The vulnerabilities Europe faces today are not confined to a single domain. Conventional military threats have resurfaced in ways many policymakers once believed impossible after the Cold War. Terrorism, though less dominant in headlines, remains a persistent and decentralised danger that exploits social fragmentation and gaps in intelligence coordination. Hybrid warfare-deliberate ambiguity, disinformation, economic coercion, and covert action-targets the political cohesion that the European Union relies on. Cyber warfare, meanwhile, cuts across every modern system, from energy grids and financial institutions to hospitals and government services, exposing uncomfortable interdependencies and inconsistent standards of protection.
These challenges are not occurring in isolation. They interact and amplify one another. A cyberattack on energy networks can destabilise a country's political environment, creating opportunities for external actors to launch disinformation campaigns. A terrorist incident can inflame polarisation, weaken trust in institutions, and make it easier for hostile states to spread influence operations. A conventional military threat can be paired with hybrid tactics designed to slow European decision-making, undermine solidarity, and fracture alliances. Modern conflict is not neatly compartmentalised; it is fluid, blended, and strategically synchronised. Europe must therefore confront not only individual threats but also the combined effect of multidimensional pressure.
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