The international framework that has supported decades of relative stability is under growing strain, with a new global security assessment cautioning that forceful political upheaval, largely propelled by US leadership, is hastening the decline of established rules, alliances, and collective norms.
According to the Munich Security Report 2026, the world has entered a phase defined by what it describes as “wrecking-ball politics,” a style of leadership that prioritizes forceful disruption over continuity and consensus. The report argues that this approach is placing the postwar international order under its most severe strain since its creation, with consequences that extend well beyond traditional geopolitical rivalries.
Released just before the annual Munich Security Conference, the report delivers a stark assessment of today’s global landscape. It points to US President Donald Trump as the primary force challenging the pillars of the current international order, depicting his approach to governance as a sharp departure from decades of US-supported multilateral cooperation. Instead of upholding institutions meant to navigate conflict and foster collaboration, the report argues that current US policy is actively eroding them.
A rules-based system facing unprecedented disruption
The international order established after 1945 was built to prevent a return to large-scale conflict, promote economic cooperation, and create mechanisms for collective security. Over time, it expanded through institutions such as the United Nations, NATO, the World Trade Organization, and a web of treaties and alliances that helped stabilize relations between major powers.
The Munich Security Report contends that this framework faces an immediate and serious threat, noting that more than eighty years after its foundations were laid, the system is not simply strained but is being intentionally taken apart. The document’s wording is strikingly direct for a text typically defined by diplomatic restraint, underscoring the authors’ view that gradual weakening has shifted toward purposeful destabilization.
Central to this argument is the characterization of Trump as one of the leading “demolition men” of the global order. The report does not frame this disruption as accidental or reactive, but as a defining feature of a political approach that views existing rules as obstacles rather than safeguards. In this context, international agreements are treated as transactional tools, valued only insofar as they deliver immediate advantage.
This transition, the report cautions, could swap principled collaboration for improvised arrangements that prioritize immediate benefits at the expense of lasting stability, creating conditions that erode predictability, strain trust among partners, and complicate unified efforts to address global challenges.
The tone set by Washington and its ripple effects
The report places the present moment against the wider backdrop of the second Trump administration, underscoring a sequence of moves and remarks that have shaken long-standing partners. One of the first indicators emerged at the previous Munich Security Conference, where US Vice President JD Vance gave a speech strongly rebuking European leaders.
Vance’s address, delivered just weeks into the administration, challenged Europe on issues such as migration and free expression, arguing that the continent’s greatest threats originated internally rather than from external adversaries. The remarks surprised many in the audience and were widely interpreted as a departure from the cooperative rhetoric typically associated with transatlantic relations.
According to the report, that speech proved to be an early indicator of a turbulent year to follow. Subsequent policy moves included the imposition of punitive tariffs on close European allies, signaling a willingness to weaponize economic ties. Even more striking were statements suggesting the possibility of US military action to seize Greenland, a territory belonging to NATO ally Denmark, a notion that sent shockwaves through diplomatic circles.
The report also highlights what it characterizes as a deferential approach toward Russia amid its invasion of Ukraine, a stance that, it contends, has placed additional pressure on alliances and sparked skepticism about the dependability of US commitments to collective defense and international law.
Collectively, these measures form what the report describes as a wider trend: leveraging power to refashion the global landscape with little consideration for established norms or the interests of long-time partners.
A world drifting toward transactional politics
One of the Munich Security Report’s primary cautions is that the present course could produce a global order largely shaped by transactional dealings, where cooperation is steered not by shared principles or mutual duties but by immediate calculations of gain.
The report indicates that this strategy tends to advantage actors wielding substantial economic and military power, leaving smaller states and communities that depend on stable rules for security and opportunity increasingly sidelined. Those quoted in the report warn that such a transition could shape a global landscape tailored mainly to the priorities of the affluent and influential, instead of responding to the wider needs of societies grappling with economic and social pressures.
This concern is not presented as abstract speculation. Instead, it is linked directly to observable trends in public opinion and political behavior across multiple regions. As trust in institutions declines and inequalities persist, populations are increasingly skeptical that governments can deliver meaningful solutions.
