NATO IN THE AGE OF HYBRID WARFARE

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PSSI Summer School NATO IN THE AGE OF HYBRID WARFARE July 1 7, 2018 Hotel Orlík, Czech Republic Program In Cooperation with NATO Public Diplomacy Division Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic

MONDAY, July 2 nd 9.00 10.30 Session I Introduction Petr Lang, Program Director, Prague Security Studies Institute Tomáš Kulda, Program Manager, Prague Security Studies Institute 10.30 12.00 Session II Hybrid Warfare: Military Perspective Lt. Col. Otakar Foltýn LTC Otakar Foltýn currently serves as a Staff Officer for the General Staff, Army of the Czech Republic. He was conscripted into the Czech Army and after his primary service at the Military Academy from 2003-2004, he volunteered to become a professional officer. He has served in various positions at G3, G5 branches and the General Staff Inspectorate, and participated in several foreign missions, including the KFOR Mission with the Multinational Task Force Center in 2006, and the ISF Mission 2009 which focused on Afghan National Police training. LTC Foltýn received his law degree from the Law Faculty of Charles University in Prague. He is member of the Czech Society for International Law and he teaches courses on the theory of armed conflicts, and international humanitarian law at Charles University. In his spare time, he volunteers for ecological organizations. 14.00 16.00 Session III NATO in New Strategic Environment Jan Havránek, Policy Adviser, Policy Planning Unit, Office of the Secretary General, NATO Headquarters Jan Havránek is a Policy Advisor at the Policy Planning Unit of the Office of the NATO Secretary General in Brussels. He previously served as a defense counsellor at the Czech delegation to NATO HQ in Brussels. Prior to this assignment, he was the Assistant First Deputy Minister and Defense Policy Director of the Ministry of Defense of the Czech Republic and also served as the Deputy Defense Policy Director and Foreign Policy Advisor to the Czech Minister of Defense. An active member of the transatlantic community, in 2013 he was named to the Diplomatic Courier s annual list of the Top 99 Under 33 Foreign Policy Leaders. He received a Master s degree in International Security Studies and Business Relations at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University.

TUESDAY, July 3 rd 9.00 10.30 Session IV NATO: Defence, Detterence and Dialogue Jan Havránek, Policy Adviser, Policy Planning Unit, Office of the Secretary General, NATO Headquarters Jan Havránek is a Policy Advisor at the Policy Planning Unit of the Office of the NATO Secretary General in Brussels. He previously served as a defense counsellor at the Czech delegation to NATO HQ in Brussels. Prior to this assignment, he was the Assistant First Deputy Minister and Defense Policy Director of the Ministry of Defense of the Czech Republic and also served as the Deputy Defense Policy Director and Foreign Policy Advisor to the Czech Minister of Defense. An active member of the transatlantic community, in 2013 he was named to the Diplomatic Courier s annual list of the Top 99 Under 33 Foreign Policy Leaders. He received a Master s degree in International Security Studies and Business Relations at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University. 10.30 12.00 Session V Hybrid Warfare: Non-Military Perspective Pasi Eronen, Foundation For Defense of Democracies Pasi Eronen is the lead researcher for FDD s Russia project, where his work focuses on economic coercion, hybrid threats, and their nexus with cyber and information warfare. His professional career includes a tour as a seconded national expert in the EU s European Police Mission in Afghanistan, and as a military officer with the Finnish Defense Forces in NATO s Kosovo Force. Pasi has previously authored a report for the Finnish Ministry of Defense on the use of public-private partnerships in the development of national cyber defenses. He helped to develop Finland s Cyber Security Strategy while working for the Ministry of Defense. He also has worked almost a decade in management consulting and serves on the advisory board of Sparta Consulting, a Finnish cyber security start-up. Pasi earned a master s degree in Security Studies from Georgetown University and a master s degree in Computer Science from the University of Joensuu, Finland.

14.00 16.00 Session VI Russia as a Security Threat Jan Paďourek, former Deputy Director-General for Analysis and Foreign Relations of the Office of Foreign Relations and Information Mr. Paďourek is former Deputy Director-General for Analysis and Foreign Relations of the Office of Foreign Relations and Information (ÚZSI), the Czech foreign intelligence agency. He joined the agency in 1993 as an analyst and was appointed as Official representative of ÚZSI in the Russian Federation in 1999. After a four-year tour of duty he was reappointed as Official representative in Ukraine where he stayed until 2008. From 2008 to 2010 he was Head of the Foreign Relations Department of the Agency. After briefly serving as Senior Head of Analysis, he was appointed as Official representative of ÚZSI in the United States of America, where he served from 2012 to 2014. WEDNESDAY, July 4 th 9.00 10.30 Session VII NATO EU Relations Martin Michelot, Deputy Director, EUROPEUM Institute for European Policy Martin Michelot is the Deputy Director of the EUROPEUM Institute for European Policy in Prague, and a Non-Resident Fellow at the Paris office of German Marshall Fund of the United States. Michelot specializes in transatlantic security and NATO policy with a particular focus on regional security cooperation mechanisms in Europe, French foreign policy, and the development of EU defense mechanisms. Michelot leads EUROPEUM s foreign policy programming in Central Europe, with a focus on security policy, immigration issues and regional cooperation. He also manages the high-level convening program Transatlantic Security and Future of NATO program for the German Marshall Fund, where he has over 5 years of experience in event management and research on transatlantic security cooperation issues. He is a graduate of Sciences Po Lyon, where he studied international relations. His previous experiences include the Brookings Institution, where he served as a research assistant, and the French National Assembly, as parliamentary assistant. Michelot is a regular contributor to various international news outlets on the topics of European defense policy, transatlantic relations, and French elections. Michelot regularly teaches seminars at Sciences Po Lyon, Sciences Po Reims, the Ecole Centrale, and Charles University. He was selected by the Atlantic Council as one of

