Nation-building in the borderlands of a borderland: A cartographical examination of the Russia-Ukraine War

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, much attention within political and military circles has been devoted to examining the origins of the seemingly unexpected war. However, these analyses have primarily explored the foreign policy objectives of Russia and the motivations of its president. This talk will instead consider the cartographical causes and consequences of the conflict. In drawing on cartographical material gathered through ethnographic fieldwork in three Ukrainian regions between 2018-2022, this talk will show how the war is connected to Ukraine’s position between the East and West. In particular, the ways its borderland status has been utilised throughout history by both neighbouring Russia and the European Union will be considered, especially how it has complicated processes of state- and nation-building since the state’s independence in 1991. Finally, the talk will argue for the importance of realising the nuances at the grassroots in Ukraine for understanding both the Russia-Ukraine war and the future direction of the country.

Dr Marnie Howlett is a Departmental Lecturer in Politics (Qualitative Methods) in the Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR) at the University of Oxford. She holds a PhD in International Relations from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), as well as a BA (High Honours) in International Studies and MA in Political Science from the University of Saskatchewan. Dr Howlett’s research centres on the intersection of cartography, nationalism, and geopolitics within the former Soviet Union, particularly Ukraine. Her interests also include research ethics, and the use of visual and spatial methods for political science research.
Dr Howlett currently teaches on the postgraduate Qualitative Methods in Political Science, Research Design in Comparative Political Science, and Comparative Political Science courses in the DPIR. She is also working on a book monograph, Imagined Borderlands, which explores the intersection and overlap of imagined and territorial cartographies to better explain contemporary nationalism and politics in Ukraine. Her research has appeared in The Conversation and on media channels in Canada, the UK, Europe, and Asia.
Prior to pursuing her PhD, Dr Howlett served as a legislative intern and policy analyst with the Saskatchewan Legislature in Regina, Canada. She has volunteered extensively in Canada and Ukraine with the non-governmental organisation, Help Us Help The Children, which works with Ukrainian orphans and families of war. Dr Howlett also served as an international electoral observer on three missions with CANADEM during Ukraine’s presidential and parliamentary elections in 2019.

Reflexive Control Theory: A Soviet perspective on influence and why it matters in the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Reflexive control theory is a theory of influence that was developed in the 1960s, in Soviet Russia. During this lecture Maria will talk about the cybernetic origins of the theory, what we know about reflexive control, and what we do not know about it. She’ll then talk about why this under-researched theory from Soviet times is important to take into account in the todays world and how it can help us think about strategic decision making in hybrid warfare.

Maria de Goeij is a Visiting Research Fellow at CCW and works as an analyst for Thomson Reuters Special Services International. Before joining TRSSI, Maria has worked for several think tanks in the Netherlands, the UK, and Montenegro. In addition to this, she has been working for several organisations as an analyst and advisor, and has considerable experience of all issues relating to hybrid and grey zone warfare.

Throughout her career, Maria specialised in the analysis of military thought and grand strategy, and strategic influence and statecraft. Her specific interest has been focused on improving contextual situational awareness, finding (qualitative and quantitative) patterns in conflict, including patterns of state and non-state actor behaviour, and the development of early warning systems. Together with the foregoing, her academic interests include the modelling of reflexive control theory.

Maria has a BA degree in European Studies, with a specialism in diplomacy, from The Hague University and an MSc degree in Crisis and Security Management from Leiden University.

Responsible Stakeholder or Challenger? Assessing India’s Foreign Policy Orientation via Leadership Travel

Will a rising India seek to uphold the existing conventions and standards that regulate the international system or is it likely to challenge an international order which is seen to have been constructed by the West in general and the United States in particular? This question has recently taken on increased salience in light of the Indian government’s multiple abstentions on UN votes censuring Russia over its invasion of the Ukraine. This talk—based on a study undertaken with Sumitha Narayanan Kutty—will shed light on India’s foreign policy priorities as well as the country’s orientation towards the international system since the end of the Cold War by assessing the patterns of high-level diplomatic travel undertaken by the Indian Prime Minister, External Affairs Minister and President between 1992-2019. In the face of arguments that India’s foreign policy has lacked coherence over the past three decades, the personal diplomacy undertaken by Indian VIPs indicates consistent drivers of foreign engagement and an identifiable orientation toward the present international system.

