In the wake of the November 13 Paris attacks allegedly masterminded by a Belgian-born extremist, Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders admitted more must be done.
"Intelligence services must get used to not only collecting information, but to sharing it," he told AFP on the sidelines of a conference gathering more than 50 countries to discuss how to thwart terror groups.
"We are doing it more and more among European services, but there is still work to be done," he acknowledged at the conference hosted by The Netherlands.
And they come as The Netherlands begins its six-month rotating presidency of the European Union.
"What we face today is terrorism 2.0. Like a virus, it adapts to survive and becomes more resilient," Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders told the opening of the talks.
"We are not dealing with the stereotypical terrorist we see in the movies. The type that can be defeated by a one-man army like Bruce Wills in 'Die Hard'."
Speaking to AFP, France's European Affairs Minister Harlem Desir said coordination was crucial.
"Today the whole international community needs to work together to fight against terrorism," he said.
"There also has to be a huge coordination in intelligence matters, judicial and police cooperation."
Countries are often wary of sharing hard-won intelligence with other nations with which they may not have such good relations.
"Do we trust each other enough to share information, and are we willing to work together?" he asked.
"This means sharing information and data" as well as threat analyses, he said.
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