POPULARITY
➡️ Watch the full interview ad-free, join a community of geopolitics enthusiasts and gain access to exclusive content on PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/DecodingGeopolitics➡️ Full Nigel's report: https://www.iiss.org/research-paper/2026/05/the-coming-crisis-in-russias-political-economy/➡️ Sign up to my free geopolitics newsletter: https://stationzero.substack.com/This is a conversation with Nigel Gould Davis - a Senior Fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the IISS. Nigel recently published a really interesting report about why Russia's war, on its present course, has reached a breaking point - when it is no longer economically and demographically sustainable. What Nigel argues is that this will almost inevitably result in a major crisis, both political and financial, that is about to hit Russia within about a year from now - and why in order to keep fighting, the Kremlin will be forced to strip away the last freedoms Russians have and drag the country back toward a Soviet-style governance and economy, with all the social upheaval that it would bring. It's a fascinating analysis that follows a clear logic and a chain of events - and it's definitely worth listening to.
Robert Ward speaks with Japan's Minister of Defense, Koizumi Shinjiro, on the sidelines of the 23rd IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. In this special episode of Japan Memo, Minister Koizumi discusses his impressions of the Dialogue and reflects on what Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's speech means for Japan and for the US—Japan Alliance.Together, they explore:● Minister Koizumi's impressions of the Shangri-La Dialogue;● the highlights of Secretary Hegseth's address and its implications for Japan;● Japan's defence-industrial cooperation with Indo-Pacific partners.We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org.Date recorded: 30 May 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward speaks with Professor Jimbo Ken – Managing Director of the International House of Japan, President of the Asia Pacific Initiative and Professor at the Faculty of Policy Management at Keio University – for a wide-ranging analysis of the 23rd IISS Shangri-La Dialogue. This special edition of Japan Memo offers timely and in-depth analysis of the key themes and moments from this year's Dialogue.Together, they explore:● the overall strategic picture from this year's Dialogue;● US Secretary of Defense Hegseth's speech: Taiwan, China, and shifts in tone from 2025;● Minister Koizumi's address in English and its strategic significance;● the state of Japan–China relations and counter-narratives on ‘new militarism';● Japan–Southeast Asia relations and Japan's role in upholding regional order.We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org.Date recorded: 31 May 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Immunization Information Systems, or IISs, quietly power much of the nation's vaccination infrastructure helping clinicians track patient immunizations, supporting outbreak response, and guiding public health decision-making. But policies governing these systems vary widely across states, shaping how complete and effective the data can be. ASTHO's Senior Director of State Health Policy, Andy Baker-White, tells why IISs are essential to modern public health, how opt-in versus opt-out policies affect vaccine data completeness, and what lawmakers, providers, and the public should understand as policy debates continue. Immunization Information Systems: Policy Trends and Opportunities | ASTHOBridging Systems: How Guam is Improving Infectious Disease Response Through Collaboration | ASTHOPrepared Together: Public Health Collaboration in Response to a Botulism Outbreak
VOV1 - Lần đầu tiên tham dự và có bài phát biểu dẫn đề quan trọng tại Đối thoại Shangri-La - diễn đàn an ninh hàng đầu châu Á, Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm đã nhận được đánh giá tích cực từ bạn bè quốc tế.Đánh giá cao bài phát biểu đề dẫn đầy cảm hứng của Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm tại Đối thoại Shangri-La, Tổng thư ký ASEAN Kao Kim Hourn nhận định, bài phát biểu đã phát đi thông điệp chính trị rất rõ ràng, rằng tất cả các quốc gia cần chung tay giải quyết những thách thức và khủng hoảng hiện nay.Trong đó, trọng tâm là việc tháo gỡ cuộc khủng hoảng về niềm tin chiến lược và trật tự quốc tế, đồng thời thúc đẩy vai trò trung tâm của ASEAN trong việc giải quyết các vấn đề khu vực và toàn cầu. Đặc biệt, vị thế và đóng góp của Việt Nam đã được nhấn mạnh một cách nổi bật:“Tôi nghĩ vai trò của Việt Nam là không thể thiếu đối với hòa bình, an ninh và sự ổn định của khu vực. Đóng góp này càng quan trọng khi chúng ta vừa theo đuổi mục tiêu thịnh vượng, vừa phải giải quyết các thách thức mới nổi, đặc biệt là cuộc khủng hoảng năng lượng hiện nay.”Đồng quan điểm trên, Tiến sĩ Bastian Giegerich, Tổng Giám đốc kiêm Giám đốc Điều hành Viện Nghiên cứu Chiến lược Quốc tế (IISS), cho rằng bài phát biểu của Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm diễn ra vào thời điểm cục diện khu vực và thế giới đang đối mặt với nhiều biến động khó lường.Theo ông, Việt Nam đang vươn lên mạnh mẽ như một chủ thể chiến lược. Vì vậy, cộng đồng quốc tế đều rất quan tâm và mong muốn tìm hiểu phương thức Việt Nam hợp tác cùng các đối tác để duy trì sự ổn định, an ninh và thịnh vượng tại châu Á - Thái Bình Dương cũng như trên thế giới. Tiến sĩ Bastian Giegerich nhấn mạnh thêm:"Việc Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm đảm nhiệm đồng thời hai trọng trách cao nhất đã tạo nên một vị thế chính trị cực kỳ mạnh mẽ. Đây là nền tảng vững chắc để định hình và đưa ra những quyết sách đối ngoại, an ninh mang tính chiến lược, nâng tầm vóc mới cho Việt Nam. Trong bối cảnh đó, bài phát biểu tại Đối thoại Shangri-La chính là dấu mốc quan trọng để tiếp tục cụ thể hóa những mục tiêu toàn cầu của đất nước dưới sự lãnh đạo của Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm.”Tổng Giám đốc IISS nhắc nhớ cột mốc Việt Nam vừa kỷ niệm 30 năm gia nhập ASEAN (1995 - 2025). Một trong những dấu ấn ngoại giao quốc phòng nổi bật chính là việc Việt Nam, trên cương vị Chủ tịch ASEAN 2010, đã khởi xướng thành công cơ chế Hội nghị Bộ trưởng Quốc phòng ASEAN mở rộng (ADMM+).Chính những thành tựu đó đã và đang giúp Việt Nam củng cố vững chắc niềm tin, nhận được sự ủng hộ rộng rãi không chỉ từ các quốc gia thành viên ASEAN mà còn từ các cường quốc hàng đầu thế giới./.Ngọc Diệp-Phương HoaTổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm phát biểu đề dẫn tại Đối thoại Shangri-La lần thứ 23 năm 2026.
