Military

Paul McGeough

The military adviser left out in the cold

Paul McGeough dinkus

Paul McGeough The lost pages of Catch-22 have turned up: they are the real-life career notes of Gwenyth Todd.

Malcolm Brown

Military violence: is it any surprise?

Army

Malcolm Brown When Captain Cook was sailing the South Pacific, he became curious as to whether the men on these idyllic islands were so besotted by the beauty and harmony that they were incapable of dark thoughts.

David Hurley

Military will not close ranks over abusive behaviour

David Hurley

David Hurley The ADF's strategy of cultural change will be strongly implemented.

Military funding takes a direct hit

An Army Reservist has been killed in East Timor.

Dylan Welch The government has delivered the biggest cuts to military funding in decades, with as much as $4 billion to vanish from this year's budget.

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Hugh White

Our military strategies indefensible

Hugh White

Hugh White Australia's status as a middle power is at risk in the Asian century.

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Abbott, O'Farrell have equal claim to Menzies' legacy

Gerard Henderson dinkus

Gerard Henderson Premier Barry O'Farrell is a proud follower of Robert Menzies (1894 to 1978), the founder of the modern Liberal Party.

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Plenty of decisions to be made and a bit of vision would help

AF-6 Flight 57, Pilot Mr. Mark Ward, January 18, 2012 Edwards AFB The first night flight for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter

James Brown, Rory Medcalf Fast, good, and cheap - the government unveils a defence policy on Friday aiming for all three.

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Softer tone, but China wariness remains

John Garnaut dinkus

John Garnaut The Rudd government's defence white paper of 2009 exploded like a bomb beneath the China relationship.

A bland defence posture that may be just right for our times

Daniel Flitton dinkus dink

Daniel Flitton Stephen Smith tried to pass the Goldilocks test on Friday when serving up Australia's latest military blueprint.

Sri Lanka's abused worthy of help

Chris Johnson

Chris Johnson Immigration Minister Brendan O'Connor returns today from a visit to Sri Lanka, where he discussed the challenges of refugees and people smuggling.

Analysis

Why the world is reading Gillard's defence paper

John Garnaut

John Garnaut The aims of 'enemy work', as they still call it today, have not much changed in 2500 years.

Drone debate too late once they get off the ground

Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the 2013 Defence White Paper

Jai Galliott In last week's Defence Department white paper the Australian public got a scary one-line insight into the future of its air force.

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Locked away with just air castles for company

jacqueline maley dinkus

Jacqueline Maley The annual budget lock-up is a like a hostage situation crossed with an exam. Armed with a notepad, a calculator and a sense of existential dread, journalists huddle from about 1pm outside the...

Howard fails in his defence of road to war

Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard (L) shakes hands with U.S. President George W. Bush after Bush presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, January 13, 2009. The award is the highest civilian honour that is given in the United States.      REUTERS/Jason Reed      (UNITED STATES)

Malcolm Jorgensen John Howard's decision to commit Australia to the 2003 Iraq war remains as indefensible as it was 10 years ago.

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Gillard's diplomatic triumphs have come all too late

mark kenny

Mark Kenny The PM didn't relish a foreign affairs role, but she has excelled as a stateswoman.

PM solved Rubik's Cube of diplomacy but won't get credit

Prime Minister Julia Gillard visited Chenjinglun High School in Beijing.

Mark Kenny It has been said before that if it weren't for bad luck, Julia Gillard would probably have no luck at all.

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Even in defeat, Assange's campaign can win

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Gay Alcorn The WikiLeaks founder's Senate bid is a long shot, but there is method in his move.

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Mark Forbes

Former PM does himself no credit with Iraq war figleaf

Dink

Mark Forbes Our former prime minister has revisited 'the most controversial foreign policy decision' taken by my government'.

Taking stock on a conflicted whaling season

whaling

Andrew Darby As Japan's most tumultuous Antarctic whaling season yet draws to a close, it seems everybody dodged, if not a harpoon, then a bullet.

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Kim's posturing forces US to play regional bodyguard

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un presides over a plenary meeting of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea in Pyongyang March 31, 2013 in this picture released by the North's official KCNA news agency on April 1, 2013.       REUTERS/KCNA (NORTH KOREA - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY) ATTENTION EDITORS ? THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. REUTERS IS UNABLE TO INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE AUTHENTICITY, CONTENT, LOCATION OR DATE OF THIS IMAGE. NO THIRD PARTY SALES. NOT FOR USE BY REUTERS THIRD PARTY DISTRIBUTORS. QUALITY FROM SOURCE. THIS PICTURE IS DISTRIBUTED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

Michael Richardson Asia-Pacific allies and security partners of the US are scrutinising every move made by Washington as North Korea threatens to strike South Korea and launch missile attacks against American bases in...

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