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Poland warns of surge in Russian cyberattacks on critical infrastructure

Poland is facing an unprecedented wave of cyberattacks, much of it traced to Russian military intelligence, according to the country’s digital affairs minister, Krzysztof Gawkowski. He told Reuters that Russia has tripled its cyber resources directed at Poland this year, targeting sectors vital to national security.

Of the 170,000 cyber incidents recorded in the first nine months of 2025, a “significant portion” was attributed to Russian state-linked actors, while the rest involved financially motivated cybercrime. Poland now faces 2,000–4,000 attacks daily, of which 700–1,000 pose real threats to key infrastructure, Gawkowski said.

The minister noted that Russian groups are expanding their focus beyond water and sewage systems to include energy networks, and warned that the activity is becoming more coordinated and sophisticated. “Russian activity is the most severe because it targets infrastructure essential to maintaining normal life,” he said.

A major escalation occurred on September 10, when a cyberattack coincided with a Russian drone strike, marking Poland’s largest coordinated digital assault since the start of the Ukraine war in 2022. False claims spread online that Ukraine had launched the drones, amplified by bot networks that had been dormant for years before suddenly reactivating.

Warsaw officials say Poland has become Russia’s top cyber target within NATO, due to its support for Kyiv and its strategic role in supplying Ukraine. The Russian embassy in Warsaw did not respond to requests for comment but has consistently denied involvement in cyber operations.

General Dynamics Wins $1.25 Billion IT Contract to Support U.S. Army in Europe and Africa

General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT), the tech services arm of defense giant General Dynamics, announced it has been awarded a $1.25 billion contract to provide long-term IT and communications support for the U.S. Army’s operations in Europe and Africa.

The contract — part of the Enterprise Mission Information Technology Services 2 (EMITS 2) task order — was awarded in September and includes a five-month transition period followed by seven optional years of service.

Under the EMITS 2 program, GDIT will deliver a range of capabilities, including:

  • Enterprise IT and communications infrastructure,

  • Mission command support services,

  • Assistance for Army headquarters, subordinate commands, NATO units, and allied partners operating across both continents.

The new contract underscores GDIT’s expanding role as a core technology partner for U.S. defense operations abroad. It comes just one week after the company announced a separate $1.5 billion modernization contract with U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM), focused on improving efficiency and cutting costs through AI-driven integration and enterprise system upgrades.

GDIT President Amy Gilliland said earlier this year that the firm’s mission is to “deliver secure, resilient technology solutions that strengthen national defense operations globally.”

With the U.S. military increasingly emphasizing digital transformation, data security, and battlefield connectivity, GDIT’s dual contracts position the company as a central player in shaping how the Department of Defense deploys advanced IT and AI capabilities across global theaters.

Meta expands Llama AI access to U.S. allies in Europe and Asia

Meta Platforms said Tuesday it will make its Llama artificial intelligence system available to U.S. allies including France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and South Korea, as well as to NATO and European Union institutions. The announcement follows U.S. approval for federal agencies to use Llama earlier this week.

Llama, a large language model capable of processing text, video, images, and audio, will now be deployed more broadly as part of Washington’s effort to strengthen digital cooperation with democratic allies.

Meta said it will work with partners such as Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Oracle, and Palantir to deliver Llama-based solutions abroad. The company emphasized that its models are released largely free for developers, a strategy CEO Mark Zuckerberg argues will drive innovation, reduce reliance on rivals, and keep engagement strong across Meta’s platforms.

The U.S. General Services Administration confirmed Monday that Llama would be added to its list of approved AI tools for federal use, meeting security and legal standards. By extending access to allies, Meta and Washington aim to align AI infrastructure across friendly nations at a time of intensifying global competition in artificial intelligence.