Future Frontiers - in collaboration with Hiatus.Digital

The Future of Human-Machine Teaming (HMT)
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

The Future of Human-Machine Teaming (HMT)

Ukraine is rewriting the rules of warfare, but not in the way most expected. What’s emerging on the battlefield is not just faster drones or smarter systems, but a new kind of partnership between humans and machines that is already changing how decisions are made and missions are executed. But the real shift lies in what humans stop doing, and what machines start taking on.

Read More
What is Data Sovereignty and why is it important for defence
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

What is Data Sovereignty and why is it important for defence

Most organisations assume their data is secure if it sits within national borders, but that assumption is increasingly flawed. In this article, we unpack how laws like the US CLOUD Act can reach across jurisdictions, why “data residency” is not the same as true sovereignty, and how a new layer, capability sovereignty, is emerging as AI systems begin to shape decisions as much as the data itself.

Read More
Low-cost drone interception is now a strategic imperative for everyone
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

Low-cost drone interception is now a strategic imperative for everyone

Uncrewed aerial systems (UAS) have evolved from niche military platforms into widely available technologies used across commercial, industrial, and recreational sectors.

Their rapid proliferation has unlocked enormous economic value, enabling new services in logistics, agriculture, infrastructure inspection, and media production. Yet the same access has created a parallel security challenge.

Read More
Cognitive Warfare
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

Cognitive Warfare

In the twenty-first century, conflict has expanded far beyond guns, borders, and physical terrain. Strategic competition increasingly targets how people think, decide, and assign trust. This shift has given rise to what military planners and scholars describe as cognitive warfare, a form of contest that operates not on the battlefield, but within the human mind.

Read More
Mesh over Metal
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

Mesh over Metal

For over a century, military communications were built around a simple logic: radios connect people. Orders flowed down hierarchical chains, reports flowed back up, and information moved along predefined paths. This model shaped the way forces organised themselves on the battlefield.

But now, that paradigm is now under sustained pressure.

Read More
The Sensor Race
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

The Sensor Race

As low-cost drones proliferate, the decisive advantage is shifting away from interceptors and jammers, and upstream towards detection, classification and attribution. Passive RF, acoustic and optical sensing are becoming foundational, not supplementary.

Read More
The Undersea Front
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

The Undersea Front

Most of the world’s internet traffic runs under the sea. Submarine fibre-optic cables carry the vast majority of international data, connecting markets, banks, cloud platforms and military networks. Recent incidents in Northern Europe made this glaring strategic weakness painfully.

Read More
From Kinetic Threats to Biological Risk:
Chris Shirley MA FRGS Chris Shirley MA FRGS

From Kinetic Threats to Biological Risk:

For decades, Western defence strategy has been shaped by kinetic threats, conventional military power, territorial defence, and deterrence based on visible force. While these capabilities are still essential, they are no longer sufficient on their own. Biological risk is emerging as a strategic defence issue that challenges the assumptions underpinning traditional military postures.

Read More