Atlantica Magazine
Young professionals are often an unheard voice in policy discussions. More often than not, however, it is their insights that we need to break hardwired, outdated ideas about foreign policy and transatlanticism. Atlantica aims to amplify the voices of the young generation of transatlanticists. Our team is committed to publishing your article. Each issue features three articles per month on a theme selected by the Atlantic Forum team, in conjunction with NATO’s Public Diplomacy Division.
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To what extent will the employment of Artificial Intelligence in Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems help us overcome the existing vulnerabilities in modern warfare?
“Predicting the future isn't magic - it's artificial intelligence.”
— Dave Waters

NATO and Russia: Is there space for dialogue?
After the end of the Cold War in 1991, NATO adopted the New Strategic Concept, which called for cooperation with former adversaries to strengthen security throughout Europe. As Russia became a successor of the Soviet Union, NATO looked for different kinds of cooperation paths.

Contemporary military focuses of Zapad 2021 and NATO's response
Zapad (“West”) is Russia’s traditional large-scale military exercise. Its main goal is to improve the practical skills of commanders and staff for strategic operations with Russian coalition forces concerning its Western strategic orientation. Initially, Zapad was conducted among former Warsaw Pact countries. Today, it is carried out among the Regional Group of Force for Russia and Belarus.
The situation of the region in 2021, however, is entirely different compared to previous years. In this article, I will analyze the leading contemporary military focuses of Zapad 2021 and provide recommendations on how NATO can improve its enhanced Forward Presence (eFP) program in light of these changes.

Returning to the Baltics by way of Warsaw: eFP deployment after four years
Four years after the initial deployment of the enhanced Forward Presence (eFP) model to Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, and Poland, the security and defence architecture of Eastern Europe and NATO has shifted dramatically. The illegal Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, along with the conflicts in Georgia, Libya and Afghanistan, can be seen as the result of a process that began after the fall of the Soviet Union—a fracturing of the post-war consensus in which global security would entail responding to isolated crises on the edges of the rules-based international order. In response to this reversion to a latter-twentieth century norm, NATO launched the eFP, which partnered the Baltics and Poland with Canada, the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom to host and operate a deployment of battalion-sized battle groups. These battle groups included personnel from other member states and were designed to provide a stronger deterrent on NATO’s Eastern flank and reinforce the extension of Article Five to NATO’s more recent member states.
This paper will argue that the eFP is well-designed for the contemporary threat environment due to its emphasis on ensuring transatlantic solidarity; altering the perception of security among the civilian population; offering a reset from NATO’s focus on out-of-area operations; and, borrowing from securitization theory, securitizing the free exchange of information. The eFP model also offers crucial lessons for NATO as it struggles to promote itself among political elites across North America and Western Europe amidst the changing nature of security and defence.

Afghan Chess
The war in Afghanistan has been one of the longest contemporary wars, starting with the Soviet invasion in 1979. For more than 40 years, Afghanistan has been a headline for war, conflict, instability, and mass migration to neighbouring countries and around the world.

Article 5: From the Cold War to 9/11 to Today
Before the end of the Second World War in 1945, the West and the East maintained an extremely suspicious perception of each other. By 1947, relations between the USSR and the United States and Great Britain had deteriorated.

China's threat to NATO security: Implications for Article 5?
We now live in a world where strategic competition has become a buzzword when explaining China’s actions worldwide. China elicits challenges where it hurts the most, starting from strategic infrastructure through its Belt and Road Initiative, ending with assaults on Western values, such as human rights, rule of law, and diplomatic dignity.

"An attack on one is an attack on all": Article V as an important tool for deterring cyber-attacks against NATO member states
With U.S. President Donald Trump gone, NATO is no longer under the threat of devolving into “brain death”—how French President Emmanuel Macron described member state’s waning commitment to transatlantic values in 2019.

Realigning on values: The case for strengthening the US-EU values-based partnership through NATO
The transatlantic relationship endured and has begun to rebound from four years of a disengaged United States under the leadership of former US President Donald Trump.

On rolling back China's global influence: Understanding Beijing's reality & leaning on our fundamental strengths
“The trend of global multipolarity, economic globalization, IT application, and cultural diversity are surging forward; changes in the global governance system and the international order are speeding up.” – Xi Jinping, work report to the 19th National Congress of the CPC[i]