Cybersecurity and Geopolitics: Digital Conflict, Election Security, and International Norms
MTA
An interdisciplinary survey of cyber threats to states, democratic processes, and emerging rules of engagement
The book examines cyberspace as a central arena of geopolitical competition, tracing how states, proxies, and criminal ecosystems leverage intrusion and influence operations to achieve strategic objectives. It details the technical lifecycle of cyberattacks—from reconnaissance and initial access through exploitation, lateral movement, persistence, and command‑and‑control—while highlighting the human and organizational factors that enable phishing, supply‑chain compromises, zero‑day exploits, and ransomware campaigns. The work shows how these tools are repurposed for espionage, economic coercion, and disruptive attacks on critical infrastructure, and how they intersect with disinformation, deepfakes, and algorithmic amplification to manipulate public perception and democratic processes.
A substantial portion is devoted to election security, presenting the architecture of voter registration, balloting, and auditing systems and offering concrete operational checklists for officials, campaign teams, and public communicators. It outlines best practices for securing voter databases, electronic poll books, ballot‑marking devices, and post‑election audits, alongside guidance for protecting party and campaign networks, managing cloud services, and countering rumor and deepfake threats during crises. The text emphasizes resilience through network segmentation, zero‑trust architectures, robust backup and recovery, and regular drills, while advocating for public‑private information sharing and incident‑response coordination.
Finally, the book addresses the international dimension: it surveys evolving norms on sovereignty, non‑intervention, and due diligence; examines attribution challenges and the toolkit of diplomatic, legal, and economic responses; and explores deterrence, confidence‑building measures, and multilateral pathways through the UN, regional bodies, and alliances. Looking ahead, it warns of quantum‑computing threats to encryption, the expanding attack surface of the IoT, and the continued weaponization of AI in future electoral cycles, arguing that a holistic blend of technical defense, organizational preparedness, and diplomatic engagement is essential to protect democratic legitimacy and maintain stability in the networked era.
This book is intended for policymakers, election officials, cybersecurity and IT/OT professionals, diplomatic and legal advisors, campaign managers, journalists, and scholars who need an integrated view of technical cyber operations and their geopolitical implications. It equips readers with practical checklists, strategic frameworks, and policy tools to defend democratic processes and critical infrastructure while contributing to the development of international norms in cyberspace.
May 31, 2026
44,514 words
3 hours 7 minutes
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