Defense — Archive
Defense Briefing
The US-Israeli war against Iran has entered its second month and has massively escalated over the past week: The Houthis opened a second front, Russia is actively supplying Iran with military technology, and Tehran is threatening attacks on private residences of Western officials. Simultaneously, Russia is intensifying its spring offensive in Ukraine with increasingly mechanized assault attacks, while NATO is completely rewriting its air defense plans for the first time in decades. Europe faces an unprecedented multi-front threat landscape: kinetic escalation in the Middle East with implications for energy supply and maritime trade, growing Russian pressure on NATO's eastern flank, and a wave of state-directed cyberattacks on critical infrastructure. Polymarket rates a US-Iran ceasefire by year-end at 74% – the coming weeks are decisive in determining whether further regional escalation with direct security consequences for Europe can be averted.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and globally is in the most acute crisis constellation in decades: The US-Israeli war against Iran has entered a new escalation phase after 29 days, following the Houthis' entry as another belligerent and threats to key maritime connections. Russia continues its spring offensive in Ukraine while simultaneously supplying upgraded drones to Iran, strategically linking both theaters of war. Europe is responding with historically high defense spending (+20%) and an accelerated strategic autonomy debate, but faces the dilemma that US resources could be withdrawn from the European flank to the Middle East. The combination of active multi-front war, escalating cyberattacks on critical infrastructure by Iranian and Russian actors, and the structural restructuring of NATO burden-sharing constitutes an acute high-risk assessment for European security.
Defense Briefing
The security policy situation in Europe and its surroundings is in an acute multi-front crisis: The US-Israel-Iran war (since February 28) is escalating with Iranian attacks on US bases in Saudi Arabia and further Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, while economic shockwaves have already cost global markets 4.5 trillion USD in market capitalization. At the same time, Russia's spring offensive against the Ukrainian fortress line around Slovyansk is underway, accompanied by the war's largest drone attack to date. Europe is responding with a 20% increase in defense spending, but current research shows simultaneous erosion of collective NATO bonds in favor of national autonomy – a dangerous signal for alliance cohesion. The combination of active warfare in the Middle East, Russian offensive momentum, Chinese infrastructure espionage, and structural weakening of the US-NATO bond under Trump creates an overall security policy situation that must be classified as an acute crisis with immediate dangers to Europe.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and the Western alliance faces an acute multi-front crisis: The US-Israeli war against Iran (since February 28, 2026) is expanding regionally with Iraq's entry into the war, while strikes near the Bushehr nuclear power plant increase the risk of nuclear escalation and direct confrontation with Russia. In parallel, Russia is conducting its spring offensive on the Ukraine front and intensifying hybrid attacks – sabotage, drone incursions, cyber operations – against NATO's eastern flank. Europe is responding with historically high defense spending ($1.4 trillion), yet the simultaneous commitment of US capacity in the Middle East structurally weakens credible deterrence against Russia. The combination of open warfare in the Middle East, escalating cyberwarfare against critical infrastructure, and Russian gray-zone operations in Europe justifies the assessment of an acute, simultaneous threat situation.
Defense Briefing
Europe is in an acute multi-crisis situation: The US-Israel-Iran war ongoing since February 28 continues to escalate, while Russia launches the largest drone attack of the Ukraine war, apparently benefiting from Iranian (Russian-supplied) drone technology. NATO is withdrawing troops from Iraq and repositioning them to Europe, reflecting the Alliance's direct threat perception. Hybrid threats from Chinese LinkedIn espionage, Iranian cyberattacks on critical infrastructure, and the Hungarian information leakage to Russia further undermine the Alliance's internal cohesion. Polymarket data shows only a 16% chance of a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire by June, while the Iran conflict continues to escalate despite Trump's victory declaration, driven by Israel's independent actions.
