Activities

Praying for Peace (Sat, February 15, 2025) – with the MSKv Project Group

“We pray for the participants of the Munich Security Conference, high-ranking decision-makers and opinion leaders from around the world, that they may promote peace through dialogue. We ask for God’s assistance for those who, through no fault of their own, must endure great suffering in the world’s crisis regions. Bless us, God, so that we ourselves may live in peace and become true partners for our neighbors.”

The individual prayer times are organized by religious orders, aid organizations, spiritual communities, churches of the ACK Munich, associations, and initiatives.

Date for “Prayer Chain”: Sat, February 15, 2025, 1:00 PM – 6:00 PM

Prayer Hour by MSKv & pax christi: Sat, February 15, 2025, 5:00 PM

Location: Bürgersaal Unterkirche, Neuhauserstraße 14, Munich

Information and further offerings for “Living Peace – Prayer for the Munich Security Conference” can be found here: Praying for Peace

Praying for Peace (Sat, February 15, 2025) – with the MSKv Project Group Read More »

Peace Prayer of Religions

The Interreligious Prayer for Peace takes place on Sunday evening after the Security Conference concludes: Jews, Christians, Muslims, Baháʼís, and Buddhists pray for peace. A truly contemplative opportunity to find peace at the end of the Security Conference weekend.

Date: Sunday, February 16, 2025, 6:30 PM
Location: St. Bonifaz Parish Center, Karlstr. 34, Munich-Maxvorstadt (Königsplatz subway station)

Further information can be found here: Interreligious Prayer for Peace – Munich Peace Conference

Peace Prayer of Religions Read More »

Our Munich Peace Meeting 2024

The 6th Munich Peace Meeting (MPM), initiated and organized by MSKv, took place on November 29, 2024. The participants from the fields of peace science, peace movement, and peace work exchanged views with Dr. Benedikt Franke and other representatives of the MSC on current security and peace policy challenges.

Together, concrete proposals for the 2025 conference were developed. We are very excited to see what activities MSC has derived from this.

A brief report on the MPM 2024 can be found here: MPM_2024

Our Munich Peace Meeting 2024 Read More »

We mourn the passing of Mechthild Schreiber, the honorary chairwoman of our association.

 

 

 

Mechthild Schreiber was very closely associated with our association from the very beginning, even though she was not among the founding members.

At the general meeting on 2015-03-27, she was formally admitted as a member, and at the general meeting on 2017-03-27, she was elected to the association’s board. She then served on the board without interruption until the general meeting on 2024-04-13, where she was unanimously elected honorary chairwoman of the association.

Among her many important contributions to our association, I would like to mention just a few of her most recent ones: For the celebration of the 20th anniversary of our first “Call for a Change in the Security Conference” in April 2024, she played a significant role in the preparation and also moderated the event. Most recently, in July 2024, we were able to meet at her home for a pleasant evening of political discussions on her terrace. A few days ago, Mechthild passed away at the age of 94 – quite suddenly and unexpectedly for us.

Mechthild was – with her sociology studies and her intensive engagement with women’s research and feminism – a clever and widely informed woman. We lose a very credible pacifist, a courageous and upright fighter for the cause of peace. Her dedicated contributions will be greatly missed!

In February 2021, Mechthild wrote in one of her regular contributions to our annual project newspaper – which she had also very credibly presented in a conversation with MSC Conference Director W. Ischinger:
“I know what war means, as I experienced it painfully as a child: the wailing of sirens that tore us from our sleep, the thunder of the FLAK, the anti-aircraft guns, the anxious hours in the cellar during air raids: will it hit us this time? Or will we still escape? The incendiary bombs that one night actually destroyed our apartment in Berlin, the familiar home of my childhood; the loss of my father, who never returned from a trip to our pastor, and whose abduction and death in a Polish prisoner-of-war camp my mother and I only learned about two years later… For many years, the people said: ‘Never again war!’ And today it can only mean: ‘Si vis pacem para pacem!’ If you want peace, prepare for peace!”

Further information on Mechthild’s life and commitment can be found via the following links:

In memoriam Mechthild Schreiber, Peace Activist

forumZFD – Farewell to a Peace Fighter

Listen persistently

Cultural regulars’ table with Mechthild Schreiber

The members of the “Changing the Munich Security Conference” Project Group e.V. will always fondly remember their long-standing chairwoman and honorary chairwoman Mechthild Schreiber.

Mechthild, we will miss you!

