Title | Document type |
''Afghanistan and the Future of Peace Operations'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the University of Chicago08 Apr. 2010 systematically with countries like India or China. These are understandable concerns. But I think they can be addressed. Afghanistan is proof, to my mind, of the vital importance of broader partnerships for successful international missions. We already | Opinion |
''Afghanistan and the Future of Peace Operations'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the University of Chicago08 Apr. 2010 systematically with countries like India or China. These are understandable concerns. But I think they can be addressed. Afghanistan is proof, to my mind, of the vital importance of broader partnerships for successful international missions. We already | Opinion |
Weekly press briefing by the NATO Spokesman James Appathurai24 Mar. 2010 one million square miles so it is a big, big area. And to give an example of the problem, yesterday a Turkish ship was hijacked more than 1,000 miles out to sea from Somalia. Closer to India than Africa, which represents a significant increase | Opinion |
Weekly press briefing by NATO Spokesman James Appathurai and NATO's Senior Civilian Representative for Afghanistan, Amb. Mark Sedwill11 Mar. 2010 . Particularly India and Pakistan are quarrelling in Afghanistan and Kandahar and Kabul and Ahmadinejad visit was criticized by Robert Gates. How do you see this development? Are we going to reach any regional solution in this particular environment | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Strategic Concept Seminar in Helsinki04 Mar. 2010 committed. Step three: We must increase NATO’s connectivity with the wider world. Look at Afghanistan. A long term peace and stability requires the positive engagement of countries in the region, like Pakistan, India, China and Russia. We must | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at Georgetown University22 Feb. 2010 of the global population, America and Europe generate more than half of the world's Gross Domestic Product. Of course, China is growing, and so is India. But when it comes to open, rules-based trade between like-minded democracies, Europe and North America | Opinion |
Remarks of Madeleine K. Albright at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Moscow, Russia11 Feb. 2010 Britain, Spain, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Kenya and virtually every country in the Middle East. Responsible world leaders are striving to prevent a recurrence of such attacks through rigorous efforts at homeland defense and by helping countries | Opinion |
NATO in the 21st Century: Towards Global Connectivity: Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Munich Security Conference08 Feb. 2010 and military partnership with Pakistan. But even that isn’t a wide enough lens. India has a stake in Afghan stability. China too. And both could help further develop and rebuild Afghanistan. The same goes for Russia. Basically, Russia shares our security | Opinion |
Lecture 6 - Cyber attacks: hype or an increasing headache for open societies? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General02 Feb. 2010 of the number of attacks, the UK – 5 per cent, Spain – 4 per cent, France – 3 per cent. And as the access to broadband increases, other countries are coming onto the list: Brazil, Poland, Russia, Turkey, India, are the ones that I've covered recently | Opinion |
Lecture 4 - Energy security: is this a challenge for the markets or for the strategic community as well? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General19 Jan. 2010 in achieving military victories grew and grew. Lord George Curzon, the Viceroy of India, who later became the British Foreign Secretary after the WWI said famously “The Allies floated to victory upon a wave of oil”. And after the WWI, as I said | Opinion |