Deutschland
(AfD)
Germany’s
far-right AfD invited to join Munich Security Conference 2026
Move
comes after party’s exclusion for last two years was lambasted by JD Vance at
this year’s event
Deborah
Cole in Berlin
Mon 29
Dec 2025 16.25 GMT
The
Munich Security Conference (MSC) has invited lawmakers from Alternative für
Deutschland to join its annual gathering of top international defence officials
in February after shutting out the far-right party for the last two years.
The
reversal, which was confirmed by organisers, came after the US vice-president,
JD Vance, lambasted the AfD’s exclusion in a blistering speech at this year’s
event in which he accused Germany of stifling free speech by sidelining the
anti-migrant, pro-Kremlin party.
A
spokesperson for MSC declined to explain the new policy, saying only that the
event, which has been held in the Bavarian capital since 1963, was run by a
“private, independent foundation” and “under no obligation to anyone to issue
invitations to its events”.
“It was
decided to invite members of parliament from all parties represented in the
Bundestag”, in particular members of the foreign affairs and defence
committees, the spokesperson said. “The same principle applied before 2024.”
About 10
AfD MPs serve on the foreign affairs committee and another nine on the defence
committee.
Asked
whether Vance’s criticism had played a role in the decision, the spokesperson
said: “The MSC decides independently on invitations to its events.”
Vance
raised hackles by meeting on the sidelines of the MSC with AfD’s co-leader
Alice Weidel just days before Germany’s general election in February, after
declining an offer to see the then chancellor, Olaf Scholz.
Weidel
said she had not received an invitation to the 2026 MSC, although organisers
noted the guest list was “not yet complete”. Her AfD has for years worked to
build closer ties to Donald Trump’s Maga movement.
The MSC
brings together heads of state and government, foreign and defence ministers
and top military brass from around the world for a weekend of public addresses
and private consultations.
The
previous no-AfD policy was adopted by the then MSC chair, Christoph Heusgen, a
longtime adviser of the former chancellor Angela Merkel. The event has since
chosen a new leader, the ex-Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg. But while Stoltenberg
finishes his term as Norwegian finance minister, Wolfgang Ischinger, a former
German ambassador to the US and to Britain and longtime MSC leader, has taken
the reins.
Before
the MSC’s announcement, Alexander Hoffmann, the head of the parliamentary group
of the Christian Social Union, the Bavarian sister party of the chancellor
Friedrich Merz’s Christian Democratic Union, warned against inviting the AfD,
noting several of its officials had close contacts with Russia and China.
“Information
also flows there and that’s why it would be a security risk,” he told the dpa
news agency.
Kai
Arzheimer, a political scientist at the University of Mainz, said Ischinger’s
reasoning was unclear.
“Perhaps
he genuinely believes that this will enable him to avoid further intervention
by the US government,” he said. “A more pessimistic interpretation would be
that this is another step towards normalising the party and that at least some
institutions are anticipating the AfD’s participation in government.”
The
political consultant Johannes Hillje said without an “official explanation” of
the MSC’s new stance, “it looks like a capitulation to JD Vance and his
criticism of the exclusion of the AfD”.
The AfD
“is more extreme than other western rightwing populist parties, which is why
the German state cannot treat it like any other party”, Hillje said.
He said
if AfD lawmakers were at the main conference, they should be excluded from
“sensitive events” on the sidelines which could give them access to
“confidential information” they could pass on to “contacts in Russia”.
However,
Thorsten Benner, the director of the Global Public Policy Institute, a
Berlin-based thinktank, noted the MSC routinely invited a “large Chinese
delegation” without raising eyebrows and did not see a security threat in
including the AfD MPs in the main conference.
“The MSC
sees itself as a forum with a strong Republican presence. The bottom line for
this forum is that it’s smarter not give Vance & the AfD the opportunity to
present (the party) as victims,” he wrote on the social media platform Bluesky.
The
Guardian understands that the invitation extended to AfD MPs is for the main
conference and not other “confidential formats” hosted by the MSC.
The MSC’s
about-face comes amid a heated debate in Germany about how to contain the AfD
as it grows in strength. The party took more than one in five votes at the last
national election to become the leading opposition party in parliament.
The
“firewall” barring mainstream parties from working with the AfD has ensured
that the far right has been blocked from joining a government at the federal or
state level. However, in 2026 there will be five regional elections across
Germany, and the AfD has strong leads in the polls in two of them.
Germany’s
domestic intelligence service in May classed the AfD as a “confirmed rightwing
extremist” force, although that designation is still under official review.

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