Munich, 2024-10-11

Thomas Mohr
Chairman

We mourn the passing of Mechthild Schreiber, the honorary chairwoman of our association. Read More »

10/10/2024: “Rethinking Security” – a concept for peace capability instead of war capability.

As part of this year’s Munich Peace Weeks, the project group “Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz verändern e.V.” cordially invites you to a presentation followed by a discussion:
Thu. 21.11. – 7:00 PM, EineWeltHaus, Room 108

with: Erwin Schelbert, Gudrun Haas, Markus Brunnhuber, Hubert Heindl
Organizer: Project group “Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz verändern e.V.”

Further information can be found here:

 

 

 

 

10/10/2024: “Rethinking Security” – a concept for peace capability instead of war capability. Read More »

2024-02-20: MSC 2024 – Observer’s Report Matthias Linnemann

General Impressions
This was my first time attending a security conference. The presence of political and media figures was impressive. The security effort (police, personal protection) and the number of uniformed personnel were rather unsettling. The conference felt too large for the Bayerischer Hof.

Thematic Focus
The conference’s motto was “Lose – lose?”. This reflects the very simple idea that there is globally only one cake of a defined size to be distributed. As soon as individual countries outside the Western Hemisphere claim a larger slice of the cake (Matthias Linnemann’s addition: larger than what the West had allocated to them), the distribution no longer works out. In the long run, all countries then lose. The MSC calls this a “loss-loss dynamic”. This aptly describes the Western understanding, but also the slowly emerging realization: How do we deal with the fact that the influence of Western industrialized nations will decline in the long term, while countries like China, India, Indonesia, and also the African continent will gain importance?

This topic shaped many events. The search for a “silver lining” was a recurring theme. In addition, the wars in Ukraine and Israel/Gaza were, of course, central. However, there were also various events on other hotspots, such as Haiti, Sahel/Sudan. The handling of the effects of climate change was also addressed.

What Struck Me
The conference was heavily dominated by one person who was not even present: Vladimir Putin. It is incredible how often his name was mentioned. It is hard to imagine, for example, the BRICS states hosting a security conference where Joe Biden’s name is constantly dropped.

In my opinion, it highlighted that NATO states are in a kind of panic mode regarding Ukraine and the resulting global power shifts. However, the answers to this are very limited: rearm, rearm, rearm.

Security derived exclusively from military strength remains the panacea. The fact that NATO has spent approximately three times as much money on armaments as China and Russia combined in recent years plays no role. $1.3 trillion spent by NATO in 2023 alone has neither ended nor prevented any war. Why diplomacy when we can also shoot? “War-readiness” in all areas without exception is the order of the day. Dissent is unwelcome.

There were even calls for European nuclear weapons and further militarization of space. I did not hear any critical or at least moderating voices on this.

What Struck Me Very Positively
There was controversial discussion. Dissenting opinions (where they existed) were permitted. I experienced substantively good discussions on the war in Israel/Gaza. The discussion with the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia and Egypt and their positions on the war in Gaza was very interesting. The perspective of the Prime Minister of Palestine, Mohammed Shtayyeh, and the Jordanian Foreign Minister, Ayman Safadi, was also worth hearing. The organization “Women Wage Peace,” in which Israeli and Palestinian women jointly advocate for peace, was allowed to make a statement and campaign for an end to the conflict. This was a very positive signal from the MSC organizers. Many of these speeches and discussion contributions can be accessed on the website of the Munich Security Conference -> securityconference.org. Highly recommended!

Even if the contributions from the USA, the EU, and, as expected, Germany were not truly substantial or even helpful with regard to the people in Ukraine or Israel/Gaza, at least concerning Israel, significantly more critical positions on the Israeli military activities are now being heard from Western politicians.

My Personal Conclusion
The Security Conference is not a peace conference. Security here does not necessarily mean the security of “ordinary people.” It is about the military safeguarding of the Western business model. However, this business model will not function permanently in view of the emerging states outside the Western Hemisphere. The West’s reaction to this, however, is not dialogue, but confrontation. And more confrontation requires more weapons. The EU has decided to go along with this path and to benefit from the fact that the USA will sooner or later lose its position as a hegemonic power. Whether this will succeed is uncertain. Doubts are appropriate. The path there will certainly be very expensive and dangerous for the EU.

If the MSC were not so strongly aligned with the USA and NATO, it could play a serious moderating role, including China and Russia. What a headline it would be if a ceasefire in Ukraine or Gaza had been negotiated on the sidelines of the MSC. However, in my impression, the MSC organizers lack the vision for this. And probably also the courage.

