Defense — Archive
Defense Briefing
Europe is facing an acute multi-front crisis: The US-Israeli war against Iran running since February 28 is escalating through mutual attacks on civilian energy infrastructure (South Pars / Ras Laffan) to a new level, destabilizing global energy markets and diverting NATO resources from the Ukraine front. Iranian cyber retaliation is increasingly targeting European critical infrastructure, while internally within NATO, the breach between the US and allies over Hormuz participation structurally weakens collective defense capability. On the eastern flank, Russian forces are approaching Slavyansk, and EU escalatory rhetoric toward Russia's shadow fleet increases the risk of direct confrontation. Polymarket data shows only 2% probability of a Russian attack on a NATO member by end of March, but the simultaneous strain from two wars, cyber campaigns, and trans-Atlantic tensions makes the overall situation the most dangerous since the end of the Cold War.
Defense Briefing
The US-Israeli war against Iran is in a dangerous escalation phase after 19 days: Israel has directly attacked Iran's energy infrastructure for the first time, coordination with Washington is publicly broken, and the WHO is preemptively warning of a nuclear incident. Simultaneously, Iran is expanding its counterstrikes to nine countries in the region and hits the US Embassy in Baghdad with the most intense drone attack to date – while the aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford is sidelined due to a shipboard fire. For Europe, this means a direct dual burden: NATO is internally divided by Trump's Hormuz demand, the cyber attack surface is growing due to Iranian actors, and defense resources (interceptors, ammunition) are being diverted from the Ukraine theater. The security situation is acutely unstable – with real escalation risk across multiple dimensions simultaneously.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and the Middle East is in acute multi-front crisis: The now 18-day US-Israeli war against Iran escalates to a new level with the killing of Iran's de facto leader Larijani, while Iran simultaneously responds with missile strikes on nine countries, cyber operations against Western infrastructure, and closure of the Strait of Hormuz. NATO faces dual pressure – Trump threatens withdrawal after the Hormuz denial, while the alliance simultaneously must rebuild its air defense architecture for the first time in decades. Russia strategically exploits Western distraction with the Iran war by shifting to a mass-drone approach and advancing across multiple front sections in Ukraine. The combination of conventional escalation, cyber warfare against critical infrastructure, and internal dissolution of the Western coalition makes the current situation the most dangerous in decades.
Defense Briefing
Europe faces a historically unprecedented multi-front threat situation: The ongoing US-Israeli war against Iran in its third month creates direct repercussions on European security through energy crisis, NATO division, and escalated Iranian cyberattacks on Western infrastructure. In parallel, the Ukraine war continues unabated, with Russia depleting its reserves while strategically targeting Kramatorsk. The public refusal of several NATO states to follow Trump in the Hormuz operation structurally endangers alliance cohesion – at the most inopportune moment imaginable. Iran's announced shift toward terrorist attacks in Europe makes the threat acute on European soil for the first time.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and the broader Middle East is experiencing an acute multi-front crisis: The US-Israeli military operation against Iran, now in its third month of war, is escalating qualitatively with Iran's first deployment of the Sejjil solid-fuel rocket and critically depleted Israeli defense systems. Simultaneously, Russia is preparing a spring offensive against Sloviansk-Kramatorsk, while Polymarket betting prices a ceasefire by June at 18%. Iran-linked cyberattacks on Western critical infrastructure (Stryker attack, 79 affected countries) signal a deliberate strategy of asymmetric retaliation outside the war zone. NATO is responding with structural reforms (air defense, Arctic Sentry, increased Eastern Flank programs), but the simultaneity of the Ukraine war, Iran conflict, and cyber escalation significantly strains European defense capabilities and the alliance's political cohesion.
