Title | Document type |
Press briefing by Andrew Walton, Commander of NATO’s Disaster Relief team in Pakistan22 Feb. 2006 because movement is likely to be difficult. And those are capabilities that NATO has and that the NRF has. And therefore if we're asked to help why would we say no? So I think this is a mission that... is particularly appropriate. Humanitarian | Opinion |
NATO Crisis Management Exercise CMX 200622 Feb. 2006 , against NATO forces, territory and populations. The scenario may include preliminary operational planning for the possible activation and employment of the NATO Response Force (NRF). However, no troops are actually deployed for the purpose of this exercise | Pressrelease |
Weekly press briefing by NATO Spokesman, James Appathurai14 Feb. 2006 on the NRF. Ministers went in looking at three challenges on the NRF. One was meeting the immediate requirements for full operational capability for November. The second was looking at the long-term force generation challenges. And the third was funding. My | Opinion |
Video background briefing by NATO Spokesman, James Appathurai13 Feb. 2006 discussed the importance of the NRF, both as a capability, which can do the full spectrum of military operations, from humanitarian relief to as a force for initial entry, to acting simply as a show of force. That's one necessary capability | Opinion |
Closing press conference by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, after the Informal meetings of Defence Ministers10 Feb. 2006 and the hardware of the 21st Century NATO -of course, a discussion I consider a building block for the Summit in Riga we're going to have at the end of November. The discussion focused to a large extent on the circumstances in which we could expect to use the NRF | Opinion |
Press briefing by John Colston, Assistant Secretary General for Defence Policy and Planning08 Feb. 2006 clear that among of the Alliance countries don't see eye to eye yet on how the NRF should be used. What sort of missions it should be engaged on and when it does, what kind of funding should take place of those missions. Do you want to stage | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, at the 42nd Munich Conference on Security Policy04 Feb. 2006 , such as support for the AU in Darfur and a major humanitarian mission in Pakistan. progress on transformation, to meet both old and new demands on the Alliance, including achieving full operational capability for the NRF, strengthening our access to strategic | Opinion |
Welcoming speech by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer at the New Year's Press Reception09 Jan. 2006 operations. And in terms, last but no least, on the relations NATO has with the wider world, the partnerships, about which a few more words in a moment. When it comes to 21st century capabilities, it is clear that the NRF, the NATO's Response Force, is our | Opinion |
"NATO's evolving operations" by James Pardew and Christopher Bennett01 Jan. 2006 the development of the NATO Response Force (NRF); moves for the Alliance to take on a more political role especially in regions where NATO forces are deployed; and measures to forge ever closer partnerships with non-member countries and other international | Opinion |
"NATO's growing humanitarian role" by Maurits Jochems, deputy assistant secretary general in NATO's Operations Division01 Jan. 2006 and NATO Response Force (NRF) air and sealift to help move urgently needed items from Europe to the United States. The EADRCC acted as a clearing house, matching requests and offers of assistance. Donations needing transportation were coordinated | Opinion |