February 2023
Dear Readers,
Our second edition of GED Monthly centres around this year’s Munich Security Conference (MSC), which brought together the world’s decision-makers in the field of security, and coincided with the anniversary of the war against Ukraine. Working with our friends and partners, Bertelsmann Stiftung’s team of experts contributed to the conference by hosting discussions and by presenting new research on managing interdependence and on public opinion regarding Europe’s defence of Ukraine.
First, our U.S.-German Futures Forum offered up a panel discussion on the identification, mitigation and prevention of potentially cataclysmic security threats. It featured opening remarks from Kemba Walden (Principal Deputy National Cyber Director, White House) and Regine Grienberger, (Cyber Ambassador, Federal Foreign Office). Panelists included David Van Weel (Assistant Secretary General for Emerging Security Challenges, NATO) and Phil Venables (Chief Information Security Officer and Vice President, Google).
We also presented our new study, produced with the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw), entitled: “Keeping friends closer: Why the EU should address new geoeconomic realities and get its neighbours back in the fold.” The study measures the interconnectivity between the European Union and its neighbouring countries and compares these interconnections with those of the EU’s peers and rival, the US, China, and Russia.
Finally, we hosted a conversation between Anne Applebaum (Journalist & Historian), Timothy Garton Ash (Professor of European Studies, University of Oxford) and Michael Thumann (Foreign Policy Correspondent in Moscow & Berlin, Die ZEIT) on how nostalgia is used as a powerful political tool. The conversation drew on new data and analysis from our polling platform, eupinions.
Below, we offer further information and links for both new reports.
We also include three further articles produced by our experts on the theme of European security. They focus on the EU’s role in reconstructing and integrating Ukraine after the conflict, on the impact of sanctions placed on Russia and on Germany’s progress in implementing the Zeitenwende.
In light of the anniversary of the war, we would like to draw your attention to the compiled analysis of Bertelsmann Stiftung’s expertise on the subject, the link to which you will find at the very end of this newsletter.
With warm wishes,
Stephan Vopel and Malte Zabel
Director and Co-Director
Europe’s Future Program