VOV1 - Đối thoại Shangri-La lần thứ 23 tại Singapore có ý nghĩa đặc biệt khi lần đầu tiên, Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm có bài phát biểu đề dẫn quan trọng - không chỉ là một dấu mốc ngoại giao đa phương, mà còn là sự khẳng định mạnh mẽ về một Việt Nam: Tự tin, chủ động, kiến tạo hoà bình.Đối thoại Shangri-La ra đời từ năm 2002 đến nay được đánh giá là diễn đàn an ninh - quốc phòng hàng đầu châu Á, do Viện Nghiên cứu Chiến lược Quốc tế (IISS) tổ chức thường niên, quy tụ hàng trăm đại biểu là lãnh đạo, quan chức cấp cao, chuyên gia trên khắp thế giới. Trong một thế giới 2026 đầy biến động, Đối thoại Shangri-La lần thứ 23 diễn ra bắt đầu từ hôm nay - 29/5 cho đến ngày 31/5 tại Singapore, không chỉ là nơi các nước quảng bá tầm nhìn chiến lược, cùng thảo luận những thách thức an ninh cấp bách; mà còn là cơ hội cho những quốc gia muốn đóng góp tiếng nói trách nhiệm vì hòa bình - trong đó có Việt Nam!Sự kiện năm nay có ý nghĩa đặc biệt khi lần đầu tiên, Tổng Bí thư, Chủ tịch nước Tô Lâm tham dự và có bài phát biểu đề dẫn quan trọng. Đây không chỉ là một dấu mốc ngoại giao đa phương, mà còn là sự khẳng định mạnh mẽ về một Việt Nam trong tâm thế mới: Tự tin, chủ động, kiến tạo hoà bình khu vực và toàn cầu.Đối thoại Shangri-La 2026 sẽ diễn ra tại Singapore. Ảnh: Reuters
With Ayatollah Khamenei's demise occurring hours into the war, the West anticipated a collapse of the Iranian regime and a popular uprising that never came to be. Is a ‘memorandum of understanding' the only thing preventing total escalation in the region? In this episode of One Decision, former MI6 Chief Sir Richard Dearlove and co-host journalist Kate McCann sit down with John Raine, Senior Adviser for Geopolitical Due Diligence for the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), to analyze the ripple effects of the war in Iran and what it will take to stabilize the Middle East. What is keeping a comprehensive peace deal off the table? How did Western intelligence miscalculate the IRGC's resilience? And where does this leave the rest of the Middle East? We also break down China's pledge to support Cuba's sovereignty, the 75th anniversary of the Cambridge Five espionage scandal, and the latest in the war in Ukraine, including China's role in training Russian soldiers and the opening of a museum in North Korea that memorializes the North Korean losses in the war. In this episode: 1:07 – Iran, Israel & Trump: The Middle East Crisis Explained 2:52 – Cuba, China, and US Spheres of Influence 6:23 – Cambridge Five: Cold War Spy Scandal Revisited 9:51 – Russia, North Korea, and Ukraine War Shifting 13:26 – Iran War: MOU vs. Formal Peace Deal Explained 16:55 – Why a Comprehensive Iran Deal Remains Out of Reach 22:41 – IRGC Resilience: How Iran's Regime Survived 29:08 – Who Has Influence Over Iran's IRGC? 33:51 – Israel's Military Objectives and Netanyahu's Agenda 39:36 – Gulf States' Vulnerability and Abraham Accords Future 45:26 – How Does the Iran Conflict End? Three Scenarios 49:47 – Sir Richard and Kate Discussion Hosted by Sir Richard Dearlove (former MI6 Chief) and journalist Kate McCann (Political Editor at Times Radio). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On today's Strategy Series program, sponsored by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Nigel Inkster, a former director of operations and intelligence at Britain's Secret Intelligence Service who is now a senior adviser for Cyber Security and China at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian to review President Trump's summit meeting with Xi Jinping last week and what to expect from the Chinese leader's meeting with Vladimir Putin this week in Beijing; the implications of Trump executing his “grand bargain” that trades Taiwan for stability in the Indo-Pacific; whether Washington's mixed messages and depleted arsenal increases the prospect of conflict; the lessons Beijing has taken from US actions in Venezuela and Iran; how Beijing is capitalizing on the Washington's focused efforts to shatter the rules-based order created in the wake of World War II to prevent another global conflict; the dissolution of that rules-based order and whether Beijing has the will use its vast resources to enact a new order that supplants the United States; and the impact of AI on cybersecurity.
Robert Ward hosts Ambassador Miyagawa Makio, former senior Japanese diplomat, and Professor Michishita Narushige, Professor of International Security Studies at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) and a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, for an in-depth discussion on the recent reform of Japan's defence-export policy. Together, they explore:The historical background of Japan's defence-export policyThe recent shift in Japan's defence-export policyThe perspectives of Japan's US ally and strategic partners on the recent policy shiftOpportunities and challenges for Japan as a defence equipment and technology exporterRecommended readings from our guests:Agawa Naoyuki, Friendship Across the Seas: The US Navy and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, (Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2019), 308pp.Doi Yasuaki, Tainichi Keizai Sensō: 1939–1941 [Economic War against Japan: 1939–1941], (Tokyo: Chuokoron-Shinsha, 2002), 302pp.Tobe Ryoichi, Teramoto Yoshinari, Kamata Shinichi, Suginoo Yoshio, Murai Tomohide and Nonaka Ikujiro, Shippai no Honshitsu [The Essence of Failure: An Organisational Study of the Imperial Japanese Military], (Tokyo: Diamond, 1984), 304pp.Michishita Narushige, The Maritime Strategy and the US–Japan Alliance: Fighting the Cold War in the Pacific, (Washington DC: Georgetown University Press, forthcoming 2027).We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 23 April 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
El papel de Israel y China en la negociación secreta entre Irán y EEUU en Islamabad. Andrew SmithLa tregua entre Irán y Estados Unidos pende de un hilo a menos de 24 horas de su vencimiento. Andrew Smith, analista del Centro para el Bien Común de la UFV y miembro del IISS de Londres, desglosa las claves de la reunión de Islamabad y la peligrosa estrategia de "máxima presión" de Donald Trump.Analiza la irrupción de China y Xi Jinping exigiendo la apertura del Estrecho de Ormuz, el papel de Israel como "spoiler" de cualquier acuerdo diplomático y la realidad del programa nuclear iraní. ¿Habrá extensión de la tregua o escalada militar? Smith advierte sobre el choque entre la diplomacia transaccional de Washington y la resistencia milenaria de Teherán en un tablero geopolítico donde los intereses de Netanyahu y las midterms de EE. UU. marcan el ritmo.#iran #eeuu #guerra #orientemedio #trump #china #ormuz #nuclear #teheran #iran #entrevista #noticias #geopolitica #negociostv Si quieres entrar en la Academia de Negocios TV, este es el enlace: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwd8Byi93KbnsYmCcKLExvQ/join Síguenos en directo ➡️ https://bit.ly/2Ts9V3pSuscríbete a nuestro canal: https://bit.ly/3jsMzp2Suscríbete a nuestro segundo canal, másnegocios: https://n9.cl/4dca4Visita Negocios TV https://bit.ly/2Ts9V3pMás vídeos de Negocios TV: https://youtube.com/@NegociosTVSíguenos en Telegram: https://t.me/negociostvSíguenos en Instagram: https://bit.ly/3oytWndTwitter: https://bit.ly/3jz6LptFacebook: https://bit.ly/3e3kIuy
