Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 5. Feb. 2024 · Modern war is almost impossible without deploying large numbers of unmanned aerial vehicles while actively countering enemy drones. Russia’s use of UAVs—in concert with its defensive lines, large amounts of artillery, attack helicopters, loitering munitions, and more responsive reconnaissance and surveillance systems—was a key reason for Ukraine’s failed 2023 counteroffensive.

  2. Foreign Affairs — The leading magazine for analysis and debate of foreign policy, economics and global affairs.

  3. Vor 5 Tagen · Like Hezbollah, the heavily armed, Iranian-backed Shiite militant movement in Lebanon, Hamas wants a future in which it is both a part of, and apart from, whatever Palestinian governance structure next emerges in Gaza. That way, as with Hezbollah in Lebanon, it hopes to wield political and military dominance in Gaza and ultimately the West Bank ...

  4. 8. Feb. 2024 · Ukraine needs help from its allies to sustain these advantages at sea. Finally, Ukraine should build a modest amphibious capability that can threaten Russian positions in Crimea and the Russian rear areas along the Black Sea coast.

  5. 1. März 2024 · The time has come for the people of Israel to stand up and bring about a change of course. Eisenkot, Gantz, and Lapid should lead this effort and demand general elections so that the Israeli people can decide where we are heading and who will lead us there. This is a crucial moment.

  6. Foreign Affairs, journal of international relations, published in New York City six times a year, one of the most prestigious periodicals of its kind in the world. The organ of the Council on Foreign Relations, by which it was founded in 1922, it provides a window on the U.S. foreign-policy establishment. It has an international reputation for ...

  7. 7. Mai 2024 · This is a problem for China, which holds 56 percent of its foreign exchange reserves in U.S. dollar assets. Beijing’s ability to neutralize this vulnerability is constrained by the basic structure of the global financial system and by China’s own capital control policies, which limit the utility of the renminbi for cross-border transactions.