Abstract
This issue of the CLAWS Cyber Index provides a comprehensive overview of emerging global cybersecurity trends and geopolitical developments across major regions. Key highlights include intensified cyber cooperation between Japan and the United States to counter escalating digital threats, and the significant influence of AI-driven misinformation during South Korea’s presidential election. In the U.S., concerns mount over proposed cybersecurity budget cuts amid increasing Chinese cyber activity, while a Harvard report underscores the narrowing technological gap between the U.S. and China. The deployment of Anthropic’s Claude-Gov AI model reflects Washington’s push to integrate secure, government-grade AI into defense operations.
China remains at the center of multiple cyber concerns: leaked files reveal its use of AI to censor Tiananmen Square history, rapid progress in AI agent development, and the strategic targeting of high-value global institutions by China-nexus threat actors. In Europe, Dutch authorities report intensified Chinese espionage on high-tech industries, while the EU and Southeast Asian nations enhance undersea cable security in response to suspected sabotage.
Elsewhere, Iran’s OilRig-linked “BladedFeline” group expands cyber-espionage campaigns across the Middle East, and the pro-Ukraine hacktivist group Black Owl emerges as a formidable digital threat to Russian infrastructure. Additionally, rising drone warfare in Ukraine prompts U.S. defense strategists to prioritize counter-UAS development.