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https://nytimes.com/live/2026/02/13/world/munich-security-conference

The Munich Security Conference opened with European leaders wary of the United States under the Trump administration. Key topics include the future of trans-Atlantic relations, the war in Ukraine, and potential US actions regarding Iran and Greenland. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is representing the US.

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AI Headline
Live Updates: Munich Security Conference
Simplified Title
Trump Administration Foreign Policy Under Scrutiny at Munich Conference
AI Excerpt
The Munich Security Conference opened with European leaders wary of the United States under the Trump administration. Key topics include the future of trans-Atlantic relations, the war in Ukraine, and potential US actions regarding Iran and Greenland. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is representing the US.
Subject Tags
Munich Security Conference Trump Administration Foreign Policy Trans-Atlantic Relations Ukraine War NATO Geopolitics
Context Type
News
AI Confidence Score
1.000
Context Details
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Completed
Submitted By
Donato V. Pompo
Submission Date
February 13, 2026 at 1:33 PM
Metadata
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    "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/live\/2026\/02\/13\/world\/munich-security-conference?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20260213&instance_id=171041&nl=the-morning&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=215219&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337",
    "parsed_content": "PinnedAurelien BreedenLeaders and dignitaries gathered in Munich on Friday for the opening of Europe\u2019s largest annual security conference, wary of what to expect from the United States after a year of trans-Atlantic turmoil. While some hope for a reprieve from President Trump\u2019s blunt-force diplomacy, others fear new disdain and recriminations.In an aggressive speech at last year\u2019s conference, Vice President JD Vance shocked attendees expecting to hear Mr. Trump\u2019s plans for ending the war in Ukraine and Europe\u2019s defense against a rising Russian threat. Instead, Mr. Vance castigated Europe\u2019s migration policies and called on its leaders to end the isolation of far-right parties across the continent.Mr. Vance is not expected in Munich this year; nor is Mr. Trump. The highest-ranking American official set to attend the three-day conference is Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is scheduled to speak on Saturday morning.Speakers expected on Friday include Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany; President Emmanuel Macron of France; Gavin Newsom, the governor of California; and Reza Pahlavi, the son of the deposed shah of Iran.The Munich Security Conference, Europe\u2019s main military-related forum, was founded in 1963 as a way for leaders to discuss dangers in an informal setting and was often a relatively quiet affair. Mr. Trump\u2019s upending of post-World War II institutions and alliances has given the event a more urgent tone.Over the past year, Mr. Trump has imposed tariffs on European goods; pushed to end the war in Ukraine on terms largely favorable to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia; threatened to pry Greenland from Denmark; withheld funding from the United Nations; and created a competing body for resolving global conflicts.His support for Ukraine in the war against Russia remains volatile. Negotiations to end the war, four years after Russian troops mounted a full-scale invasion, have made little progress despite months of diplomatic efforts.The Middle East is on edge over American threats to attack Iran with forces amassed in the Persian Gulf if talks over Tehran\u2019s nuclear and military capabilities do not succeed.And while Mr. Trump has backed down from his immediate threats to take Greenland from Denmark, a fellow member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, European countries are still gripped by anxiety over the president\u2019s next moves.Here\u2019s what else to know:Security order: In a report this week, conference organizers wrote that \u201cunder Donald Trump, the United States has largely abandoned the role of the \u2018leader of the free world\u2019\u201d and called the American president a \u201cdemolition man.