Slovenia's annual high-level foreign policy summit convenes heads of state, foreign ministers and EU principals each August at Lake Bled, offering one of Central Europe's last major diplomatic gatherings before the United Nations General Assembly. The 21st edition, held 31 August to 1 September 2026, is themed "Choosing the Future."
The Bled Strategic Forum (BSF) is a two-day annual international summit held in Bled, Slovenia, convened jointly by the Slovenian government and the Centre for European Perspective (CEP). Founded in 2006, it brings together heads of state and government, foreign ministers, EU and NATO officials, diplomats, senior executives and academics to discuss European security, foreign policy and global governance. Now in its 21st edition, the forum has become the highest-profile diplomatic conference in Central and South-Eastern Europe, hosting according to the organiser over 18,000 participants and 1,700 speakers from more than 100 countries since its founding. The 2026 theme, "Choosing the Future," frames the programme around strategic agency at a moment of accelerating geopolitical fragmentation.
The Bled Strategic Forum occupies a distinctive niche on the European diplomatic calendar. It assembles decision-makers rather than commentators: the typical participant list skews toward sitting ministers, ambassadors, and heads of international organisations rather than think-tank staff or conference professionals. That composition makes BSF sessions function more as pre-negotiation consultations than academic panels, and its outputs, including declarations such as the 2023 Bled Pledge on EU enlargement championed by then-European Council President Charles Michel, carry political weight beyond the forum itself.
Its timing is also deliberate. Held each year in late August, BSF falls roughly three weeks before the opening of the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week in New York. This positioning allows participants to test diplomatic formulations, align positions on European security and foreign policy, and establish bilateral contacts before the multilateral season intensifies. For smaller EU and candidate states, the forum provides access to an informal venue where their foreign ministers can engage principals from major capitals on equal footing.
BSF draws a concentrated senior-government audience, supplemented by business and civil society delegations.
The composition signals the forum's essentially governmental character: it functions less as a networking marketplace and more as an informal diplomatic channel where accreditation rather than registration governs attendance.
The 2026 edition is organised around the theme "Choosing the Future," a framing designed to address questions of strategic agency: whether states, institutions and regional bodies can exercise meaningful choice in an international environment marked by fragmenting alliances, contested multilateralism and renewed great-power competition. Sessions are expected to cover European security architecture, transatlantic relations, EU enlargement dynamics in the Western Balkans and Eastern Partnership, and the role of international institutions in an era of weakened consensus.
Across its twenty-year history, BSF has maintained a core set of recurring subject areas reflecting Slovenia's foreign policy priorities and its position as a small EU member state at the intersection of Central Europe, the Western Balkans and the Eastern Partnership region. Enlargement policy has been a constant, with multiple editions hosting high-level panels on Western Balkan EU integration. European security and defence autonomy, the rules-based international order and NATO's eastern flank have grown in prominence since 2022. The forum also consistently covers global governance reform, climate geopolitics and the strategic implications of technological change, though these topics remain secondary to the core foreign-policy and security agenda.
Over its twenty editions, the forum has assembled an unusually dense concentration of serving heads of state and senior officials. European Council President Charles Michel participated in the 2023 edition and announced the Bled Pledge, a political commitment to EU readiness to admit Western Balkan countries by 2030. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy have both appeared at BSF, as has former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and Michelle Bachelet in her capacity as UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. At the 2025 edition, Slovenia's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Tanja Fajon co-chaired proceedings alongside Secretary General Peter Grk. According to the organiser, the cumulative roster across all editions comprises some 60 heads of state or government and 380 ministers. The confirmed 2026 speaker programme had not been announced as of June 2026.
The Bled Strategic Forum was founded in August 2006 on the initiative of Dimitrij Rupel, then-Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia, as a strategic dialogue platform ahead of Slovenia's first presidency of the Council of the European Union (first half of 2008). The inaugural edition was a one-day regional conference; over the following two decades it expanded into a two-day international summit attracting participants from more than 100 countries. The 2026 gathering is the 21st edition. The parallel Young Bled Strategic Forum, aimed at professionals aged 18 to 35, was launched in 2011 and has since evolved into a separate three-day conference; in 2026 it takes place in Kranjska Gora on 28 to 30 August under the theme "After the Rupture: Agency and Resilience in a Fragmented World," with young participants then joining the main forum in Bled.
