WORLD
2 min read
Munich Security Conference chief urges Europe to act on defence, security plans
Pointing to doubts about shared Western values, Wolfgang Ischinger urged EU members to boost defence production and clarify plans to strengthen collective security mechanisms.
Munich Security Conference chief urges Europe to act on defence, security plans
"Europeans are stepping up on defence and that countries are willing to shoulder a larger share of the security burden", he says. / AFP
an hour ago

Munich Security Conference Chairman Wolfgang Ischinger urged European leaders to move from rhetoric to concrete action on defence, calling for clearer plans to strengthen the continent’s security architecture amid growing global uncertainty.

In his closing remarks at the three-day gathering, Ischinger said on Sunday that: "Europeans are stepping up on defence," and that countries are willing to shoulder a larger share of the security burden.

He, however, stressed that speeches are not enough.

"What we need now is a plan, is action," he said, urging EU members to ramp up defence production and clarify how they would strengthen collective security mechanisms.

He said the talks also revealed deep divisions over the state of the international order, pointing to doubts about whether Western countries still share the same values and play by the same rules.

"At the beginning of the conference, I referred to our Munich Security Report, which says that our international system is under destruction," he said, noting that some leaders argued the system may already be beyond repair, while others called for "renewal and restoration."

"That shows the spectrum of views about where we are in either repairing, restoring, or actually accepting the fact that we probably may have to rebuild something practically from scratch," Ischinger said.

Turning to Ukraine, he called for providing more weapons, particularly air defence systems, and coordinating tougher sanctions on Russia.

"The question of how this war is going to end is actually an existential question for Europe," he said. "It will determine, in more ways than one, the future of this continent."

"I hope very much that we, as allies and partners, are united and determined to act together to make sure Ukraine can and will prevail," he said.

RelatedTRT World - EU’s Kaja Kallas pushes back against US ‘Europe-bashing’
SOURCE:AA