Analysts say the trilateral defense pact could set precedents and become a 20-year endeavor for the countries involved.
By Justin KatzThe one thing Boris Johnson and his DUDE — Deliver, Unite, Defeat, Energize — partisans have in common with their opponents is that they all want to see a quick end to a process that has paralyzed the debate about Europe’s future and created a climate of instability which only NATO’s foes can find suitable.
By Murielle DelaporteLondon is on the verge of a much-delayed and debated decision about allowing Huawei to build “non-core” components of its 5G network.
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.A year ago, it would have been tempting to write off President Trump’s “bull in a china shop” diplomacy as the product of inexperience and impulsiveness. However, after eighteen months in the White House tenure, Trump is looking like a man with a method, a leader acting according to a consistent ideology — if not…
By James KitfieldA British defense official talks about an age of competition among great powers, putting the Ministry of Defense on the same page as its Pentagon colleagues
By Paul McLearyLONDON: Sen. John McCain would be howling if 49 percent of Pentagon contracts were not competed — especially if that had been true for more than nine years. How would McCain and his colleagues react if a company awarded a sole source deal charged the government $34,000 for a charitable donation or for “staff welfare?” One can only…
By Colin Clark