Survival, the IISS’s bimonthly journal, challenges conventional wisdom and brings fresh, often controversial, perspectives on strategic issues of the moment.

    In this issue:

    • Franz-Stefan Gady and Michael Kofman assess that Ukraine will not be able to avoid attrition in its military strategy against Russia

    • Nigel Gould-Davies assesses that Vladimir Putin’s priority has shifted from demobilising the population from politics to mobilising it behind the war

    • Bastian Giegerich and Ben Schreer judge that Germany still requires significant changes to its defence and foreign policies for Zeitenwende to be meaningful

    • Lynn Kuok believes that framing great-power competition as an ideological struggle is counterproductive to the United States’ partnerships in the Asia-Pacific

    • Adam Mount observes that a fixation on nuclear assurance is harming the military alliance between the United States and South Korea

    And seven more thought-provoking pieces, as well as our regular Book Reviews and Noteworthy column.

    Editor: Dr Dana Allin

    Managing Editor: Jonathan Stevenson

    Associate Editor: Carolyn West

    Editorial Assistant: Charlie Zawadzki

    Survival 65.2 (April–May 2023), pp. 1–228

    Ukraine’s Strategy of Attrition, by Franz-Stefan Gady and Michael Kofman

    How the War Has Changed Russia, by Nigel Gould-Davies

    Enforcing Russia’s Debt to Ukraine: Constraints and Creativity, by Maria Shagina

    Zeitenwende One Year On, by Bastian Giegerich and Ben Schreer

    Asia’s Ukraine Problem, by Lynn Kuok

    Noteworthy

    About European Sovereignty, by Pierre Buhler

    The Energy Transition, Protectionism and Transatlantic Relations, by Nicholas Crawford

    Truman Redux? Biden’s National Security Strategy, by Aaron Ettinger

    The US and South Korea: The Trouble with Nuclear Assurance, by Adam Mount

    Assessing Proliferation Risks in the Middle East, by Aya Kamil, Zuha Noor and Daniel Serwer

    Reading Clausewitz: On War for 21st-century Practitioners, by James S. Powell

    Book Reviews

    Middle East, by Ray Takeyh

    United States, by David C. Unger

    Environment and Resources, by Jeffrey Mazo

    Historical Imagination and the Unspoken Assumptions of Our Age, by Benjamin Rhode

    Biography

    The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a registered charity with offices in Washington, London, Manama, Singapore and Berlin, is the world’s leading authority on political–military conflict. It is the primary independent source of accurate, objective information on international strategic issues. Publications include The Military Balance, an annual reference work on each nation’s defence capabilities; Strategic Survey, an annual review of world affairs; Survival, a bimonthly journal on international affairs; Strategic Comments, an online analysis of topical issues in international affairs; and the Adelphi series of books on issues of international security.