Title | Document type |
Why We Still Need NATO: Safety for the Next Generation05 Apr. 2000 program, NATO is developing security relationships with 25 non-NATO countries, including former Warsaw Pact members and neutrals. Since, the Paris NATO Summit in Spring of 1997, NATO and Russia have been sitting down at the same table in the NATO-Russia | Opinion |
Why Markets Need NATO03 Apr. 2000 Republics, Warsaw Pact members and neutrals. These partnerships are helping us to create a continent-wide pool of trained and interoperable forces for crisis management. But we also seek to give assistance to those states coping with the challenge | Opinion |
Lord Robertson addresses OSCE Summit18 Nov. 1999 and the former Warsaw Pact to work towards disarmament in Europe. Lord Robertson concluded his speech by saying that both organisations were contributing to the same goal: "a secure and stable Europe". | News |
Address by Václav Havel, President of the Czech Republic at the meeting of the North Atlantic Council23 Apr. 1999 of the Alliance that is attended by representatives of its three new member countries that were members of the Warsaw Pact no more than ten years ago. The enlargement of the Alliance which has begun with their admission signifies the real and definitive end | Opinion |
Intervention12 Mar. 1999 Czechoslovakia which was betrayed by its allies, the fascist protectorate, the horrors of the WWII, the 40 years of Communist dictatorship, and the death of the 1968 Prague Spring, which was crushed by the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact invasion. At the same time | Opinion |
Speech "Transatlantic Relations in the 21st Century"12 Feb. 1999 to help restructure the armed-forces of countries formerly belonging to the Warsaw Pact, to help them find their appropriate place in modern democratic societies, and to engage in practical cooperation. This, too, enhances stability far outside NATO | Opinion |
Address by the Honourable Lloyd Axworthy Minister of Foreign Affairs at the meeting of the North Atlantic Council08 Dec. 1998 threat once posed by the Warsaw Pact, the Soviet Union and its 350 000 soldiers in East Germany. This has implications for Alliance strategies. Now more than ever, any discussion of using Alliance nuclear capabilities - even in retaliation - raises very | Opinion |
Current Developments in NATO from the Chairman's Perspective Address27 Oct. 1998 Union and the Warsaw Pact, no nation or group of nations now or in the foreseeable future has the ability to attack the Alliance with conventional military means with any prospect of victory. Thus our opponents of the future, be they nation-states | Opinion |
NATO's Cooperation with Partners02 Jul. 1998 filled by the Alliance until 1989 when the threat disappeared: until the fall of the Berlin Wall, and subsequently the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union itself, and the retreat of the Soviet troops from Central Europe. Sometimes I am | Opinion |
Speech02 Jul. 1998 as one that is worth to copy, and we can offer this as our experience to other. Fourthly let me also say a few words about the reform of the Hungarian military. As you know we inherited from the Warsaw Pact a lopsided military that was considered | Opinion |