🌎 International Diplomacy / Geographical Awareness / Civilizational Matters
Europeans Push Back At U.S. Claim They Face 'Civilizational Erasure,' Counter That Americans Can't Find Europe On A Map
At Munich Security Conference, EU foreign policy chief calls 'civilizational erasure' language overblown; U.S. delegation reportedly unable to locate Germany without assistance from hotel concierge
By Brunhilde Kopfschmerz, HuckFinn Transatlantic Correspondent •
Published February 18, 2026 • Munich, Germany (we think — the pin kept moving)
MUNICH — Bristling with continental pride and a deeply ingrained sense that they invented most things Americans claim to have invented, European diplomats at the 62nd Munich Security Conference pushed back firmly Sunday against U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's claim that Europe faces "forces of civilizational erasure," with EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas noting that, as a matter of observable fact, Europe continues to exist and is indeed quite large and findable on most maps, which she could provide if needed.
"Contrary to what some may say, woke, decadent Europe is not facing civilizational erasure," Kallas told the assembled delegates, gesturing toward a continent that had, for the record, survived two World Wars, the Black Death, the Spanish Inquisition (which nobody expected), and at least four separate attempts to turn its currency into something a unified population could agree on. "In fact, people still want to join our club," she added, in what observers described as the most devastating possible rebuttal to a claim of civilizational collapse.
The remark drew polite applause from European delegates and expressions of genuine puzzlement from the U.S. contingent, several of whom later admitted they had been under the impression the speech was taking place in Austria.
"We are bound to one another by the deepest bonds — forged by centuries of shared history, Christian faith, culture, and heritage. It was this continent that produced the genius of Mozart, Beethoven, Dante, Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones."
— Secretary of State Marco Rubio, apparently treating "rock and roll" as equivalent to "the Renaissance" as civilizational achievements
Rubio had opened the conference by invoking a shared "Western civilization," citing as evidence the contributions of Mozart, Beethoven, Dante, Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, and, in a rhetorical flourish that left several art historians briefly unable to breathe, "the Beatles and the Rolling Stones." It was unclear whether Rubio was drawing a meaningful distinction between fifteenth-century Italian Renaissance masters and a band whose frontman currently promotes a heavily discounted jewelry line, or whether the argument was simply that everything good happened somewhere near Europe and should therefore count.
Sources inside the conference hall reported that Kallas wore "a look of horror" during the speech and was conspicuously seated during the partial standing ovation that followed, a gesture of restraint widely interpreted as the diplomatic equivalent of placing a polite but firm hand on someone's chest and saying "No."
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The United States delegation appeared untroubled by the pushback. Rubio maintained that the erasure thesis remained valid and that civilizational concerns were, in any case, a matter of perspective. He further suggested that the continent's current status — present, intact, and home to several internationally recognized capitals — did not preclude it from being in danger of no longer being present, intact, or home to several internationally recognized capitals at some unspecified future point, pending the continued influence of whatever forces one imagined to be erasing it.
When pressed by a Danish journalist on what specifically constituted a "force of civilizational erasure," the Secretary's aide provided a list that included progressive immigration policies, secular governance, overregulated sausage standards, and a specific variety of German recycling bin that the aide described as "genuinely alarming."
Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz warned of a "deep rift" in the transatlantic relationship and urged European nations to consider building independent economic and security capacity, a proposal that was welcomed by some as prudent, dismissed by others as premature, and described by one anonymous U.S. official as "adorable." Merz further cautioned that the United States "will not be powerful enough to go it alone" in the future, a statement the U.S. side disputed on the grounds that it did not apply to them, only to other countries.
In an unusual parallel development, a contingent of U.S. Democratic politicians — including California Governor Gavin Newsom, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, and Senator Ruben Gallego — arrived at the conference to deliver a competing American foreign policy message, creating a situation in which Europe was simultaneously being warned about its erasure by one group of Americans and assured of its continued importance by a different group of Americans, while Europeans themselves attempted to determine which, if any, of these Americans would be relevant in three years.
"Donald Trump is temporary," Newsom told a gathering of visibly exhausted German officials, which they received with the expression of people who have heard this before. Ocasio-Cortez assured attendees that U.S. politics was "not monolithic," a remark that several European ministers confirmed they would attempt to believe until something happened to make it harder.
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The episode prompted what several observers called the deepest philosophical question yet posed by the transatlantic relationship: namely, whether it is possible to credibly warn of another civilization's imminent erasure while being demonstrably unable to locate that civilization on a standard political map, and if so, whether the warning should be weighted more or less heavily than a warning from someone who could, in fact, find Europe, point to Bavaria on it, and pronounce "Bundestag" correctly on the first attempt.
Kallas, for her part, said she remained committed to the relationship, with reservations. She did not specify which reservations. Observers described her expression throughout the day as "that of a very patient librarian who has just watched someone try to return a book to the wrong library in the wrong city in the wrong country and ask for a refund."
As of press time, the conference had concluded without a resolution to the "civilizational erasure" question, mainly because no one had agreed on what was being erased, by whom, at what rate, and whether the process could be slowed by, for instance, tariffs. European leaders departed with renewed resolve to determine their own collective security arrangements. The U.S. delegation departed, sources confirmed, in the general direction of what several members believed was France.
Geographic: An earlier version of this article stated that the Munich Security Conference took place in "Munich, near Berlin." Munich is not near Berlin. Berlin is approximately 584 km north of Munich. Both are in Germany, a country in central Europe. We regret the error and have updated our wall map accordingly.
Civilizational: We stated in yesterday's edition that Europe was "facing erasure." Europe has contacted us to clarify that it is not. It is quite present. It has a GDP of approximately $18 trillion and several well-maintained train networks. We regret the error.
Cultural: Secretary Rubio was quoted as citing "the Beatles and the Rolling Stones" as achievements of European civilization equivalent to those of Michelangelo and Da Vinci. The Secretary did say this. We wish to clarify that we are not responsible for this comparison. It happened. It is in the record. We have checked.
Atmospheric: A weather graphic in our previous print edition labeled the city of Brussels as "possibly Belgium, maybe Luxembourg, one of those." Brussels is in Belgium. Luxembourg is a separate country. We apologize to Luxembourg, which has contacted us twice.
Diplomatic: We characterized Vice President Vance's 2025 Munich speech as "greeted with applause." It was not greeted with applause. The absence of applause was, in fact, the story. We have updated our records. The silence stands.