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Munich Security Conference: Leaders Confront a World in Disorder
European and world leaders gather in Munich to address escalating conflicts, fraying alliances, and the future of multilateral security.
Munich 2026: The World's Hardest Conversations
The 62nd Munich Security Conference, held over three days in February 2026, convened an extraordinary gathering of heads of state, defence ministers, intelligence chiefs, and leading thinkers to grapple with what the conference organisers described, with remarkable understatement, as 'an exceptionally challenging security environment'. The simultaneous crises of the Ukraine war, the Iran conflict, growing tensions in the Indo-Pacific, and the fracturing of the transatlantic consensus under persistent US-European disagreements created an atmosphere of both urgency and uncertainty that no previous Munich conference had quite matched.
The central theme of the 2026 conference was European strategic autonomy — the question of how much and in what ways Europe can and should develop independent defence and foreign policy capabilities to reduce its dependence on US security guarantees that now appear more conditional than at any time since the Second World War. Several European leaders used Munich as a platform to call for urgent acceleration of EU defence integration, including a common defence procurement agency, a European defence budget contribution mechanism, and clearer rules for the deployment of European military force in crises where the US chooses not to participate.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, who has developed a reputation for frank assessments of the alliance's tensions, delivered a keynote address arguing that Europe must increase defence spending and develop genuine military capabilities not as an alternative to the transatlantic alliance but as a contribution to it. Rutte's implicit message — that an alliance in which Europe provides almost entirely political legitimacy while the US provides military hard power is structurally unsustainable — was received with varying degrees of enthusiasm by delegates from different NATO member states.
