União Europeia

  • 695 Respostas
  • 141444 Visualizações
*

Cabeça de Martelo

  • Investigador
  • *****
  • 24820
  • Recebeu: 5002 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 3506 vez(es)
  • +4218/-4836
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #690 em: Janeiro 15, 2026, 12:53:30 pm »
Seeing the whole picture: a new way to track Russian FIMI
By EUvsDisinfo

Russian disinformation campaigns are not random but organised, persistent, and designed to manipulate how people think, vote, and trust institutions. Despite years of research and monitoring, responses to these operations remain fragmented. The lack of coordinated reporting and a shared framework leads to duplication of efforts and limits the impact of counter-FIMI measures.

That is why EU DisinfoLab, together with its partners the European External Action Service (EEAS), Viginum, DFRLab, CheckFirst, Cassini, and the Auswärtiges Amt published Building a Common Operational Picture of FIMI. The report proposes a clear terminology and a new model for defining, detecting, describing, and disrupting FIMI operations.

Why FIMI is often ‘lost in translation’

One major problem is terminology. Reports often mix words like incidents, operations, campaigns or a threat actor as if they mean the same thing. This creates ‘conceptual noise’: duplication of effort, confusion over who is behind what, and missed opportunities to respond effectively.

To address this, the report builds on the Information Manipulation Set (IMS) model developed by the French agency Viginum. An IMS captures the identifiable pattern of behaviour used by a specific disinformation actor, including their tools, methods, platforms, and tactics over time. Using this approach, the framework was applied to four well-documented operations: Doppelganger, Storm-1516, Undercut, and Overload.

From labels to behaviour

Take the well-known label ‘Doppelganger’, that has often been used as a catch-all for many pro-Kremlin influence activities. But the IMS approach shows that these operations are not identical. Some of them impersonate real media outlets. Others create fake ‘alternative’ news brands from scratch. Some rely heavily on video, others on cloned websites or paid advertising. By looking at how these operations work – not just what they say – analysts can distinguish between them and trace them back to specific networks, including EU sanctioned Russian entities such as the Social Design Agency.

Overall, an IMS can be understood as a threat actor’s ‘digital fingerprint’. It brings together the behaviours, tools, tactics, techniques, procedures, and resources used by the same actor – whether that actor is already known or not. A threat actor controls an IMS, and through it runs information campaigns, which can then be broken down into individual operations or incidents.

Seeing the whole supply chain

The IMS model shifts attention away from isolated posts or fake articles towards the disinformation supply chain. It helps identify who produces the content, who amplifies it, which platforms and services enable it, and where vulnerabilities exist.

As a result, this enables the following capabilities:

• collective and credible attribution,
• detection of vulnerabilities in FIMI operations,
• assessment of the effectiveness of countermeasures against FIMI campaigns.

Key conclusions from the expert group

The IMS approach is not without limits. Its main challenge is cooperation. Public authorities and private organisations work under different mandates and priorities, which makes sustained collaboration hard to maintain. While the IMS model improves how disinformation is analysed, its full potential depends on stronger and more consistent cooperation between researchers and analysts.

The expert group reached three main conclusions. First, the IMS makes it possible to attribute information operations collectively rather than in isolation. Second, disinformation networks run by Russia or other any other actor rely on financial and operational intermediaries, including on those based inside the EU. Third, the model can strengthen both the design and enforcement of sanctions by improving the identification of networks, intermediaries, and enabling structures behind FIMI operations. By providing a clearer picture of how these networks function, the IMS model supports more targeted, evidence-based sanctions that are better aligned with the operational realities of disinformation campaigns.

Using the Cassini mapping tool, experts tracked campaigns linked to the Social Design Agency across Europe. Their analysis showed that sanctions have not stopped these networks from using technical intermediaries, cloaking services, hosting providers, and advertising infrastructure in several EU member states. The report concludes that this ongoing activity points to weaknesses in enforcement rather than a lack of evidence.

From tools to action: strengthening cooperation and enforcement

The report is clear: better tools alone are not enough without stronger cooperation and enforcement.

