Perspectives on Arctic security: an analysis of strategies, presence, and capabilities from ten Arctic and non-Arctic countries | Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
1 min readeurope
Perspectives on Arctic security: an analysis of strategies, presence, and capabilities from ten Arctic and non-Arctic countries | Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Summary tailored to your query:
- The article analyzes Arctic security strategies across ten countries (Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden, United States, plus China and India as observers) using 107 policy documents and AI-assisted text mining.
- It highlights how Arctic foreign policy and diplomacy are shaped by climate/environmental concerns (broad consensus) while diverging on sovereignty and resource issues (e.g., U.S. and Russia stress sovereignty
Keep reading
security
Ghana and EU sign landmark defence deal to combat militant Islamist threat - Graphic Online
Ghana and EU sign a landmark defence pact to bolster counterterrorism, border and maritime security, marking Ghana as the first African country to strike such an agreement with the EU. Key details: - Signed in Accra by EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas and Ghana’s Vice President Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang. - Agreement aims to enhance counterterrorism, cybersecurity, border security, and maritime security; includes provision of military support (drones, anti-drone systems, bo
security
India’s road through Myanmar is one of engagement - The Hindu
India’s approach to Myanmar, as discussed in The Hindu op-ed, emphasizes pragmatic engagement over sanctions. Key points: - High-stakes diplomacy: India hosted Myanmar’s President Min Aung Hlaing (May 30–June 3, 2026) as a signal of deepening ties, reflecting Myanmar’s strategic importance to India’s Act East and Neighbourhood First policy. - Realpolitik rationale: Myanmar is India’s gateway to Southeast Asia and a buffer against China’s influence; instability there directly
security
[Interview] Iceland’s ex-foreign minister on EU referendum, as war and Arctic tension reshape Europe – EUobserver
Iceland’s potential EU accession referendum (Aug. date) frames policy around geopolitics, economy, and security. Ex-foreign minister Thórdís Kolbrún Gylfadóttir emphasizes: - Geopolitical shifts and US dynamics increasingly shape Iceland’s economic debate, including tariffs and security considerations. - Iceland has no standing army and, though NATO founding, is relatively insulated from direct defence but would feel effects from European conflict at sea or regional ruptures.