Peter Layton

Peter Layton
Biography
Publications

Dr Peter Layton is a Visiting Fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute, an Associate Fellow RUSI (UK) and a Fellow of the Australian Security Leaders Climate Group. A retired RAAF Group Captain, Peter has extensive experience in force structure development and taught national security strategy at the US National Defense University. He has written extensively on defence and security matters, and was awarded the US Exceptional Public Service medal for force structure planning work. In 2006, he won the RUSI Trench Gascoigne Essay Prize for original writing on contemporary issues of defence and international security. He is the author of the book Grand Strategy.

Preparing Australia to respond to disasters – at home and abroad
Preparing Australia to respond to disasters – at home and abroad
The military should be restructured with a dedicated element to better tackle relief operations full-time.
Bringing the grey zone into focus
Bringing the grey zone into focus
Australia must be ready for China’s next move in the volatile game of statecraft brinkmanship.
Belt and Road means big data and facial recognition, too
Belt and Road means big data and facial recognition, too
China is exporting the same social control technology it employs to monitor its own population.
Discontinued: America’s Continuous Bomber Presence
Discontinued: America’s Continuous Bomber Presence
Ending a long-standing program, the US shows its commitment to defending friends in the Western Pacific is on the wane.
Is this the Kindleberger moment?
Is this the Kindleberger moment?
Covid-19 exposes a power vacuum where exceptionalism and tinfoil hat conspiracy theories go hand in hand.
Australia’s F-35s: Lessons from a problematic purchase
Australia’s F-35s: Lessons from a problematic purchase
The rush nearly 20 years ago to buy the fighter of the future exposed fundamental shortcomings in defence acquisitions.
Undeclared air strikes: Between war and peace
Undeclared air strikes: Between war and peace
Israel has pioneered attacks with no apparent owner, and now others have taken up the tactic.
The trouble in the air on a tense Tuesday in Northeast Asia
The trouble in the air on a tense Tuesday in Northeast Asia
The ruckus after South Korea fired warning shots at a nosy Russian spy plane marks a significant rise in tensions.
Japan’s very busy fighter force
Japan’s very busy fighter force
Scrambling to intercept roughly three intruders daily, wear on the fleet raises concern about keeping pace with China.
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