“By 2026, cyber conflict will be a constant and hybrid domain. Nation-states will increasingly leverage criminal groups to carry out ransomware, data theft, and disruption, achieving strategic goals ...
Navigating insights from the World Economic Forum’s meeting at Davos on AI-driven threats, the push for digital sovereignty ...
In 2022, amidst the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian conflict, one of the largest cyber attacks fell upon Kyivstar, the largest telecommunications provider in Ukraine, leaving millions without mobile and ...
As the conflict between Israel and Iran ramps up, there is another, silent war taking place between the two nation-states. KIRO Newsradio asked Cristin Flynn Goodwin, a cybersecurity expert who worked ...
The puzzle of nuclear deterrence is now further muddied by the emergence of cyber threats and their nebulous role in conflict escalation. As doctrine continues to be shaped, there is the ongoing risk ...
Brian M. Mazanec is an adjunct professor at George Mason University. His book, The Evolution of Cyber War: International Norms for Emerging-Technology Weapons, will be published by Potomac Books next ...
Cyber crime has evolved to become a threat to the security of western states, according to a threat intelligence report from Google, published on the eve of the 2025 Munich Security Conference. This ...
In the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran, cyberspace has become the newest and perhaps most volatile front. As kinetic warfare remains an ever-present threat, June 2025 has marked a ...
Could the United States win a cyber war? This series explores the future of cyber warfare, examining how the United States and its adversaries—Russia, China, and Iran—wage war in the cyber domain.
Contemporary conflict between State actors is increasingly unfolding in the grey-zone arena, an ambiguous space that lies below the threshold of declared war yet delivers strategic effects ...
Offensive cyber operations in warfare have long had the potential to be revolutionary but that promise has remained distant, being “much harder to use against targets of strategic significance or to ...