Over the past few years, new terms have emerged to describe the constant state of conflicts around the world, in the form of concepts such as hybrid warfare, cyber warfare, gray zone conflict, misinformation, deceptive information, deep forgery, infiltration operations, and cognitive warfare.
But they are only a few of the new terms that have entered the military or political lexicon in an attempt to define today’s relatively vague concepts of confrontation between states that have become normal in peacetime.
Most of them are in the idea and perspective of “hybrid war.”
Peace as we know it may be described as the absence of the act of war, and at the same time, war, in our traditional understanding, is a conflict that is dynamic in nature and includes armed attacks, commitments of armed forces, and armed conflict.
What we do not account for is the constant and continuous enslaught of attacks on the brain.
Cognitive Warfare is all encompassing.
