Paul Rogers is Emeritus Professor of Peace Studies in the Department of Peace Studies and International Relations at Bradford University, and an Honorary Fellow at the Joint Service Command and Staff College. He is openDemocracy’s international security correspondent. He is on Twitter at: @ProfPRogers.
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Published in: Home: OpinionCould winning an election be the end of Keir Starmer?
Elected as the lesser of two evils, Labour will face crises from the offset. Could its disenchanted left step in?
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Published in: Home: OpinionMilitary alliances like NATO won’t solve our greatest security threat
Things may look rosy for NATO today, but climate breakdown, not wars, are the biggest threat to global security
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Published in: Home: OpinionCorbynism isn’t gone – there’s still hope it could shape the UK’s future
Could Corbyn’s reception at events like Bradford Literature Festival say anything about the future of British politics?
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Published in: Home: OpinionPutin stays in charge, but Prigozhin mutiny highlights US power in Ukraine
The ‘march on Moscow’ threw light on US intelligence involvement in Ukraine, and the leverage it has over the war
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Published in: Home: OpinionOur global culture of war means guaranteed profits for the arms industry
For the arms industry to flourish, it needs wars, preferably protracted, destructive stalemates in far-off places
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Published in: Home: OpinionNuclear weapons on rise in a world where ‘peace through deterrence’ is a myth
Powerful nations are prepared to use nuclear weapons first. This is why their proliferation is worrying analysts