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Live. Munich Security Conference 2026: Global leaders gather as transatlantic ties dominate talks

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrives in Munich.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrives in Munich. Copyright  AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool
Copyright AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool
By Tamsin Paternoster & Andrew Naughtie, Alice Tidey, Maria Tadeo and Johanna Urbancik
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Follow our live blog as we bring you updates for three days of talks on global security, war in Ukraine and the future of transatlantic relations.

World leaders are gathering for the first day of the Munich Security Conference, one of the year's most important geopolitical events, where they will focus on the future of the endangered transatlantic alliance and efforts to bring Russia's war in Ukraine to an end.

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The United States delegation is being led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who will address the conference on Saturday.

Last year, US Vice President J.D. Vance took Munich by storm with a speech that shocked Europeans after he suggested the real enemy for the continent's future comes from within, not Russia, through mass migration and political correctness.

Also appearing today is President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is expected to press for progress on peace talks days after he said Moscow was stalling efforts to bring a halt to the conflict while continuing to attack civilian energy facilities in the depths of winter.

Our Euronews reporters are on the ground in Munich to bring you the latest updates.

Follow our live blog below:

Pistorius shows Zelenskyy round drone facility

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy have paid a visit to drone producing company Quantum Frontline Industries, based near Munich.

European-made drones are proving a key part of Ukraine's defence against Russia. The ground advantage in Ukraine is often determined by the two sides' drone abilities, both for battlefield surveillance and targeted strikes on troops and equipment.

Russia has relied heavily on Shahed drones purchased from Iran.

Copyright: AP Photo

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Flashback: Vance in Munich, 2025

When he visited the Munich Security Conference as the United States' freshly inaugurated vice president last year, J.D. Vance delivered a speech that left many in the room and around the world open-mouthed with its condemnation of European democracies.

Railing against supposed crackdowns on free speech and tolerance of mass migration, Vance warned of "a retreat of Europe from some of its most fundamental values, values shared with the United States of America".

The speech set the stage for a year of aggressive US diplomacy towards Europe, including a National Security Strategy released last December that warned of the continent's "civilisational decline".

At the 2025 Munich conference, Vance met with the co-leader of the far-right party Alternative for Germany, which several in the Trump administration have gone on to support.

Here is how then-German Chancellor Olaf Scholz reacted at the time:

Scholz: Germany won’t accept people who ‘intervene in our democracy’

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has said his country won’t accept people who “intervene in our democracy”, a day after US Vice President JD Vance criticised Euro…

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Spotted in Munich

We have some pictures coming in on the wires of leaders arriving for today's talks. It's cold and overcast in Munich today — stay tuned for more.

European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas.

Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio meets China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

Denmark's Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen smokes a pipe.

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Ukraine joining the EU forces rethink of Brussels' enlargement rules

Ukraine's push to join the European Union in 2027 is forcing Brussels to reconsider how enlargement works.

EU officials have said that Kyiv's stated 2027 goal is impossible under current, merit-based enlargement rules, which require full alignment with EU laws and democratic standards. At the same time, diplomats say rejecting the deadline, which is tied to a US-brokered peace deal, would be politically challenging.

How is Brussels rethinking its enlargement rules? Mared Gwyn has more.

Kyiv’s call for 2027 EU accesion forces re-think of enlargement rules

EU officials and diplomats say several “new models” for integrating candidate countries are being considered in response to Zelenskyy’s demand for a date on Uk…

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Europe needs 'a strategic and mental shift' - Sweden's Kristersson

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, who is scheduled to take part in a panel this afternoon on deterring and countering hybrid warfare, has written lengthy X post sharing his thoughts on how Europe should change to face the "great geopolitical shifts" taking place.

Europe, he wrote on X, needs to operate a "strategic and mental shift, to make sure we can do more on our own, and with other partners". He said that the relationship with the US "has suffered a blow" but that "this does not at all mean we should abandon the transatlantic relation" (sic).

His remedy to all that?

  • Europe must become more competitive by "tearing down barriers and cutting red tape on the single market" – but "'Buy Europe' protectionism is not the answer"
  • Europe must take more responsibility for its own security through rebalancing the NATO military alliance
  • Europe must continue its support for Ukraine and keep its pressure on Russia, Kristersson said, noting that although the bloc has done "more than many expected", its "words have sometimes been stronger than our budgetary allocations"

He adds that while the EU has a broad toolbox it can draw on, one of its strengths remains its size and its deep attachment to a rules-based international order, which brings "much-needed stability and predictability to global trade".

