Germany's New National Security Council Tackles Hybrid Threats, Boosts Infrastructure Protection

November 6, 2025
Germany's New National Security Council Tackles Hybrid Threats, Boosts Infrastructure Protection
  • Germany’s National Security Council, created to centralize crisis governance, held its first meeting and approved an action plan to counter hybrid threats, with a focus on protecting critical infrastructure like power grids, water systems, and energy pipelines.

  • The council will coordinate across government ministries, security services, and the private sector, aiming to develop an interdepartmental plan and strengthen resilience for critical raw materials and strategic dependencies.

  • NATO leadership downplayed the significance of the US troop withdrawal from Romania, describing the adjustments as routine and not overinterpreted.

  • The discourse around security also touches asylum policy and deportation rules, including Syrians and voluntary returns for Afghans, reflecting broader immigration-security debates.

  • The withdrawal from Europe occurs in the context of a broader US reassessment of force posture to address China, while keeping overall European force levels above pre-2022 levels.

  • NSC proceedings are publicly communicated on a case-by-case basis, with sessions typically held in secrecy and public briefings contingent on government discretion.

  • Recent remarks include Zelensky thanking Merz for Patriot air defense support to Kyiv, underscoring ongoing war-related developments linked to Germany’s security posture.

  • Historical context notes that similar security coordination efforts stalled two decades ago due to inter-ministerial competence disputes; current leadership under Merz is reportedly resolving those rivalries.

  • The council will convene in crises, issue overarching security policy recommendations, and can make final decisions where not constrained by constitutional or federal law.

  • As part of coalition commitments, the NSC will supersede the Bundessicherheitsrat and take over arms export approvals, centralizing national security and defense decision-making within the Chancellery.

  • Chancellor Friedrich Merz chairs the NSC, with permanent members including ministers of Finance, Foreign Affairs, Defense, Interior, Justice, Economy, Development, Digital Affairs, and the Head of the Chancellery; ministers and officials from security and international partners may join as needed.

  • Germany has authorized police to shoot down drones that pose an acute public threat, illustrating a tightened security stance amid hybrid threat concerns.

Summary based on 11 sources


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