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Search Result for “imperial bicorne”

Showing 1 - 10 of 20

OPINION

It could take 1 Danish soldier in Greenland

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 23/01/2026

» In 1910, Henry Wilson, the British army officer charged with planning for a possible war with Germany, visited the French officer doing the same job in Paris, Ferdinand Foch. The Anglo-French alliance was still a tentative, semi-secret thing, so Wilson asked Foch, "What is the smallest British military force that would be of any practical assistance to you?"

OPINION

World leaders are destroying the rule of law

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/12/2025

» Russia's "big concession is they stop fighting, and they don't take any more land," US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday, when asked what Russia was conceding in the thinly disguised surrender document he was trying to shove down Ukrainian throats. He truly is a 19th-century man at heart.

OPINION

Will there be a ceasefire in Ukraine now?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 15/02/2025

» It's taking Donald Trump a little longer than the 24 hours he said he would need to end Russia's war in Ukraine, but his 90-minute phone call with Vladimir Putin on Wednesday comes as no surprise.

OPINION

Syria: It's those jihadis on the march again

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 04/12/2024

» One week in, the ceasefire in Lebanon seems to be holding, but everything is connected: only three days later, the civil war in Syria started up again after a de facto four-year truce.

OPINION

New Caledonia pragmatism pips nationalism

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 03/09/2024

» With the sole exception of the fifty people on Pitcairn Island, the United Kingdom (once known as the British Empire) liquidated its holdings in the Pacific Ocean long ago. France, by contrast, has a half million citizens in the Pacific (and another two million living in other bits of its former empire on islands in all the world's major oceans).

OPINION

Ukraine's Kursk push -- a bold or risky move?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 17/08/2024

» Ukraine's cross-border attack into the Kursk region of Russia last week has triggered the usual claims and counter-claims. First, former Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu said that Russia had taken 420 square km of territory from Ukrainian forces since June 14 along the old front line in the east.

OPINION

Stop making the 'Munich in 1938' analogies

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 15/06/2024

» Scarcely a week passes without some media pundit or attention-seeking historian warning that a Great War is nigh. As always, there are enough signs and portents around to make that sort of prediction plausible, but it's rarely correct. In fact, it hasn't been correct now for 79 years.

OPINION

Clock is ticking for Armenians in Karabakh

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 12/09/2023

» The Armenians are a people of great antiquity -- the first Armenian kingdom was in the 8th century BC -- but they grew up in a tough neighbourhood, and they have been in retreat for a very long time.

OPINION

Putin provides a shot in the arm for Nato

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 12/07/2023

» When Nato held its annual summit in Brussels two years ago, all 31 presidents and prime ministers of the alliance’s member states dutifully showed up, but their hearts weren’t really in it. France’s President Emmanuel Macron had publicly declared Nato “brain-dead” in 2019, and nobody could find a good reason to disagree.

OPINION

Prigozhin and the aftermath of Russian folly

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 30/06/2023

» 'I said to Putin: 'We could waste [Prigozhin], no problem. If not on the first try, then on the second.' I told him: 'Don't do this'," said Aleksander Lukashenko, long-ruling dictator of Belarus, clearly delighted at having upstaged his arrogant Russian counterpart. The worm had turned, and it was the Russian dictator who needed help.