Robert Ward hosts Katada Saori, Professor of International Relations and the Director of the Center of International Studies at the University of Southern California, and Yamada Satoshi Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Geoeconomics (IOG), for an in-depth discussion on the current state and future direction of Japan-US economic security.Together, they explore: The historical and institutional development of Japan's economic statecraftThe recent evolution of economic security in JapanJapan-US cooperation in advanced technologies and business for economic security The future development of Japan's engagement in economic security with the Global South – with or without the US. Recommended readings from our guests: Institute of Geoeconomics, Survey results of 100 Japanese companies on economic security 2023. (Tokyo: Institute of Geoeconomics, 2024) 58pp.Institute of Geoeconomics (Ed.) introduction to geoeconomics (in Japanese) 『はじめての地経学:経済が武器化した時代の見方』] (Tokyo: Asahi Shinsho, 2026) 288pp.Shiono, Msato, Kousuke Saito and Kota Umeda, The geoeconomics of generative AI development race: How emerging technologies can become national power (Tokyo: Institute of Geoeconomics, 2026).Pempel, T. John. Regime shift: Comparative dynamics of the Japanese political economy. (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998), 288pp. Solís, Mireya, Dilemmas of a trading nation: Japan and the United States in the evolving Asia-Pacific order. (Washington DC, Brookings Institution Press, 2017), 180pp.Katada, Saori and Koga, Kei, Japan's grand strategy: Liminal power in an uncertain world. (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2026), 304pp. We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 1 April 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Will Israel's war to eliminate Hezbollah in Lebanon collapse the fragile US-Iran ceasefire?Tehran has accused Israel of violating the terms of its deal with Donald Trump by launching a massive military operation against its Lebanese proxy on Wednesday afternoon, killing more than 250 people with strikes on more than 100 targets in the space of 10 minutes. Today, Hezbollah has responded by firing a barrage of rockets at northern Israel. Iran and Europe want Lebanon to be included in the ceasefire, but Israel and the US say it's a separate theatre of the war. Venetia Rainey talks through the latest updates and what it could mean for the upcoming peace talks in Pakistan. Plus, as Keir Starmer tours the Gulf, countries in the normally stable region are reeling from more than 40 days of war. Qatar-based IISS research fellow Sascha Bruchmann and Bahraini political consultant Ahmed Alkhuzaie discuss the Gulf's scepticism of the ceasefire, why a counter-force in the Strait of Hormuz is essential, and how Ukraine is helping tackle the Iranian drone threat. CONTRIBUTORS:Venetia Rainey, co-host @venetiaraineyAhmed Alkhuzaie, Bahraini political consultant @AhmedAlkhuzaieSascha Bruchmann, IISS research fellow Producer: Max BowerExecutive Producer: Louisa WellsListen to Iran: The Latest: YOUTUBE | APPLE PODCASTS | SPOTIFY | AMAZON Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As the war in Iran enters its second month, President Trump has delivered a prime time address promising, simultaneously, that the conflict will be over “very shortly” and that the United States is preparing to hit Iran “extremely hard”.Thousands more US troops have arrived in the region in recent days, including a marine expeditionary unit as the president is reportedly weighing options for a potential ground assault, such as an attempt to seize the Iranian oil export hub on Kharg Island, which Trump has said the US could take “very easily.”But what options does the President actually have and what would be involved in an attempt to forcibly re-open the strait of Hormuz? Katie Stallard is joined by Ruben Stewart, senior fellow for land warfare at the IISS think tank and a former infantry officer and UN peacekeeper.LISTEN AD-FREE:
On this Land Warfare episode, sponsored by American Rheinmetall, Ben Barry, a retired British Army brigadier who is the director of land warfare studies at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian to discuss his new book, “The Rise and Fall of the British Army: 1975-2025;” the role of ground forces in the US-Israel war on Iran; impact of diminishing weapon stocks and how this conflict could leave the United States in a window of vulnerability; what it will cost and how long it will take to rebuild the kind of army Britain will need for the future; capabilities it needs; and lessons from failed acquisition efforts like the Ajax armored vehicle.
News Connect 土曜版、今回のゲストは、ジャーナリストで国際文化会館グローバル・カウンシルチェアマンの船橋洋一さんです。今年3月に出版された新刊『戦後敗戦』をベースに、エネルギー、通貨、半導体、インターネットなど、日本が戦後に経験した「敗北の歴史」を紐解きながら、現代の事象を読み解きます。現在進行形の「イラン危機とホルムズ海峡」「トランプ関税の源流」「構造的な円安の背景」、そして「AI覇権闘争」まで。歴史の因果関係を明らかにし、日本が再び立ち上がるための「国民安全保障国家」と「起業家国家」という2つのビジョン、そして私たち有権者に求められる視点について掘り下げていきました。▼船橋洋一さんの新刊書籍『戦後敗戦』https://amzn.asia/d/01ubXpow▼野村高文の新著『プロ目線のPodcastのつくり方』の購入はこちらから!https://amzn.asia/d/5A0NQEj▼Podcast Studio Chronicle YouTubeチャンネルhttps://www.youtube.com/@PodcastStudioChronicle▼出演:野村高文(Podcastプロデューサー/Podcast Studio Chronicle代表)https://x.com/nmrtkfm【ゲストプロフィール】船橋洋一/ジャーナリスト1944年、北京生まれ。ジャーナリスト。法学博士。公益財団法人国際文化会館グローバル・カウンシルチェアマン。アジア・パシフィック・イニシアティブ創設者。英国際戦略研究所(IISS)評議員。東京大学教養学部卒業後、朝日新聞社入社。北京特派員、ワシントン特派員、アメリカ総局長、コラムニストを経て、朝日新聞社主筆。『カウントダウン・メルトダウン』(文藝春秋)で2013年に大宅壮一ノンフィクション賞受賞。近著に『地経学とは何か』(文春新書)、『国民安全保障国家論』(文藝春秋)などがある。▼News Connect 土曜版・日曜版 Spotifyプレイリストはこちら
