Rubio warns Europe of new era in geopolitics before big Munich speech

Rubio warns Europe of new era in geopolitics before big Munich speech
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has spoken of a defining moment and a “new era” as he travels to Europe for a major speech to the Munich Security Conference.
Rubio will lead the US delegation at the first major global event since President Donald Trump threatened Danish sovereignty with a pledge to annex Greenland.
French President Emmanuel Macron has insisted Europe must prepare for independence from the US, while Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte has stressed that transatlantic bonds are as close and important as ever.
The war in Ukraine, tensions with China and a potential nuclear deal between Iran and the US are also on the agenda as the security conference gets under way.
“The world is changing very fast right in front of us,” Rubio told reporters, when asked if his message to Europeans would be more conciliatory than a year ago.
“We live in a new era in geopolitics, and it’s going to require all of us to sort of re-examine what that looks like and what our role is going to be”.
At last year’s conference, US Vice-President JD Vance attacked Europe, including the UK, for policies on free speech and immigration. His speech triggered a year of unprecedented transatlantic tension.
Some 50 world leaders are set to attend the conference, which will discuss European defence and the future of the transatlantic relationship at a time when US commitments to Nato have been called into question.
Tensions have been heightened in recent months as Trump has repeatedly said that Greenland is vital to US national security, stating without evidence that it was “covered with Russian and Chinese ships all over the place”.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen told reporters on Friday she planned to meet with Rubio to discuss the US threats to seize Denmark’s semi-autonomous territory from its Nato ally.
The US threats have been viewed by many European leaders as a watershed moment that has eroded trust with its biggest ally.
Ahead of the conference, eight former US ambassadors to Nato and eight former American supreme commanders in Europe issued an open letter calling for Washington to maintain its support for the Western defensive alliance.
“Far from being a charity”, they said Nato was a “force-multiplier” that allowed the US to assert its power and influence “in ways that would be impossible – or prohibitively expensive – to achieve on its own”.
The transatlantic relationship has come under increasing strain following the Republican president’s introduction of tariffs and a suggestion in the US national security strategy that European nations may not remain “reliable allies” in the long term.
Rubio is expected to avoid taking Vance’s abrasive approach from last year but, when asked if he was planning to be more conciliatory, he told reporters that Europeans “want to know where we’re going, where we’d like to go, where we’d like to go with them”.
Hours before German Chancellor Friedrich Merz was due to open the Munich conference, Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul told German public TV that the aim was to define jointly what held Nato together and show the US that it needed Europe too.
President Macron will also address the conference on Friday, having told the World Economic Forum in Davos last month that now was “not a time for new imperialism or new colonialism”.
After a week of turbulent domestic politics, Sir Keir Starmer will also travel to Munich, where he is expected to hold meetings with both Merz and Macron, before addressing the summit on Saturday morning.
Conference chairman Wolfgang Ischinger, in a report ahead of the event, said: “For generations, US allies were not just able to rely on American power but on a broadly shared understanding of the principles underpinning the international order.
“Today, this appears far less certain, raising difficult questions about the future shape of transatlantic and international co-operation.”
The former German diplomat said the White House’s foreign policy “is already changing the world, and it has triggered dynamics whose full consequences are only beginning to emerge”.
By BBC News
