The European Perspective
Germany’s Unseen Front
Berlin is elevating its alert status on hybrid warfare, a clear admission that critical infrastructure is the new battlefield. A top German military official, Vice Admiral Thomas Daum, detailed the escalating threat picture, focusing on cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns designed to sow instability (Politico). This isn’t theoretical; the targeting of airports, power grids, and government agencies is now a persistent reality. For open economies, the challenge is immense. Private and public systems are deeply interconnected, creating vulnerabilities that authoritarian states are actively exploiting. The core issue is that our digital openness, the engine of innovation and efficiency, is also our primary security weakness. This pivot in military doctrine signals a future where domestic resilience is as vital as expeditionary force.
Energy Markets Feel the Pressure
The abstract threat of cyber warfare has a concrete price. European natural gas futures ticked higher, closing at €31.81 per megawatt-hour on the benchmark Dutch TTF hub, a 1.1% increase (Ansa). While modest, this move reflects a market perpetually on edge, sensitive to any tremor of geopolitical instability—including Russia’s accusation that Ukraine used drones to attack a tanker in the Black Sea (ZDF). These incremental price bumps are a tax on the entire economy, a direct consequence of conflicts that are increasingly waged through asymmetric, often technology-driven, means. The volatility underscores how dependent Europe’s economic stability is on securing its energy and digital infrastructure from state-backed disruption.
Catch the next Gist for the continent’s moving pieces.
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