Journal on Baltic Security logo


  • Latest call
Login Register

  1. Home
  2. Issues
  3. Volume 11, Issue 2 (2025)
  4. From the Analogue Warrior to the Algorit ...

Journal on Baltic Security

Submit your article Information Become a Peer-reviewer
  • Article info
  • Related articles
  • More
    Article info Related articles

From the Analogue Warrior to the Algorithmic Strategist: The Evolution of Military Training through Artificial Intelligence
Volume 11, Issue 2 (2025), pp. 54–78
Gerassimos Karabelias ORCID icon link to view author Gerassimos Karabelias details   Konstantinos Zafeiris ORCID icon link to view author Konstantinos Zafeiris details   Georgios Chontos ORCID icon link to view author Georgios Chontos details  

Authors

 
Placeholder
https://doi.org/10.57767/jobs_2025_011
Pub. online: 30 December 2025      Type: Policy Analysis      Open accessOpen Access

Received
11 October 2025
Accepted
9 November 2025
Published
30 December 2025

Abstract

NATO’s 2030 digital transformation demands innovative approaches to harness specialised capabilities and ensure readiness against hybrid threats. Cyber reserves are pivotal in bridging military and civilian technologies, enabling digital objectives, and countering sophisticated tactics like cyberattacks and GPS jamming. These reserves integrate military training with civilian expertise, leveraging private sector knowledge – controlling 90% of critical infrastructure – as a strategic asset. They serve as a force multiplier in digital transformation, connect industry and technology to military planning, and enable rapid deployment of advanced capabilities like cloud, AI, and data analytics. Cyber reserves enhance a country’s response to hybrid threats by improving vulnerability assessment, attribution, and civil-military coordination, emphasising societal resilience and military preparedness. They foster digital literacy, cultural change, and partnerships with industry and academia to strengthen holistic defence. However, challenges include standardising training, securing information exchange, and ensuring flexible service models that respect civilian commitments and national sovereignty. By addressing these, a military can calibrate cyber reserves to bolster defences and accelerate digital transformation, creating a full-spectrum, multi-domain force capable of countering 21st-century hybrid threats in both digital and physical spaces.

Related articles PDF XML
Related articles PDF XML

Copyright
Open Access. ©
by logo by logo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Keywords
Professional Military Education Artificial Intelligence AI Integration AI Military Training

Metrics
since May 2021
201

Article info
views

0

Full article
views

68

PDF
downloads

27

XML
downloads

Export citation

Copy and paste formatted citation
Placeholder

Download citation in file


Share


RSS

Journal on Baltic Security

  • Online ISSN: 2382-9230
  • Print ISSN: 2382-9222
  • Copyright © 2021 Baltic Defence College

About

  • About journal

For contributors

  • Submit
  • OA Policy
  • Become a Peer-reviewer

Contact us

  • Baltic Defence College,
    Riia 12, 51010,
    Tartu, Estonia
Powered by PubliMill  •  Privacy policy