2024-02-20: MSC 2024 – Observer’s Report Matthias Linnemann Read More »

2024-02-24: MSC 2024 – Ralf Becker’s Observer’s Report

I observed a diverse MSC:

1. The MSC as a High Mass of Military Security Logic
On the one hand, the current MSC functioned as a high mass of military security logic. Uniformed Bundeswehr soldiers dominated the scene; even Dr. Benedikt Franke, the Deputy Chairman and CEO of the MSC, wore a uniform for the first two days. In these current times of war, many participants superficially exuded the reinforced certainty that military strength and solidarity alone guarantee security.

“The transatlantic partners have no choice but to invest more in defense and military deterrence, while at the same time limiting cooperation for mutual benefit more strongly to politically like-minded states” – this statement by the MSC Chairman, Ambassador Christoph Heusgen, at the press conference preceding the MSC, shaped the entire meeting.

As did statements by EU High Representative Josep Borrell, “We are at war,” and a statement he reportedly made in the Ukrainian parliament, quoted during the MSC: “We are supporting Ukraine with everything it needs for Ukraine to win.”

The title of the MSC Report 2024, “Lose-Lose?”, describes a kind of vicious circle, as many people worldwide currently believe they are losing compared to others. Due to a lack of constructive imagination, the MSC was accordingly keen to close Western ranks towards increasing military strength.

2. The Global South Confidently Resists Western Co-optation
The attempt, openly expressed by Josep Borrell among others, to draw global South partners to the side of the West in the struggle of the “Global West” against the “Global East” (Russia and China), was and is confidently rejected by them. Representatives of security policy think tanks from the Global South pointed out that they still feel patronized by Western representatives.

A former Foreign Minister of Pakistan, like several peace activists from Israel and other parts of the world, emphasized in the interactive debates that further rearmament does not solve any of the world’s urgent challenges, but rather makes their solution significantly more difficult.

Eight Nobel Peace Prize laureates also participated in the MSC and introduced realistic possibilities for a paradigm shift. For example, the former President of Colombia, Santos, convincingly described his internal and external journey from military security logic to peace logic.

3. Dawning Helplessness
It was palpable that, at least beneath the surface, many decision-makers are realizing that the old military recipes cannot continue much longer. tagesschau.de’s headline for the MSC was accordingly “Much Helplessness.” On the closing panel, this was articulated by, among others, the Icelandic Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs: “The war in Ukraine is an old-fashioned war. We need innovations to tackle global challenges.”

Contrary to the loud voices from media and politics at the MSC, which demand further military rearmament far exceeding 2% of our economic output, Federal Finance Minister Lindner and Chancellor Scholz struck a significantly more moderate tone and did not promise any further increase in military spending.

4. The Emergence of Far-Sighted, Constructive Conflict Resolution – Including Regarding the War in Israel/Palestine
In addition to highly competent exchanges among numerous African representatives on the constructive resolution of conflicts in Africa and helpful support for this, I was surprised to experience a consistently high-quality, almost ideal dialogue on the Israel-Palestine conflict:

The former Foreign Minister of Israel, Livni, and attending relatives of the hostages taken by Hamas were able to present their traumatic experiences, as did the Prime Minister of Palestine. Settler violence in the West Bank was addressed, as was the need for security for all Israelis and all Palestinians.

I was particularly surprised by the convincingly constructive appearance of Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Al Saud. Almost all participants, including nearly all foreign ministers of the states in the region involved in a possible solution, the USA, the EU, and India, spoke convincingly and credibly about the necessity of an immediate end to the war and the creation of permanently effective security prospects for Israel and Palestine, including in the form of a Palestinian state – if necessary, even without the consent of a traumatized Israel.

Josep Borrell emphasized that Hamas is an idea that cannot be killed as an idea. A better idea is needed. A former Israeli ambassador participated as a peace activist, as did a representative of Women Wage Peace from Israel. Regarding the Israel/Palestine war, Western representatives also ventured a self-critical examination of their own past failures.

This type of self-critical reflection on the West’s own role in the violent conflict escalation in Ukraine was not observed during the MSC. Ambassador Heusgen did, however, emphasize at the press conference that the war in Ukraine could only be ended through negotiations that could be based on the Minsk agreements.

