SESSION OPEN
The information was there. The system to synthesise it wasn't.
The Governing Council is composed of all Member States. No State holds more than 20% of total voting weight — regardless of calculation, regardless of financial contribution. There are no permanent members. There are no vetoes — not by legal rule, not by voting design, not by informal practice.
Voting weight cannot be purchased. Contributions above the maximum financing limit confer no additional power, no additional access, no institutional influence of any kind. The tier-based weighted system reflects governance quality and financial commitment — not geopolitical leverage.
Membership tiers are not permanent and not negotiable. They reflect democratic governance, financial reliability, and sustained constitutional compliance. Tier status is subject to upgrade, downgrade, and sanctions at any point.
All classified ARGOS feeds are originator-controlled. To ensure superpower alignment, members retain absolute sovereign freedom to utilize their own intelligence for unilateral national security operations. The sole constitutional red line is the external extraction of ARGOS data or influence; laundering, selling, or routing network intelligence to third-party proxies is strictly prohibited.
Raw data is permanently sealed from compromised international bodies like the UN or the WHO, where foreign adversaries hold systemic access. ARGOS operates without humanitarian mandates; however, in extreme existential crises—such as active genocide or catastrophic pandemics—Public Affairs may issue sanitized, high-level advisories to direct these global entities without exposing source capabilities.
Deliberate ORCON breach is a red line. Trust inertia—the institutional protection afforded to long-standing Tier 1 members—does not apply.
Access terminated on conflict initiation. No vote. No delay. Unless the system recognises a NATO operation. This simulation has three scenarios.
A country has 30 days to convince the other members that its the victim to get the access back as seen in simulation above Automatic Trigger · Art. XVI
ARGOS employs layered data-denial mechanisms scaled to available time. Upon confirmed hostile intrusion, insider compromise, imminent physical seizure, or deliberate ORCON breach — staged denial activates up to full system collapse.
Where time permits: destruction of encryption keys, secure erasure through multiple overwrites, physical destruction of storage media. Where it does not: instantaneous key destruction, segment isolation, system-wide key rotation.
No attacker — successful in penetration or not — shall obtain actionable intelligence. All breach scenarios result in zero exploitable gain. Institutional survival takes precedence over data preservation. This is not a contingency. It is doctrine.
Cold Continuity Vaults — physically air-gapped, multi-party time-delayed access — store the skeleton of the system. No live intelligence. Reconstitution is possible. But the data that could be used against member states will not exist.
ARGOS operates under permanent hostile-environment assumption.
Seven nodes. Five continents. Embassy-equivalent independence from host states.
Each of the seven nodes operates under embassy-equivalent legal status — the same framework that has governed diplomatic missions since the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961) and the same Status of Forces Agreements that have protected NATO installations across member states for decades. Host states cannot enter, subpoena, or compel disclosure. No member government — including the host — holds jurisdiction over the facility on its own soil. This is not novel. It is the same legal architecture that already governs hundreds of facilities worldwide. ARGOS applies it to intelligence infrastructure.
This is structural, not diplomatic. ARGOS intelligence is only worth anything if every member state knows that no other member state can reach it through legal pressure, political leverage, or institutional proximity. A node that a host government can access is not a secure node. It is an extension of that government. The independence is the product. Without it, there is nothing to distribute.
The distribution across seven locations on five continents means that no single legal jurisdiction, no single geopolitical disruption, and no single physical threat can take down the network. The standby nodes visible in the globe are not backup offices. They are pre-positioned reconstitution points — ready to assume full operational status the moment a primary node goes dark.
The same logic applies physically. If a host state turns hostile — if it decides to breach the facility, overrun the perimeter, or attempt seizure — Article XVIII activates the same sequence you can trigger in the simulation above. Encryption keys destroyed. Storage media wiped. Systems collapsed in order. The institution does not fight back. It simply disappears. Operations continue from the standby node. The six remaining facilities stay online.
By the time anyone physically enters the building, there is nothing left to take. No intelligence. No architecture. No keys. The simulation above shows what a digital breach looks like from the inside. A physical seizure produces the same outcome — just with soldiers at the door instead of malware. The institution survives elsewhere. What stays behind is a building. It probably cost a significant amount to build. But in the end, it is just a building.
The research and development engine of ARGOS. Constitutionally insulated from member-state direction. Funded by a permanent endowment. Built to lead, not follow.
"An institutional culture of caution, risk-avoidance, or preference for guaranteed outcomes over transformative potential is incompatible with this mandate. It is accepted and expected that not all research investments will yield successful outcomes."
Alexandra Pennewitz
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Contact via LinkedIn
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This website presents ARGOS — a self-initiated academic framework for a multilateral intelligence-sharing alliance. It is a research and policy document, not a functioning institution. No data is collected. No cookies are set.
All content,besides logo, framework design, and constitutional architecture © Alexandra Pennewitz. Reproduction requires written permission.