Title | Document type |
Speech by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer in Tokyo, Japan04 Apr. 2005 response – to deter and defendagainst that threat. And just as Japan relied upon its Alliance withthe US to defend itself against that threat, we did so through NATO. This situation lasted for four decades. Forty years in which NATO andthe Warsaw | Opinion |
"NATO's role in nation-building" by James Dobbins, International Security and Defense Policy Center at the RAND Corporation01 Apr. 2005 designed to command million-man Western armies in the event of war with the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact. The comparative wealth of staff resources ensures that NATO operations are more professionally planned and sustained, but also result in a heavier tail | Opinion |
"Improving linguistic interoperability" by Mark Crossey, British Council’s Peacekeeping English Project01 Apr. 2005 to participate effectively in both NATO missions and wider Alliance activities as any other form of interoperability. While soldiers in all Allied armed forces benefit from language training, the need has been particularly acute in former Warsaw Pact countries | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer at Victoria University Institute of Policy Studies and New Zealand ...31 Mar. 2005 of NATO. With the disappearance of the Soviet Unionand that of the Warsaw Pact, many felt that the Alliance could simplydeclare victory and fold up its tents as well. Instead,NATO proved its worth many times over during the 1990s. The Alliancewas | Opinion |
Statement to the press by US President George W. Bush at the press conference following the meeting of the North Atlantic Council at the level of Heads of State and Government22 Feb. 2005 and at peace. And that's a milestone in the history of liberty. NATO is the home for nine former members of the Warsaw Pact. The leaders of those countries, when they sit around the table, brings us vitality to the discussions | Opinion |
"Manlio Brosio: Cold War consensus-builder" by Ryan C. Hendrickson, Eastern Illinois University01 Jan. 2005 , the report recommended both that NATO maintain its traditional mission of defence and that it develop a new objective of "détente". This meant that, while recognising the ongoing security threat posed by the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact and the need | Opinion |
"Should NATO play a more political role?" - Debate between Espen Barth Eide Frédéric Bozo01 Jan. 2005 withdrawal from NATO's integrated military structure in 1966 was a similarly seminal moment, which led a year later to the Harmel Report On The Future Tasks of the Alliance. Fifteen years ago, the dismantling of both the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union | Opinion |
"Remaining relevant" by Jonathan Parish01 Jan. 2005 years I flew anti-tank helicopters in the Federal Republic of Germany. Every morning started with the same routine: a weather forecast for the area, and then a detailed study of Warsaw Pact and NATO military equipment so that we would be able | Opinion |
"The need for change" by Henning Riecke, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik in Berlin01 Jan. 2005 . In response to the vacuum created by the demise of the Warsaw Pact, NATO offered cooperative structures to tie in former adversaries, including eventually a mechanism for joining the Alliance, and to integrate Partner militaries into crisis-management | Opinion |
Joint press point with NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer and the President of Bulgaria, H.E.Georgi Parvanov16 Dec. 2004 ? Q: The second question to the Bulgarian president was, that the military analysis of NATO recently showed that there would be need for former Warsaw Pact equipment for Iraq, and my question to the Bulgarian president, is do we have such extant | Opinion |