No. BSF is a project of the Government of Slovenia, organised jointly by the Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs and the Centre for European Perspective (CEP). It has no formal institutional status within the EU or NATO, though both organisations' leadership regularly attend. The forum's independence from any single intergovernmental body is part of its design: it functions as a neutral convening space rather than an official institution.
BSF is smaller and more concentrated than Munich, with roughly 2,000 participants versus Munich's 6,000-plus. Its geographical focus is consistently European, with particular emphasis on Central Europe, the Western Balkans and the Eastern Partnership region. The forum's late-August timing before the UN General Assembly also gives it a pre-positioning function that Munich, held in February, does not serve. The Slovene government's direct convening role means it carries implicit state-level diplomatic weight.
The forum operates on an invitation and accreditation basis; there is no public registration. Diplomatic missions, government ministries and the organising secretariat manage participant accreditation. Working language is English. Interpretation is available for select sessions.
The forum is held at the Bled Congress Centre, a purpose-built convention facility situated on the shore of Lake Bled in north-western Slovenia. The town of Bled, roughly 55 kilometres north-west of Ljubljana, is accessible by road and rail; the nearest international airport is Ljubljana Joze Pucnik Airport (LJU), approximately 35 kilometres away. The lakeside setting, with the Julian Alps as backdrop, has become closely associated with the forum's visual identity and contributes to an atmosphere conducive to informal bilateral dialogue on the margins of official sessions.
The Bled Strategic Forum is co-organised by the Government of the Republic of Slovenia through its Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs and the Centre for European Perspective (CEP), a Slovenian public think tank based in Ljubljana. The Ministry provides the diplomatic and political direction of the forum, ensuring the participation of high-level state delegations and securing bilateral government-to-government engagement on the margins. CEP handles programmatic and logistical organisation, including thematic curation, speaker coordination and the management of the Young Bled Strategic Forum. Peter Grk has served as Secretary General of BSF since 2016, providing continuity across editions and overseeing the forum's growth into a two-day international summit.
CEP was established as a Slovenian state instrument for promoting European integration and enlargement policy. Its dual role as think tank and conference producer positions it to combine policy research with high-level convening, and it maintains ongoing institutional relationships with EU institutions, Western Balkan governments and Eastern Partnership states that feed directly into BSF programming.
Slovenia's invitation-only summit has secured a durable place on the European diplomatic calendar by convening it at the sole high-level foreign-policy gathering in Central and South-Eastern Europe timed to the fortnight before the UN General Assembly, drawing 60 heads of state across its twenty editions.
The Bled Strategic Forum is an invitation-only event. There is no public ticket sale or open registration process. Participation is granted through accreditation managed by the forum secretariat in coordination with diplomatic missions and government ministries. Senior government officials and international organisation representatives are invited through official channels; business and civil society participants are accredited on a selective basis.
The Young Bled Strategic Forum, the parallel programme for professionals aged 18 to 35, operates through a competitive application process. Applications for YBSF 2026 were open until 26 April 2026 via the official BSF website. Successful applicants join the main forum in Bled on 31 August and 1 September after the three-day programme in Kranjska Gora.
The main forum does not offer an individual application route for general attendance. Access is through institutional accreditation: if your government ministry, international organisation or accredited institution nominates you, the secretariat reviews the request. There is no walk-in or self-registration option.
YBSF 2026 takes place in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, from 28 to 30 August 2026, under the theme "After the Rupture: Agency and Resilience in a Fragmented World." Participants then travel to Bled to join the main forum on 31 August and 1 September. Applications closed in April 2026; check the official BSF website for future edition timelines.
The Bled Strategic Forum typically streams selected sessions and publishes video recordings and summary materials on its official website and the CEP website after the event. Check bledstrategicforum.org for live-stream announcements closer to the event dates.
| Official website | https://www.bledstrategicforum.org/ |
| Organiser (CEP) | https://www.cep.si/ |
| Wikipedia | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bled_Strategic_Forum |
| gov.si press release (2025 edition) | https://www.gov.si/en/news/2025-08-29-bled-strategic-forum-2025-20-years-of-shaping-the-global-conversation/ |