Great powers increasingly expect alignment not only in military affairs but also across diplomacy, technology, supply chains, and public signalling.
Press freedom rarely collapses in a single dramatic moment. More often, it erodes gradually through legal pressure, intimidation, and financial
The students who will negotiate Australia's future with Indonesia are currently in Year 7. What are we giving them? The
The events of February 2026 have confirmed that Australia can no longer afford to plan for one crisis at a
Australia and the European Union will sign a security and defence partnership to offer industry procurement opportunities and tangible economic
At first glance, the current crisis involving Iran has generated a familiar interpretive reflex: that the recent American and Israeli
This week in Australian foreign affairs: The Department of Defence confirms Iranian strikes have struck the Al Minhad Air Base in the United Arab Emirates, Prime Minister Anthony
As the conflict in the Middle East intensifies, a question that has received little attention is whether the war could
Stories of past disasters help prevent complacency. When survivors recount their experiences and how events unfolded, they keep the memory
India, which holds the world’s fifth‑largest rare earth reserves, remains heavily dependent on China for 80-90% of its magnets and
This was always going to be a complicated campaign. Modern wars rarely follow a predetermined plan, especially when conventional armies,
Recent crises show how quickly smaller states can be drawn into conflicts they neither choose nor control. Many have responded