Parallel to events on the topic of “Military Zeitgeist,” there were also events on civil resistance in Belarus and the possibilities of supporting it from abroad. However, given the framing of this civil resistance within the global military dominance policy of the USA, the potential power of non-violent resistance was not made visible.

5. Expanded Concept of Security as the Core Brand of the MSC
The expanded concept of security has now become a visible and publicly represented core brand of the MSC. Topics such as climate, food, and debt security are naturally included and discussed. This was significantly different 20 years ago. The now 27% of participants from the Global South, who confidently contribute their perspectives, can certainly be attributed to the work of MSKv. The fact that 50% of speakers at the MSC are now women is another very positive development – even if many Western (prime) ministers among them currently appear to be even more entangled in military rearmament logic than their male counterparts.

6. Concrete Steps Towards Rethinking Security
During the MSC, I had extended discussions with both the editor-in-chief of a major German daily newspaper and the secretary of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region in Africa about the necessary paradigm shift from military to civilian security policy. We were able to agree on concrete cooperation between the International Conference on the African Great Lakes Region and the African Peace University to develop a Rethinking Security scenario for the region.

Furthermore, a representative of the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (DPPA) intends to work with us to further develop the MSC towards rethinking security.

Please also note my interview with “nd-aktuell”: Interview with nd

Ralf Becker coordinates the civil society initiative “sicherheitneudenken.de – from military to civilian security policy,” supported by 150 organizations in Germany and Europe.

2024-02-24: MSC 2024 – Ralf Becker’s Observer’s Report Read More »

2024-03-20: Thought Mail No. 41

“We refuse to be enemies”

Dear MSKv Interested Parties,

Imagine this:
From two ethnic groups in a confined space, after more than a century of fighting as enemies over
land and recognition, “connected” by growing hatred, women and men
approach each other, shake hands, bury the hatchet, make friends!
In the Israeli-Palestinian organization Combatants for Peace, you will find these
people:
Former IDF soldiers together with Palestinian fighters – both sides with blood on their
hands – exchange views on their own history and that of their respective cultures, which
taught them to hate the others.
Exemplary here are the co-founders of Combatants for Peace: Rami Elhanan, a Jewish
Israeli, and Bassam Aramin, a Palestinian fighter. Both have lost their daughters through
acts of violence by the opponent: Rami’s 14-year-old daughter was killed in a suicide bombing
by Hamas – an act of retaliation against a new settlement in East Jerusalem – in 1993;
Bassam’s 10-year-old daughter Abir was fatally hit by a
rubber bullet fired by the Israeli border police on her way to school in 1997.
What helped the two men to change direction, to find the path to peace?
Bassam had time in prison – for throwing stones at Israeli tanks – to understand
Israeli society and realized that the shooter himself was “a victim of his
education, his society, the Israeli occupation regime” and that acts of revenge
never alleviate the pain.
For Rami, who had only served as a tank mechanic in the IDF, his
basic attitude towards humanity and justice had already prepared the ground on which an energy of powerful resistance could grow through
anger and pain and be used against the hostile
trend of leading political circles in Israel. He, too, does not see
retaliation, but conversation, the sharing of fear and grief as a path to peace.
In the group, they have learned to listen to each other, to see themselves reflected in the other, to feel the other’s pain
.
And they have realized:
Only by being open to the other side, by being willing to understand the other, can the
vicious cycle of retaliation be broken.
How about inviting the Combatants for Peace to the Munich Security Conference?

With kind regards,
Mechthild Schreiber
Member of the Board of the Project Group
“Changing the Munich Security Conference” e.V.

2024-03-20: Thought Mail No. 41 Read More »

04/13/2024: MSK verändern Members Meeting

The annual members meeting of the association took place on April 13, 2024, at EineWeltHaus.
Dr. Thomas Mohr, chairman of the project group, led the meeting and, after his welcome, highlighted the main points of the event:

  • organizational structure of the association
  • definition of thematic priorities
  • recruitment of new members and supporters
  • finances

In addition, the executive board was newly elected:
Dr. Thomas Mohr remains chairman of the association. New to the executive board are
Matthias Linnemann and Katharina Rottmayr.
Mechthild Schreiber was elected honorary chairwoman.

Anja Ufermann has left the executive board but will remain with MSK verändern as an active member.
Gudrun Haas, long-time AK spokesperson for the project group, will retire from active association work at the end of the year.

We wish the new executive board every success in its work and thank Anja Ufermann and Gudrun Haas very much for their many years of passionate cooperation.

04/13/2024: MSK verändern Members Meeting Read More »

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