Overview
Chinese espionage. Russian sabotage. Iranian assassination attempts. North Korean cybercrime. The UK and its allies are facing successive waves of covert, and sometimes not-so-covert, hostile action from repressive states with revisionist ambitions. These states are using many different tools, from cyber and AI technologies to weaponised illegal migration and many different types of operatives, from criminals and terrorists through to apparently legitimate companies, civilians and diaspora communities. While during the Cold War hostile covert action was largely the preserve of intelligence agencies, now, the most active states are increasingly taking a ‘whole of society’ approach.
In a new research paper funded by the Serious Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Evidence (SOC ACE) Research Programme, RUSI Senior Associate Fellow Matthew Redhead seeks to understand and assess such hostile activity, described in UK government policy as ‘state threats’. The paper examines the scale, scope and significance of the contemporary state threats landscape and considers future trends, highlighting how states are diversifying, decentralising and experimenting in their secret statecraft. The paper also narrates how the use of state-to-state hostile activity is spreading, virus-like, from ‘usual suspects’ such as Russia and Iran to other authoritarian – and even some democratic – states, who view the exploitation of underhand methods as a cheap and effective way to pursue policy goals.
The event will include headline findings from the research, followed by an expert panel discussion that will consider the scale and scope of contemporary threats, potential future trends, and policy responses.
The SOC ACE Research Programme is funded by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the UK Government’s official policies.
Introductory Speaker:
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Professor Heather Marquette, Professor of Development Politics at the University of Birmingham and Director of the SOC ACE Research Programme
Panellists:
- Professor Rory Cormac, Professor of International Relations at the University of Nottingham and Co-director of the Centre for the Study of Subversion, Unconventional Interventions and Terrorism
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Matthew Redhead, Senior Associate Fellow, Centre for Finance and Security, RUSI
Moderator:
- Tom Keatinge, Director of the Centre for Finance and Security, RUSI
Joining instructions
This event is open to all, taking place at RUSI, 61 Whitehall, London, SW1A 2ET. If you have any questions regarding this event, please email [email protected]. Drinks will be served from 18:30-19:30.
Both the panel discussion and the subsequent Q&A will be on-the-record.