Dr. Walter C. Ladwig III is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London and an Associate Fellow in the Indo-Pacific Program at the Royal United Services Institution. His research interests include South Asian security, U.S. foreign policy, and irregular warfare. Walter’s scholarly work has been published in a number of academic journals including International Security, the Journal of Strategic Studies, and Asian Survey, among others. His first book, The Forgotten Front: Patron-Client Relationships in Counter Insurgency (Cambridge 2017), examines the often-difficult relations between the U.S. and local governments it is supporting in counterinsurgency. He is currently writing a book on Indian defense policy.

Walter has given evidence to Parliamentary committees and commented on international affairs for the Economist, the Washington Post, the Financial Times, and the BBC. His opinion pieces have appeared in a number of newspapers including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. He has held fellowships at the University of Virginia and the University of Pennsylvania, and previously taught courses on insurgency, terrorism, and Cold War history at the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge. He received a B.A. from the University of Southern California, an M.P.A. from Princeton University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Oxford.

International Law, Politics and Ethics of Humanitarian Military Intervention

The presented paper adopts a fresh approach on unilateral humanitarian intervention, and purports to demonstrate that, in certain cases, not only is permissible, but also legally and morally imperative. This academic venture is predominantly based on authoritative state practice, which in the view of the author should constitute reliable international legal custom, as well as theoretical groundwork; namely the well-established notion that violation of human rights necessitates intervention for the restoration of moral order, and applicable theories of deterrence (and just retribution) rendering humanitarian military intervention unobjectionable on grounds of the possibility of imminent humanitarian catastrophes.

Iacovos Kareklas got his B.A. and M.A. Degrees (Honours) in Law from Cambridge University, Magdalene College. He holds a Ph.D. in International Law from London University (London School of Economics and Political Science). He specialized in all fields of Public International Law and every aspect of the Cyprus problem. He conducted sustained and in depth research in the United Kingdom Foreign Office Archives with regard to the critical phases of the Cyprus Question. In the academic year 2003-2004 he was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Government, Harvard University. He did postdoctoral studies in International Relations Theory with special reference to the Use of Military Force under the worldwide distinguished political scientist, Professor Stanley Hoffmann. At Harvard, he also taught the course Classical Theories of International Relations. In the year 2004-2005, Dr. Kareklas was appointed Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies. In 2006 and 2007 he was elected Fellow of the Faculty of Law in the University of Oxford, where he specialized in the Philosophy of Law.

From 2013 to 2020 he was Associate Professor at the European University Cyprus, where he taught Public International Law, Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, and International Politics.

He spent a year as researcher in the Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICS) of London (2001-2002), the British Institute of International and Comparative Law (2003), the Oxford Centre for Criminology (2006), and has been a member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs. Iacovos is the author of numerous books and articles in the fields of his specialization. His latest book entitled Thucydides on International Law and Political Theory was published in New York by Rowman and Littlefield: Lexington Books, in 2020.

As a Visiting Research Fellow at CCW, he is conducting further research on the Law of War with emphasis on military humanitarian intervention.

The Strategies of Small States: Safeguarding Autonomy and Influencing Great Powers

When major powers clash, or grow more competitive, the historical record shows that small states are the first to be buffeted by the actions of their larger counterparts. Small states do not set the international agenda. This means that if the fears of a breakdown of the rules-based order are well-founded, it will have profound implications for their security. Thus, these actors must look within their own armoury – at the tactics and strategies available to them, within certain bounds – and consider how much leverage they can exert within the context in which they operate. Can small states do anything more than move swiftly to avoid being trampled when elephants collide? This talk will examine the strategies pursued by small states to safeguard their autonomy (including ‘strategic hedging’ and ‘seeking shelter’); as well as innovative means of projecting influence (ranging from the harnessing of multilateralism to bind great power behaviour, to serving as ‘smart states’ in the international system). Today, increasing antagonism between great powers is already creating serious dilemmas for smaller international actors, and this is likely to intensify in the near future. However, the ability of small states to strategically navigate risk and influence the behaviour of Great Powers means that they can be expected to adapt to these changes. As small states navigate a fading rules-based order, this talk will argue that they have several time-tested strategies in reserve.     

