Dmytro Kuleba to Address the New Cyber Frontline at Infose Europe

Dmytro Kuleba to Address the New Cyber Frontline at Infose Europe

Dmytro Kuleba to Address the New Cyber Frontline at Infose Europe

https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/foreign-minister-kuleba/

Publish Date: 2026-03-24 10:00:00

Source Domain: www.infosecurity-magazine.com

Infosecurity Europe has announced former Ukrainian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Dmytro Kuleba as headline keynote for its 2026 conference program. The event will run from 2–4 June at ExCeL London.

Kuleba will take to the keynote stage on Wednesday, June 3 at 10:05, delivering his talk on ‘Ukraine’s Hybrid War and the New Cyber Frontline.’

Serving as Ukraine’s Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2020 to 2024, Kuleba was a key architect of the nation’s wartime strategy alongside President Volodymyr Zelensky.

During the Infosecurity Europe keynote, Kuleba will share the critical learnings his country gained while under digital siege.

He will detail how Russia coordinated cyber-attacks with kinetic strikes: from the crippling of telecommunications to the weaponization of disinformation. He will explain why Western enterprises are now the primary front line and what their cyber teams must know to survive this new era of “permanent shock.”

Rising Tensions Makes Cyber Collaboration Harder Across Europe

This geopolitical focus comes amid Infosecurity Europe’s 2026 Cybersecurity Trends Research which found that over half, 59%, of cybersecurity professionals say geopolitical tensions are making European cyber collaboration harder.

Countries including the UK (62%), France (68%) and Denmark (69%) all report that collaboration is becoming more difficult. Just 16% of survey respondents said tensions have had no impact.

Infosecurity Europe’s 2026 Cybersecurity Trends research was conducted by Zing Insights, among 396 cyber security professionals in the UK, France, Germany, Holland, Belgium and Denmark.

The research also revealed a widening split in confidence over European cyber cooperation, with 42% saying their country is doing enough, 43% saying it is not. Majorities in the UK (53%) and Germany (57%) expressed concern that current collaboration models are falling short.

Despite these challenges, the value of collaboration is clear, with 33% citing…

Source