Given the stark nature of the threats that have emerged (or re-emerged in some cases) in recent months and years, CCW continues to provide a critical role in rigorous, thoughtful, original, and in-depth analyses.

Rob Johnson cited in new Parliamentary Report

Director Rob Johnson has been cited in a new Parliamentary Report by the House of Commons Defence Committee. The report is entitled “We’re going to need a bigger Navy” and looks at how the Royal Navy is being tasked with ever more responsibility in this increasingly unstable international security environment. The report hopes to provide a realist assessment of capability against government ambition and looks at the areas in which funding is desperately needed despite defence spending caps.

The report finds that “In short, over the next five years or so, at least until the new classes of surface escorts come on stream, the Royal Navy will be asked to do even more with even less. This is a clear risk, which those beyond these shores can calculate just as readily as we can.” The report goes on to recommend greater funding, stronger domestic shipbuilding capability, collaboration with industry to keep pace with and stay ahead of technological advances, and investment into modernising shipyards.

The report can be read here.

Cyber Strategy and Information Operations Group

The Cyber Strategy and Information Operations Group meets every Wednesday from 15:30-17:00. It is hybrid meeting format, held in person at Nuffield College in person and online via Teams. Working Group meetings explore a spread of topics concerning cyber strategy, including AI arms control, geopolitics, disinformation, cyber terrorism, and social media dynamics. The weekly sessions are led by a rotating presenter, who will facilitate the week's discussion topic and suggest academic materials for participants to prepare in advance of the meeting. As part of the working group format, there will be opportunities for research collaboration, and group members will often share a working draft of relevant research for constructive feedback and further engagement. Most recently, the group has discussed the topic of disinformation: theoretical approaches, debates about measurement, effectiveness, and case studies. Next week, we will cover the related topics of Countering Disinformation and Strategic Communications undertaken by both state and non-state organizations. 

 Remaining Michaelmas schedule:

    • Wednesday, November 24: 15:30-17h - Countering Disinformation and Strategic Communications

    • Wednesday, December 1, 15:30-17h - topic TBC *

    • Wednesday, December 8, 15:30-17h - topic TBC*

*Specific topics are confirmed one week in advance, but will likely be one of the following: AI and arms control, the geopolitical dimension to cyber strategy, active measures and technological warfare, digital technologies and (cyber)terrorism. 

For further inquiries, please contact Julia Carver at julia.carver@politics.ox.ac.uk. Due to COVID guidelines, please be aware that group attendance may be limited, and it is required to contact Julia in advance for availability.

Will James writes chapter for Oxford Handbook of Grand Strategy

Dr William James has written a chapter in The Oxford Handbook of Grand Strategy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2021), which was edited by Professor Thierry Balzacq and Professor Ronald R. Krebs.

Will’s chapter is titled ‘Grand Strategy and the Challenge of Change’ and can be accessed here

Grand Strategy is a state’s “theory of victory,” explaining how the state will utilise its diverse means to advance and achieve national ends. A clearly articulated, well-defined, and relatively stable grand strategy is supposed to allow the ship of state to steer a steady course through the roiling seas of global politics. However, the obstacles to formulating and implementing grand strategy are, by all accounts, imposing. The Oxford Handbook of Grand Strategy addresses the conceptual and historical foundations, production, evolution, and future of grand strategy from a wide range of standpoints. It seven constituent sections present and critically examine the history of grand strategy, including beyond the West; six distinct theoretical approaches to the subject; the sources of grand strategy, ranging from geography and technology to domestic politics to individual psychology and culture; the instruments of grand strategy’s implementation, from military to economic to covert action; political actors’, including non-state actors’, grand strategic choices; the debatable merits of grand strategy, relative to alternatives; and the future of grand strategy, in light of challenges ranging from political polarisation to technological change to ageing populations. The result is a field-defining, interdisciplinary, and comparative text that will be a key resource for years to come.

 The book is available online here and can be purchased here

Rob Johnson wins British Army Military Book of the Year

The British Army Military Book of the Year 2021 has been won by Dr Robert Johnson for his book, 'Lawrence of Arabia on War: The Campaign in the Desert 1916-18.

The British Army Military Book of the Year (BAMBY) is a prestigious book prize, judged by a diverse panel, representing the very best military books of the previous year.

