1 01, 2026

Mx Russia: Information Governance as a Power Function

By |2026-03-24T12:26:58+01:00January 1, 2026|Research|

This text constitutes the public layer of a layered analytical document. A more detailed analytical section follows immediately below under access restriction. Applied capability assessment and structural mapping are available separately to qualified actors upon request via NDA ed.8d1774562902hcrud1774562902@adn1774562902

1 01, 2026

Leonid Ivashov Is Government-Aligned — by Design, Not by Command

By |2026-03-26T23:01:10+01:00January 1, 2026|Analysis|

Russian information activity is routinely analyzed as communication. That classification fails. The observed effects — delayed decisions, fragmented coalitions, persistent ambiguity — do not depend on belief, persuasion, or narrative coherence. They persist even when messages are discredited or contradictory. ...

17 12, 2025

From Capability Substitution to Decision Control

By |2026-03-24T12:29:02+01:00December 17, 2025|Methods & Doctrine|

This paper is written as a structural companion to a recent European Policy Centre analysis examining Europe’s transition toward greater strategic responsibility in transatlantic security. Europe is undergoing a strategic transition shaped by growing uncertainty in the transatlantic security relationship and sustained external pressure.

7 12, 2025

Narrative Warfare

By |2026-03-24T12:30:59+01:00December 7, 2025|Methods & Doctrine|

Narrative Warfare, Plain and Precise How can one man like Bin Laden shake the United States? Why do democracies erode today? How can armies fall without a single shot being fired? If you want to understand why narratives are weapons — read. Narratives are raw, primordial power. ...

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