Communication
Strategic Competition and the Battle of Narratives: A Sociopsychological Perspective
The Atlanticist Anglo-Saxon Reich and All That: How Russia Understands Strategic Confrontation
Propaganda in Armed Conflict: Exploring Legal Ambiguities and Civilian Engagement
NATO and Intermediate Force Capabilities: Why Human Effects Matter
Introduction
On February 24, 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine, the international order was impacted sharply and abruptly. Russia’s invasion put the North American Treaty Organization (NATO) on center stage. As a contribution to international security, NATO’s deterrence capabilities take many forms. From nuclear weapons to cyberattacks, to be effective, deterrence must be scalable across a conflict spectrum that includes non-kinetic actions.
Launching Narrative into the Information Battlefield
Introduction
Twenty-first Century Threats Require Twenty-first Century Deterrence
Introduction
Soon after the defeat of Germany in World War II, the USA and the USSR found themselves in a global struggle for power and influence. In contrast to previous great power competitions, which often led to armed conflict, nuclear weapons changed the risk calculus for both sides. This had four key consequences.
The Impact of Organizational Design and Leadership on Strategic Communications
The Age of Post-Truth: State Influence and Strategic Communication - Contemporary Security Challenges on Europe’s Eastern Flank
Introduction
Between 14-18 May 2018, the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies brought together 54 civilian, law enforcement and military mid- to senior level security policy practitioners and experts from 19 countries in order to collaborate on the third European Security Seminar-East (ESS-E).