Six books were shortlisted and the top three placings were as follows:

1st: Dr Rob Johnson - Lawrence of Arabia on War: The Campaign in the Desert 1916-18.
2nd: Prof David Kilcullen - The Dragons and the Snakes: How the Rest Learned to Fight the West.
3rd: Brig (Ret'd) Ben Barry - Blood, Metal, and Dust: How Victory Turned into Defeat in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Congratulations to Rob for the well deserved recognition. Congratulations also to Ben Barry, who we were pleased to have presenting the CCW Tuesday seminar this week.

Systematic Failure: Article on Afghanistan by Rob Johnson

Systematic Failure: Afghanistan Endgame

Dr Rob Johnson

The rapid collapse of the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan provoked a welter of think tank analyses, political recriminations, and breathless media coverage, with responsibility pinned either onto the hasty manner of the United States’ withdrawal, faulty intelligence, or the alleged inadequacy of the Afghan security forces. Regardless of these assessments, the events in Afghanistan constitute a systemic failure. But it was avoidable….

Influencing the United States: is the game worth the candle for junior allies? by Will James

Dr William James has published an article with International Politics

Influencing the United States: is the game worth the candle for junior allies?

Abstract: How do junior allies seek to leverage US foreign policy to their advantage? In ‘The Big Influence of Small Allies’, Robert Keohane delineated the tactics that these states employ. Fifty years on, this paper updates and modifies Keohane’s influential article. It offers a framework for analysing the different influencing tactics: (1) bargaining; (2) direct, indirect and diaspora lobbying; and (3) political and institutional bonding. Unlike Keohane’s article, which examined influence from an American perspective, this paper explores the concept from the vantage point of junior allies. It concludes by considering avenues for future research. The paper not only contributes to the academic literature on US alliances and the concept of influence, but the findings are also pertinent to policymakers. The article demonstrates the potential benefits and drawbacks of different influencing tactics so that junior allies are clear-eyed about the promise and the pitfalls of influencing US foreign policy.

Routledge Handbook of U.S. Counterterrorism and Irregular Warfare Operations

De Rob Johnson has written a chapter in The Routledge Handbook of U.S. Counterterrorism and Irregular Warfare Operations, Edited By Michael A Sheehan, Erich Marquardt and Liam Collins, Routledge, 2021.

Rob’s chapter is titled: “The Taliban and the Modern History of Afghanistan”.

This handbook comprises essays by leading scholars and practitioners on the topic of U.S. counterterrorism and irregular warfare campaigns and operations around the globe. Terrorist groups have evolved substantially since 9/11, with the Islamic State often described as a pseudo-state, a terrorist group, and insurgency all at the same time. While researchers', analysts', and policymakers’ understanding of terrorism has grown immensely over the past two decades, similar advancements in the understanding of counterterrorism lag. As such, this handbook explains why it is necessary to take a broader view of counterterrorism which can, and often does, include irregular warfare.

The Open Access version of this book is available.

"Russia’s Understanding of War" by Andrew Foxall

Changing Character of Russia’s Understanding of War: Policy Implications for the UK and Its Allies

Dr Andrew Foxall has published a new article though CCW.

Russia’s current leaders believe their country is at war with the Euro-Atlantic, whether the countries of the Euro-Atlantic recognise this or not. This belief is deep-seated and reflects an incompatibility between how Russia views the world and how the countries of the Euro-Atlantic view the world. It is this belief that drives Russia’s hostile actions across a range of domains -including in cyberspace, in disinformation campaigns, in assassinations of its own citizens as well as foreign citizens abroad, and in attempts to destabilise countries.

CCW recognised by DPIR Impact Award

Oxford’s Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR) has recognised the work of Dr Rob Johnson and Dr Annette Idler.

The new DPIR Impact Awards celebrate how research in Politics and International Relations make a difference beyond academia. Two prize categories recognise ‘Impact Leaders’ and ‘Achieving Impact’.

The Impact Leader Award recognises a significant track record of achieving impact or a commitment to collaboration and engaged research.

CCW’s  Rob Johnson and Annette Idler are both winners in the Impact Leader award. Dr Johnson’s research project has created impact included helping to influence strategic defence education and providing analysis and tools to aid military forces in working with local actors. Dr Idler’s research has helped enhance responses to insecurity and conflict across the globe as her Conflict Platform tool is now embedded in UN practice. It has also helped inform the Colombian government’s strategy for peace in the nation’s unstable borderland regions.

