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Articles on governance design, organizational decision-making, systems thinking, and the structural conditions that shape how organizations and societies function.

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On European Strategic Independence
Part X: European Ammunition Sovereignty and the Supply Chains It Requires
What must exist before a shell can be loaded. Tracing the chemistry supply chains for European ammunition and drone warhead production — where sovereign production exists, where it does not, and what the gaps would cost to close at the level where the actual constraints operate.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part IX: War, and What It Takes to Keep the Wounded Alive
The pharmaceutical supply chain Europe would need, and the one it has. Tracing the antibiotic treatment ladder from finished dose to elemental input — what battlefield wound infections with the resistance profiles documented in Ukraine would actually demand, and what the worst-case planning standard reveals about European pharmaceutical sovereignty.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part VIII: The Supply Chains War Actually Requires
Three supply chains, their vulnerabilities, and one structural condition. The upstream chemistry for shell explosives, battlefield antibiotics, and synthetic fertilizers shares a common feedstock dependency and a common geographic concentration outside European sovereign control — and under conflict conditions, they fail together.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part VII: The Response That Cannot Close the Gap
Why European institutions are structurally positioned to do more of what no longer works, and what that means for every domain that follows. The manpower, procurement, and paradigm problems that budget increases cannot solve — and what Finland and Poland demonstrate about what a structurally different response actually looks like.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part VI: The Geography You Cannot Negotiate With
What defending Europe's eastern frontier actually requires, and why the current response is not designed to meet it. An examination of the 2,500-kilometer frontier geometry, the distributed threat model it is actually exposed to, and why the mobile reserve and infrastructure gaps cannot be closed by the responses currently underway.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part V: What the War in Ukraine Has Made Measurable
Europe's response to the Ukraine conflict was calibrated to a reference point that has not remained stationary. An examination of what high-intensity conventional warfare actually consumes — artillery, drones, and the innovation cycle — and what that reveals about the structural gap between where European defense stands and what the situation now requires.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part IV: A War European Defense Was Not Designed For
Three decades of individually sensible decisions accumulated a defense posture that the current geopolitical situation has made impossible to defer. An examination of how that happened, what it produced, why signals went unacted upon after 2008, and why the gap between where European defense stands and what the situation now requires is harder to close than current policy responses are willing to state plainly.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part III: The Solutions That Do Not Solve the Problem
Why does political discourse so consistently promote energy solutions that independent engineering analysis does not support? An examination of how technically deficient solutions achieve strategic promotion, using small modular reactors and hydrogen as the clearest available illustrations of the pattern.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part II: Energy Is a System Problem
The energy problem Europe is debating is not the energy problem Europe has. An examination of what the transition actually requires, why the technology debate is the wrong debate, and how deployment consistently falls short of what the system demands due to sequencing failures and industrial policy incoherence.
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On European Strategic Independence
Part I: Why We Europeans Are Solving the Wrong Problem
The structural conditions for European strategic independence are not where the debate is looking. An analysis of why a shared diagnosis of European strategic weakness consistently fails to produce effective intervention, and what the analytical frameworks being applied to the problem are missing.
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