Dr Hillary Briffa is a Lecturer in National Security Studies and the Assistant Director of the Centre for Defence Studies in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, where she read for her Ph.D, asking whether small states can have a grand strategy. She is also a founding member of the Centre for Grand Strategy at King’s, where she serves as the research lead for the Climate Change and International Order portfolio. Previously, she has taught courses across the spectrum of global politics, international relations, defence, foreign policy, security and strategy at the Royal College of Defence Studies, the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, University College London, Birkbeck University of London, and Queen Mary University of London. Beyond academia, she served as Malta’s official Youth Ambassador to the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) for three years, and worked at the Malta High Commission to the UK throughout Malta’s tenure as Commonwealth Chair-in-Office. After running peace-building projects in Eastern and Central Europe, in 2015 she was appointed an Associate Fellow of the Royal Commonwealth Society, and in 2016 became a recipient of the U.S. State Department’s inaugural Emerging Young Leaders award.

** Apologies for the audio quality for this podcast. The introductory segment is the worst affected but the audio quality improves significantly afterwards and the sound is clear for the rest of the podcast. We hope you enjoy it. See here for an auto-generated transcript of this podcast.

Russian Perceptions of Conflict with Discussion of War in Ukraine

Professor Mark Galeotti discusses Russian perceptions of war and conflict. The differences between what is considered "war" vs "conflict" and how this changes between the military and civilian security establishments. In addition, the war in Ukraine is discussed. Discussion of Russian notions of future warfare tend, for understandable reasons, to focus on the debates within the military, which are then embodied in doctrine, tactics and procurement decisions. These debates are important, but also much more accessible, given the degree to which they are played out and arbitrated within the military press. However, there is an intertwined, if much less accessible debate within the civilian national security establishment – notably the intelligence services and the Security Council secretariat – which is at least of equal importance. While informed by the defence establishment’s debate and sharing many of its assumptions, it is different, not least in its greater willingness to think in terms of open-ended and non-military conflicts, in which over warfighting may play a limited, episodic or essentially theatrical role. In this presentation, Dr Galeotti will address both sets of perceptions and consider the practical and political implications of this divide within Kremlin thinking on warfare.

In light of current events, the original planned lecture was amended to include coverage of the ongoing war in Ukraine, Russian thinking about it, and potential outcomes.

Dr Mark Galeotti is CEO of the consultancy Mayak Intelligence as well as an Honorary Professor at University College London School of Slavonic and East European Studies. He is also a senior research associate with RUSI, the Council on Geostrategy and the Institute of International Relations Prague. A widely published specialist on Russian security issues, Dr Galeotti has taught, researched, and written in the United Kingdom, the United States, Russia, the Czech Republic and Italy. Educated at Cambridge University and the London School of Economics, he has been a senior research fellow at the FCO, head of the history department at Keele University, professor of global affairs at New York University, head of the IIR Prague’s Centre for European Security, and a visiting faculty member at Rutgers-Newark (USA), MGIMO (Russia), and Charles University (Czech Republic). His most recent books include The Weaponisation of Everything (Yale, 2022), Russian Political War (Routledge, 2020) and The Vory (Yale, 2018).

War and Peace at Oxford Seminar with Raja Karthikeya

17 January 2022

The UN and the changing character of peacemaking: new tools and new thinking.

This was a joint CRIC-CCW-WAPO event.

Raja Karthikeya is a Political Affairs Officer in the United Nations Secretariat supporting the General Assembly's deliberations on the Middle East. He has previously served with UN special political missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, and led the Global Programme on Preventing Violent Extremism at the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism where he supported governments across Asia and Africa in developing inclusive policies to counter violent extremism.

His work has included engaging civil society and youth to ensure inclusive political negotiations, facilitation of national unity government formation efforts, and design of transitional justice mechanisms. As part of his personal efforts to raise awareness about the peace & security dimension of climate adaptation, he crossed the Arctic and Antarctic circles in 2018. Prior to the UN, he has worked with international affairs thinktanks and has published widely on public policy challenges.

Please note that Raja was speaking in his personal capacity as a visiting fellow at CCW and his comments do not reflect any position of the UN.

