Two weeks ago I sat on a panel on "Defense & commercial revenues of tech startups, how to balance?" -- Dual-Use and Defense startups. The other panelists were Jake Chapman @ Marquee VC, Matt Kaplan @ Shield Capital, Chris Moran @ Lockheed Martin Ventures, and Kris Vulgan @ Ferocity Capital. It was a marathon panel … Continue reading National Resilience Demands Capacity, Not Contract Chasing
Category: Dual-Use & National Resilience
Where We Go From Here: Seven Investor Lessons From Ukraine
Yesterday, I published a self-audit of a blog post I wrote 3 years ago ("War in Ukraine: The Long-Term Impact", August 16, 2022). What emerges in hindsight: I systematically undervalued adaptive capacity of political and market systems when existential stakes are present.ย Cynicism about inertia was a biasย โ understandable given decades of EU under-delivery! โย but wrong … Continue reading Where We Go From Here: Seven Investor Lessons From Ukraine
Markets, Politics, and the Speed of Shock: Lessons from Ukraine
In a blog post from August 16, 2022, War in Ukraine: The Long-Term Impact, I made an economic and investment forecast. It was not a prediction, but it a directional framing of consequences under tension based on my observations on market drivers. Capital allocation is national security. Ventureโs edge isnโt alphaโitโs foresight operationalized under uncertainty.Thinkstorm … Continue reading Markets, Politics, and the Speed of Shock: Lessons from Ukraine
Generating 5x+ Alpha in Defense/Resilience VC
The best early-stage venture capital (VC) investors in defense and resilience over the next decade will outperform by doing what current mainstream VC still structurally avoids: investing with operational patience, systems-level clarity, and moral clarity โ under radical uncertainty. Here's what theyโll get right, and the key success factors that enable >5x+ returns, true alpha, … Continue reading Generating 5x+ Alpha in Defense/Resilience VC
Quantum Computing: Fixing SME Lending in Germany
Quantum computing can close the SME credit gap in Germany by resolving systemic data asymmetries that legacy financial institutions and classical machine learning models cannot overcome. In doing so, it could realign ESG-linked capital with high-quality, underfunded industrial firms at the heart of Germanyโs economic resilience.[Thinkstorm Thesis] Context: Why SME Lending Is Broken โ Especially … Continue reading Quantum Computing: Fixing SME Lending in Germany
Quantum Finance as Game-Theoretic Deterrence
Banks could treat quantum compute capacity as a deterrent in global financial conflict, like nuclear early-warning systems, but for real-time risk asymmetry. I recently caught up with the Bundesverband Deutscher Banken on the future of quantum computing for banking in Germany. For context, German banks play an outsized role in economic orchestration, not just capital … Continue reading Quantum Finance as Game-Theoretic Deterrence
Undergrounds-as-a-System: Doctrine Map for Resilient Conflict Architecture
Undergrounds are clandestine, resilient systems that enable sustained resistance, asymmetric warfare, or covert statecraft. Historically embedded in insurgency, resistance, and revolutionary doctrine, they now re-emerge as critical enablers in grey-zone and high-tech conflict.
Red Team FRAGPLAN: “Typhoon Blade”
A Red Team FRAGPLAN to investigate areas for venture capital and traditional innovations in a hypothetical indo-pacific conflict.
Europe and NATO: Not Ready for Russian Threat?
[usually I post about something venture capital on Tuesdays. Today's article by Atlantic Council's Fred Kempe made me switch up a few things -- stay with me, it'll be about venture capital...] This is Part I. Part II tomorrow, Part III Thursday. In his Atlantic Council article, "Europe is โnot readyโ for the Russian threat. … Continue reading Europe and NATO: Not Ready for Russian Threat?
Memos for the Hill and DoD: theyโre not dumb!
The post discusses feedback regarding memos on research, emphasizing they shouldn't simplify complex ideas. Successful memos require intuitive arguments for policymakers, aligning with political agendas, and allowing graceful retreats for stakeholders. The author outlines effective practices using examples from reputable sources and warns against overcomplication that may hinder support.









