The G7 summit in Biarritz has become a theatre of instability, with protest movements exploiting the gathering to challenge state authority. French security forces, despite their reputation, have been stretched thin by coordinated anarchist cells and violent fringe elements. The contrast with British handling of such events is stark.
UK security protocols, honed through decades of IRA counter-insurgency and recent counter-terrorism operations, focus on pre-emptive intelligence gathering, robust physical barriers, and rapid incident containment. This integrated approach neutralises threats before they escalate into large-scale disorder. France's reactive posture, by contrast, leaves gaps that agitators exploit.
The praise for British forces is not mere diplomacy, but a recognition of a superior security doctrine. However, this situation presents a strategic risk. Adversaries observe these weaknesses.
A hostile state could use protest movements as a cover for hybrid warfare, embedding agents within crowds to gather intelligence or conduct sabotage. The failure of French security is a threat vector that should concern all G7 nations. The UK must ensure its own protocols are shared and adopted, less these vulnerabilities become a chink in the alliance's armour.