Defense Briefing
Europe is in its most dangerous security situation in decades: The US-Israeli war against Iran, which began on February 28, has escalated on day 15 with massive attacks on Kharg Island, while Iran responds with hypersonic missiles at Israel and threatens to attack Western energy infrastructure. Simultaneously, Iran is waging a hybrid cyber war against Western critical infrastructure, which has reached a new level of sophistication with the Stryker attack and the attempted strike against Poland's nuclear research center. On NATO's eastern flank, Russia continues to build troop presence, while the Ukraine war continues without ceasefire prospects and the alliance faces pressure from Italy's withdrawal from the Iran coalition and unfulfilled defense spending commitments. The combination of active warfare in the Middle East, Russian pressure in Europe, escalating cyber threats, and growing fractures in Western alliances justifies an acute crisis assessment.
Defense Briefing
The US-Israeli war against Iran entered a new escalation level on March 14, 2026: the bombing of Kharg Island, through which 90% of Iranian oil exports flow, has prompted Iran to threaten retaliation against all US-linked energy facilities in the region – with immediate impacts on global energy supply. Within NATO, dangerous cohesion gaps are emerging as Italy and Spain refuse to participate in the military operation, while SACEUR simultaneously deems the alliance's air defense architecture obsolete and is restructuring it. The cyber front has reached a new level of sophistication with the first confirmed autonomous AI attack and Iranian wiper operations against critical US infrastructure, undermining conventional deterrence calculations. Europe faces simultaneous triple pressure: the Iran war with its energy price shocks, the unresolved Ukraine conflict without ceasefire prospects, and a structural NATO crisis that imperatively accelerates the development of independent European defense capabilities.
Defense Briefing
Europe's security situation has dramatically escalated in the week of March 8–13, 2026: the ongoing US-Israel war against Iran has, with the attack on NATO territory in Turkey, for the first time directly touched the alliance's collective defense clause and forces NATO to take immediate reinforcement measures. Simultaneously, the ongoing Ukraine war on multiple fronts, Russian gray zone operations on NATO's eastern flank, and a wave of Iran-directed cyberattacks on Western critical infrastructure are straining Europe's security architecture simultaneously on three levels. Europe faces the paradoxical situation of having to expand its strategic autonomy while still depending on US capabilities – and the US is increasingly shifting its focus to the Indo-Pacific. The escalation dynamics in the Middle East involving nine affected countries, an oil price above $100, and Iranian threats against NATO infrastructure make further expansion of the conflict a real danger.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and the broader Euro-Atlantic region has deteriorated dramatically within two weeks: The active US-Israeli war against Iran, now in its 12th day, has triggered a global energy crisis through the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz and driven the region into multi-front escalation – Iran is attacking across nine countries, Beirut and Tel Aviv are under rocket fire. NATO territory is already directly affected, as demonstrated by the intercepted Iranian cruise missile over Turkey. In parallel, Russia is intensifying hybrid warfare against NATO's eastern flank, while Iranian cyber operations have for the first time crippled a major Western defense contractor (Stryker) with a destructive wiper attack. Europe is responding with historically high defense spending and accelerated strategic autonomy, but faces the immediate challenge of simultaneously ensuring energy supply security, cyber resilience, and conventional deterrence.
Defense Briefing
The security policy situation in Europe and the adjacent region is in an acute multi-front crisis: The US-Israeli war against Iran has entered its most intense phase on the eleventh day, with over 1,300 Iranian casualties, Iranian counter-strikes on US bases in the Middle East, and a real threat of Strait of Hormuz closure, which has already destabilized global energy markets. Russia is strategically exploiting the distraction – it is supplying Iran with targeting data against US troops and benefiting from Western ammunition supply shortages for Ukraine, while Moscow simultaneously pressures elite units on the southern front. NATO Europe faces a double dilemma: The US is structurally reducing its engagement, while alliance defense is simultaneously demanded in the north (Arctic exercises) and in the Mediterranean (interception of Iranian rockets over Turkey). The oil price shock above $100 and growing cyber threats from Iran-aligned groups against Western infrastructure are significantly increasing economic and social pressure on European governments.