Heritage Foundation Senior Fellow

Ted R. Bromund

10 articles 2015–2018

Ted R. Bromund is a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation, specializing in Anglo-American relations, international institutions, and transatlantic policy. He contributed to The Weekly Standard between 2015 and 2018, writing on topics including Brexit, British politics, Winston Churchill's legacy, and international affairs involving China and Russia.

Damn, Busted

April 27, 2018 · Ted Bromund, Ted R. Bromund, Defense Spending

Britain’s military should be growing. It’s not.

Churchill Comes to Washington

November 6, 2016 · Ted Bromund, Magazine, Winston Churchill

Monuments to Winston Churchill abound in the United Kingdom. You can remember the greatest man of the 20th century at his birthplace, Blenheim Palace, or by his grave nearby at Bladon. Then there are the Cabinet War Rooms in London, his country house, Chartwell, and, of course, the magnificent…

Churchill in Washington

November 4, 2016 · Ted Bromund, Magazine, Winston Churchill

Monuments to Winston Churchill abound in the United Kingdom. You can remember the greatest man of the 20th century at his birthplace, Blenheim Palace, or by his grave nearby at Bladon. Then there are the Cabinet War Rooms in London, his country house, Chartwell, and, of course, the magnificent…

Why Did Britain Exit? Because It Finally Got the Chance To

July 12, 2016 · Immigration, EU, Brexit

Why did Brexit win? Well, first bear in mind it's not unusual for the EU to lose referenda. Before the end of the Cold War, the only votes it lost were in Norway (1972) and Greenland (1973). But in 1992, the Maastricht Treaty almost lost in France (51.1 percent in favor) and did lose in Denmark…

What Mad Cow Disease Tells Us About Brexit

July 11, 2016 · Brexit, Ted R. Bromund, United Kingdom

When historians seek to explain an event, they often divide their explanation into three parts. In the long run—what the French Annales School called the longue durée—there are deep historical structures, mental frameworks or other slow-to-change systems. In the intermediate term, there are…

Putin’s Long Arm

March 2, 2015 · Vladimir Putin, Ted R. Bromund, Magazine

In Chechnya, Georgia, and Ukraine, Russia works through bribery, fear, and force to destroy its opponents. In the West, it works through Interpol and the U.S. Treasury. If Moscow decides to target you, being in the United States won’t protect you from Russian harassment. In fact, it makes you a…