➡️ Buy your own Geopolitics of the Western Pacific Map Print: https://decoding-geopolitics-shop.fourthwall.com/➡️ Watch the full interview ad-free, join a community of geopolitics enthusiasts and gain access to exclusive content on PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/DecodingGeopolitics➡️ Take a look at Nigel's IISS analysis here: https://www.iiss.org/online-analysis/online-analysis/2026/02/russiaukraine-war-escalation-not-stalemate➡️ Sign up to my free geopolitics newsletter: https://stationzero.substack.com/For a long time, the war in Ukraine resembled a bit of a stalemate. Russia gradually pushed into Ukrainian territory, Ukraine fought back and Russia, although suffering great costs, managed to keep going. But that is now changing - as the dynamics of the war are undergoing major shifts - and as those shifts are quickly picking up pace. Ukraine has a new strategy to win the war. The gradual Russian push has been slowed to a halt and Ukraine has increasingly been able to go on the offensive, capturing lost territory and pushing back Russian forces. And Russia is increasingly struggling with something that was never really expected to become a major issue - and it's getting so bad that it's quickly approaching an inflection point where something will have to break - one way or another.I talk about all that - and much more - with my guest, Nigel Gould Davis, a Senior Fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Robert Ward hosts Dr Kristin Vekasi, the Mansfield Chair of Japan and Indo-Pacific Affairs at the University of Montana, and Professor Hatakeyama Kyoko, Professor of International Relations at the Graduate School of International Studies and Regional Development, University of Niigata Prefecture for an in-depth discussion on the current state and future direction of Japan's critical mineral strategy. Together, they explore: · Developments in Japan's critical mineral strategy from 2010 when China briefly curbed exports of rare-earth elements to Japan. · The implications of Japan's response to the 2010 crisis for Beijing's recent controls on exports of dual-use products to Japan. · The strategic importance of deep-sea rare earths around Minami-Torishima Island. · The future trajectory of Japan's critical mineral strategy in cooperation with the US and European countries. Recommended readings from our guests: · Catalinac, Amy, Dominance through division: Group-based clientelism in Japan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2025), 365pp.· Harris, Tobias S. The iconoclast: Shinzō Abe and the new Japan (London: C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd., 2020), 392pp.· Higuchi, Shinji, Bullet Train Explosion [Shinkansen Bakuhatsu] (Tokyo, Episcope, 2025) [Netflix film]· Ward, Robert, Evaluating Japan's new grand strategy (London: Routledge, 2025). 156pp.We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org.Date recorded: 3 March 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Poro-Cupin osakilpailu kokoaa Suomen kovimmat kilpaporot ja ohjastajat viikonlopuksi Yli-Iihin. Luvassa on kovatasoiset porokilpailut useassa sarjassa. Tarjolla on myös monipuolista oheisohjelmaa. Yli-Iin porokilpailut on Poro-Cupin eteläisin osakilpailu ja siihen osallistuu yli sata kilpailijaa. Aamu-Paavon haastattelussa kisojen puuhamies Reijo Kynkäänniemi.
Robert Ward hosts Professor Taniguchi Tomohiko, Chairman of Nippon Kaigi and Specially Appointed Professor at the University of Tsukuba. They discuss the outlook of Japan's foreign and security policy in 2026. Together, they explore: · The upcoming Japanese snap election· The Takaichi government's security and defence reforms· Japan's foreign and security relations with the US· Japan's security and economic relations with China Recommended materials from our guests: · Agawa Naoyuki, Friendship Across the Seas: The US Navy and the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force, (Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture, 2019), 308pp.We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org.Date recorded: 28 January 2026Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward hosts Kristi Govella, senior advisor and Japan chair at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies and Eva Pejsova, Japan chair at the Centre for Security, Diplomacy and Strategy of the Brussels School of Governance. They review Japan's security and diplomacy in 2025. Together, they explore: The US tariffs on Japan and trade negotiations between the two countries Ishiba Shigeru's legacy as prime minister Takaichi Sanae's selection as prime minister, her cabinet appointments and the collapse of the LDP-Komeito coalition Changing security relations with the US and other countries The policy agenda for the Takaichi administration Recommended materials from our guests: Kenneth M. McElwain (ed.), Robert J. Pekkanen (ed.), Daniel M. Smith (ed.), Japan Decides 2024 (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan), 365pp. Michael J. Green, Line of Advantage: Japan's Grand Strategy in the Era of Abe Shinzō (New York: Columbia University Press), 328pp. Andrew L. Oros, Japan's Security Renaissance: New Policies and Politics for the Twenty-First Century (New York: Columbia University Press), 320pp. We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 28th November 2025Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Reabre estación Chilpancingo del Metrobús Violencia criminal en México comparable a conflictos armados: IISS FBI ofrece recompensa por líder del CJNG Más información en nuestro podcast
Robert Ward hosts Ogi Hirohito, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Geoeconomics; Ito Ayano, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of ITO Strategy Company; and Tom Corben, Research Fellow at the United States Studies Centre. They discuss the increasing cooperation between Japan and the US in the defence industry.Together, they explore: · How Takaichi and Trump might cooperate on US-Japan defence-industrial issues· The Takaichi government's new policies in relation to the defence industry· How the defence industry in Japan and the US views recent defence-industrial policy changes· Defence-industrial cooperation with third countries, through initiatives such as GCAP· How the US views defence-industrial cooperation with Japan and the effect of the upcoming US National Security Strategy on this Recommended materials from our guests: · Alan Booth, The Roads to Sata,(London: Penguin, 2020), 336pp.· Tobias S Harris, The Iconoclast, (London: Hurst, 2023), 504pp.· Anno Hideki and Higuchi Shinji, Shin Gozilla, (Toho Co, 2016).We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org.Date recorded: 4 November 2025Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Der Kriegsverlauf ist in den letzten Monaten in den Hintergrund gerückt. Militäranalyst Franz-Stefan Gady berichtet von seinen Erfahrungen im Donbass, die Veränderung der Frontlinie durch Drohnen. Und junge Männer aus Odessa sprechen über Ausreisepläne.