\u201d Read more \u203aGlobal attendees: Ministers, lawmakers and other officials from around the world are scheduled to speak on Friday, including Nickolay Mladenov, the high representative for Gaza on Mr. Trump\u2019s Board of Peace; Rafael Grossi, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency; and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York.Canceled House delegation: Speaker Mike Johnson abruptly canceled the House delegation to Munich, amid a funding battle that is expected to shut down the Department of Homeland Security this weekend. Top Democrats denounced the decision as wrong in a moment of frayed trans-Atlantic relations. Read more \u203aJoint warning: In a joint letter timed for the opening of the conference, eight former American ambassadors and eight former American generals called NATO \u201cthe cornerstone of United States national security\u201d and \u201cvital\u201d to preserving American global interests. Read more \u203aShow moreFeb. 13, 2026, 8:21 a.m. ET12 minutes agoJim TankersleyReporting from MunichChancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany has been speaking in German, but he broke into English to directly address the American administration. \u201cIn the era of great power rivalry, even the United States will not be powerful enough to go it alone,\u201d he said. \u201cDear friends, being a part of NATO is not only Europe\u2019s competitive advantage. It is also the United States\u2019 competitive advantage.\u201dFeb. 13, 2026, 8:07 a.m. ET27 minutes agoJim TankersleyReporting from MunichFriedrich Merz\u2019s speech is not a eulogy for the old order. Rather, it\u2019s a double critique: of the United States, for breaking with shared trans-Atlantic values, and of Europe, for not doing enough to defend its own security and grow its own economies independently of America.Feb. 13, 2026, 8:03 a.m. ET30 minutes agoJim TankersleyReporting from MunichMerz just told the conference that the existing international order was over \u2014 a clear shot at President Trump\u2019s rapid reorientation of American foreign policy. He criticized America for it. In the last year, he said, the United States\u2019 claim to global leadership \u201chas been challenged, and possibly squandered.\u201dImageCredit...Michael Probst\/Associated PressFeb. 13, 2026, 7:52 a.m. ET42 minutes agoAurelien BreedenWolfgang Ischinger, the chairman of the conference, said in his opening remarks that he hoped the event would help build a \u201cconstructive trans-Atlantic reset.\u201d But, he asked, \u201cDoes the Trump administration believe, truly believe, that it needs allies and partners?\u201d He added: \u201cIf so \u2014 this is what we hope \u2014 is Washington actually prepared to treat allies as partners?\u201dImageCredit...Michael Probst\/Associated PressFeb. 13, 2026, 7:27 a.m. ET1 hour agoEdward WongReporting from MunichSecretary of State Marco Rubio plans to meet with the prime ministers of Denmark and Greenland later today in Munich. President Trump has assigned Rubio and Vice President JD Vance to speak with officials from the two governments to try to negotiate an expanded U.S. presence in Greenland or a greater official American control of the territory, which is an autonomous part of Denmark. Rubio and Vance met with the foreign ministers of both governments last month in Washington. The U.S. military has a base in Greenland and about 200 troops there. It has the right under a decades-old U.S.-Denmark defense agreement to increase its troop presence. Trump has said that as a person with a real estate background, he is driven to acquire Greenland.Feb. 13, 2026, 7:22 a.m. ET1 hour agoKellen BrowningReporting from MunichI\u2019m watching for whether any Democrats who are considered potential 2028 presidential candidates make a splash this weekend. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York has drawn the most buzz, but Govs. Gavin Newsom of California and Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, and Senators Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Chris Murphy of Connecticut are all scheduled to speak as well.Feb. 13, 2026, 7:00 a.m. ET2 hours agoJim TankersleyReporting from MunichI\u2019m expecting Merz to build on a speech he gave in Davos, Switzerland, last month. It contained some light rebukes of America\u2019s foreign policy turn under President Trump, including a warning that Germans know the dangers of strongman politics from their \u201cdark\u201d history under Hitler.ImageCredit...Michaela Stache\/Agence France-Presse \u2014 Getty ImagesFeb. 13, 2026, 6:58 a.m. ET2 hours agoJim TankersleyReporting from MunichToday\u2019s first big speech will come from Friedrich Merz, the chancellor of Germany. He is expected to outline a new vision of the European-American relationship, one built on increased European economic and military strength.Feb. 13, 2026, 6:45 a.m. ET2 hours agoJeanna SmialekReporting from MunichEuropeans are hoping that this conference will be a moment to stabilize the trans-Atlantic relationship after a chaotic year. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the E.U.\u2019s executive arm, said at a sidelines event here that \u201cthis alliance is very important to me.