Security.Table
Federalism in an emergency: How the German federal states organize their civil defense
By Lisa-Martina Klein
18.05.2026
How the German government should respond to new US defense procurement risksBy Dominik Tolksdorf
18.05.2026
Defense industry: How South Korean defense group Hanwha wants to break into EuropeBy Wilhelmine Stenglin and Robert Wallenhauer
14.05.2026
Ukraine: Why the Mindichgate corruption scandal matters to its Western partnersBy Denis Trubetskoy
13.05.2026
Drone defense: German Armed Forces host “Market Survey” at the Innovation Center in ErdingBy Robert Wallenhauer
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Barış İkiz
Publishing Director
Editorial Team
Viktor Funk
Redakteur (Russland, postsowjetischer Raum)
Lisa-Martina Klein
Redakteurin (Zivil-, Katastrophenschutz, Kritische Infrastruktur)
Robert Wallenhauer
Volontär (New Defense, Rüstungsindustrie)
Security (English)
Headlines - Edition 469 from May 19th, 2026
- Civil protection: How differently individual federal states organize civil defense
- Space security: DACH countries plan closer cooperation
- China: Putin and Xi press ahead with pipeline project
- Bundeswehr: Representatives for the severely disabled criticize BGG provision
- D-LBO: Parliament’s approval of additional costs still unclear
- Air defense: German Armed Forces deploy Patriot system and 150 soldiers to Turkey
- Must Reads: Defense contractors are preparing for clearing sea mines in the Strait of Hormuz
From battlefield to boardroom – deep coverage of security posture, defense policy, and arms procurement amid a fast-changing global landscape.
Security.Table goes beyond general security news – delivering exclusive intelligence on cyber threats, defense procurement, and geopolitics for enterprise leaders. Our editorial team covers global strategy, NATO, and arms cooperation, with a sharp focus on actionable insight for leaders. Try the latest issue free – no obligation.
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