Mladic, justice and 2011: view from Croatia
Mladic, justice and 2011: view from Serbia
Mladic, Srebrenica and justice
Karadzic: from Sarajevo to the Hague (Aug 2008)
Bosnia: a new model army? (Aug 2008)
NATO's relations with Bosnia and Herzegovina - part I : Building peace (Dec 2010)
NATO's relations with Bosnia and Herzegovina - Part II : Reforming the military (Dec 2010)
NATO's relations with Bosnia and Herzegovina - part III : The road to integration (Dec 2010)
2014: New Afghanistan's year zero?
Where now for Afghanistan? Interview with Ahmed Rashid
Was it worth investing in Afghanistan?
Afghanistan: 10 years of missed opportunities?
Afghanistan: what’s gone right, what’s gone wrong
Double vision - an Afghan-American view
Mladic, justice and 2011: view from Croatia Watch video
Mladic, justice and 2011: view from Serbia Watch video
View from the region Watch video
Mladic, Srebrenica and justice 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
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