The scenes from Paris following PSG’s victory are not a celebration but a strategic vulnerability exposed. Thousands flooded the streets, overwhelming police lines and demonstrating a fundamental failure in crowd control planning. For UK authorities, this is not just a lesson but a threat vector.
Violent disorder, whether spontaneous or orchestrated, can paralyse a city and divert resources from critical infrastructure. The logistical breakdown in Paris is a textbook example: insufficient containment, poor communication, and a reactive rather than proactive posture. UK police must analyse the tactical missteps, from the failure to secure choke points to the reliance on static lines that were easily breached.
This is a warning. The next such event could be a deliberate provocation by hostile actors exploiting similar crowds for chaos. The strategic pivot here is towards dynamic, mobile units trained in crowd dispersal and reinforced by surveillance and intelligence.
Without that, any major event becomes a soft target.








