Title | Document type |
Declaration of the Heads of State and Government at the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Bonn, Germany10 Jun. 1982 the projection of military power on a global scale. While creating a threat of these dimensions, Warsaw Pact governments condemn Western defence efforts as aggressive. While they ban unilateral disarmament movements in their own countries they support demands | Official text |
Brussels Summit Final Communiqué issued by the Heads of State and Government (1975)29 May. 1975 is to safeguard the independence and security of its members and to make possible the creation of a lasting structure of peace. Serious problems confront the Allies in the pursuit of this purpose. The armed forces of the Warsaw Pact continue to grow | Official text |
''NATO and Russia: A New Beginning'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Carnegie Endowment, Brussels18 Sep. 2009 and continue to burden our relationship. Put simply, Russia expected NATO to be dissolved when the Warsaw Pact collapsed. Because it didn’t, many in Russia can only find one explanation – that the Alliance still sees Russia as a threat. And every thing we do | Opinion |
North Atlantic Cooperation Council (1991-1997)by the Allies in December 1991 as a forum for dialogue and cooperation with NATO’s former Warsaw Pact adversaries. The NACC was a manifestation of the “hand of friendship” extended at the July 1990 summit meeting in London, when Allied leaders proposed a new | Topic |
NATO member countriesin Brussels in March 1999. The fall of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact after the end of the Cold War opened up the possibility of further NATO enlargement. Some of the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe were eager | Topic |
NATO member countriesin Brussels in March 1999. The fall of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact after the end of the Cold War opened up the possibility of further NATO enlargement. Some of the new democracies of Central and Eastern Europe were eager | Topic |
Euro-Atlantic Partnership. The EAPC and PfP are central to the Allies’ vision of a Europe whole, free and at peace. As early as 1991, NATO had set up a forum to institutionalise relations with countries of the former Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact, called the North Atlantic | Topic |
Euro-Atlantic Partnership. The EAPC and PfP are central to the Allies’ vision of a Europe whole, free and at peace. As early as 1991, NATO had set up a forum to institutionalise relations with countries of the former Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact, called the North Atlantic | Topic |
Collective defence and Article 5A cornerstone of the Alliance Article 5 In 1949, the primary aim of the North Atlantic Treaty – NATO’s founding treaty – was to create a pact of mutual assistance to counter the risk that the Soviet Union would seek to extend its control of Eastern | Topic |
Collective defence and Article 5A cornerstone of the Alliance Article 5 In 1949, the primary aim of the North Atlantic Treaty – NATO’s founding treaty – was to create a pact of mutual assistance to counter the risk that the Soviet Union would seek to extend its control of Eastern | Topic |