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Western Way of War

Latest episodes

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Dec 23, 2021 • 56min

So What Did We Learn, if Anything?

Emilie Cleret, a discerning critique from France's École de Guerre, dives deep with host Peter Roberts into the complexities of military strategy. They question the existence of a 'Western Way of War' and discuss the evolving nature of military thought. The conversation touches on the impact of historical figures like Clausewitz and emphasizes the importance of human emotions in warfare, as well as the dangers of over-reliance on AI. Together, they demand a broader perspective for future conflicts, particularly regarding emerging threats from adversarial nations.
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Dec 16, 2021 • 30min

Ben Wallace: Not Tinkering Around the Edges

UK Secretary of State for Defence Ben Wallace talks to Peter Roberts about spending trends, allies, terrorism, campaigning, budgets and reforming the military (and the strategic headquarters of defence). Do we know him any better after this chat? You be the judge.
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Dec 9, 2021 • 29min

Dr Matthew Harries: Matters of nuclear weapons

There is a lot going on with nuclear weapons at the moment - from UK and German announcements, changes in the way China is thinking about nuclear doctrine, and US recapitalisation (including some spoilers about what to expect from the US Nuclear Posture review due out in January 2022). Who better to discuss all this with than RUSI's own doyen of WMD, Dr Matthew Harries? He and Peter try to avoid theological questions and stick to the reality. Find out if they succeeded.
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Dec 2, 2021 • 32min

Joann Robertson: Rethinking Logistics

Joann Robertson, a logistics expert, joins commentator Peter Roberts to shine a light on the critical role logistics play in military operations. They discuss the risks introduced by outsourcing supply chains and explore how rethinking logistics could provide a strategic edge for Western militaries. The conversation delves into the disconnect between civilian and military perspectives, the evolution of logistics practices, and the benefits of adopting proven technologies to enhance operational effectiveness. A compelling examination of logistics as a potential game-changer in modern warfare!
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Nov 25, 2021 • 31min

Sam Cranny Evans: Chinese Ground Forces

Peter talks to the latest RUSI recruit and People’s Liberation Army researcher Sam Cranny Evans about the professionalisation and modernisation of the Chinese ground forces since 1980, their doctrine of strategic attrition and defeat-in-detail, the new Combined Armed Brigade structures, and whether Chinese electronic warfare is as good as that of the Russians.
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Nov 18, 2021 • 32min

Natia Seskuria: Russian Borderisation Tactics

When Russia invaded Georgia in 2008, Moscow annexed 20% of Georgia's sovereign land space using traditional military force. Over the subsequent 13 years, however, Georgia has been subject to constant political, economic and societal coercion as Moscow tries to steer Tbilisi into the Russian sphere of influence. The tradecraft used by Moscow might simply be an evolution of what we previously knew as 'active measures', but – as Georgian analyst Natia Seskuria tells Peter Roberts – it certainly feels new.
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Nov 11, 2021 • 32min

Alessio Patalano: The Evolution of Warfare at Sea

Peter Roberts talks to Professor Alessio Patalano, doyen of the development of naval warfare and strategy at King’s College London. They discuss combat experience at sea, the value of corporate memory, the formation of alliances, naval diplomacy, economics and the fragility of life at sea.
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Nov 4, 2021 • 32min

Kafia Omar: A Deadly Decade for Children

The experience of children in war is getting worse, from mental abuse to physical torture, kidnap, rape and being forcibly inducted into militaries. Peter Roberts talks to Kafia Omar from the charity War Child about what can be done so that states can live up to their legal and moral obligations to stamp out such practices.
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Oct 21, 2021 • 33min

Sarah Ashbridge: Are We Proud of the Contract Between the Military and Society?

Veterans, families, casualties, death and the repatriation of casualties’ remains feature as key themes in a discussion between conflict archaeologist Dr Sarah Ashbridge and Peter Roberts. The key question: is the reverse of the current implicit contract between service personnel and the nation – namely society’s obligation to people in uniform, both living and dead – something we should be proud of or slightly ashamed of?
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Oct 14, 2021 • 27min

Justin Bronk: An Unhealthy Dependence on Air Power

Peter Roberts talks to RUSI Research Fellow for Airpower and Technology Justin Bronk about the realities of aircraft availability for contemporary operations, and the risk that Western air forces may ‘design themselves into irrelevance’ because of a flawed set of assumptions about force generation for peacetime duties that just don't work in combat.

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