\u201dElbridge Colby, the U.S. under secretary of defense for policy, suggested this morning that last year was intended to \u201creframe\u201d and \u201creorient\u201d the relationship, and that now we are in a \u201ctransition period.\u201dFeb. 13, 2026, 6:36 a.m. ET2 hours agoJeanna SmialekReporting from MunichImageSecretary of State Marco Rubio arriving in Munich on Friday.Credit...Pool photo by Alex BrandonVice President JD Vance stunned America\u2019s closest allies with his speech at last year\u2019s Munich Security Conference, warning that Europe faced a \u201cthreat from within\u201d and was backsliding on free speech.This year, Secretary of State Marco Rubio is leading the U.S. delegation in Munich, and Europeans are nervously awaiting his speech, wondering if it will prove equally bruising.Mr. Vance\u2019s remarks last year underscored the severity of the rupture forming between the United States under the Trump administration and its allies in London, Paris, Brussels and Berlin. They also served as a prelude to a year of strained trans-Atlantic relations.In the 12 months since, Europe has navigated a cascade of threats from the Trump administration. Mr. Trump warned of high tariffs, which European nations negotiated to more moderate ones. His wavering support for NATO distressed Europe, which pledged to spend more on defense to keep him engaged. And the White House\u2019s insistence that it wanted to take over Greenland led to frantic negotiations that ended in European pledges to better police the Arctic.The tensions have abated, for now. Mr. Rubio\u2019s colleagues in Europe view him as levelheaded, and are optimistic that his remarks will be less jarring than Mr. Vance\u2019s address last year.Before leaving for Munich on Thursday night, Mr. Rubio told reporters that he thought his speech would be \u201cwell-received\u201d by European officials.\u201cThey want to know where we\u2019re going, where we\u2019d like to go, where we\u2019re going with them,\u201d Mr. Rubio said.At the same time, Mr. Rubio represents President Trump, who has humiliated European politicians and excoriated their values in recent weeks.\u201cThere\u2019s a tension for him,\u201d J\u00f6rn Fleck, senior director with the Europe Center at the Atlantic Council, said of Mr. Rubio. \u201cSignaling to the audience of one, while maintaining what constructive role he can play with the Europeans.\u201d\u201cThat\u2019s the balancing act,\u201d he added.Mr. Rubio\u2019s speech comes as the administration remains critical of both Europe\u2019s migration policies and its regulation of technology companies. And while European nations are moving to limit migration, they have not backed away from their oversight of big social media platforms in particular.Show moreFeb. 13, 2026, 6:27 a.m. ET2 hours agoEdward WongReporting from MunichSecretary of State Marco Rubio began a meeting with Wang Yi, the top foreign policy official in China, around noon in Munich. The two shook hands but did not say anything to journalists in the room before the journalists were ushered out. President Trump and Xi Jinping, China\u2019s leader, are planning to meet at a summit in Beijing in April, and Rubio and Wang were expected to talk about the plans.Feb. 13, 2026, 6:15 a.m. ET2 hours agoEdward WongReporting from MunichSecretary of State Marco Rubio said last night that he thought his speech tomorrow in Munich would be \u201cwell-received\u201d by the audience, which will be made up of many European leaders and officials. \u201cThey want to know where we\u2019re going, where we\u2019d like to go, where we\u2019re going with them,\u201d he told reporters before taking off on an overnight flight for Munich from Washington.Feb. 12, 2026, 7:52 p.m. ETFeb. 12, 2026Megan MineiroMegan Mineiro covers Congress. She reported from Munich.ImageSpeaker Mike Johnson abruptly canceled the House delegation to the Munich Security Conference.Credit...Eric Lee for The New York TimesThe congressional delegation to Europe\u2019s biggest annual security summit had been expected to be the largest ever this year, with around 50 lawmakers planning to travel to Munich to reassure allies that the United States could still be counted on as a reliable security and trade partner.But amid a funding battle that is expected to shutter the Department of Homeland Security this weekend, Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House, abruptly canceled the official delegation of dozens of House members to the Munich Security Conference, which began on Friday.It is standard operating procedure to call off congressional travel during a government shutdown, and a senior House Republican leadership aide said that was the reason for the cancellation.But top Democrats warned that canceling the delegation was the wrong decision in a moment of frayed trans-Atlantic relations.Last year, Vice President JD Vance\u2019s speech at the conference left foreign leaders reeling. And in recent months, President Trump\u2019s threats to invade Greenland and tariff any NATO ally that tried to stand in his way rattled European allies.