The eruption of protests in Albania against a luxury resort development backed by Jared Kushner presents a new vector of instability in the Balkans. For British investors, this is not merely a question of reputational risk but a potential flashpoint for hostile state actors seeking to exploit anti-Western sentiment. The protests, fuelled by allegations of corruption and environmental degradation, have exposed a soft underbelly in Albania’s investment climate.
From a defence and security perspective, the region is already a chessboard for Russian and Chinese influence operations. Any disruption to Western-backed projects provides an opening for Moscow or Beijing to foment discord, undermining NATO’s southern flank. The protests also highlight a failure of intelligence and due diligence: the lack of a comprehensive threat assessment before greenlighting such a high-profile development in a politically volatile area.
British investors must now pivot to risk mitigation strategies, reviewing their exposure to Albanian assets and ensuring robust cybersecurity against disinformation campaigns that could further escalate the situation. The resort may be a symbol of luxury, but in the current geopolitical climate, it is a potential liability that adversaries will not hesitate to weaponise. This is not a local issue; it is a warning shot across the bow of Western soft power in the Balkans.








