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IISS in the Press

  • 03 September 2010 - - Business Daily - Troop withdrawal mere propaganda Military Balance 2010In comparative terms and using the latest figures from the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, Kenya’s armed forces, that is, the Army, Air Force and Navy, comprise less than half of the US forces that remain in Iraq following the recent reductions. The Economist on Tuesday said the IISS "reckons China now has more warships than America, which long possessed the biggest fleet. As it can be hard to distinguish a warship from other boats, the IISS uses its own definition of what
  • 03 Sseptember 2010 - - Financial Times - China and US stage Yellow Sea wargames IISS Logo“China’s naval power is growing rapidly. This is something which the US long expected to happen but which has now reached a level where it is clearly felt also by China’s neighbours,” says Gary Li, an expert on the PLA Navy at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.
  • 01 September 2010 - - Chosun Ilbo - China 'Has More Warships than U.S.' Military Balance 2010China overtakes the U.S. in the number of warships, a British weekly said, quoting a report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies. The Economist on Tuesday said the IISS "reckons China now has more warships than America, which long possessed the biggest fleet. As it can be hard to distinguish a warship from other boats, the IISS uses its own definition of what counts and what does not."
  • 30 August 2010 - - Economist - Warships Military Balance 2010THE International Institute for Strategic Studies (better known as the IISS), reckons China now has more warships than America, which long possessed the biggest fleet. As it can be hard to distinguish a warship from other boats, the IISS uses its own definition of what counts and what does not.
  • 27 August 2010 - - Al-Arabiya - Strike against Iran still on the table IISS Logo“Nuclear reactors, per se, do not threaten the non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and do not necessarily result in nuclear weapons programs,” said Michael Elleman, Senior Fellow for Missile Defense, International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). "It would be a risk if Iran operated it differently, i.e. for short periods at low burn-up in order to produce weapons-usable plutonium. But in this case, the IAEA would know," Mr Fitzpatrick says.
  • 25 August 2010 - - National Review - Evaluating China's Military Strength Shangri-La Dialogue 2010When it comes to China, this administration seems to be pulled in two directions. It spent much of 2009 trying to reassure China that the U.S. welcomes its rise; the White House’s handling of the report was one effort in that broader campaign. At the same time, there has been the occasional glimpse of a more confrontational approach to Beijing: Secretary Clinton’s Internet-freedom speech, arms sales to Taiwan, Secretary Gates’s remarks at the International Institute for Strategic Studies’ Asia Security Summ
  • 26 August 2010 - - IISS Experts' Commentary - Generation 'Qiam': Iran's new missile Michael EllemanMichael Elleman, IISS Senior Fellow for Missile Defence, says Iran’s latest missile test reveals much about its development programme
  • 23 August 2010 - - The National - UAE sets peaceful precedent in nuclear design IISS LogoBut according to Mark Fitzpatrick, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, fear of proliferation is not the main reason for the region’s relative slowness to join the nuclear energy club. “There is just as much, if not more fear, of proliferation today as there was then. If it were a contributing factor, it would be more relevant today when the proliferation concerns are more real,” he said.
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