Title | Document type |
"Rethinking NATO" by Tom Donnelly, American Enterprise Institute in Washington01 Apr. 2003 less on nuclear deterrence. The Reagan build-up, designed not only to fight a strictly defensive war but also to project naval power directly against the Soviet Union and to develop air and land forces capable of counter-attacking deep into Warsaw Pact | Opinion |
"Great expectations" - Analysis by Ronald D. Asmus, German Marshall Fund of the United States01 Apr. 2003 and statesmen negotiated a soft landing on the withdrawal of Soviet troops and the peaceful demise of the Warsaw Pact. They then set their sights on a goal that at the time seemed visionary, highly desirable but largely unreachable: to rejoin a West from which | Opinion |
Press point by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson and Mr Rolandas Paksas, President of Lithuania19 Mar. 2003 draconian line. This is not the Warsaw Pact. We expect, in a range of democratic countries, to see a range of democratic views. In terms of the threats to the Alliance, well invited countries are exactly that. They are invited countries, and when | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the Slovenian Parliament, Ljubljana10 Mar. 2003 how Belgium’s voice was listened to with great care. Slovenia will lose none of its independence, sovereignty or the right to make decisions on its own. Because NATO is not the Warsaw Pact. It is an Alliance of free nations and democratic countries | Opinion |
Building a Transatlantic Consensus NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson's Remarks at the European Institute Washington, D.C.20 Feb. 2003 late last Sunday evening was what NATO is all about. We are not the Warsaw Pact. My illustrious predecessor, Lord Carrington, was fond of saying that unlike the Soviet bloc, NATO sang in harmony, not in unison. No one country, or group of countries | Opinion |
“A New Russian Revolution: Partnership with NATO” by NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson at the Royal Society of Edinburgh13 Dec. 2002 dialogue between Russia and the West took place at the occasional high-pressure and adversarial Summit meeting. And of course, there was no question of sharing the benefits of democracy and growing prosperity with the countries of the Warsaw Pact | Opinion |
Statement by Mr. Ion Iliescu, the President of Romania, at the "19+7" meeting of Heads of State and Government of NATO count...21 Nov. 2002 Romania. You have opened a new chapter in Europe's long lasting quest for unity and peace. For Romanians, Prague has a special meaning. It is a place where, in 1968, Romania, alongside other Warsaw Pact countries, was commanded to come with tanks | Opinion |
Statement on NATO Enlargement by H. E. Aleksander Kwasniewski, President of the Republic of Poland21 Nov. 2002 Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, This day will become history! I wish to express how deeply moved and happy I am that here in Prague, a city of a thousand-year-long history, the place of the Warsaw Pact invasion of 1968 and its last meeting eleven years | Opinion |
Remarks by the President of the United States, George W. Bush to the Atlantic Student Summit20 Nov. 2002 of a Warsaw Pact. The days of the Warsaw Pact seem distant -- they must seem to you; after all, the Warsaw Pact ended a half a lifetime ago for you. It was a dark and distant era. The years since have brought great challenge and great hope to all | Opinion |
"The Transformation of NATO" Opening speech by Václav Havel, President of the Czech Republic at the conference organized by...20 Nov. 2002 of my fellow citizens join me in perceiving the Munich experience as evidence in favor of the belief that evil should be resisted as soon as it is born. We have also had another experience : the occupation by the Warsaw Pact States in 1968 | Opinion |