Illusions of Autonomy: Why Europe cannot provide for its security if the United States pulls back

25 January 2022

Europe’s security landscape has changed dramatically in the past decade amid Russia’s resurgence, mounting European doubts about the long-term reliability of the U.S. security commitment, and Europe’s growing aspiration for strategic autonomy. Could Europeans develop an autonomous defense capacity if the United States withdrew completely from Europe? If the United States were to do so, any European effort to develop an autonomous defense capacity would be fundamentally hampered by profoundly diverging threat perceptions and severe military capacity shortfalls that would be very costly and time-consuming to close.

Hugo Meijer is CNRS Research Fellow at Sciences Po, Center for International Studies (CERI, Paris) and the Founding Director of The European Initiative for Security Studies (EISS), a multidisciplinary network of scholars that share the goal of consolidating security studies in Europe. He is also a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Security, Diplomacy and Strategy (CSDS), in Brussels, and an Honorary Researcher at the Centre for War and Diplomacy, Lancaster University. Recent and forthcoming books: Awakening to China’s Rise. European Foreign and Security Policies toward the People’s Republic of China (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2022); The Handbook of European Defence Policies and Armed Forces (Oxford University Press, 2018), co-edited with Marco Wyss. For more details, see: https://www.hugomeijer.com/

A transcript file is available here.

Russian Strategy in the Social Media Battlefield

18 January 2022

Malign manipulation of the information environment is an urgent security threat facing western democracies. This talk examines why and how state and nonstate actors have harnessed emerging technologies – social media platforms in particular – to shape the information environment for strategic ends. Weaponization of disinformation is neither new nor warfare in the traditional sense, but digital aspects in particular have confounded western efforts to manage it. This talk is based on interdisciplinary British Academy project that applies intelligence history, strategic studies, and technological perspectives to evaluate and counter influence operations that seek to advance strategic aims in an asymmetric manner short of war.

Dr. David V. Gioe is a British Academy Global Professor and Visiting Professor of Intelligence and International Security in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London (KCL). Prior to joining KCL David was Associate Professor of History at the US Military Academy at West Point and History Fellow for the Army Cyber Institute. David is Director of Studies for the Cambridge Security Initiative and is co-convener of its International Security and Intelligence program. He is a former CIA analyst and operations officer; he remains a senior officer in the US Navy Reserve.

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.

Emerging Military Technologies: A New Military Revolution?

23 November 2021

“Military revolutions” refer to major changes in the technologies required for prosecuting wars, which in turn fundamentally alter the organization and functioning of human societies. This phenomenon has been observed for the Napoleonic wars, the industrial age, and the nuclear age. The 4th industrial revolution (4IR), characterized by the fusion of the digital, biological, and physical worlds through technologies such as artificial intelligence, robotics, genetic engineering and quantum computing (among others), is already profoundly changing the conduct of war (warfare). Yet, it also has the potential to simultaneously alter our perceptions of time (hyper-velocity weapons, speeding up of warfare), of space (militarization of new domains such as cyber and extra-atmospheric space), and of self (transformed human bodies through “augmented soldiers”, robotization of the battlefield). Combined, 4IR military technologies may trigger a new “military revolution” with far-reaching consequences not only for warfare but also for the politics, self-understanding and functioning of human societies. This talk will discuss how 4IR technologies may transform our understanding of war and affect our societies.

Dr Schmitt is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the Center for War Studies, University of Southern Denmark. He also currently serves as Vice-president and Scientific Director of the French Association for War and Strategic Studies (AEGES).Before joining CWS in 2015, he obtained his PhD from the department of War Studies, King’s College London, and was a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Montreal Center for International Studies (CÉRIUM). He holds MA degrees from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva) and Sciences Po Aix. A reserve officer in the French navy, De Schmitt has policy experience at the French MoD and NATO. He also worked for two think-tanks: the Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). He conducts research in two broad fields. First, he is interested in security and strategic studies, in particular multilateral military cooperation, comparative defence policies, arms control, military transformation and the changing character of warfare. Second, he looks at the role of ideas and norms in world politics, with research on strategic narratives, influence and propaganda, but also far-right ideologies. His current research project, entitled “Transforming Armed Forces in the 21st Century“, is founded by the Carlsberg Foundation (“Distinguished Associate Professor Fellowship“), the Independent Research Fund Denmark (“Research Project 1“) and the Gerda Henkel Foundation (special programme “Security, Society and the State“).

