Training & Awareness

Locked Shields 2026: 41 Nations Strengthen Cyber Resilience in World’s Biggest Exercise

Locked Shields has grown significantly over the past 16 years, with only four nations participating in the first edition.

NATO Locked Shields

The world’s largest live-fire cyber defense exercise, Locked Shields 2026, concluded on Friday after bringing together more than 4,000 participants from 41 nations. 

Organized by the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (CCDCOE) in Tallinn, Estonia, the event simulated intense real-time cyberattacks against critical infrastructure and military systems, testing defenders’ ability to maintain essential services under pressure.

The number of participants was the same as in 2025.

Teams were tasked with protecting air defense, e-voting platforms, and other critical infrastructure. In addition to technical skills, Locked Shields tests the ability to deal with disinformation and political pressure.

According to Tõnis Saar, Director of the NATO CCDCOE, participants demonstrated strong capabilities in detecting and responding to malicious activity. Saar emphasized the need to translate exercise lessons into real-world readiness, particularly as AI continues to reshape both cyber defense and attack capabilities.

Sixteen multinational teams competed in the exercise. The three highest-scoring joint teams, listed in no particular order, were France and Sweden; Latvia and Singapore; and Germany, Austria, Luxembourg, and Switzerland. 

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Exercise Director Dan Ungureanu underscored the event’s core objective: enhancing international collaboration, building trust, and developing a shared understanding of cyberspace resilience. 

Locked Shields has evolved significantly over the past 16 years. When the first exercise was held in 2010, only four nations and 60 individuals participated.

Related: Over 370 Organizations Take Part in GridEx VIII Grid Security Exercise

Related: Apple iPhone and iPad Cleared for Classified NATO Use

Related: AI Can Autonomously Hack Cloud Systems With Minimal Oversight

Related Content

Compliance

The devices have been added to the NATO Information Assurance Product Catalogue (NIAPC).

Cybercrime

Codenamed Eastwood, the operation targeted the so-called NoName057(16) group, which was identified as being behind a series of DDoS attacks on municipalities and organizations...

Data Breaches

Microsoft flags a new Kremlin hacking team buying stolen usernames and passwords from infostealer markets for use in cyberespionage attacks. 

Cloud Security

VMware patches flaws that expose users to data leakage, command execution and denial-of-service attacks. No temporary workarounds available. 

Incident Response

The 15th edition of NATO’s Locked Shields cyber defense exercise brought together 4,000 experts from 41 countries.

Incident Response

The NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence in Estonia is hosting the Locked Shields 2025 cyber defense exercise.

Cyberwarfare

NATO will establish a new cyber center to better protect against increasingly sophisticated cyber threats.

Cyberwarfare

On the eve of NATO’s 75th anniversary summit in Washington DC, Mandiant outlines the current state of cyberthreats facing NATO and aligned countries.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version