The biennial awards are part of the Department’s efforts to profile impact and recognise the investment of researchers in impact activities, with each category prize fund totalling £1,000. Applications were reviewed by the Research Support Team, Research Director, Head of Department and four other reviewers including Aileen Marshall-Brown - the Social Science Division's Senior Research Impact Facilitator.

New edited volume from Rob Johnson: The World Information War

A new book edited by Robert Johnson and Tim Clack wil be published on 11 May. “The World Information War: Western Resilience, Campaigning, and Cognitive Effects” is published by Routledge. The book includes a chapter by Dr Johnson on “Information warfare: theory to practice”

This book outlines the threats from information warfare faced by the West and analyses the ways it can defend itself. Existing on a spectrum from communication to indoctrination, information can be used to undermine trust, amplify emotional resonance, and reformulate identities. The West is currently experiencing an information war, and major setbacks have included: ‘fake news’; disinformation campaigns; the manipulation of users of social media; the dissonance of hybrid warfare; and even accusations of ‘state capture’. Nevertheless, the West has begun to comprehend the reality of what is happening, and it is now in a position defend itself. In this volume, scholars, information practitioners, and military professionals define this new war and analyse its shape, scope, and direction. Collectively, they indicate how media policies, including social media, represent a form of information strategy, how information has become the ‘centre of gravity’ of operations, and why the further exploitation of data (by scale and content) by adversaries can be anticipated. For the West, being first with the truth, being skilled in cyber defence, and demonstrating virtuosity in information management are central to resilience and success.

20% Discount Available - enter code FLY21 at checkout. Code expires on 31 August 2021

Russia's Worldview by Andrew Foxall

It has been apparent since 2014, if not before, that Russia’s current leadership views the world in terms that are very different to those familiar to us in the Euro-Atlantic more than twenty-five years after the end of the Soviet Union. Seen from the Kremlin, the post-Cold War international system is illegitimate and unfair, and has been forced on the world by the West. This view was articulated most clearly in Vladimir Putin’s speech at the Munich Security Conference in 2007, and has only been reinforced by events since then.

Dr Andrew Foxall is Senior Research Fellow in Russian Strategy at the Changing Character of War (CCW) Centre at the University of Oxford. Between 2013 and 2020, he was Director of the Russia and Eurasia Studies Centre at the Henry Jackson Society. Before that, he held academic positions at Queen’s University Belfast and the University of Oxford. He holds a DPhil from the University of Oxford.

Will James article published with RUSI: "Between a Pandemic and a Hard Brexit"

William James’s article 'Between a pandemic and a hard Brexit: grand strategic thinking in an age of nationalism, renewed geopolitical competition and human insecurity', has been published in the RUSI Journal.

This essay was awarded first prize in RUSI's annual Trench Gascoigne prize.

Ministers have pledged that the UK’s Integrated Review will be driven by external threats, rather than financial pressures. This would be refreshing, but a renewed focus on ‘the other’ should not come at the expense of self-evaluation. Strategy, grand or otherwise, is about making choices. Prioritising threats is difficult without an understanding of one’s internal capabilities and vulnerabilities. In this essay, which was awarded the 2020 Trench Gascoigne Prize, William D James considers the UK’s strengths and weaknesses, as well as its external environment, in the early 2020s. The analysis suggests that some external threats would be less concerning if domestic frailties were first addressed.

Will James on Britain's 'East of Suez' Basing Strategy

William James’ article, "There and Back Again: The Fall and Rise of Britain's 'East of Suez' Basing Strategy", was published yesterday by War on the Rocks.

The essay examines the causes of the UK’s withdrawal from its major bases in the Arabian Peninsula & Southeast Asia midway through the Cold War. It also draws out the lessons for current policymakers in London who are charting a "return" East of Suez.

Many of the ideas & findings in the essay are explored at greater length in Will’s recent article for the European Journal of International Security: "Global Britain's strategic problem East of Suez". 

"Winning Wars" published with chapter from Rob Johnson

In December 2020, the volume Winning Wars was published in the US through Casemate, and it is due to be published in the UK next month. Rob Johnson contributed a chapter: ‘'Winning’' in the World Wars. The British Conception of the War-Time Leaders David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, 1914–1945 

Former CCW Director, Sir Hew Strachan wrote the introduction.