Commentary
Strategic Communication
Too Little, Too Late: On Ukraine, Europe is in the Backseat
25 November 2025
22 July 2025
As revisionist powers exploit alliance gaps and maritime vulnerabilities, Central Europe must move from being a reactive flank to a strategic core.
As the Euro-Atlantic community confronts simultaneous challenges – Russian aggression in Eastern Europe and China’s naval assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific – strategic foresight is more urgent than ever.
History, particularly from the interwar period, offers overlooked warnings. The 1921–22 Washington Naval Conference, which brought together major naval powers to prevent a new arms race, achieved short-term success but ultimately failed to avert global conflict.
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Dr. Ju Hyung Kim currently serves as a President at the Security Management Institute, a defense think tank affiliated with the South Korean National Assembly. He has been involved in numerous defense projects and has provided consultation to several key organizations, including the Republic of Korea Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Defense Acquisition Program Administration, the Ministry of National Defense, the Korea Institute for Defense Analysis, the Agency for Defense Development, and the Korea Research Institute for Defense Technology Planning and Advancement. He holds a doctoral degree in international relations from the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) in Japan, a master’s degree in conflict management from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), and a degree in public policy from Seoul National University’s Graduate School of Public Administration (GSPA).
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