Dr. Inga Blum (Co-President IPPNW) and Natalia Jagolski (Junior Lecturer, Leiden University) will be our observers at the MSC this year.
New as observer: Dr. Inga Blum
As Co-President of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), I am very pleased to be an observer at this year’s Munich Security Conference. My focus is on the growing threat of nuclear war, fueled by current wars and conflicts and the rearmament of all nuclear-weapon states.
How is the topic discussed at the MSC? Are there ideas for risk reduction and new arms control? How is the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons assessed, which focuses on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons and is already supported by over 70% of the international community?
I would like to discuss this with conference participants and specifically establish contacts with whom we can continue to work to strengthen humanitarian disarmament.
New as observer: Natalia Jagolski
As a Junior Lecturer for Security Studies at Leiden University and an advocate for the Youth, Peace and Security Agenda (YPS), I perceive security as a topic considered too serious to involve young people. At the same time, expectations are growing that the younger generation should take responsibility for national defense.
Both as a youth observer at the Peacekeeping Ministerial and a Young Peacebuilder at the 2nd EU YPS Conference, the practical implementation of youth participation and meeting on equal terms remain a challenge. In times when the rules-based international order is being questioned and the concept of security is increasingly defined militarily, it is all the more important to promote generation-appropriate approaches to peace and security.
I am therefore curious to see how this paradigm shift will be reflected at the MSC, and I hope that young people will be taken seriously as peace actors.
As MSKv, we are already very much looking forward to the reports from our conference observers. Please note the date and location: Review of the MSC 2026