Title | Document type |
A Transformed NATO: Delivering Security In a Dangerous World Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the Brookin...22 Oct. 2002 in the past year, since September 11, 2001. We have built the largest, most powerful coalition the world has ever seen. A coalition based on a global consensus that terror must not and will not be allowed to succeed. That consensus was enshrined | Opinion |
"NATO Reform" Speech by the Deputy Secretary General at the VII International NATO Conference17 Oct. 2002 for membership. To refuse would be to perpetuate an archaic division of Europe that died a decade ago. Second, because enlargement promotes reforms in aspirant countries. The incentive of NATO membership has been a powerful force in encouraging countries | Opinion |
Press Conference by US Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld25 Sep. 2002 Rumsfeld: Needless to say it would be the first Summit meeting of NATO to be held in a former Warsaw Pact country later this year. Together it's a powerful symbol of our commitment to unifying Europe and creating a Europe that is, as has been said, whole | Opinion |
Press Briefing by US Secretary of State, Colin Powell following the Summit Meeting of the NATO-Russia Council28 May. 2002 SECRETARY POWELL: Well, good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. President Bush is this afternoon finishing up what we believe has been a most successful and historic trip to Europe. In Berlin and Moscow and Paris, and now here in Rome, we have made common | Opinion |
NATO in the 21st Century Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the Charles University in Prague21 Mar. 2002 Ladies and Gentlemen, In its long and proud history, Prague, the "golden city", has come to symbolise many things that have made Europe great. Being, quite literally, at the centre of Europe, Prague has symbolised religious and political tolerance | Opinion |
"Towards the Prague Summit and beyond" Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the Hanns Seidel Stiftung06 Mar. 2002 . Throughout its history, NATO has embodied those lessons -- and proved their wisdom. Throughout the Cold War, the United States remained a European power. European countries institutionalised their defence cooperation, so precluding the renationalization | Opinion |
"NATO: Enlarging and redefining itself " Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at Chatham House18 Feb. 2002 in an Alliance geared towards the new challenges posed by terrorism and the spread of weapons of mass destruction. But it will also fine-tune NATO to pursue its wider agenda: creating long-term stability in the Balkans; helping to overcome Europe's Cold War | Opinion |
A New Quality in the NATO-Russia Relationship22 Nov. 2001 ." These are powerful words indeed, which point the direction we should be headed. But how far have we travelled down that road? Not far enough. Our partnership has remained a nervous one. The foundation for our new relationship was laid in the Founding Act | Opinion |
Partnership, the Foundation of European Security26 Oct. 2001 . It may be that Central and Eastern Europe's pre-communist experience, and the experience of the last century, dominated up to 1945 by fascism and communism, and after 1945 by ideological, political and economic clashes between communism and democracy, has | Opinion |
Speech19 Oct. 2001 , that was a powerful message indeed. And it was not simply rhetoric. Europe's solidarity with the United States was solid, it was total, and it was felt from the highest levels of government to the smallest village: America has been there for us through two world wars | Opinion |