2025-10-21 | Silicon Wafers 036 | DAILY UPDATES | Is Russia's Hybrid War on Europe a precursor to a full incursion on European territory, or even the invasion of a European country? This is Silicon Wafers. Today: why Russia is probing and testing Europe, how hybrid attacks work, and what happens if the Kremlin pushes further escalating to a full invasion — and how we can deter it.Why the probing is intensifying - Moscow is stress-testing Europe's seams, pulling at the threads to see if the fabric of our institutions and resilience will unravel. But it is conducting this below the threshold of open war — because hybrid pressure is cheap, deniable, and strategically useful. Sub-threshold does not trigger a direct armed response but can also achieve Russia's strategic objectives without direct confrontation. It's a war sandbox, for testing and learning. Think of it as a toolkit of rolling lab experiments in limited aggression: sabotage, arson, cyber, GPS jamming, “grey fleet” shenanigans at sea, drones in NATO airspace, and influence operations that launder Kremlin narratives through local proxies, compliant channels and criminal networks.----------Partner on this video: KYIV OF MINE Watch the trailer now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arJUcE1rxY0'Kyiv of Mine' is a documentary series about Ukraine's beautiful capital, Kyiv. The film production began in 2018, and much has changed since then. It is now 2025, and this story is far from over.https://www.youtube.com/@UCz6UbVKfqutH-N7WXnC5Ykg https://www.kyivofmine.com/#theprojectKyiv of Mine is fast paced, beautifully filmed, humorous, fun, insightful, heartbreaking, moving, hopeful. The very antithesis in fact of a doom-laden and worthy wartime documentary. This is a work that is extraordinarily uplifting. My friend Operator Starsky says the film is “Made with so much love. The film series will make you laugh and cry.” ----------SOURCES: IISS — The Scale of Russian Sabotage Operations Against Europe's Critical Infrastructure* (research paper, Aug. 2025). Council of the EU — Statement condemning Russia's persistent hybrid campaigns (July 18, 2025); EU hybrid-threats sanctions framework (Oct. 8, 2024; prolonged Oct. 3, 2025)Reuters — Poland/Romania foil exploding-parcel plot (Oct. 21, 2025); Spanish minister's jet GPS interference near Kaliningrad (Sept. 24, 2025); German CHOD: 5–8 year window (Apr. 18, 2024); Hybrid threat to Europe's energy (Oct. 13, 2025)AP News — Arrests tied to parcel-bomb plot in Poland and Romania (Oct. 21, 2025)The Guardian — Sikorski on drone incursion: “tactically stupid and counterproductive” (Oct. 15, 2025)The Insider — Inside Russia's Latvian Sabotage Squad (July 10, 2024)Meduza - ‘There has to be a cost' — Russian sabotage spiked in Europe last year (Mar. 21, 2025)RFE/RL — Admiral Rob Bauer warning (NATO readiness) (Jan. 19, 2024); IISS sabotage overview (Aug. 20, 2025)UK Government — Condemnation of “malicious cyber activity by the Russian Intelligence Services” (May 3, 2024); UK/US advisory on Star Blizzard spear-phishing (Dec. 7, 2023)ACLED — Suspected Russia-linked hybrid incidents across Europe (2022–Apr. 2025)Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service — International Security and Estonia 2025 (threat horizon)----------SILICON CURTAIN FILM FUNDRAISERA project to make a documentary film in Ukraine, to raise awareness of Ukraine's struggle and in supporting a team running aid convoys to Ukraine's front-line towns.https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras----------
Robert Ward hosts Yamashita Yukari, Managing Director at the Institute of Energy Economics, Japan (IEEJ), and Stephen Stapczynski, Asia Energy Team Leader at Bloomberg News, for an in-depth discussion on the current state and future direction of Japan's energy security. Together, they explore: Japan's 7th Strategic Energy Plan and its emphasis on economic security and energy mix. The balance between renewables, nuclear and fossil fuels in achieving realistic decarbonisation. Japan's pioneering role in global LNG investment and supply security — a model now studied by the European Union. Japan's initiatives in hydrogen and blue ammonia cooperation with the Middle East and ASEAN. The policy and market challenges shaping Japan's energy strategy towards 2040. Recommended readings from our guests: Hyakuta Naoki, Kaizoku to yobareta otoko [A man called a pirate] (Tokyo: Kodansha, 2012), 386pp. Michael Booth, Sushi and beyond: What the Japanese know about cooking (London: Vintage Publishing, 2010), 336pp. We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 8 October 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward hosts Goto Shihoko, Senior Fellow for Indo-Pacific Affairs at the Mansfield Foundation, and Eto Naoko, Professor at Gakushuin University and Senior Fellow at the Institute of Geoeconomics, for a timely discussion on Japan–US–China economic relations.. Together, they explore: · US-China competition and its implications for Japan's economic strategy· Japan-China dynamics in rare earths supply chains and technology competition· Japan's balancing act between economic engagement with China and its alliance commitments with the US· The potential implications of upcoming major diplomatic events, including US diplomacy on China. Recommended readings from our guests: · Kokubun Ryosei, Japan-China Relations through the Lens of Chinese Politics (Tokyo: JPIC International, 2021), 326pp.· Richard Katz, The Contest for Japan's Economic Future: Entrepreneurs vs Corporate Giants (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024), 356pp.· Jeffrey Ding, Technology and the Rise of Great Powers: How Diffusion Shapes Economic Competition, (Prinston: Princeton University Press, 2024), 320pp.We hope you enjoy the episode. Please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your preferred podcast platform. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 5 September 2025Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
When we think about flashpoints between India and Pakistan, most people picture borders, bombs, or Kashmir. But the most strategic weapon in South Asia today may not be nuclear—it's water.The Indus Water Treaty has been called one of the world's most successful peace agreements, surviving wars, nuclear standoffs, and decades of political hostility. But in April this year, India suspended the treaty after a terrorist attack in Kashmir, effectively threatening to choke off the lifeline of Pakistan's agriculture and economy. For the first time in 65 years, the Indus—an ancient river system that sustains over 250 million people—has been turned into a tool of coercion.This is more than a regional spat. It's a live experiment in how climate stress, nationalism, and security fears can dismantle one of the last bastions of cooperation between nuclear rivals. And if water becomes a weapon here, what does it mean for other fragile river basins—the Nile, the Mekong, the Jordan—where upstream states already hold the cards?Today, I'm joined by Professor Ashok Swain, UNESCO Chair on International Water Cooperation and Head of Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University. He has authored and edited 20 books and more than 150 journal articles, and he is also the Founding Editor-in-Chief of the peer-reviewed journal Environment and Security, published by Sage. He has also served as a consultant on environmental and development issues, advising various international organisations, including UN agencies, OCSE, NATO, EU, IISS, the Arab League and Oxfam, as well as the governments of Sweden, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Singapore. Few people understand more about how rivers can both unite and divide nations. His work spans transboundary water politics, climate security, and conflict dynamics, and he has been one of the most vocal critics of India's suspension of the Indus Water Treaty.The International Risk Podcast brings you conversations with global experts, frontline practitioners, and senior decision-makers who are shaping how we understand and respond to international risk. From geopolitical volatility and organised crime, to cybersecurity threats and hybrid warfare, each episode explores the forces transforming our world and what smart leaders must do to navigate them. Whether you're a board member, policymaker, or risk professional, The International Risk Podcast delivers actionable insights, sharp analysis, and real-world stories that matter.Dominic Bowen is the host of The International Risk Podcast and Europe's leading expert on international risk and crisis management. As Head of Strategic Advisory and Partner at one of Europe's leading risk management consulting firms, Dominic advises CEOs, boards, and senior executives across the continent on how to prepare for uncertainty and act with intent. He has spent decades working in war zones, advising multinational companies, and supporting Europe's business leaders. Dominic is the go-to business advisor for leaders navigating risk, crisis, and strategy; trusted for his clarity, calmness under pressure, and ability to turn volatility into competitive advantage. Dominic equips today's business leaders with the insight and confidence to lead through disruption and deliver sustained strategic advantage.Tell us what you liked!