the 15 Emerging Leaders tasked with writing a report before the NATO 2014 Wales Summit. 10.30 12.00 Session VIII NATO: Projecting Stability František Šulc František Šulc currently serves as a member of the Active Reserve of the Army of the Czech Republic, in addition to his work as a consultant on defence, security, media and marketing matters for both private citizens and public institutions. Previously he worked for the Czech Ministry of Defence from 2010-2014, serving as both the Chief of Cabinet and the Chief Adviser. While there, he assisted in the strategic review of the Czech defence systems, and proposed new reforms to their Armed Forces. In 2012, he was awarded the Cross of Merit of the Minister of Defence for his work. Prior to his career in defence, Šulc was a well-known journalist for various news desks of the Czech Republic, including Prima TV, and Lidové Noviny, where he served as the Chief of the Foreign News Desk, the Domestic News Desk, and Saturday s Supplement Orientace. In 2014 he received the Open Society Fund Journalism Award for the Best Reportage, and in 2003 the Ferdinand Peroutka Award for his reporting from Iraq. He has a Master s degree in Security Studies from Charles University, and a Bachelor s in International Relations from the University of West Bohemia s Faculty of Philosophy and Arts. 14.00 17.00 Session IX Russian Foreign Policy Tools Pál Dunay, Professor of NATO and European Security Issues Pál Dunay received an LL.M in Law and Political Science from the Loránd Eötvös University Budapest in 1982, a so-called Dr. Universitatis degree in Public International Law in 1991 from the same university and a Ph.D. in international relations from the Budapest University of Economics in 2001 each with summa cum laude. He has submitted his habilitation at the Lorand Eötvös University in June 2015. Between 1982 and 1996, he was post-graduate student, assistant and associate professor at the International Law Department of Lorand Eötvös University. In 1989-90 he was legal advisor of the Hungarian Delegation to the Conventional Forces in Europe talks, whereas in 1992, he held the same function at the Open Skies negotiations. In 1991 for half a year, he was Head of the Security Policy and Disarmament Department of the Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Between 1994 and 1996, he was Deputy Director of the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs. Between 1996 and 2004 as well as between 2007 and 2014,

he was course director of the nine months long International Training Course in Security Policy at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy. Between July 2004 and the beginning of 2007, he was Senior Researcher at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). In 2007, he reopened and directed the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs until his return to Geneva. Between May 2014 and June 2015, he was Director of the Organization for Security Cooperation in Europe s Academy in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Pál Dunay's research interest extends to various issues of European security with an emphasis on Eastcentral Europe and Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the OSCE, the legality of the use of force, and integration and disintegration in the post-soviet space. THURSDAY, JULY 5 th 9.00 10.30 Session X Securing the Baltic Region: Estonian Perspective Rainer Saks, Secretary General, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Estonia Rainer Saks is the Secretary General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Estonia since December 2015. From 2011 to 2015, Mr Saks served as the Director General of the Estonian Information Board (currently the Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service). Prior to that Mr. Saks was the Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Estonia. From 2001 to 2006, he served as the National Security Coordinator in the Government Office of the Republic of Estonia. At the turn of the millennium, Mr. Saks was adviser to the then Minister of Foreign Affairs of Estonia, Mr. Toomas Hendrik Ilves. Mr. Saks holds a bachelor s degree in history from the University of Tartu. He has worked as a history teacher and is a member of the Estonian Students' Society. Rainer Saks has been awarded the Third Class of the Order of the White Star by the Republic of Estonia in 2005. 10.30 12.00 Session XI NATO Summit Jan Jireš, Head of Defence Section, Czech Republic Permanent Representation to NATO Since August 2017, Jan has been the Head of Defence Section at the Czech Republic Permanent Representation to NATO in Brussels. From March 2014 to July 2017, he served as the Defence Policy Director at the Ministry of Defence of the Czech Republic. From April 2013 to February 2014, he worked as Deputy Defence Policy Director. From 2004 to 2014, Jan was a lecturer in international relations and security studies at Charles University in Prague. Between 2009 and 2013, he

