A Dublin man has been found guilty of the attempted murder of three children. The verdict, delivered in a tense courtroom, marks the end of a judicial process but the beginning of a deeper strategic question: why did the system fail to prevent this attack? From a threat vector perspective, this incident highlights a critical vulnerability in our security architecture.
The attack was not sophisticated; it relied on basic access and opportunity. Yet it succeeded in causing grievous harm. This points to a failure in intelligence triage and community policing.
The UK Home Secretary has responded with calls for tougher sentencing, a political gesture that does little to address the operational gaps. Sentencing alone is a reactive measure. It fails to deter the ideologically motivated or the severely disturbed.
The real pivot must be towards pre-emptive intervention: better data sharing between Garda and MI5, increased surveillance of flagged individuals, and a review of how credible threats are escalated. The logistics of child safety require a multi-agency approach, not just a longer prison term. We must ask: what early warning indicators were missed?
Was there a breakdown in communication between social services and law enforcement? These are the hard questions that demand answers, not political posturing. The strategic reality is that our justice system is fighting the last war, focusing on punishment rather than prevention.
Until we shift our doctrine towards proactive threat neutralisation, we will continue to see these verdicts delivered after the damage is done.