Defense Briefing
The US-Israeli war against Iran ongoing since February 28 has reached a dangerously new level of escalation with strikes on the Bushehr nuclear power plant, while diplomatic initiatives have so far failed. In parallel, Russia is intensifying mechanized attacks along the entire Ukraine front line in preparation for the spring offensive, although Ukrainian counterattacks and deep strikes on Russian infrastructure are disrupting the timeline. NATO is responding with heightened readiness, new defense spending, and major exercises, but faces industrial capacity constraints and political fragmentation caused by Russian interference in Hungary. Europe faces an acute multiple crisis: simultaneous kinetic threats in the east, an escalating war in the Middle East with repercussions for energy markets and critical infrastructure, and growing cyberattacks by state actors on Western systems.
Defense Briefing
The security situation in Europe and the expanded NATO area is facing an acute multi-front crisis: The now four-week-long US-Israeli war against Iran is escalating with drone attacks on Gulf state infrastructure and Iranian missile strikes in Israel, while negotiations have thus far failed. In parallel, Russia is preparing its spring-summer offensive in Ukraine, and ceasefire chances are falling rapidly according to markets. The digital front is simultaneously intensifying: Iranian cyber groups and state actors from China and Russia have embedded themselves deeply in Western critical infrastructure, as confirmed by the ODNI 2026 annual report. Europe is responding with historically high defense spending and NATO realignment toward independent defense – yet industrial capacity bottlenecks and disputes with Washington over Hormuz involvement threaten alliance cohesion.
Defense Briefing
The US-Israeli war against Iran has escalated in week four: mutual strikes on nuclear facilities (Natanz/Dimona), Iran's proven intercontinental missile range to Diego Garcia, and Trump's 48-hour ultimatum on Iranian power plants are driving the situation toward a possible turning point. For Europe, a direct threat cascade emerges: the Middle East conflict absorbs Western weapon stocks and political attention, while Russia simultaneously intensifies mechanized offensive preparations on the Ukraine front and holds 500,000 battle-hardened troops in position. NATO is responding with accelerated air defense replanning and increased eastern flank presence, but transatlantic unity is structurally under pressure due to Trump's demand for NATO involvement in Hormuz operations. Critical infrastructure in Europe remains acutely vulnerable: Iran's cyber proxies have recorded over 2,000 incidents since February 28, and hacktivist groups have announced large-scale attacks on European and Asian infrastructure.
Defense Briefing
The Middle East is in week four of a direct US-Israeli-Iranian war with rapid escalation dynamics: Iran's missile attack on Diego Garcia with a 4,000 km range and the bombardment of the Dimona nuclear facility mark qualitative leaps in the conflict. Trump's 48-hour ultimatum to open the Strait of Hormuz and Iran's threat of counterattacks on energy infrastructure increase the risk of uncontrolled escalation with global energy shock consequences. For Europe, the situation is exacerbated by the simultaneous Ukraine front, growing NATO-internal tensions from US pressure tactics, and intensified Iranian cyber operations against Western critical infrastructure. European defense spending is rising historically, yet structural dependence on the US and inadequate cyber defense capabilities remain acute vulnerabilities.
Defense Briefing
Europe faces its most severe security crisis in decades: the US-Israeli war against Iran running since February 28, 2026 is escalating daily with Iranian missile attacks on US bases and Gulf states, while NATO is torn internally by Trump's Hormuz demands and simultaneously must shift capacities from Iraq to Europe's eastern flank. Ukraine is exploiting Russian overextension for territorial gains, yet Russia benefits massively economically from rising oil prices and intensifies drone production to up to 1,000 attacks daily. Hybrid cyber operations by Iranian and Russian actors against critical infrastructure in the US and Europe are increasing qualitatively – the transition from disruption to physical sabotage via ICS/OT systems is the immediate next escalation stage. The strategic coherence of the Western alliance is seriously damaged by Trump's unilateralism and NATO internal division, which Moscow and Tehran are exploiting as room for maneuver.