📍 What's Happening?
The Netherlands — a country where bicycles are more important than traffic jams, and cheese is traded like stocks — is now preparing for the worst.
Dutch supermarkets are developing crisis plans in case of large-scale food supply disruptions. The reason?
Warnings from national security services: possible power outages, cyberattacks, and even sabotage provoked by geopolitical tensions.
The National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism (NCTV) stated directly:
"Critical infrastructure — including energy systems, water supply, and digital networks — can become a target. The food supply chain is vulnerable."
This is not panic. This is planned preparation for a new reality.
🔗 Sources:
Sources
🔥 Why Is This Alarming?
🔹 1. Food as the New Front Line
Supermarkets are no longer just retail outlets. They are lifeline nodes in peacetime and strategic pressure targets in crisis. If you disable refrigerators, block logistics, or hack warehouse management systems — you can trigger social panic within 48 hours.
🔹 2. Hybrid Warfare in the Supermarket
Russia, proxy groups, hacktivists — all understand: You don't need to bomb cities to paralyze a country. Just disrupt the supply chain.
Western analysts have long warned: the next stage of hybrid attacks is targeting civilian infrastructure:
- Power grids
- Water systems
- Food distribution centers
The Netherlands is an ideal target:
- Dense urbanization
- High dependence on imports (up to 70% of food)
- Key EU logistics hub (Rotterdam, Schiphol)
🔹 3. Supermarkets as the "Reserve Shield" of the State
The government doesn't hide that in case of emergency, state reserves won't save everyone. Therefore, retailers — Albert Heijn, Jumbo, Lidl, Plus — are included in national response plans. Their tasks:
- Maintain a minimum assortment (water, cereals, canned goods, medicine)
- Have backup generators and alternative delivery routes
- Ensure cyber resilience of cash register and warehouse systems
🕵️♂️ Who's Behind the Threat?
🔹 1. Russia — Through Hybrid Methods
- Already used cyberattacks on power systems (Ukraine, Germany)
- Uses economic pressure as a weapon (gas, grain)
- Can simulate "accidental" failures in logistics through IT system compromise
🔹 2. Hacktivists and Proxy Groups
- Pro-Russian hacktivists (e.g., Killnet) have already attacked Dutch government sites
- Can use drones for sabotage at warehouses or DDoS against online delivery
🔹 3. Accident or Sabotage?
Authorities don't rule out technical failures — but the synchronization of threats (electricity + internet + logistics) suggests deliberate pressure.
⚠️ Why Is This Not Just a "Supermarket Problem"?
Because hunger is the fastest way to destroy stability.
In 2022, Europe saw how bread prices caused protests. In 2025, lack of bread could cause chaos.
The Netherlands is one of the most vulnerable EU countries in this regard:
- No strategic grain reserves
- Almost the entire cooling system depends on the power grid
- 90% of cargo passes through a few key nodes
If they are paralyzed — the country will stop.
📌 What's Next?
- Installation of EW and drone protection systems around logistics centers
- Creation of "blacklists" of suppliers from risky jurisdictions
- Mandatory drills for retailers under "week without electricity" scenarios
- Possible introduction of a "72-hour reserve" norm in each store
💎 Conclusion:
This is not just a "crisis plan."
This is recognition: the world has changed.
Now the supermarket is part of national defense.
And bread, water, and toilet paper are tactical resources.
The Netherlands is preparing not for a war with tanks.
It is preparing for a war without electricity, without internet — but with shelves that don't empty.
Because in the 21st century, the one who survives is not the one with more missiles...
But the one with more rice.
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