\u201cIt\u2019s more important than ever that we continue to engage with our partners and allies on critically important national security issues, and send a message of strength through unity,\u201d Representative Adam Smith of Washington, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said on Thursday.Mr. Smith, who had planned to attend the Munich gathering, added that lawmakers could have returned to Washington within two days to vote if Republicans and Democrats reached a homeland security funding deal.\u201cOur colleagues in the Senate understand that, and Speaker Johnson should as well,\u201d he said.Several senators departed Capitol Hill on Thursday bound for Germany.Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, is leading a bipartisan convoy of 11 senators, along with Sheldon Whitehouse, Democrat of Rhode Island. Other senators traveling with them include Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska; Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia; Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware; and Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut.Another bipartisan delegation, led by Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, flew out on Thursday. Ms. Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, plans to sit down with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, as well as Mark Rutte, the Secretary General of NATO, and the prime ministers of Denmark and Greenland.Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina and the co-chairman with Ms. Shaheen of the Senate\u2019s NATO Observer Group, is also set to meet with European leaders in Munich alongside Senators Mark Kelly of Arizona and Chris Murphy of Connecticut, both Democrats.Some Democrats privately suggested that Mr. Johnson\u2019s decision was motivated by a desire to punish them for holding up homeland security funding as they press for guardrails on Mr. Trump\u2019s immigration crackdown.They noted that the Defense and State Departments, which facilitate official overseas travel for members of Congress, are fully funded and at no risk of shutting down, and that the Department of Homeland Security plays no role in congressional delegations.While the delegations are bipartisan, some Republicans made the case on Thursday that Democrats should not be allowed to make the trip, given the spending impasse.Senator Eric Schmitt of Missouri criticized Democratic senators for blocking G.O.P. proposals to fund the department, which includes the Transportation Security Administration, then boarding a government plane bound for the conference.\u201cThey\u2019re going to shut that down and then get to fly to Munich on the taxpayer dime and trash President Trump\u2019s foreign policy to Europeans,\u201d Mr. Schmitt said in a video posted to social media. \u201cThey should not be going to Europe. This shouldn\u2019t be happening. It\u2019s ridiculous.\u201dSeveral House members still planned to travel to the conference on their own, including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York. She is expected to use the trip to widen her progressive pitch to foreign policy.Representatives Yassamin Ansari of Arizona, Jason Crow of Colorado, and Sara Jacobs of California, all Democrats, are also traveling to the security summit independently.Ms. Ansari and Ms. Jacobs are scheduled to speak on panels this weekend and were members of the official trip, but scrambled to book commercial flights to Germany after Mr. Johnson called it off.Ms. Ansari said in a statement that she looked forward to discussing with foreign allies how the United States could \u201crebuild our soft power after an era of chaotic foreign incursions mixed with isolationist lies.\u201dShow moreFeb. 9, 2026, 11:46 a.m. ETFeb. 9, 2026Jim TankersleyReporting from BerlinImagePresident Donald Trump at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last month.Credit...Doug Mills\/The New York TimesThe security order that has bound together the West and much of the rest of the world since the end of World War II is under attack from President Trump and like-minded leaders, officials of the Munich Security Conference warned on Monday in remarkably blunt terms.The world has entered an era of \u201cwrecking ball politics,\u201d a team of conference staff wrote on Monday, in their 2026 Munich Security Report. The conference is a highly watched annual gathering of security officials from Europe, the U.S. and beyond, and was roiled last year by a castigating speech from Vice President JD Vance, who called on European leaders to cooperate with parties they have deemed extreme.This year\u2019s conference, which opens on Friday, has taken on a more urgent tone amid growing concerns in Europe over Russian military aggression and Mr. Trump\u2019s rapidly refashioned security strategy, including his ongoing efforts to pry Greenland from Denmark. The report summarizes those concerns, which have been repeatedly voiced by European officials in recent months, in terms that are more strident and detailed than many European leaders have typically dared to express.