Title | Document type |
Press briefing on the NATO Training and Equipment Co-ordination Group (NTEGG) by Colonel David Spasojevich, United States Ma...10 Nov. 2004 was to be... as much as possible to use former Warsaw Pact equipment, which the Iraqis have been familiar with in the past. Is that correct? SPASOJEVICH: I will tell you that initially that may be the smart way of doing it. It's going to be up to the Iraqis | Opinion |
Historic NATO documents now available online04 Aug. 2004 | News |
"Manfred Wörner: NATO visionary" by Ryan C. Hendrickson, associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University01 Jul. 2004 relations with former members of the Warsaw Pact and to create new security structures to deal with what was a political revolution affecting all of Europe. While some analysts suggested that the end of the Cold War heralded the Alliance’s demise, Wörner | Opinion |
"Expanding NATO’s counter-terrorism role" by C. Richard Nelson, Atlantic Council of the United States (ACUS)01 Jul. 2004 threat differs sharply from that posed by the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact for which NATO was designed. This new threat consists primarily of al-Qaida and related groups that form a network of jihadists who share the ultimate goals of establishing a new | Opinion |
Statement by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Bulgaria at the Ceremonial Session of the NAC02 Apr. 2004 -a-days, the due for his clear and farsighted vision for the future. This integration comes as a result of a 14-year continuing effort. Back in 1990 the Grand National Assembly raised the idea of leaving the Warsaw Pact and acceding to the Washington | Opinion |
"The meaning of enlargement" by Tomáš Valášek, director of the Brussels office of the Center for Defense Information01 Apr. 2004 missions. Indeed, in some ways, the newcomers are ahead of the established Allies in moving away from static defence postures. This is by necessity as much as by choice. The need for downsizing expensive Warsaw Pact-era militaries coincided neatly | Opinion |
"Marrying capabilities to commitments" by John Colston, NATO’s Assistant Secretary General for Defence Policy and Planning01 Apr. 2004 attack against the territory of any Ally by the Warsaw Pact. To achieve this, NATO needed to possess large numbers of predominantly heavy conventional and nuclear forces held at high readiness and optimised for a short high-intensity campaign | Opinion |
Remarks by US Secretary of State, Colin L. Powell at the NATO Accession Lunch at the Department of Treasury29 Mar. 2004 members of the Warsaw Pact." They laughed a little bit. Here it is. (Applause.) Nearly three years ago in Warsaw, President Bush called for a new round of NATO enlargement to extend Europe's zone of freedom and security from the Baltics to the Black | Opinion |
"The impact of September 11th on the Alliance" - Video lecture with Jamie Shea, NATO Temporary Spokesman12 Jan. 2004 into the Alliance, they brought in a lot of expertise in military medicine, particularly analysing biological and chemical weapons that they developed in the days of the Warsaw Pact, but which was far ahead of what many NATO countries have. And subsequently they've | Opinion |
Video-interview with NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson16 Dec. 2003 , and the others part of the Warsaw Pact, will become full members of NATO next year. So, I consider that on these three objectives, we've got... I've got real satisfaction on the capabilities issue. We've set in play a number of processes which I believe | Opinion |