Title | Document type |
''A strong Europe for a strong NATO'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Academy of National Defence in Warsaw06 Jun. 2013 , and the capabilities to play its full part in shaping the 21st century. And Poland can help show the way. Poland was in the first group of former Warsaw Pact countries to join NATO in 1999, along with Hungary and the Czech Republic. And just 5 years later you were | Opinion |
''NATO’s Approach to a Rapidly Changing MENA Region'' - Keynote speech by Ambassador Dirk Brengelmann, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs and Security Policy at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly Seminar in Marrakech, Morocco16 Apr. 2013 on hope. Two decades ago, Europe faced a period filled with risks and opportunities when the Warsaw Pact and then the Soviet Union disintegrated. It was a victory for the West according to the logic of the Cold War, but it also created a vacuum | Opinion |
''NATO’s Approach to a Rapidly Changing MENA Region'' - Keynote speech by Ambassador Dirk Brengelmann, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs and Security Policy at the NATO Parliamentary Assembly Seminar in Marrakech, Morocco16 Apr. 2013 on hope. Two decades ago, Europe faced a period filled with risks and opportunities when the Warsaw Pact and then the Soviet Union disintegrated. It was a victory for the West according to the logic of the Cold War, but it also created a vacuum | Opinion |
NATO in 2020: Strong capabilities, strong partnerships : Keynote speech by NATO Deputy Secretary General Ambassador Alexander Vershbow at the conference ''NATO and the global structure of security: the future of partnerships'', Bucharest, Romania19 Nov. 2012 and uncertainties, when the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union disintegrated. There was no guarantee that the new-found freedom would last, neither here in Romania, nor elsewhere in Central and Eastern Europe. But freedom not only lasted – it flourished | Opinion |
20 years of working with partners to bring progress and peace through science24 Oct. 2012 . The opening of NATO’s science programme to partners followed the decision by Allied leaders, at the Rome Summit in November 1991, to enhance non-military scientific cooperation between NATO and countries of the former Warsaw Pact. These countries had also been | News |
20 years of working with partners to bring progress and peace through science24 Oct. 2012 . The opening of NATO’s science programme to partners followed the decision by Allied leaders, at the Rome Summit in November 1991, to enhance non-military scientific cooperation between NATO and countries of the former Warsaw Pact. These countries had also been | News |
Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the 50th anniversary celebration of the Springfield Commission on International Visitors in Springfield, Illinois22 Sep. 2012 - to preserve our freedom and our way of life. Just like the soldiers who stormed the Normandy beaches on D-Day. Like the sentries who protected the check-points in Berlin against Warsaw Pact aggression. Like the pilots who stopped mass murder in the Balkans | Opinion |
NATO Secretary General delivers speech in Springfield, Illinois22 Sep. 2012 have done. They gave everything they could for us - to preserve our freedom and our way of life. Just like the soldiers who stormed the Normandy beaches on D-Day. Like the sentries who protected the check-points in Berlin against Warsaw Pact | News |
NATO after Chicago: Struggling for Capabilities, Enlarge or Regionalize? Introductory remarks by the Deputy Secretary General of NATO, Amb. Alexander Vershbow at the 7th annual Riga Conference15 Sep. 2012 finished. After the Warsaw Pact and Soviet Union dissolved two decades ago, NATO used the promise of membership to help spread security, prosperity, and freedom across this continent. Former adversaries became partners and then Allies – including | Opinion |
''Keeping NATO's door open'' - speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Croatia Summit06 Jul. 2012 and spread. Today, the path to stability and security in South-East Europe is the same as it was for the former members of the Warsaw Pact twenty years ago. On this journey, there are no shortcuts. NATO’s door will not open automatically simply | Opinion |