As I stepped out on the street in Kreuzberg (Berlin) on Monday, all was calm, with little to worry about save the choice of the excellent local food, loud music, beer and football (the Dutch invasion was just starting ahead of Tuesday’s match against Austria). Kreuzberg was of course once on the frontier of West Berlin, looking across to East Berlin and will have featured in the high stakes espionage between the West and East (notably so when Markus Wolf ran the Stasi).
Having once run into Mr Wolf, I was pondering what Berlin was like at the time, and we should not be surprised that it is still regarded as ‘the city of spies’, and that it continues to feature in espionage literature.
Given that context, it was no surprise to learn that Germany continues to be targeted by foreign spies. Over a week ago, German Interior minister Nancy Faeser launched the annual threat assessment of the German domestic intelligence service – which pinpoints Russia as well as China and Iran as the authors of multi-faceted attacks (disinformation, cyber-attacks, manipulation of people flows and racial tensions) on Germany, not to mention a recent spate of assassination attempts in Germany by Russia.
Of great concern is the range of threats to Germany (the same is true in most other countries), from Russian operatives defenestrating enemies of Moscow, to plots to overthrow the German state by the far-right to Islamic terror (there are over 27000 known radicalised Islamists in Germany, and the threat of Islamic terror has been growing since the October 7 attack).
The tactics that the enemies of Europe (and democracy) are deploying are likely very different to those crafted by the likes of Markus Wolf. Espionage during the Cold War was motivated by a need for information, with plenty of proxy battles for influence taking place around the rest of the world.
Today, the aim seems to be outright destabilisation and provocation – from the multiple attacks on arms production facilities across Europe to an epidemic of coups d’état across Africa, to the waves of disinformation on our social media. There is also the impression that the US is being tied down in multiple conflicts around the world.
Today, the eyes of the world are on Gaza and Ukraine – and we are bracing for a new Trump Presidency – perfect conditions to ramp up outright destabilization and provocation. The issue then, is what the EU and its member countries need to do.
The first is to confront the problem and bring it into the open. Nancy Faeser’s report is just one of a growing number from security services across Europe – in May the head of Britain’s GCHQ outlined a similar, urgent threat landscape. The second will be for governments to give security services larger budgets (a Trump presidency might help), and potentially, to allow them a more flexible modus operandi.
The new development relates to the new EU commission. Following last week’s meeting of heads of state, it now looks likely that Ursula von der Leyen will continue as president – and with Katja Kallas as foreign representative, the tone of the next commission will tilt from ‘Green Deal’ to ‘security’ and ‘strategic autonomy’. Defence infrastructure and innovation will become a key trend in the private investment industry (private equity and venture). Von der Leyen has already flagged that enormous amounts of capital will be required to support this, and given the failure of the EU to build out its capital markets union (CMU) this will be an immense challenge.
One element that might help, a little, is von der Leyen’s proposal to create an EU defence commissioner. If it does happen, it will run into two of the common problems that beset bright ideas in Brussels.
First the role of defence commissioner will need to be based on the reallocation of powers from other commissioners – some defence innovation and military logistics responsibilities from Thierry Breton’s department, transport and infrastructure from the Transport commissioner (Valean) and various other responsibilities from the foreign representative.
The second issue is that it might take some power from national defence ministries, but there is also a strong argument that they need to be better coordinated.
In that sense the new EU defence commissioner might reflect changes that John Healey (currently the shadow defence minister in the UK) wants to usher in – an office for value for money in the Ministry of Defence and a restructured defence command.
The EU defence commissioner might also start by coordinating the purchase and use of heavy duty equipment, such as large transport aircraft, and driving the integrated use of new technologies across countries. Another potential task is to find means of better coordinating European security agencies and militaries, so that their collective, offensive capability becomes stronger.
It is a depressing, though necessary use of resources, and a sad sign of our times as globalization fades away.