BBC Interview of Baroness Manningham-Buller
Being NATO's Secretary General on 9/11
NATO ten years after: learning the lessons
Images of terror: threats' changing faces
NATO and Russia today: interview with Dmitri Trenin
Taking the temperature: what the Russian experts think
NATO and Russia: doomed to disappointment?
Dealing with the symbolic irritant in NATO-Russia diplomacy
Photostory: the struggle against small arms in pictures
Small arms: the real weapons of mass destruction?
10 years of action on small arms: where are we now?
Small arms: Thousands destroyed, millions remain
Limit arms exports to reduce violence against women
NATO and Russia today: interview with Dmitri Trenin Watch video
Small arms: the real weapons of mass destruction? Watch video
NATO and its partners: changing relationships? Watch video
NATO and Sweden: old partners, new outlooks? Watch video
NATO Review online magazine looks at key security issues through the eyes of the experts
How important does Madeleine Albright believe energy security is? Where does Paddy Ashdown believe the Balkans is heading? And how do award-winning journalists, economists and researchers see the future in diverse issues from organised crime to climate change?
NATO Review welcomes unsolicited manuscripts. As the Alliance's flagship magazine on current policy issues, the Review is intended to contribute to a constructive discussion of transatlantic security matters. As such, articles that appear in the Review may not necessarily represent official opinion, policy of member governments, or NATO. Submissions should focus on NATO-relevant themes or on topics of interest in the overall context of security policy, peace and stability.
Potential contributors should bear in mind that NATO Review publishes both General Content articles and articles under the following subheadings:
Analysis articles that offer in-depth research;
Book Reviews;
History pieces: pieces that consider people or events from the Alliance’s past;
Military Matters pieces that focus on NATO capabilities, or missions and operations;
Opinion pieces that follow a clear and concise argument; and
Specials that present alternative perspectives on NATO and its policies.
Any submitted article not explicitly labelled using the above sub-headings will be considered under the ‘General Content’ rubric.
NATO Review considers articles with a length between 1,000 and 2,000 words, with a preference for articles of approximately 1,500 words. Pieces longer than 2,000 words will not be considered. Pieces that appear in the Review are translated into 24 Alliance languages plus Russian, Ukrainian, Arabic, and Hebrew. Contributors are compensated.
If you have an article, preferably in English or French, that you would like to submit for the consideration of the Review, please email it to the following address
Please attach an up-to-date résumé with previous writing experience and a two-hundred word summary, in English or French, of the manuscript. Note that submission of an article does not entail any obligation on behalf of NATO Review to publish it.
Please also be aware that NATO Review does not reprint previously published manuscripts. Direct any questions to the Editor revieweditor@hq.nato.int