It recommends:

stable funding for long-term cooperation between public and private actors,
greater transparency from platforms on how disinformation networks operate,
tagging IMSs in takedown databases to improve shared awareness.
To improve the impact of sanctions it advocates for:

strengthening the evidentiary value of open-source investigations,
improving coordination of sanctions enforcement,
tailoring sanctions to disrupt FIMI networks more effectively.
Disinformation is a coordinated threat. Countering it requires a shared picture, shared responsibility, and the political will to act on what is already known.

https://euvsdisinfo.eu/seeing-the-whole-picture-a-new-way-to-track-russian-fimi/
Contra a Esquerda woke e a Direita populista marchar, marchar!...

 
Os seguintes utilizadores agradeceram esta mensagem: Duarte

*

Duarte

  • Investigador
  • *****
  • 6884
  • Recebeu: 1374 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 3235 vez(es)
  • +3817/-1756
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #691 em: Janeiro 17, 2026, 12:28:34 am »
Europe Rethinks Security Order as Macron Questions U.S. Defense Dominance and Putin Hints at Strategic Reordering

https://www.thedefensenews.com/news-details/Europe-Rethinks-Security-Order-as-Macron-Questions-US-Defense-Dominance-and-Putin-Hints-at-Strategic-Reordering/
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"Even the dumbest among us can see the writing on the wall for Putin"
 

*

Duarte

  • Investigador
  • *****
  • 6884
  • Recebeu: 1374 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 3235 vez(es)
  • +3817/-1756
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #692 em: Janeiro 17, 2026, 11:34:57 pm »
EDA brings seven EU states and shipbuilders together to shape future European Combat Vessel frigates

https://defence-industry.eu/eda-brings-seven-eu-states-and-shipbuilders-together-to-shape-future-european-combat-vessel-frigates/
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"Even the dumbest among us can see the writing on the wall for Putin"
 

*

Ghidra

  • Analista
  • ***
  • 600
  • Recebeu: 324 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 217 vez(es)
  • +351/-311
  • 🙈🙉🙊
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #693 em: Janeiro 18, 2026, 04:58:15 pm »
Como melhorar a mobilidade militar na UE?

Citar
Para melhorar a mobilidade militar, prontidão de defesa e resposta rápida a ameaças, a Comissão Europeia propôs uma abordagem semelhante a um “Espaço Schengen militar”. Conheça as principais medidas.

AComissão Europeia aprovou na quarta-feira, 14 de janeiro, o plano para Portugal aceder a 5,8 mil milhões de euros em empréstimos a condições favoráveis para investir em capacidades de defesa, sendo um dos oito países com aval preliminar — em paralelo com a Roménia, Bélgica, Bulgária, Chipre, Dinamarca, Espanha e Croácia — no âmbito do Instrumento de Ação para a Segurança da Europa (SAFE). Mas a aposta na defesa tem sido crescente, tendo em conta os desafios criadas pela guerra na Ucrânia e, mais recentemente, as ameaças do Presidente dos EUA, Donald Trump, dirigidas à Gronelândia e ao Irão.

“No ano passado, ao nível europeu, fizemos mais investimento em defesa do que nas décadas anteriores […] e isso inclui os 150 mil milhões de euros do programa SAFE”, sublinhou a presidente da Comissão, Ursula von der Leyen.

E para permitir a movimentação militar rápida e em grande escala, a Comissão Europeia propôs uma abordagem semelhante a um “Espaço Schengen militar”. Um conjunto de medidas que visam melhorar a mobilidade militar em toda a Europa, a prontidão de defesa e resposta rápida a ameaças.

O objetivo é criar uma área de mobilidade militar à escala da UE, onde as tropas, o equipamento e os recursos militares poderão deslocar-se de forma rápida e eficiente. Mas, para isso, é necessário eliminar barreiras burocráticas e de infraestrutura, através de um quadro regulamentar, focado na adaptação dos transportes e na digitalização, que deverá estar pronto até 2027.

As principais medidas são:

Mobilidade mais rápida: um procedimento único de autorização para a movimentação de equipamento militar para todos os 27 países da UE, procedimentos acelerados e acesso prioritário às infraestruturas.

Partilha de capacidades de transporte e logística.

Melhorar percursos: modernização dos principais corredores de mobilidade militar da UE para os padrões civis e militares.