Chris Clague, an Associate Fellow at the IISS and an independent advisor on trade and supply chains, discusses recent trends in China-ASEAN trade and investment flows, and how they may be affected by US President Trump's tariff policies.(00:00) - Introduction (02:04) - Overview of China/ASEAN trade and investment (06:26) - Transshipments (09:57) - Transshipment tariffs effect on China's investment (12:54) - China+1 strategy (14:58) - Top destinations and sectors for Chinese investment (17:35) - China's role in global supply chains (20:37) - How will ASEAN manage a surge in imports from China? (24:13) - Conclusion
Podcast host Meia Nouwens is joined by IISS experts Dr Ben Schreer, Fenella McGerty and Ester Sabatino to reflect on the 2nd IISS Prague Defence Summit, which was held on 3–5 September 2025. Meia, Ben, Fenella and Esther discuss the major takeaways from the Prague Defence Summit, including:Secretary General Mark Rutte's call for stronger European defence production in the face of closer Russia–China cooperation;The sustainability of record-high defence spending and new ways to fund Europe's security;How procurement reforms and EU initiatives are reshaping Europe's defence industrial landscape;The growing role of Indo-Pacific and non-EU partners in strengthening European security.We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice.Date of Recording: 10 September 2025The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's Strategy Series, sponsored by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, James Hackett, the head of defense and military analysis at the International institute for Strategic Studies, joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian to discuss the updated report he co-edited — “Progress and Shortfalls in Europe's Defence: An Assessment.”
Robert Ward hosts Dr Chijiwa Yasuaki, Chief, International Conflict Division, National Institute for Defence Studies (NIDS), Ministry of Defence, Dr Jennifer Lind, Associate Professor in the Department of Government at Dartmouth, and Dr Sayuri Romei, Senior Fellow in the German Marshall Fund, GMF, Indo-Pacific Program. They discuss the evolution of Japan's post-war defence policy in light of the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. Robert, Yasuaki, Jennifer and Sayuri discuss: Evolution of Japan's defence policy — shift from post-war defensive defence doctrine to recent adoption of counter-strike capability, expanded defence budget and multi-domain defence forceRole of external environment and alliances — China's rise, North Korea's threat, Russia's actions and shifting US commitments shaping Japan's security trajectoryDomestic politics and public opinion — gradual change in attitudes, reduced resistance to defence reforms and evolving consensus on stronger defence postureUS-Japan alliance deepening — institutional developments, interoperability improvements, establishment of joint command structures, people-to-people ties strengthening alliance foundationsWe hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 6 August 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward hosts Sakata Yasuyo, Professor of International Relations at Kanda University, Victor Cha, President of the Geopolitics and Foreign Policy Department and Korea Chair at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), and Jung-Hoon Lee, Dean and Professor of International Relations at the Graduate School of International Studies at Yonsei University. They discuss Japan–South Korea relations in light of the 60th anniversary of diplomatic normalisation. Robert, Yasuyo, Victor and Jung-Hoon discuss: Evolution of Relations: From diplomatic normalisation in 1965 to people-to-people and civil society engagement, especially post-1998Japan–South Korea–US trilateral alignment, institutional frameworks, and strategic consultation, notably the 2023 Camp David SummitFuture Prospects and Domestic Pressures: Economic strain, shifting public sentiment towards China, and cautious optimism in bilateral cooperationThe following books are recommended by our guests to gain a clearer picture of the topics discussed: Victor Cha, Alignment Despite Antagonism: The United States-Korea-Japan Security Triangle, (California: Stanford University Press, 1990), 376pp. Victor Cha, Powerplay: The Origins of the American Alliance System in Asia, (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2016), 352pp. Victor Cha and Ramon Pacheco Pardo, Korea: A New History of South and North, (Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2024), 320pp.Chong-Sik Lee, Japan and Korea: The Political Dimension, (California: Hoover Institution Press, 1985), 234pp. Brad Glosserman and Scott A. Snyder, The Japan–South Korea Identity Clash: East Asian Security and the United States, (New York: Columbia University Press, 2015), 240pp. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 30 June 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this Land Warfare episode, sponsored by American Rheinmetall, Ben Barry, a retired British Army brigadier who is the director of land warfare studies at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian to discuss his recent report, “Defending Europe Without the United States: Costs and Consequences;” how quickly Russia will be able to reconstitute its forces and pose a threat to NATO; what Europe has to do to build the capabilities to defend itself without relying on the United States; the critical role of more than 128,000 American military personnel in Europe; where member nations will find the $1 trillion they will need; coordinating industrial capacity to deliver needed systems; whether Europe can support Ukraine in the event Washington pulls the plug on Kyiv; whether there are a opportunities for US companies and more cooperation in the short and longer term; outlook for the Ukraine war; and case for tanks and attack as well as transport helicopters even in a highly kinetic battlefield environment.
In this episode of the ChinaPower Podcast, Ms. Meia Nouwens and Ms. Veerle Nouwens join us to discuss key takeaways from the recent 2025 IISS Shangri-La Dialogue. They start by discussing the significance of the dialogue as a high-level forum for discussion between governments on issues impacting Asian security and they highlight some of the major topics that countries repeatedly brought up throughout sessions, with cross-regional security, hybrid threats, and uncertainty in the international order as three of the most prominent. They unpack President Macron's speech, who, they note, is the first European leader who has ever been invited to provide keynote remarks at the dialogue, and describe the emphasis he laid on Europe becoming a more active player in the Indo-Pacific region. Meia and Veerle also discuss the attendance from China's side and point to the notable absence of Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun. They describe China's messaging this year as less focused on the United States and instead with a greater emphasis on China's relationships with regional partners. Similarly, they touch on the variety of current views of China they heard from regional countries during the dialogue, which ranged from viewing China as a cooperative partner, a challenger, and a competitor all to different extents. They describe U.S. Defense Secretary Hegseth's remarks and note they believe he succeeded in providing some reassurance to allies and underscored his emphasis that the U.S. can work more with partners in the region through increased forward deployment of troops, cooperation on defense industrial capabilities, and greater interoperability. Finally, Meia and Veerle describe what they heard from countries as shared challenges in the region that transcend boundaries and emphasized the consensus among many for the US and China to find ways to cooperate with each other despite their disagreements. Ms. Meia Nouwens is a Senior Fellow for Chinese Security and Defense Policy. Meia's expertise lies in Chinese cross-service defense analysis, China's defense industry and innovation, as well as China's regional strategic affairs and international relations. She leads IISS research on China's Digital Silk Road, and was a co-lead of the China Security Project with the Mercator Institute for China Studies. Prior to commencing at IISS, she worked for the European External Action Service as a policy officer in Taipei, and as a trade analyst in the EU's delegation to New Zealand. Meia holds a BA Hons in international relations and political science from Macquarie University, a master's in international relations and diplomacy from Leiden University in conjunction with the Clingendael Institute, and an MPhil in modern Chinese studies from the University of Oxford and Peking University. Ms. Veerle Nouwens is the Executive Director for IISS–Asia. Veerle's expertise lies in Chinese foreign and defense policy, as well as the wider Indo-Pacific defense and security environment. She plays a key part in organizing the annual IISS Shangri-La Dialogue, provides intellectual direction for IISS research on the Asia-Pacific, and works to enhance the profile of IISS across the region and beyond. Prior to joining the IISS, Veerle worked as Senior Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London, where she established the Indo-Pacific Programme and focused on China and Indo-Pacific security, and as a policy officer in the political section of the European Union Delegation in Singapore. Veerle holds a BA Hons in international relations and political science from Macquarie University, a Master's in international relations and diplomacy from Leiden University in conjunction with the Clingendael Institute, an MPhil in modern Chinese studies from the University of Oxford and Peking University, and has attended a Mandarin semester programme at Tsinghua University.
