Cross-Border Radar & Sensor Networks (Operational Priorities)
Integrated Air & Missile Defence (IAMD)
29 pages · PDF · 13 December 2025 · Licensed single-user copy, watermarked to the buyer
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About this report
Cross-border radar and sensor networks form a critical operational line of effort within NATO’s Integrated Air and Missile Defence (IAMD) framework. The fundamental rationale is to ensure that Allied territory is continuously monitored by a network of interconnected sensors that transcend national borders, creating an integrated “sensor dome” against any aerospace threat.
This priority responds directly to the proliferation and intensive use of advanced aerial threats – from long-range missiles to drones – demonstrated in recent conflicts such as Russia’s war against Ukraine .
Key questions this report answers
- How do interconnected cross-border radar and sensor networks create an integrated 'sensor dome' within NATO's Integrated Air and Missile Defence framework?
- Which mission sets, theatres and command-and-control architectures enable continuous monitoring of Allied territory against aerospace threats?
- What capability families and performance requirements are needed to counter long-range missiles and drones seen in recent conflicts?
- What technology clusters, industrial base and structural bottlenecks constrain networked sensor coverage across national borders?
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.
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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 (13 December 2025). You receive a 29-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.
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