The report argues that disruptive leadership styles may initially resonate with voters who feel excluded or ignored. Over time, however, the erosion of cooperative frameworks risks deepening the very problems that fuel discontent, including economic insecurity, inequality, and declining social mobility.
Public sentiment reveals mounting pessimism
Based on extensive surveys carried out in numerous countries, the Munich Security Report grounds its analysis in public opinion data, revealing a widespread unease about what lies ahead, as many participants question whether their governments can raise living standards or tackle deep-rooted issues.
Issues like the growing cost of housing, widening inequality, and stagnant wages stand at the center of these worries, and many respondents feel that existing policies may ultimately leave future generations in a more difficult position, a view that reflects a deeper erosion of faith in sustained long-term advancement.
The data indicate that pessimism runs especially high across several European nations, with most respondents in France believing that government actions will disadvantage rather than support future generations, a sentiment echoed by over half of those surveyed in the United Kingdom and Germany, while in the United States the proportion was lower though nearly half of participants still expressed this concern.
The report interprets these results as evidence of a growing sense of individual and collective helplessness. Rather than viewing political change as a pathway to improvement, many people now associate it with instability and decline.
Assigning responsibility in a volatile environment
Notably, the surveys also explored perceptions of responsibility for this bleak outlook. When asked whether the policies of the US president are beneficial for the world, significant portions of respondents across multiple countries expressed disagreement.
In the United States itself, as well as in Canada, major European economies, Japan, Brazil, and South Africa, at least half of those surveyed said they either slightly or strongly disagreed with the notion that current US leadership is having a positive global impact. This widespread skepticism suggests that concerns about US policy extend beyond traditional critics and are shared across diverse political and cultural contexts.
Although the report avoids assigning every global challenge to one leader, it highlights how the vast reach of the US amplifies the impact of its policy decisions. When the world’s dominant nation conveys apathy or opposition toward established norms, those signals echo across the entire international system.
This dynamic, the report argues, creates incentives for other actors to adopt similarly transactional or unilateral approaches, accelerating the breakdown of cooperative structures.
The Munich Security Conference as a focal point
The report’s publication aligns with preparations for the Munich Security Conference, the annual event that gathers heads of state, ministers, military officials, and security specialists from across the globe. Set to take place over three days in Munich, the conference is anticipated to welcome more than 50 national leaders, emphasizing its importance as a central venue for high‑level strategic discussions.
Although the conference has long functioned as a venue for reiterating mutual commitments, this year’s dialogue is poised to unfold amid heightened uncertainty and strain, with issues highlighted in the report – particularly the resilience of alliances and the trajectory of multilateral institutions – likely to steer much of the agenda.
US President Trump will not attend the conference. Instead, the United States will be represented by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and a large congressional delegation. According to conference organizers, more than 50 members of Congress are expected to participate, signaling continued engagement even in the absence of the president himself.
The report indicates that while representation at this level keeps communication channels open, it also underscores how the president’s absence carries symbolic weight at a time when strong leadership and reassurance are urgently needed.
An international order standing at a pivotal juncture
The Munich Security Report refrains from treating its conclusions as fixed or unchangeable, presenting the present phase instead as a pivotal juncture where decisions by major stakeholders are poised to influence global security’s direction for many years.
The authors argue that while the post-1945 order has always evolved, its survival has depended on a shared understanding that rules and institutions serve collective interests. Undermining those structures, even in the name of national advantage, risks creating a more volatile and unequal world.
At the same time, the report acknowledges that the existing system has not delivered prosperity or security equally. Addressing legitimate grievances, it suggests, requires reform rather than destruction. Strengthening institutions to better reflect contemporary realities may be more effective than abandoning them altogether.
As discussions continue in Munich and elsewhere, global leaders will face the task of navigating domestic demands while meeting their international duties, and the report delivers a stark message: a world driven only by raw power and transactional dealings might yield brief advantages for a few, yet it poses lasting dangers for everyone.
In highlighting these dynamics, the Munich Security Report 2026 offers not just a critique of current leadership, but a broader reflection on the fragility of the international order. Whether that order adapts, fractures, or gives way to something entirely new will depend on decisions being made now, in an era marked by disruption, uncertainty, and competing visions of the future.
