Full Description
Survival, the IISS's bimonthly journal, challenges conventional wisdom and brings fresh, often controversial, perspectives on strategic issues of the moment.
In this issue:
Marcus Willett examines Russia's SolarWinds hack and the painful lessons it holds for the United States
In a special forum, seven experts consider the purpose and effectiveness of the United Nations, as well as the intricacies of Security Council reform, on its 75th anniversary
Peter Rudolf argues that the United States' perception of China as a revisionist strategic rival will complicate transatlantic policy coordination
Ray Takeyh considers whether the US intelligence community bungled assessments of Iran's political stability in the late 1970s
And six 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
Assistant Editor: Jessica Watson
Contents
Survival 63.2 (April-May 2021), pp. 1-212
Lessons of the SolarWinds Hack, by Marcus Willett
Eastern Exposure: Germany Looks at Russia, by Aaron M. Zack
Reforming Ukraine's Security Sector, by Nicolò Fasola and Alyssa J. Wood
Forum: The UN at 75
Editor's Note
Resolving the Dilemma of UNSC Reform, by Kishore Mahbubani
The Intricacies of UN Security Council Reform, by Martin Binder and Monika Heupel
What's the UN Security Council For?, by Sergio Aguirre and William Wagner
UN Peacekeeping After the Pandemic: An Increased Role for Intelligence, by Allison Carnegie and Austin Carson
Noteworthy
The Sino-American World Conflict, by Peter Rudolf
Why Global Order Needs Disorder, by Dominic Tierney
Lifting the Protection Curse: The Rise of New Military Powers in the Middle East, by David B. Roberts
Did the US Intelligence Community Lose Iran?, by Ray Takeyh
Rebel with a Cause, by Russell Crandall
Book Reviews
Environment and Resources, by Jeffrey Mazo
Middle East, by Ray Takeyh
United States, by David C. Unger
Is Putin Doomed to Run in 2024?, by Nigel Gould-Davies



