Organizing for Cyber Power - cover

Organizing for Cyber Power

Gazmend Huskaj

  • 14 september 2026
  • 9781041104667
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Samenvatting:

Organizing for Cyber Power examines how states organise to develop and employ offensive cyberspace operations (OCO) as an instrument of national security under conditions of time compression, partial intelligence, attribution friction, and technical volatility.





Organizing for Cyber Power examines how states organise to develop and employ offensive cyberspace operations (OCO) as an instrument of national security under conditions of time compression, partial intelligence, attribution friction, and technical volatility. Its central claim is conditional: offensive capability contributes to strategic value when it is integrated across strategic authority, operational planning, and tactical execution, and embedded in institutional arrangements that sustain legal compliance, political oversight, intelligence-driven targeting, and risk governance.

The book introduces the Multi-Level, Multi-Dimensional (MLMD) Framework as a structured map linking strategic, operational, and tactical decision-making with cross-cutting political, ethical, and technological dimensions. MLMD is used to trace dependencies that shape whether policy intent can be translated into authorised, feasible action without losing control over effects that may propagate across interconnected systems.

Across three parts, the analysis develops conceptual foundations for cyber power and deterrence, then applies the framework to governance and institutional design, including Sweden’s cyber deterrence posture, vulnerability exploitation and its ethical implications, and whole-of-society partnership configurations. A policy-to-payload workflow and deconfliction model clarifies where authorisation, intelligence, engineering, and defensive activity collide and where escalation exposure concentrates.

The final part connects theory to practice through cases and prospective analysis, including WannaCry and an exercise-based cyber range scenario, before deriving institutional implications and future policy directions. The book is written for policy-makers, practitioners, students, and scholars who require a coherent way to analyse how cyber power is organised and governed as lawful statecraft in a contested domain.

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