Podcast host Meia Nouwens is joined by IISS experts Veerle Nouwens, Morgan Michaels and Darshana Baruah to reflect on the 22nd IISS Shangri-La Dialogue, which was held on 30 May–1 June 2025. Meia, Veerle, Morgan and Darshana discuss key takeaways and topics include: US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and his landmark speech on the US' new ambitions for the Indo-Pacific; President Macron's proposal for greater European-Asian engagement;Prime Minister Dato' Seri Anwar Bin Ibrahim's call for shared purpose and cooperation in order to prevent further fracturing of the international order and support peace and stability; andhow the wider Indo-Pacific dynamics featured in this year's Shangri-La Dialogue, such as the security priorities of Pacific Island states and the ongoing conflict in Myanmar. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice. Date of Recording: 3 June 2025 The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this special edition of Japan Memo Season 5, Robert Ward reports from Singapore on the 22nd IISS Shangri-La Dialogue. Joining him is Professor Jimbo Ken, Managing Director of the International House of Japan, President of the Asia Pacific Initiative, and Professor at Keio University's Faculty of Policy Management. They deliver timely and in-depth analysis of this year's key developments and strategic narratives. Robert and Professor Jimbo discuss: · Major themes and takeaways from the 2025 Dialogue and how it compares with previous years· Key messages from US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's speech· Regional perspectives on China's activities and strategic posture· Analysis of Japanese Defense Minister Nakatani Gen's address· ASEAN's evolving role in an increasingly contested regional orderWe hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 1 June 2025 This episode of Japan Memo was recorded in Singapore and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's Look Ahead Podcast, sponsored by HII, Byron Callan of the independent Washington research firm Capital Alpha Partners joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian discuss the US defense budget outlook that could include a big jump in spending that flattens; the complex dynamics between the administration and Congress; the impact of tariffs and how nations like China will retaliate; takeaways from IISS' Shanghai-La Dialogue; Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb attack on Russia's bomber bases; and a look at the week ahead.
On this week's Defense & Aerospace Report Business Roundtable, sponsored by Bell, Dr. “Rocket” Ron Epstein of Bank of America Securities, Sash Tusa of the independent equity research firm Agency Partners, and Richard Aboulafia of the AeroDynamic advisory consultancy join host Vago Muradian to discuss a rocky week on Wall Street that ended with the best month since 2023; President Trump doubles tariffs on steel and aluminum to 50 percent and curbs aerospace, chip, and chemical export as well as educational visas to China; whether this is a negotiating tactic born of frustration with slow talks between Beijing and Washington or the latest effort to decouple the world's two leading economies; investors' “TACO” mindset and the reality that despite a chaotic approach the administration has increased tariffs; the Senate pushes back on the House's reconciliation package; newsflow from the IISS's annual Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's warning that China could attack Taiwan at any time and call that allies spend 5 percent of GDP on defense, and French President Emmanuel Macron and top EU diplomat Kaja Kallas' view that a partnered China and Russia constitute a major threat to the global rules-based order that must be countered, and Indian defense chief Gen Anil Chauhan's acknowledgment that India lost fighters in its recent conflict with Pakistan but learned lessons from the experience; Saab's capital markets day; the latest on the administration's Section 232 trade investigation; and King Charles' historic address opening Canada's new parliament.
In this Sounds Strategic episode, podcast host Meia Nouwens is joined by Veerle Nouwens, Evan A. Laksmana and Nick Childs to discuss the upcoming 22nd IISS Shangri La Dialogue, which will be held in Singapore from 30 May–1 June. This year's dialogue is held against the backdrop of Russia's ongoing war of aggression against Ukraine, an intense US trade and tariff war with China, heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, and ongoing military modernisation across the Asia Pacific. Key themes explored include the impact of great power competition on small and medium powers in the region; strategies to manage nuclear and conventional proliferation risks; and the evolving defence challenges in critical domains such as undersea warfare, cyber security and outer space. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice. Date of Recording: 16 May 2025 The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. Find out more: https://www.iiss.org/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward hosts Professor Hosoya Yuichi, Professor of International Politics at Keio University, Professor Yee Kuang Heng, Professor at the Graduate School of Public Policy and Director of the Security Studies Unit at the Institute for Future Initiatives at the University of Tokyo, and Fenella McGerty, the IISS Senior Fellow for defence economics in the Defence and Military Analysis Programme. They discuss Japan-UK relations. Robert, Yuichi, Yee Kuang and Fenella discuss: Japan-UK diplomatic alignment, amid the UK's tilt towards the Indo-PacificJapan-UK defence partnership, including the GCAP, the UK CSG deployment to the Indo-PacificJapan-UK economic cooperation, including the bilateral economic 2+2, the UK accession to the CPTTPWe hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 6 May 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Europe's defence posture is evolving rapidly — but is the pace of change sustainable? In this episode, IISS experts examine global and regional defence spending trends, the EU's emerging industrial initiatives and the implications of Germany's policy shift. Host Meia Nouwens is joined by Fenella McGerty, Ester Sabatino and Ben Schreer to discuss whether current trends represent a pivot in European strategic capability or if policy ambition will be constrained by economic and political realities. Key themes include: Drivers behind global and European defence spending increases The EU's ReArm Europe Constraints on joint procurement and industrial scalability Germany's budget shift and prospects for sustained leadership Geopolitical uncertainties and potential disruptors We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice. Date of Recording: 24 March 2025 The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Це був неспокійний місяць для дипломатії в російсько-українській війні. В умовах бурі та стресу дві речі змінилися, одна — ні, і було отримано один важливий урокАвтор: Найджел Гулд-Девіс, старший науковий співробітник Міжнародного інституту стратегічних досліджень (IISS), редактор щорічного стратегічного огляду геополітики IISSНачитала: Олена Русінова