worked as director of the Prague Centre for Transatlantic Relations at the CEVRO Institute College. In 2008 and 2009, he spent a year as a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at John Hopkins University s Center for Transatlantic Relations in Washington, DC. Before joining the Defence Ministry, Jan worked with a number of U.S. and European research institutes and think-tanks on various security policy-related projects (CESS Groningen, DCAF Geneva, CEPI Bratislava, PISM Warsaw, SOWI Strausberg, PSSI Prague, SAC Bratislava). He was also an Adjunct Fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) in Washington, DC. In 2010 and 2011, Jan was a member of an expert group, appointed by the Czech Minister of Defense, drafting the country s new Defence White Paper. He holds an M.A. in Political Science and History from Charles University. In September 2012, he received a Ph.D. from Charles University for his dissertation on the evolution of U.S.-Central European relations in the post-cold War era. 14.00 16.00 Session XII NATO's Modernization: Polish Perspective Marcin Zaborowski, Senior Associate, Visegrad Insight Marcin Zaborowski is a Senior Associate at Visegrad Insight. Prior to that he was the executive vice-president and head of the Warsaw Office for the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) from July 2015 to December 2016. From 2010 to 2015, Mr. Zaborowski served as the director of the Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM), in Warsaw. Prior to that, Mr. Zaborowski directed the Transatlantic Programme at the European Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS), in Paris, where he dealt with transatlantic relations, U.S. foreign policy, EU Common Security and Defence Policy, and EU enlargement. He was a lecturer in international relations at the University of Birmingham and Aston University, in the UK, from 2001 to 2005, and a coordinator and director of the Transatlantic Programme at the Centre for International Relations, in Warsaw, from 2002 to 2004. Mr. Zaborowski holds a Ph.D. in European Politics and an M.A. in International Studies from the University of Birmingham. He is also a graduate of the Adam Mickiewicz University, in Poznan, Poland.

FRIDAY, JULY 6 th 9.00 10.30 Session XIII Next Generation of Sanctions: Market-Based Tools Roger W. Robinson, Chairman and Co-Founder, Prague Security Studies Institute Roger W. Robinson, Jr. has served as President and CEO of RWR Advisory Group since 1985 and of the Conflict Securities Advisory Group, Inc. between 2001 and 2009. He likewise serves as Chairman and Co-founder of the Prague Security Studies Institute. Prior to forming the firms referenced above, Mr. Robinson served as Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Congressionally-mandated U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission for much of the time from 2001 to 2006. He also served as Senior Director of International Economic Affairs at the National Security Council (NSC) from March 1982 until September 1985. Between January 1984 and April 1985, Mr. Robinson served as Executive Secretary of the Senior Interdepartmental Group-International Economic Policy, a Cabinet-level body that reported through the NSC to the President. Prior to joining the NSC staff, Mr. Robinson was a Vice President in the International Department of the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City. Mr. Robinson has published extensively on security-related risk in the global capital markets and East-West economic and financial relations. He has served as an expert witness on numerous occasions before both Senate and House Committees. 10.30 12.00 Session XIV Space Security: Implications for NATO Jana Robinson, Space Security Program Director, Prague Security Studies Institute Dr. Jana Robinson is currently Space Security Program Director at the Prague Security Studies Institute (PSSI). She previously served as a Space Policy Officer at the European External Action Service (EEAS) in Brussels, as well as a Space Security Advisor to the Foreign Ministry of the Czech Republic. From 2009 to 2013, Ms. Robinson worked as Resident Fellow at the European Space Policy Institute (ESPI), seconded from the European Space Agency (ESA), leading the Institute s Space Security Research Programme. Prior to joining ESPI, Dr. Robinson served as Development Director at PSSI from 2005 to 2009, and administered its affiliate organization in Washington DC, PSSI

Washington. Ms. Robinson is an elected member of the International Institute of Space Law (IISL) and the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA). She is also a member of the Advisory Board of the George C. Marshall Missile Defense Project of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C. Ms. Robinson holds a PhD from the Charles University s Faculty of Social Sciences, Institute of Political Studies, in the field of space security. She also holds two Master s Degrees, from George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs and Palacky University in Olomouc, respectively. She received scholarships to attend the International Space University s (ISU) 2009 Space Studies Program (SSP09), the 2008 Summer Training Course at the National Taiwan Normal University in Taipei, and a one-year course of study at Shanghai University 1999-2000. 14.00 16.00 Session XV How is NATO Preparing for the Cyber War Lilly Muller, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs Lilly Pijnenburg Muller is a research fellow in the Research Group for Security and Defense at NUPI with a focus on cybersecurity. Within cybersecurity her research covers public-private cooperation, multistakeholder processes, capacity building in developing countries, risk and harm, NATO and cyber resilience and deterrence. In addition, she follows international cybersecurity processes in the UN, OSCE and NATO. Her research interests include security politics, global governance and publicprivate relations, cyber security and cyber war. She has worked as a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford at the Martin Schools Global Cyber Security Capacity Building Center (GCSCC) and holds a Master of Arts (MA) from the University of Glasgow. SATURDAY, JULY 7 09.00 10.30 Simulation Debriefing 10.30 12.00 Wrap-up, Evaluation, Certificates 12.00 13.00 Lunch 13.00 14.30 Return to Prague