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Tag Archives: energy security
When Critical Systems Age, So Does Our Security
Russian sabotage across Europe has surged, exposing how ageing systems, private‑sector gaps and fragile submarine cables leave the continent open to quiet disruption. This commentary looks at why these weaknesses matter and why policymakers can’t keep postponing the hard decisions that protect the systems holding Europe together. Continue reading
Posted in GENERAL OBSERVATIONS & THOUGHTS
Tagged ageing systems, Critical infrastructure, cyber risk, energy security, European governments, European policy, European security, grey zone activity, hybrid warfare, infrastructure vulnerability, National Resilience, private sector infrastructure, Public Safety, resilience planning, Russia Europe tensions, Russian sabotage, security awareness, security threats, state aggression, strategic pressure, submarine cables, unconventional threats
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Malta’s Drone Blindspot: Neutrality Is Not a Defence Strategy
Malta is still treating drones as if they’re a future problem, when the rest of Europe has already moved on. Airports abroad are being disrupted, energy sites probed, borders tested — and the EU has responded with detection grids, counter‑UAV doctrine, and rapid‑response layers. Meanwhile, we’re still arguing about neutrality as if a hostile drone will stop mid‑air to read our Constitution.
We have one airport, one main port, one power station, a few desalination plants, and a handful of subsea cables. A single drone incident in any of these would hit the whole country. That’s not drama; it’s maths.
Neutrality never meant refusing sensors, refusing training, or refusing the ability to detect a threat before it’s overhead. It meant staying out of alliances — not staying blind.
Europe adapted. The threat arrived. We’re the only ones still standing still.
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Posted in GENERAL OBSERVATIONS & THOUGHTS
Tagged AFM, Air Defence, Air Defence Artillery, airport security, ARMED FORCES OF MALTA, Aviation Security, Civil Military Cooperation, Counter Drone, Counter UAV, Critical infrastructure, Cyber Physical Security, defence policy, Defence Readiness, Desalination Plants, Drone Incidents, Drone Threats, energy security, EU Defence, European Defence Agency, Infrastructure Protection, MALTA, Malta Discussion, Maltese Security, maritime security, Mediterranean security, National Resilience, national security, Neutrality, PESCO, policy debate, Port Security, Power Station Security, Public Safety, risk management, Security Debate, Security Policy, Situational Awareness, Small State Vulnerabilities, strategic planning, Subsea Cables
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When Bombs Couldn’t Buy Victory: The Real Outcome of the 2026 Iran Strike
A concise investigative breakdown of the 2026 Iran strike that contrasts official claims with battlefield realities. Explores equipment losses, the Strait of Hormuz shutdown, and how strategic leverage—rather than pure firepower—shaped the outcome. Continue reading
Posted in GENERAL OBSERVATIONS & THOUGHTS
Tagged 2026 Iran strike, A-10 Warthog, air force losses, alleged war crimes, arms depletion, asymmetric tactics, asymmetric warfare, AWACS, battlefield analysis, Black Hawk, bridges, C-130, Ceasefire, ceasefire deal, China, civilian infrastructure, compensation, conflict reporting, cost of war, defense analysis, defense spending, deterrence, diplomacy, documentary, Donald Trump, drone swarm, drone warfare, economic warfare, energy geopolitics, energy security, enriched uranium, equipment losses, escalation risk, explainer, F-15, F-35, Geopolitics, global economy, global markets, Guardian analysis, humanitarian impact, IAEA, IAEA verification, international law, investigative report, Iran, Iran demands, KC-135, longform analysis, mainstream media, MALTESE, maritime security, media analysis, Middle East conflict, military credibility, military logistics, military losses, military myth, military strategy, missile defense, missile factories, missile warfare, munitions, munitions shortage, naval blockade, naval losses, negotiation terms, North Korea, nuclear enrichment rights, nuclear program, oil chokepoints, oil markets, oil shipping, Oman, Operation Epic Fury, Pakistan negotiations, Patriot, political victory, postwar negotiations, power plants, precision-guided munitions, propaganda, public diplomacy, radar systems, Reaper drone, regional stability, reparations, reparations debate, Russia, sanctions, sanctions relief, shipping lanes, Strait of Hormuz, strategic communications, strategic failure, strategic leverage, supply chain risk, Supreme National Security Council, Taiwan, Tehran, THAAD, timeline, Trita Parsi, UN resolutions, United States, US military, war costs, Washington, watch now, water treatment
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Can we function when things go wrong?
Colonel David Attard argues that Malta is exposed to sudden disruptions—especially in energy, cyber and supply chains—and urges practical preparedness through redundancy, strategic reserves and stronger infrastructure. Essential reading for policymakers and citizens concerned with national resilience and continuity planning. Continue reading
Posted in GENERAL OBSERVATIONS & THOUGHTS
Tagged Civil defence, Climate resilience, Critical infrastructure, Cybersecurity, David Attard, Emergency planning, energy, energy security, Governance, Healthcare continuity, Interconnector, MALTA, Malta resilience, MALTESE, Maritime law, National preparedness, Power grid, Public policy, Security strategy, Strategic reserves, Supply chain
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The Mediterranean has transformed from a passive buffer into a “compression chamber”
A focused look at how Haftar’s Benghazi regime, “dark fleet” tankers, Houthi raids and Europe’s industrial strains are converging to tighten maritime pressure—shaping a new strategic reality Malta can’t ignore. Continue reading
Posted in GENERAL OBSERVATIONS & THOUGHTS
Tagged AIS blackout, benghazi, border, cyber friction, Cyrenaica realignment, dark shipping, dual-use infrastructure, energy security, European Union, FRONTEX, frozen Libyan assets, Haftar regime, Houthi Red Sea raids, hybrid maritime threats, illegal migration, irregular migration, MALTA, Malta defense, MALTESE, MALTESE MILITARY, Mediterranean security, migration, migration pressure, NATO southern flank, shadow logistics, Valletta, Wagner in Fezzan
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