
Report Group
Security Policy & Defence
Securing peace before conflict begins
This Report Group Security Policy & Defence analyses evolving security threats, including cyber warfare, terrorism, and military strategy. It evaluates defence alliances, arms control agreements, and emerging technologies in warfare. Special focus is given to deterrence strategies and international defence cooperation. Biannual reports provide academic insights into strengthening global security frameworks and addressing the challenges of modern warfare.
Publications
Trilateral Security Model
A Cooperation Framework for Regional Security based on NATO, the EU and NORDEFCO
1. How can European states improve regional security cooperation against emerging threats? 2. A trilateral model combining NATO, the EU, and NORDEFCO offers more agile and localized defense capabilities. 3. Institutionalizing this model would enhance Europe’s resilience through interoperable and complementary security strengths.
Junior Research Fellow
Speer Group : A symbol of European cooperation
Strengthening Europe's security architecture in an era of rising threats
How can private equity, through firms like Speer Group, strengthen European defence cooperation? 2. By filing a critical gaps in early-stage defence ventures, Speer Group fosters innovation, interoperability and strategic autonomic across Europe. 3. Speer Group positions itself as a key neutral actor enhancing Europe's resilience and security in a multipolar and increasingly unstable geopolitical environment.
External Author
US Influence on European Defence Policy
United-States impact and influence on the development of European defence policy
1. What influences have the United-States on the development of the European Defence Policy ? 2. The American influence on the development of European policy in recent years, the present developments and future prospects. 3. These approaches give us a better understanding of some of the issues at stake in the development of European security policy.
Senior Research Fellow
Macron’s European Nuclear Umbrella
A credible commitment?
1. European Nuclear Umbrella - Macron's proposal is based on growing concerns regarding US credibility in NATO. The proposal is politically strong yet regarding capabilities Europe still cannot match the US. 2. Macron's proposal vs. NPT - the extension of the French nuclear deterrent, especially regarding nuclear weapon sharing proposed by Macron undermines to some extent the efforts of NPT 3.Is the plan feasible? - given European current arsenal in numbers, the US is still indispensable.
Junior Research Fellow
Accelerating Innovation Through Defence Spending
The potential of innovative spillover effects for the creationg of innovative ecosystems.
1. How can we maximize the societal benefit of increasing defence expenditure? 2. There is a positive correlation between higher defence expenditure and overall public R&D expenditure. 3. The EU needs to strengthen the interconnectedness of the defence and civilian sector to maximize innovative spillover effects that result from an increase in defence R&D.
Junior Research Fellow
The cybersecurity capability gap
Reviewing the EU’s strategic shortcomings in the age of cyber
1. What cyber capability gaps does the EU grapple with? 2. The EU lacks operational coherence, offensive capabilities, and personnel infrastructure to combat complex cyberthreats. Institutional fragmentation, national sovereignty concerns, and an overreliance on civilian regulation hinder cybersecurity policy and legal development. 3. To become a credible and effective cyberpower, the EU must improve coordination, invest in technical and human skills, and become more assertive.
Senior Research Fellow
Between Washington and Berlin
The dilemma of Europeans security policy
While strategic autonomy remains a key ambition, Europe‘s defence still largely depends on transatlantic cooperation, making full independence unlikely in the near future. Europe position itself between U.S pressure and strategic autonomy? Europe is increasingly seeking to develop its own defense capabilities and reduce dependency. 3.While strategic autonomy remains a key ambition, Europe‘s defence still depends on transatlantic cooperation.
External Author
Europe’s Quest for the Long Reach
European Long-Range Strike deficits, and prospects
This article compares asymmetries in European and Russian long-range missile arsenals and concludes that Europe has significant capability gaps in three main areas: range, platform diversity and redundancy, and, lastly, insufficient means to deliver nuclear payloads. Although important steps have been taken to tackle some of these challenges at an incredible pace, it remains to be seen, whether the actual capability output will arrive in time to deter Russia credibly.
Senior Research Fellow
Westphalian Order Under Siege
Trump’s Challenge to Allied Sovereignty and Europe’s Strategic Dilemma
1. How does Donald Trump’s rhetoric challenge the foundational Westphalian principles underpinning the Western alliance?, 2. Trump’s rhetorical imperialism, seen in his statements on Greenland and Canada, undermines the transatlantic norm of territorial integrity and reveals a shift from collective security to unilateralism, 3. Europe must confront this erosion by pursuing strategic autonomy to uphold the postwar order.
Junior Research Fellow