1st Edition
Survival: October–November 2024
Survival 66.5 (October–November 2024), pp. 1–240
The Janus Face of Italy’s Far Right, by Riccardo Alcaro and Nathalie Tocci
Europe’s Leadership Void, by Matthias Matthijs
America’s Election and Europe’s Choices, by Sarah Raine
Putin’s Ideological State, by Vladimir Ryzhkov
The Significance of the Prisoner Exchange with Russia, by Nigel Gould-Davies
Noteworthy
Forum: Towards a European Nuclear Deterrent, by Héloïse Fayet, Andrew Futter and Ulrich Kühn
The War in Ukraine and Russia’s Quest to Reshape the World Order, by Jeffrey Mankoff
Ukraine in NATO: Beyond the ‘Irreversible Path’, by John R. Deni and Elisabeth Nielsen
Britain in the Pacific: Staying the Course?, by Nick Childs and Callum Fraser
Mirage of Coercion: The Real Sources of China’s Influence in the Middle East and North Africa, by Dale Aluf
Unpalatable Options: Confronting the Houthis, by Thomas Juneau
Is a Visionary Defence Bureaucracy Possible?, by Paul Fraioli
Book Reviews
South Asia, by Teresita C. Schaffer
Middle East, by Ray Takeyh
Economy, by Erik Jones
Ersatz Intelligence, by Michael Nevitt
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.
‘In a world of complex security challenges the need for serious, thoughtful analysis is greater than ever. Survival’s combination of elegant writing and rigorous scholarship from the world’s top experts makes it essential reading for both practitioners and academics.’
Professor Sir Lawrence Freedman, War Studies King's College London