The Central Role of Space Domain Awareness in Future Military Conflicts

16 November 2021

Since the start of the Space Age, the orbital domain has always been used for military purposes; but in recent times there has been an increasing focus on tactical rather than strategic satellite applications. There has been a shift in military emphasis towards systems that provide wider coverage, more timely information, increased data capacity, and lower latency communications. Nevertheless, these novel military capabilities are now being surpassed by commercial mega-constellations, some of which are providing services that were once exclusively military functions.

For these reasons, space assets have now become targets; a number of nations have demonstrated anti-satellite (ASAT) systems in multiple orbital regimes. In a hostile military environment, both offensive and defensive space operations require highly detailed space domain awareness (SDA) information. This level of SDA is currently in relatively short supply, and as satellite systems start to develop SDA countermeasures, it will become increasingly difficult to acquire. 

The lecture will explain the ongoing technical evolution in space systems that will, inevitably, influence future conflicts, and the increasing threats that such systems face. It will make the case that the outcome of future military engagements in orbit will be reliant on SDA which needs to be far better than the limited information that is available today, especially if satellite system designers start to protect their assets by conducting “SDA Warfare”. 

In 2018, Stuart Eves founded his own space consultancy company, SJE Space Ltd, after spending 16 years with the UK Ministry Of Defence, and 14 years with Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL). He has been involved with a wide variety of space missions, including TopSat, which set a satellite world record for “resolution per mass” when it was launched in 2005, and which was featured in the Space Gallery at the Science Museum in London. Stuart’s recent book “Space Traffic Control”, describes the measures needed to maintain the space environment and protect satellites from both natural hazards and man-made threats. He serves on the Advisory Panel for the ESA Space Safety Programme, and is a founder of the GNOSIS network on sustainability in space. He has been involved in a diverse range of media activities on all aspects of space, (including most recently on “SSA Warfare”), and has previously been a recipient of an Arthur Clarke Award for space education and outreach. Stuart has an MSc in Astrophysics, a PhD in satellite constellation design, and has been a fellow of both the Royal Astronomical Society and the British Interplanetary Society for more than 25 years.

Integration – The Goldilocks Factor

26 October 2021

The Integrated Review, Multi-Domain Integration, The Integrated Operating Concept, Multi-Domain Battle, the list goes on. These concepts define US and UK ideas of how to fight and win in the future, and they all have a common underpinning premise: integrate better.  But what is ‘better’ integration? Counter-intuitively to many, better integration is not as simple as more integration. ‘Better’ integration doesn’t just enable efficient communications, it enables systemic learning and memory, collective intelligence, speed of response, and effective adaption. Increased integration, but done badly, induces blindness, slower responses, bloat, and systemic stupidity. In an era where how data flows across a military system is going to matter more, what are the lessons from DeepMind’s research, paper plates, cats, the P-38 Lightning, the biggest theoretical artificial intelligence, the disaster that is the human eyeball, and even how you are sitting in that chair. 

Lieutenant Colonel Al Brown is a Visiting Research Fellow at Oxford. In addition to all the things one might expect in a twenty-year military career in the post-9/11 era, Al was previously the lead for Defence on the study of global trends in robotics and artificial intelligence and their impacts on conflict. He has been one of the group of government experts providing advice to and speaking at the United Nations, and an occasional guest lecturer at various universities, the Royal United Services Institute, and the Alan Turing Institute. 

CCW 2021 Annual Lecture: British Defence Policy: Reviews and Redirections

22 November 2021

We were thrilled to have Peter Watkins speak at our 2021 Annual Lecture. We hope you enjoyed the event and refreshments afterwards and, if not, we hope you enjoy catching up with the lecture here.

Peter Watkins became an associate fellow for Chatham House in June 2019. Before that, from 2014 to 2018, he was Director General (DG) in the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) responsible for strategic defence policy, including key multilateral and bilateral relationships (such as NATO), nuclear, cyber, space and prosperity (latterly this post was known as the DG Strategy and International). Previously he served as DG of the Defence Academy, Director of Operational Policy, Director responsible for the UK share of the multinational Typhoon combat aircraft programme and as Defence Counsellor in the UK Embassy in Berlin. He is a frequent participant in conferences on defence and security in the UK and overseas. He was awarded the CB (2019) and CBE (2004) for services to defence. He has an MA from Cambridge University.