Title | Document type |
Remarks by Kris Janowski, Spokesman, UNHCR16 Oct. 2003 potential adversary, despite expanding beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union. One reason for this is that the alliance succeeded in including its former Warsaw pact foes in the peace-keeping efforts in the Balkans of the 1990s. Today, many countries | Opinion |
"Change and continuity" by Lord Robertson, Secretary General of NATO01 Oct. 2003 . The Warsaw Pact disintegrated but NATO retooled. It retooled first to help spread security and stability Eastwards across Europe, then to use its unique multinational military capabilities to bring peace to Europe’s bloody and chaotic Balkan backyard, and now | Opinion |
Krivenik Report25 Jul. 2003 of interest. Most are models of former Warsaw Pact mortars. Fuses and ammunition are usually Russian, Yugoslavian, Bulgarian, and Ukrainian. NLA Mortars. The NLA has both 82mm and 120mm mortars in the area of interest. Arms caches discovered by KFOR | News |
Video-interview with Chris Donnelly, Special Advisor to the Secretary General for Central and Eastern Europe14 Jul. 2003 will happen with a unified Germany? What will happen with NATO? What will happen with the Warsaw Pact? It was clear the Warsaw Pact was going to disintegrate, do we need NATO anymore? And at that same summit, the member nations decided they did need NATO | Opinion |
"Building hope on experience" by Paul Fritch, NATO's Political Affairs and Security Policy Division01 Jul. 2003 in a seemingly permanent state of confrontation simply withdrew without firing a shot. The "iron curtain" that had divided Europe for half a century was erased permanently from the map, as states of the former Warsaw Pact asked for, and were granted, full | Opinion |
"Building effective partnerships" by Christopher Bennett, editor of "NATO Review"01 Jul. 2003 . The starting point for NATO’s partnership policy was the hand of friendship that the Alliance offered to the countries of Central and Eastern Europe soon after the Berlin Wall came down and the Warsaw Pact disintegrated. In the first instance, this manifested | Opinion |
Interview: General Totskiy: Russian Ambassador to NATO01 Jul. 2003 be to coordinate political approaches to a particular situation requiring joint action and to ensure that such action has a proper, international legal basis. NATO has enlarged to bring in both former members of the Warsaw Pact and former Soviet republics | Opinion |
"Explaining NATO in Russia" by Rolf Welberts, director of NATO’s Information Office in Moscow01 Jul. 2003 , a potentially aggressive military bloc the world would be better off without. One of the most frequent questions concerns the dissolution of NATO. Not whether, but when. The collapse of communism triggered the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact. Why did NATO | Opinion |
Press conference by Donald Rumsfeld, US Secretary of Defense following the meeting of the North Atlantic Council12 Jun. 2003 Atlantic Council. Since the end of the Cold War we've now invited a total of ten new Allies. Many of them, of course, were former Warsaw Pact adversaries. I think it says a good deal about how much Europe has changed in the past decade. Certainly it's | Opinion |
Remarks by Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland at the EAPC Meeting04 Jun. 2003 of partnership and co-operation. Yet, measured with the right yardstick, the success of this policy is indeed impressive. Eight former members of the Warsaw Pact and three former Soviet Republics have joined or been invited to join NATO. None of us would have | Opinion |