Hybrid Threat Support Teams (Operational Priorities)
31 pages · PDF · 30 January 2026 · Licensed single-user copy, watermarked to the buyer
€499 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
“Hybrid Threat Support Teams” represent a dedicated operational line of effort aimed at helping allied nations counter the subtle and multidimensional campaigns known as hybrid threats. In recent years NATO and the EU have identified hybrid warfare – the coordinated use of non-military and military means below the threshold of open armed attack – as a core challenge to collective security .
The 2022 NATO Strategic Concept explicitly highlights the need to counter hybrid threats as a vital part of Allied defense and resilience . This priority falls under the broader strategic objective of achieving information superiority and protecting societies against sub-threshold aggression.
Key questions this report answers
- What mission sets, theatres, domains, and scenarios do Hybrid Threat Support Teams address in countering sub-threshold campaigns?
- What force posture, readiness models, and command-and-control architecture underpin these teams?
- What capability families, tactical building blocks, and performance requirements support countering hybrid threats?
- What technology clusters, industrial base, and structural bottlenecks shape this NATO-EU priority for information superiority and resilience?
Inside this report
- 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.
Methodology & sources
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; the report reflects them as of its publication date (30 January 2026).
Format & delivery
31-page PDF, watermarked to you (name, e-mail, order number on every page). Delivered immediately after checkout on the confirmation page and by e-mail; the personal link is valid for 72 hours and up to 5 downloads (re-issued on request). Guest checkout — no account required. Single-user licence: see the Terms of Sale.
The full analysis, not the summary
The public briefing linked above tells you what this report found; the report itself shows the full evidence and reasoning behind it, section by section. It is the complete, dated document from the DFM research desk — sources cited, delivered as a licensed PDF you can keep and cite in your own work.
Related on DFM
More Strategic reports · Free summary of this report · All reports
Prefer unlimited access?
Prefer unlimited access? Every report like this is included in the DFM Analysis subscription. See plans →