Introduction
Modern warfare no longer distinguishes between digital and physical battlegrounds. From drone swarms to AI-disinformation campaigns, nation-states are merging cyberattacks with real-world chaos.
Case Studies
The Geneva Convention lacks cyber warfare provisions. Should a power grid hack be treated as an act of war? Global consensus remains elusive.
Modern warfare no longer distinguishes between digital and physical battlegrounds. From drone swarms to AI-disinformation campaigns, nation-states are merging cyberattacks with real-world chaos.
Case Studies
- Ukraine Conflict (2022–Present): Russian hackers targeted Viasat satellites to disable Ukrainian command systems, while physical strikes destroyed data centers.
- Stuxnet 2.0: The original 2010 malware disrupted Iranian centrifuges; experts warn updated variants could sabotage smart factories or autonomous vehicles.
- AI-Powered Disinformation: Deepfake videos of political leaders declaring fake emergencies to incite panic.
- Dronejacking: Hijacking agricultural or delivery drones to smuggle weapons or surveil targets.
- Cyber-Physical Threat Intelligence: Platforms like Dragos track malware targeting industrial control systems (ICS).
- Resilient Infrastructure: Modular systems that isolate damage, akin to submarine bulkheads.
The Geneva Convention lacks cyber warfare provisions. Should a power grid hack be treated as an act of war? Global consensus remains elusive.