The recent espionage revelations within Slovenia have once again spotlighted critical weaknesses in the European Union’s collective security apparatus. Experts warn that fragmented intelligence sharing and uneven national counterintelligence capabilities create fertile ground for foreign interference. This scandal underscores the urgent need for a harmonized, EU-wide framework capable of rapid detection and mitigation of espionage activities, especially amid increasing geopolitical tensions. Brussels is now facing mounting pressure to enhance legislative measures that empower both EU institutions and member states to respond more decisively to such covert threats.

Key concerns raised by analysts include:

  • Lack of unified protocols: Disparate national laws result in inconsistent responses to espionage.
  • Insufficient Intelligence exchange: Gaps in real-time sharing hamper…