Robert Ward hosts Professor Takahara Akio, Emeritus Professor of The University of Tokyo, Dr Elizabeth Wishnick, Senior Research Scientist at the Centre for Naval Analyses (CNA) and Dr Catherine Jones, a Lecturer at the University of St Andrews, to explore Japan's challenges amid growing cooperation between Russia and China. Robert, Akio, Elizabeth and Catherine discuss: The recent development of the Russia-China strategic partnership in the Ukraine war The limitations of the Sino-Russian relationship and the potential overlap of their interests Japan's security, economy and energy challenges amid growing Sino-Russian aligment The following books are recommended by our guests to gain a clearer picture of the topics discussed: Takahara Akio and et al., Japan–China Relations in the Modern Era, (Abingdon: Routledge, 2017), 250pp. Takahara Akio and et al., Nicchū kankei 2001-2022 [Japan-China Relations 2001-2022], (Tokyo: The University of Tokyo Press, 2023), 432pp. Charles E. Ziegler, Russia in the Pacific: The Quest for Great Power Recognition, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024), 296pp. Gaye Christoffersen, Russia in the Indo-Pacific: New Approaches to Russian Foreign Policy, (Abingdon: Routledge, 2022), 298pp. Endo Shusaku, Chinmoku [Silence], (Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1981), 320pp. Endo Shusaku, The Samurai, (Tokyo: Shinchosha, 1986), 520pp. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 17 February 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Америка заздалегідь поступається Росії засадничими і давно усталеними позиціями, сподіваючись припинити війну, у якій вона не бере участіАвтор: Найджел Гулд-Девіс, cтарший науковий співробітник Міжнародного інституту стратегічних досліджень (IISS), редактор щорічного стратегічного огляду геополітики IISSНачитала: Олена Русінова
Podcast host Meia Nouwens is joined by Dr Nigel Gould-Davies, Dr Maria Shagina and Franz-Stefan Gady to discuss the recent developments in Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine. Almost three years to the date of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a new US administration has drastically changed the course of events. President Trump has signaled a desire for the war to end, and for the US' attention to focus on strategic priorities in the Indo-Pacific instead of on European security matters. At the time of recording, the US and Russia are negotiating Ukraine's future, without Ukraine represented at the table. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice. Date of Recording: 17 February 2025 The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robert Ward hosts Professor Suzuki Kazuto, Professor at the Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Tokyo, and Dr Elli-Katharina Pohlkamp, Director at Agora Strategy Group, to explore Japan's economic security policy. Robert, Professor Suzuki and Dr Pohlkamp discuss: Recent developments in Japan's economic security strategyThe European perspective on Japan's economic security policyKey differences between Japan and Europe's economic security approachesThe future of Japan-China economic relations The following books are recommended by our guests to gain a clearer picture of the topics discussed: Aoyama Michiko, What You Are Looking for Is in the Library, (New York: Doubleday, 2023), 256pp. Okamoto Yukio, Japan and the United States: The Journey of a Defeated Nation - A Diplomat's Memoir by Yukio Okamoto, (Vermont: Tuttle Publishing), 388pp.We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate, and subscribe to Japan Memo on your podcast platform of choice. If you have any comments or questions, please contact us at japanchair@iiss.org. Date recorded: 30 January 2025 Japan Memo is recorded and produced at the IISS in London. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A new IISS study shows Russian defence spending exceeds all of Europe's combined, adding weight to worries that after Ukraine, Russia would be capable of attacking other parts of the continent. Also, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has wrapped up a two-day visit to France, with French President Emmanuel Macron working on developing ties with one of the world's most important developing economies. Elsewhere, US inflation spiked more than expected in January. Finally, Duolingo announces the death of its green owl mascot.
In this episode of Sounds Strategic, we explore the main takeaways from the 20th IISS Manama Dialogue, held in Bahrain from 6 to 8 December 2024. IISS host Meia Nouwens is joined by experts Air Marshal (Retd) Martin ‘Sammy' Sampson, Dr Irene Mia and Dr Hasan Alhasan to discuss to their views on the themes that emerged from the Dialogue ranging from conflict resolution to post-conflict reconstruction. The IISS Manama Dialogue came at a momentous time for the Middle East, with ongoing conflicts and instability in the region. By the end of the Dialogue, the Assad regime had collapsed. Themes include global security, the eroding rules-based order, and the implications of expanding strategic partnerships. The episode also touched on Iran's regional influence, the complexities of post-conflict reconstruction in Gaza, and the growing role of non-state actors in conflict zones. Tune in for an in-depth look at the geopolitical challenges and solutions shaping the Middle East. We hope you enjoy the episode and please follow, rate and subscribe to Sounds Strategic on the podcast platform of your choice. Date of Recording: 11 December 2024 The podcast is recorded and produced by the IISS. We recommend the following background reading for this episode: IISS Manama Dialogue 2024 IISS Manama Dialogue 2024: Introduction and Expert Commentary Chapter 1 | Geopolitics: Fragmentation, competition and the persistence of conflict Armed Conflict Survey 2024: Editor's Introduction Iran's strategic limbo Tracking Gulf defence production: armoured vehicles lead the way Human and development costs of the Middle East's protracted conflicts Bridging, not hedging: Arab Gulf States' ambitions in a polarised world Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On today's program, sponsored by HII, Byron Callan of the independent Washington research firm Capital Alpha Partners joins Defense & Aerospace Report Editor Vago Muradian to discuss political, market and international surprises in 2024 that will be consequential in the coming year; a look at the National Defense Authorization Act and appropriations expectations; the IISS' global outlook; the Washington International Trade Association's take on Trump and tariffs; the Defense Innovation Unit and the US Air Force's Collaborative Combat Aircraft; HII's shipyard acquisition; and a look at the week ahead.
Day 960.Today, we look at why Kamala Harris isn't talking about Ukraine, and hear from a missile-technology expert about what Russia's recent failed (and very expensive) missile test might mean for arms control and strategic ability. Contributors:Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor, Defence). @DomNicholls on X. Tony Diver (US Editor). @TonyDiver on X.Tim Wright (Research Analyst and Programme Administrator for Defence and Military Analysis at the IISS). @Wright_T_J on X. Students can subscribe to our coverage for free:We're giving university students worldwide unlimited access to The Telegraph completely free of charge. Just enter your student email address at telegraph.co.uk/studentsub to enjoy 12 months' free access to our website and app. Better still, you'll get another 12 months each time you re-validate your email address.Subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.ukHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.