"We have the tools to shape our own future, promote security and stability in our neighbourhood and to project our own geopolitical interests. We can achieve this as long as we stand united and act on the main security challenges facing Europe."

Read the full post below.

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Von der Leyen talks up SAFE and €90 billion Ukraine loan

European Commission President von der Leyen has celebrated the EU's €150 billion Security Action for Europe (SAFE) scheme at a side event organised by Germany's ruling CDU party.

"SAFE has €100 billion allocated for joint projects to close the gaps and also to strengthen (the EU's) own defence capability," she said.

"A second element is important here, namely that these €100 billion, which are made available, very clearly define that 65 per cent, two-thirds of the products must come from Ukraine or Europe, and can no longer be purchased from abroad."

She also mentioned the bloc's collective €90 billion loan for Ukraine, which was agreed by EU countries in early February.

"This loan must only be repaid by Ukraine if Russia pays reparations. Two-thirds of this loan, i.e. €60 billion, is available for defence expenditures."

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Rutte describes "mindset shift" as leaders trickle in

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte kicked off today's conference by speaking of a "mindset shift" amongst European leaders.

“We had years, decades, of complaints by the US about the fact that in Europe we were not spending enough on defence. That is what we are correcting at the moment, and this makes NATO so much stronger,” he told reporters at a press conference with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

"The shift in mindset is that yesterday in the room, what we felt, all of us, there was a clear coming together of vision and of unity."

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A NATO 3.0?

Transatlantic relations are a key theme at this year's conference after a tumultuous year of White House policies that's shaken the western alliance to its core.

At a meeting on Thursday, US and European defence ministers seemed to be in agreement that the NATO military alliance needs to become more "European" to survive, but their rationales for this shift might differ.

Our reporter Alice Tidey has more below.

‘NATO 3.0’: US & Europe appear to agree rebalancing of power is needed

Washington wants to focus more on other theatres, while Europeans are wary of the mercurial nature of the current US administration. #EuropeNews

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What we know about Zelenskyy's agenda

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's speech to the Munich Security Conference is scheduled for 12pm tomorrow.

According to my colleague Sasha Vakulina, he will today attend a Berlin format meeting with leaders of European countries, the EU, NATO, and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as holding a series of bilateral meetings with Germany's Friedrich Merz, Denmark's Mette Frederiksen, Finland's Alexander Stubb, the Netherlands' Dick Schoof, and exiled Iranian dissident Reza Pahlavi.

He will also visit the first joint Ukrainian-German drone production enterprise, Quantum Frontline Industries.

"We need more of our joint production, more of our resilience, more coordination and effectiveness of our shared security architecture in Europe," Zelenskyy wrote on X.

"The most significant thing we can achieve together is ending the war with a dignified peace and creating reliable security guarantees for Ukraine and for all of Europe – so that no one in Europe is afraid of being left without protection."

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Arrivals

World leaders are starting to trickle into Munich's iconic Bayerischer Hof hotel.

Among others, our reporters on the ground have spotted German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen; earlier, Germany's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha were seen cutting a ribbon to open the "Ukraine House" — a new venue designed to showcase the conference's commitment to supporting Ukraine.

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Here are the key events we'll monitor for you today

The three-day conference officially kicks off at 13.30 CET, but it will still be an action-packed day with some heavy-hitting speakers.

Here are the events we'll bring you (all times CET):

  • 13.30: Opening with welcome remarks by MSC chairman Ischinger, Bavaria State Premier Soeder, Chancellor Friedrich Merz 
  • 14.30: Session on multilateralism with EU's Kaja Kallas, Saudi Arabia's foreign minister, and the US ambassador to UN
  • 15.30: Session on Geoeconomics with the WTO chief Okonjo-Iweala, Finnish President Alexander Stubb, Germany' finance minister
  • 15.30: Arctic Security with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, Greenlandic Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt
  • 17.30: Session on hybrid warfare with the German Federal Intelligence Service president, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, Moldova President Maia Sandu, NATO Admiral Guiseppe Cavo Dragone
  • 18.45: Session on Iran with Prince Reza Pahlavi, and European Parliament President Roberta Metsola 
  • 19.00: France in Europe and the world with President Macron
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Good morning

Welcome to Euronews' live coverage of the Munich Security Conference, bringing you the latest updates from three days of debate between the world's top international security figures.

Today's conference opens with a speech by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, one of multiple European heads of state or government who will attend.

Among the other guests are Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is bringing with him a large US delegation one year after Vice President J.D. Vance shocked European leaders with a lecture on the state of democracy in Europe.

All eyes this year will be on how Washington will show up after a year of White House policies that have strained the transatlantic relationship. Stay tuned for more.

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