Uma autoridade única: designação de um coordenador nacional para o transporte militar em cada Estado-membro e simplificação da governação a nível da UE.

https://eco.sapo.pt/2026/01/18/como-melhorar-a-mobilidade-militar-na-ue/?utm_source=SAPO_HP&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=destaques
« Última modificação: Janeiro 18, 2026, 04:58:58 pm por Ghidra »
 

*

Ghidra

  • Analista
  • ***
  • 600
  • Recebeu: 324 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 217 vez(es)
  • +351/-311
  • 🙈🙉🙊
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #694 em: Janeiro 24, 2026, 04:27:05 pm »
London seeks route into next round of EU SAFE defence financing

Citar
London and Brussels are expected to resume discussions in early February on UK involvement in a future phase of the EU’s Security Action for Europe (SAFE) defence financing scheme, as part of a broader set of talks aimed at tightening UK–EU cooperation

SAFE is the EU’s flagship joint-procurement loan instrument, designed to help participating states finance defence purchases on favourable terms while encouraging common buying across the bloc. The European Commission describes SAFE as a €150 billion loan facility within its wider “Readiness 2030” defence package. In mid-January, the Commission said it had endorsed an initial batch of national defence plans and proposed that the Council approve financial assistance for eight member states, including Belgium, Denmark and Spain.

The UK’s interest is primarily industrial and strategic. British defence firms are major suppliers in European supply chains, and UK officials have argued that closer alignment on procurement would improve interoperability and shorten delivery times for munitions and other equipment. The May 2025 UK–EU summit produced a security and defence partnership intended to widen practical cooperation, with both sides signalling at the time that it could support pathways for British industry to take part in EU-backed procurement.

However, the first attempt to secure UK participation in SAFE did not succeed. Talks broke down in late 2025 amid disagreements over the financial contribution London would make for access. Reporting at the time said the EU sought a multi-billion-euro entry fee, while the UK offer was in the hundreds of millions. The question of “pay-in” has been a recurring feature of the post-Brexit reset agenda, and EU negotiators have framed contributions as a standard condition for third countries seeking access to EU frameworks.

A further complication is the design of SAFE itself. The loans are made to participating states, not to suppliers, and access for non-EU firms depends on the rules attached to eligible procurement and on any separate arrangement the EU concludes with a third country. Analysts have noted that SAFE’s third-country provisions are detailed and can constrain procurement choices, depending on how “European preference” conditions are applied in practice. Separate debate inside the EU has also focused on the share of non-EU content that should be permitted in SAFE-supported projects, with press reporting in 2025 describing proposals that would cap the value of British components.

The renewed February talks are expected to sit within a wider UK–EU package. Officials on both sides have discussed issues ranging from security coordination to trade frictions and mobility arrangements, with the UK government seeking progress ahead of a further leaders’ meeting later in 2026. The defence-financing question is therefore likely to be negotiated alongside other files where the EU may also seek UK financial participation, such as parts of the energy relationship.

Timing also matters on the EU side. SAFE is moving from legal adoption to implementation: member states submitted national plans by late 2025, and the Commission has begun approving the first wave. In September 2025 nineteen member states had taken up SAFE loans, with Poland receiving the largest allocation, with first disbursements expected in early 2026 following plan submissions and approvals. With funding decisions underway, any UK agreement tied to a “future round” would need to align with the EU’s budgetary and political calendar, including whether additional financing capacity is created beyond the current €150 billion envelope.

https://eutoday.net/london-next-round-of-eu-safe-defence-financing/
 
Os seguintes utilizadores agradeceram esta mensagem: Duarte

*

sivispacem

  • Investigador
  • *****
  • 2010
  • Recebeu: 1205 vez(es)
  • Enviou: 1332 vez(es)
  • +553/-775
Re: União Europeia
« Responder #695 em: Janeiro 25, 2026, 08:10:45 pm »
Hoje, no DN:

https://dinheirovivo.dn.pt/empresas/rearmar-a-europa-para-deixar-de-depender-dos-eua-custaria-840-mil-milhes-de-euros?_gl=1*tnus58*_ga*NjQyNzM3MzkwLjE3NjU3OTY2MjI.*_ga_N4ZRRTF0TT*czE3NjkzNzEzNTIkbzM3JGcxJHQxNzY5MzcxNDQwJGo2MCRsMCRoMjkyMzQ4MDk4*_ga_7R43SHMFXJ*czE3NjkzNzEzNTIkbzM3JGcxJHQxNzY5MzcxNDM5JGo0MiRsMCRoMTE2NDIwNjc4Mw..
Cumprimentos,
 
Os seguintes utilizadores agradeceram esta mensagem: Duarte