Counter-Terrorism Missions
22 pages · PDF · 12 February 2026 · Licensed single-user copy, watermarked to the buyer
€299 excl. VAT — EU VAT calculated at checkout (VAT ID accepted for reverse charge); invoice issued after payment
One click to Stripe — guest checkout, no account. Your download appears on the confirmation page and arrives by e-mail right after payment (link valid 72 hours, up to 5 downloads).
About this report
The operational vulnerability addressed by counter-terrorism missions can be defined as the persistent risk that transnational terrorist organisations reconstitute operational capacity and strategic depth in fragile environments, exploit technology-enabled reach into allied societies, and create force-protection and resilience liabilities for allied deployments and critical infrastructure, while allied and partner counter-terrorism architectures remain insufficiently integrated, scalable, and sustainable under contested multi-domain conditions.
This vulnerability is not limited to the probability of attacks against civilians.
Key questions this report answers
- What operational vulnerability do counter-terrorism missions address across fragile environments and allied societies?
- What mission sets, theatres, domains and scenarios structure counter-terrorism operations?
- What force posture, readiness models and command-and-control architecture are required?
- What capability families, technology clusters and structural bottlenecks constrain counter-terrorism?
Inside this report
- Operational Rationale and Strategic Anchoring
- Mission Sets, Theatres, Domains and Scenarios
- Force Posture, Readiness Models and Command-and-Control Architecture
- Capability Families, Tactical Building Blocks and Performance Requirements
- Technology Clusters, Industrial Base, Value Chain and Structural Bottlenecks
Who it's for
Strategy, corporate-development and investment teams that need an ecosystem-level view — budgets, industrial capacity and technology landscapes — before committing capital or capacity.
Related reports
Methodology, format & delivery
DFM reports are built from primary and official sources — TED procurement notices, CORDIS and the EU Funding & Tenders Portal, EIB operations, the NATO Innovation Fund portfolio, SIPRI data, official budget documents and company disclosures — read together with the underlying legal texts. Sources are cited in the document; it reflects them as of its publication date (12 February 2026). You receive a 22-page PDF, watermarked to you on every page, delivered on the confirmation page and by e-mail immediately after checkout (personal link valid 72 hours, up to 5 downloads). Guest checkout, single-user licence — Terms of Sale.
Related on DFM
More Strategic reports · All reports
Prefer unlimited access?
Prefer unlimited access? Every report like this is included in the DFM Analysis subscription. See plans →