In Search of a New World Order
- EPIS Think Tank
- Apr 14
- 3 min read

2025 Munich Security Conference Report — The Call for Global Depolarization in a Multipolar World
The annual Munich Security Conference, held in Munich, Germany, remains one of the
most influential platforms for shaping global security. The event brings together world
leaders, policymakers, and defence and security experts to address the most urgent
geopolitical issues. As we look back on this year’s Munich Security Conference, there
are several key topics that must be further analysed.
An Emerging Crisis
A central theme of the 2025 Munich Security Conference was on how governments can
develop strategies and uphold democratic values in an increasingly multipolar
geopolitical landscape, a world where power and influence is fragmented among
multiple global actors rather than dominated by the United States and its allies. A clear
consensus was reached: governments around the world now face a new Cold War
between democracies and autocracies, where competing global orders and agendas
fight for dominance on the global stage.
But how can governments work together when they are trapped inside a multipolar
world? The time has come for global depolarization—the search for a new world
order. One that guarantees an enduring democracy for all.
“Threat from Within”
On day 1 of the 2025 Munich Security Conference, U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance
delivered a historic speech, where he strongly criticized several European leaders for
their approach to free speech. He asserted that the greatest threat to Western
democracies is not Russia, China, or any other external actor, but rather, the greatest
crisis that we all face together, is one of our own making.
Vance particularly targeted the United Kingdom, calling out its dictatorial censorship
policies and stressed the urgent need to protect freedom of expression. He also
condemned the Romanian government for its undemocratic removal of Romanian
presidential candidate Călin Georgescu from the federal elections, citing fears of
election interference from the Kremlin.
A Reality Check
If dissenting opinions and so-called “far-right” perspectives pose such a threat to
Western democracies, then perhaps those democracies were never strong in the first
place. It is alarming that the very democracies that claim to uphold freedom are
increasingly becoming plagued by authoritarian tendencies.
The problem lies in the way mainstream narratives tend to align with government
policies, making dissenting views more likely to be labelled as “propaganda” —
regardless of any legitimate evidence supporting them. Too often, political correctness
overshadows critical debate, and those who challenge favoured narratives are
dismissed as “wrong” or even worse — “false”. This approach is not just foolish; it
silences potentially constructive solutions to existing or emerging concerns.
Western governments and institutions’ propagandist sentiment towards their citizens’
controversial or dissenting viewpoints or opinions is driving the public further away. Fear
of censorship, persecution, and even prosecution discourages citizens from holding
their leaders accountable and calling for improvements from the very government that
they had elected, weakening the trust between political leaders and the people they
were meant to serve in the first place.
The Continuous Fight for Democracy
The only way forward to safeguard true democratic principles is to acknowledge the
intentional suppression of differing perspectives in the name of combatting
disinformation. Leaders must make a final critical choice: remove censorship entirely or
enforce it fully and admit that democracy, in its purest form, no longer exists.
Politicians around the globe must decide whether they will continue to infringe upon civil
liberties or stand up for what is right — ensuring that no voice is silenced, and no
debate is dismissed.
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Only the truth shall prevail.
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