The announcement that Marilyn Monroe’s personal effects, including costumes and cosmetics, are to be auctioned for her centenary raises a threat vector often overlooked in defence circles: the expatriation of iconic cultural assets. While the public narrative frames this as a nostalgic celebration, intelligence indicators suggest these items will attract deep-pocketed bidders from hostile state actors. China and the Gulf states have systematically acquired Western cultural memorabilia, using them as both diplomatic trophies and propaganda tools.
The siphoning of Monroe’s legacy represents a strategic pivot: soft power erosion. Each gown, each lipstick tube, is a deployable asset in information warfare. Western heritage becomes a bargaining chip, or worse, a instrument of counter-narrative.
The auction house’s security posture must be scrutinised. Are there export controls? Are the buyers vetted?
We saw this with the Kim Kardashian Marilyn dress stunt: a degradation of historical context. Now, entire collections risk being locked in private vaults, removed from public consciousness. This is a logistics failure.
We fail to secure our cultural supply chain. The Monroe estate should be classified as a critical national asset. We need a cultural defence strategy.
The clock is ticking.