\u201cIronically, the president of the United States \u2014 the country that did more than any other to shape the post-1945 international order \u2014 is now the most prominent of the demolition men,\u201d the authors wrote. \u201cAs a result, more than 80 years after construction began, the postwar international order is now under destruction.\u201d\u201cUnder Donald Trump,\u201d they said, \u201cthe United States has largely abandoned the role of the \u2018leader of the free world.\u2019\u201dThe U.S. ambassador to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, rejected those characterizations on Monday. \u201cI don\u2019t see a world under destruction,\u201d Mr. Whitaker said at an event held to mark the security report\u2019s release, adding that the Trump administration is \u201cnot trying to dismantle NATO.\u201dImageThe U.S. ambassador to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, rejected the notion that President Trump was wrecking the international order. Credit...Mario Tama\/Getty ImagesHe suggested Mr. Trump\u2019s actions were simply meant to force Europe to be stronger. \u201cWhen your kids are young they\u2019re dependent on you,\u201d he said, \u201cbut eventually you expect them to get a job, and so to me that\u2019s where we are.\u201dThe report includes survey data showing growing and widespread disenchantment among residents of wealthy democracies, who have lost faith in the ability of traditional democratic institutions to solve problems and improve life for future generations.It calls Mr. Trump and similar leaders, like President Javier Milei of Argentina, the beneficiaries of those trends. And it details several ways in which Mr. Trump has broken from longstanding practices of the postwar era, including imposition of tariffs on longtime allies, volatile support for Ukraine in its defense against Russia and sharp cuts in aid to impoverished countries.\u201cPerhaps most shockingly,\u201d the authors wrote, \u201cthe U.S. under Trump has now disregarded some of the most basic norms of the post-1945 system: territorial integrity and the prohibition of the threat or use of force against other states.\u201dIn keeping with the prevailing mood among European leaders, the report warns that Mr. Trump and others\u2019 new \u201cdemolition\u201d policies may create a less safe and prosperous world, one \u201cshaped by transactional deals rather than principled cooperation, private rather than public interests, and regions shaped by regional hegemons rather than universal norms.\u201dMr. Trump is not scheduled to appear at the conference. Neither is Mr. Vance. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is expected to address this year\u2019s gathering on Saturday.Show more",
    "ai_headline": "Live Updates: Munich Security Conference",
    "ai_simplified_title": "Trump Administration Foreign Policy Under Scrutiny at Munich Conference",
    "ai_excerpt": "The Munich Security Conference opened with European leaders wary of the United States under the Trump administration. Key topics include the future of trans-Atlantic relations, the war in Ukraine, and potential US actions regarding Iran and Greenland. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is representing the US.",
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Original Content
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    <title>Munich Security Conference: Live News and Updates - The New York Times</title>
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Parsed Content
PinnedAurelien BreedenLeaders and dignitaries gathered in Munich on Friday for the opening of Europe’s largest annual security conference, wary of what to expect from the United States after a year of trans-Atlantic turmoil. While some hope for a reprieve from President Trump’s blunt-force diplomacy, others fear new disdain and recriminations.In an aggressive speech at last year’s conference, Vice President JD Vance shocked attendees expecting to hear Mr. Trump’s plans for ending the war in Ukraine and Europe’s defense against a rising Russian threat. Instead, Mr. Vance castigated Europe’s migration policies and called on its leaders to end the isolation of far-right parties across the continent.Mr. Vance is not expected in Munich this year; nor is Mr. Trump. The highest-ranking American official set to attend the three-day conference is Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is scheduled to speak on Saturday morning.Speakers expected on Friday include Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany...

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