“Boost our ability to counter hybrid threats,
including by bolstering resilience, working together on analysis, prevention,
and early detection, through timely information sharing and, to the extent
possible, intelligence sharing between staffs; and cooperating on strategic
communication and response. The development of coordinated procedures through
our respective playbooks will substantially contribute to implementing our
efforts”.
EU-NATO Joint Declaration, 8 July, 2016
Alphen, Netherlands. 18
November. On Wednesday, in my capacity as Vice-President of the Atlantic Treaty
Association (ATA), I had the honour of chairing a meeting at the European
Parliament in Brussels on NATO-EU co-operation on hybrid warfare. To be honest,
as someone who knows a bit about hybrid warfare, my definition of it – the use
of all state and many extra state means to exploit the seams and
vulnerabilities of an opponent via disruption, destabilisation and
disinformation – was also a pretty good description of NATO-EU relations up
until recently. Anything changed?
In fact, the ATA pulled
off something of a coup in having such a meeting take place in the august if
somewhat labyrinthine bafflement that is the European Parliament. The fact that
a NATO Assistant Secretary-General spoke at the meeting was also a sign that
relations between the Alliance and the Union are improving.
Here’s the ‘but’. Many
people think hybrid warfare is cyber warfare. And yes, in an age of ‘digitisation’,
as outgoing President Obama yesterday called it in Berlin, cyber is a very important
line of hybrid warfare operations. However, cyber warfare is only a part of
hybrid warfare. The problem with the meeting was that I got the distinct
impression that apart from me very few of the speakers knew what hybrid warfare
actually is, and just how dangerous it can be if practised by an opponent that
does know what it is – Russia. Consequently, what happened is what happens at
all such meetings when those present do not really know what they are talking
about. The meeting rapidly elevated into the upper atmosphere of strategic
semantics, whilst at one and the same time retreating into the weeds of
technical cybernetics.
One reason much of the
meeting focused on what I rather disparagingly call ‘cybrid jawfare’ is
precisely because ‘we’, be it the Western ‘we’, the NATO ‘we’, the European ‘we’,
or the EU ‘we’, (and therein lies a very big problem) simply lack a
counter-hybrid strategy worthy of the name. Yes, we have the EU-NATO Joint Declaration and
it is a start, but there have been so many starts in EU-NATO relations. Speak
in the margins of any such meeting and as ever the gap between rhetoric and
reality is precisely one of those seams adversaries can exploit.
There was the usual talk
about the need for accelerated decision-making, better sharing of information
and intelligence, the enhancing of societal resiliency, and the reinforcing of
national efforts. However, when I pushed it was clear to me that far from preparing
both the Alliance and the Union for a new form of warfare, much of it is still simply
jawfare. Why? Because the single most
effective defence against hybrid warfare is still missing – political solidarity.
This is dangerous. The
time for talking about doing needs to be rapidly replaced by simply doing.
Yesterday, the Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linus Linkevicius said he was very
worried that Russia would ‘test’ NATO before the Trump administration is sworn
in on January 20th next. So am I. That ‘test’ could well come in the
form of hybrid warfare and an attempt to destabilise the Baltic States via an aggressive
strategic communications campaign, cyber-interference, and the use of military
power to intimidate the three countries. This week the Estonian government fell
giving Moscow a gold-plated opportunity to interfere in the coming elections.
The threat is profound. If
‘we’ cannot protect the home base, ‘we’ will be unable to project power. Hybrid
warfare is not half warfare, or pretend warfare, it is part of full-on warfare.
Quite simply, we Europeans are still unable to protect our frighteningly open societies
from destabilising political and social penetration. As such we are also unable
to safeguard the political and societal resilience which effective policy and
strategy requires. Therefore, we are unlikely to be able to project the
influence, power and effect vital to preserving a credible security and
defence, let alone a credible defence and deterrence posture.
The good news was that
such a meeting took place at all in the European Parliament. It simply would
not have been possible even five years ago. For that reason I very much applaud
the initiative and it was an honour to chair it. However, the dictates of institutionalism
come well before the rigours of policy and the disciplines of action. That can
only happen because those in power see inter-institutional games as more
important than forging a real partnership. In other words, complacency still reigns
precisely because power does not as yet take the threat seriously enough.
There can be no security
in contemporary Europe without the creation of a new ‘iron triangle’ – the US,
NATO and the EU. Right now, ‘reality’ looks more like a meringue triangle – the
appearance of a hard crust on the outside, very soft in the middle. Until the
hybrid threat is seen as the strategic threat it is NATO and the EU will continue
to act like two wary bull elephants dancing around each other on the head of a
shrinking pin. Real progress will only be seen when effective and real strategy
is crafted and the agility and adaptability central to the conduct of effective
hybrid warfare is realised.
In May 1935, Winston Churchill wrote: “There is nothing new in the
story. It is as old as the Sibylline Books. It falls into that long, dismal
catalogue of the fruitlessness of experience and the confirmed unteachability
of mankind. Want of foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be simple
and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion of counsel until the emergency
comes, until self-preservation strikes its jarring gong, these are the features
which constitute the endless repetition of history”.
EU-NATO: cybrid jawfare?
Julian Lindley-French
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