Neutrality does not mean passivity.
The Irish Presidency is expected to support continuity in the EU’s defence agenda, with Ukraine as a defining priority. Dublin has made clear that it will back continued political, financial and military support for Ukraine, maintain pressure on Russia, and support Ukraine’s integration into EU defence initiatives.
At the same time, Ireland is likely to frame European defence through areas that fit its own strategic profile: resilience, cyber security, hybrid threats, maritime security, critical infrastructure protection, preparedness and dual-use innovation.
Ireland’s defence niche advantage.
The Irish defence industrial base is not built around large defence primes or major weapons platforms. Instead, it is concentrated in specialised SMEs, research institutions and technology-driven capability areas such as cyber, secure communications, AI-enabled analysis, C4ISR, space-based ISR, simulation, data fusion and maritime surveillance.
These are precisely the areas becoming increasingly important in Europe’s defence transformation.
During the Irish Presidency, key files to watch will include the revision of the Defence Procurement Directive, the proposed Regulation on Military Mobility, work on European Defence Projects of Common Interest, the implementation of the Preparedness Union Strategy, and initiatives linked to cyber, hybrid threats, drone and counter-drone security, cable security and maritime domain awareness.