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RSI will host Ivan Klyszcz, Laurent Bonnefoy, Andrew Lambert, and Martin Plaut to discuss how recent activity in the Red Sea has shaped threat perception in the critcal region. This panel supports Ivan Klyszcz's current project exploring Russia's foreign policy interests and activities in the Red Sea and includes a focus on the views of Russia, Yemen, and the countries of northeast Africa,
Ivan KlyszczResearch Fellow International Centre for Defence and Security (ICDS)
Dr. Ivan Klyszcz is a PhD researching Russian foreign policy since 2019. He is a senior fellow at International Centre for Defence and Security (ICDS) the leading Baltic think tank in defense and security
Laurent BonnefoyProfessorSciences Po
Laurent Bonnefoy (PhD) is a researcher in political science, specializing in the contemporary Arabian Peninsula. He is affiliated (tenured) with Sciences Po in Paris. An Arabic speaking scholar, he has lived extensively in Yemen, Oman and Qatar.
Andrew Lambert
Director Laughton Naval History UnitDepartment of War StudiesKing's College London
Andrew Lambert is Laughton Professor of Naval History in the Department of War Studies at King's College, London, and Director of the Laughton Naval History Unit. His work focuses on the naval and strategic history of the British Empire between the Napoleonic Wars and the First World War and the evolution of sea power. His work has addressed a range of issues, including technology, policy-making, regional security, deterrence, historiography, crisis-management and conflict.
Martin PlautSenior Research FellowInstitute of Commonwealth StudiesKing's College London
Martin Plaut is currently a Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Commonwealth Studies and at King’s College, London. He worked for a year as an Industrial Relations officer with Mobil Oil before joining the British Labour Party as Secretary on Africa and the Middle East in 1979. In 1984 he joined the BBC, working primarily on Africa. He became Africa editor, BBC World Service News in 2003 and reported from across the continent before retiring from the BBC in October 2013. Martin Plaut has advised both the U. K. Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and the U.S. State Department.
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