Is the British public remotedly prepared for possible cyber attacks aimed at our national infrastructure?
Be ready too, for him to surprise by doing less than expected, in the hope that the more skittish members of the Alliance peel off.
Constructing Nightingale hospitals, delivering vaccines, driving ambulances – such work mustn’t compromise their core function.
It is no longer possible to believe that one can sup with Putin provided one’s spoon is as long as the Nordstream 2 pipeline.
The former Tory leader says far too many officials and ministers have retired and then taken money from Beijing.
I would like to see a new ‘COP26 for migrants’ – a new global agreement to update the post-Second World War Refugee Convention for the modern era.
Our columnist provides the second piece in our series this week about Brexit – almost a year since the end of transition.
The bottom line is that no-one has to make these dangerous journeys. We need to be crystal clear about that.
The naive globalisation of the 1990s has become a liability. Britain and its allies need to beef up their defences
In particular, the escort fleet needs to double in size by acquiring more low-end capability to carry out presence operations and other low-end tasks.
The UK needs a fresh, robust template. Central to it should be a differentiation between strategic and non-strategic areas.
There are also diplomatic and geostrategic opportunities for Global Britain to lead on developing human and environmental standards.
There should be a growth target to complement the inflation target – to drive government departments to take actions that will promote more UK activity and jobs.
Experience suggests that killers motivated by Islamist extremism seldom act outside terrorist networks.
Re-calibrating policies to account for the reality of conflict and warfare today could not be more urgent.