David Fields
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Future defence engagement with Russia
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This chapter highlights that the experience of the interaction and cooperation between 1988 to 2014 and the lessons learned, provides an important foundation and context to the nature of UK’s defence engagement with Russia both now and in the future. Using both primary and also secondary sources, the chapter examines the three pillars of that engagement - defend, deter and dialogue. The Royal Navy in the maritime environment has a key role to play in all three of these elements - defending the 3 ‘crown jewels’ of UK defence i.e. at sea nuclear deterrent, the Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers and the at sea elements of UK’s critical national infrastructure; deterring Russia globally through maritime presence and projection of military power, but also arguing that dialogue is a part of deterrence, which is lacking at present. The section on dialogue offers future policy makers suggestions on a pathway back to dialogue and cooperation, while mindful of the political and diplomatic complexities of achieving this in the aftermath of the Ukraine conflict, in which the UK and West have been heavily involved. Since 2014, the focus of engagement with Russia has been on defend and deter, with dialogue along pre-2014 lines suspended. The latter will at some stage need to be addressed but for the foreseeable future, it is highly likely that the former two elements will remain the focus.

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The Royal and Russian Navies

Cooperation, Competition and Confrontation

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