Archive | International Security
Posted on 08 February 2012. Tags: aerospace manufacturers, Aircraft, Aviation, Berlin, Business/Finance, Canard aircraft, Carrier-based aircraft, Cassidian, chief, Dassault Rafale, defense aerospace, defense contractor, EADS, EUR, Eurofighter, Eurofighter Jagdflugzeug GmbH, Eurofighter Typhoon, Europe, F-35, F-35 Lightning II, Fighter aircraft, Finance, France, French government, German Marshall Fund of the United States, Germany, india, Indian MRCA competition, Italy, Japan, JAS 39 Gripen, Jet aircraft, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Mumbai, Natural Disaster, Nicolas Sarkozy, Politics, President, program officer, Rafale, Royal Air Force, Sarah Raine, Spain, Stealth aircraft, Switzerland, technology transfers, United Kingdom, USD, Washington
By: Sarah Raine
BERLIN/MUMBAI–The announcement last week that India was entering into exclusive negotiations with Dassault for its Rafale fighter jet represents a major coup for the French defense contractor and for Nicolas Sarkozy. The embattled French president was evidently relieved by the prospect of the Rafale’s first ever foreign sale in a deal worth over US$10 billion, [...]
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Posted in European Union, French Politics, Germany, India, International Security, Japan, slider, Transatlantic Take
Posted on 03 February 2012. Tags: Afghan government, Afghanistan, Alexandra de Hoop Scheffer, Asia, Barack Obama, Europe, France, Francois Hollande, German Marshall Fund of the United States, International public opinion on the war in Afghanistan, International Security Assistance Force, Kapisa Province, Military, NATO, Nicolas Sarkozy, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Obama administration, Politics, President, Taliban, war fatigue, War in Afghanistan, War/Conflict
By: Alexandra de Hoop Scheffer
PARIS–President Barack Obama’s announcement last June of an accelerated U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan reopened debates in many European countries over when their soldiers should return from that unpopular war. French President Nicolas Sarkozy followed a few days later with an announcement that French troops would be reduced “in a proportional manner and in a calendar [...]
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Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, European Union, France, French Politics, International Security, NATO, slider, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take
Posted on 25 January 2012. Tags: Afghan, Arab Spring, Barack Obama, Iran, osama bin laden, Persian Gulf, State of the Union
By: Mark Jacobson
WASHINGTON – As he campaigned for the U.S. presidency in 1952, Republican candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower argued that he would seek to bring “security with solvency” to the American people. Eisenhower realized that the challenges posed by the Soviet Union could too easily stress America’s finite resources and a strategy to face that threat consider [...]
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Posted in Afghanistan, Climate, Economics, Election 2012, Energy, Immigration, International Security, Middle East, NATO, News, Renewable Energy, Solar Energy, United States
Posted on 25 January 2012. Tags: African Union, Corporate Council for Africa, Democracy, European Union, Humanitarian aid, International Engagement Conference on South Sudan, South Sudan, United Nations, USAID
By: James Kunder
Fewer than 30 days into the new year, the foreign policy agenda for Europe and North America has already become crowded. North Korea, Iran, Syria, potential breakthroughs in Burma, and the still roiling revolutionary fervor in the Middle East are but a few of the issues facing transatlantic policymakers. Iraq, facing renewed violence in the [...]
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Posted in Africa, Economics, European Union, International Security, South Sudan, Trade & Poverty Reduction, United States
Posted on 18 January 2012. Tags: International Security, Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, North Arabian Sea, Nuclear Security, nuclear talks, Obama administration, Persian Gulf, PLO, Turkey, U.S. foreign policy, USS John Stennis
By: Geoffrey Kempe
WASHINGTON– Political realities facing the leaders of the United States and Iran mean that military confrontation between the two states is a distinct possibility. In late December, the Iranian armed forces conducted a number of war games — which included the live firing of missiles — in the Straits of Hormuz and adjacent waters of the [...]
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Posted in Energy, International Security, Iran, Middle East, slider, Transatlantic Take, United States
Posted on 09 January 2012.
By: Ian Lesser
BRUSSELS—Full details of the Obama administration’s new look in defense spending, force posture, and strategy are not yet out. But enough has been revealed to venture some thoughts on the logic of the new approach and the longer-term implications for the United States and transatlantic partners. The shift to a “one war, spoil and manage” [...]
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Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, Black Sea, European Union, International Security, Iran, Iraq, Middle East, NATO, News, Politics, Russia, slider, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United States
Posted on 09 January 2012.
By: Sarah Raine
BERLIN — When President Barack Obama unveiled a new national defense strategy last week, which confirmed the United States’ intent to play a sustained role in shaping a rising Asia, he noted that “the tide of war is receding.” This observation will have done little to reassure a skeptical Beijing that the strategy is aimed [...]
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Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, European Union, International Security, Iran, Iraq, Middle East, NATO, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United States
Posted on 09 January 2012.
By: Alexandra de Hoop Scheffer
PARIS—The Obama administration’s new defense strategy should come as no surprise to observers in France and across Europe. The question of rebalancing American military involvement between Europe and the Asia-Pacific has been a recurring theme of transatlantic relations and of U.S. policy debates since at least the 1950s. In large part, it reflects the historical [...]
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Posted in Asia, European Union, International Security, Iran, Iraq, Middle East, NATO, News, Politics, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United States
Posted on 09 January 2012.
By: Andrew Michta
WARSAW—The new strategic defense guidance from the Obama administration aims to refocus the U.S. defense posture on the increasingly competitive security environment emerging in the Pacific. It also (despite the Pentagon’s protestations to the contrary) appears to put an end to the era of large-scale counterinsurgency and stability operations. Last but not least, it implies [...]
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Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, European Union, International Security, NATO, News, Politics, Transatlantic Relations, Transatlantic Take, United States
Posted on 04 January 2012. Tags: arctic security, Artic Ocean, Canada, Global warming, International Security, North Pole, oil, sea lanes, Transport
By: Geoffrey Kempe
WASHINGTON—Slowly but surely, climate change is opening up the Arctic. Greenland’s glaciers and ice fields are melting, sea ice around the North Pole is decreasing each year, and the huge permafrost areas of Russia and Canada are beginning to thaw. This has led to widespread speculation of a Great Game-style scramble for the region’s abundant [...]
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Posted in Climate, Energy, International Security, NATO, Russia, Transatlantic Take