Title | Document type |
Address to the Eighth NATO Maritime Symposium-Sealink Speech by Secretary General, Manfred Wörner13 Jun. 1989 and the flanks lacks the advantage of depth. In times of tension, crisis and war, we are totally dependent on our ability to reinforce Europe over great expanses of water. Our sea lines of communication are the equivalent of the Warsaw Pact's roads and railways | Opinion |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Manfred Wörner09 Jun. 1989 requirements for defence and deterrence must be measured continues to be present and forecast Warsaw Pact capabilities. In this respect we noted that, even after the announced and recently begun unilateral reductions in some of the Warsaw Pact forces have been | Official text |
The Alliance's comprehensive concept of arms control and disarmament adopted by the Heads of State and Government at the meeting of the North Atlantic Council29 May. 1989 . In Eastern Europe, progress in constructive reform is still uneven and the extent of these reforms remains to be determined. Basic human rights still need to be firmly anchored in law and practice, though in some Warsaw Pact countries improvements | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Manfred Wörner20 Apr. 1989 weapons necessary for our security, taking into account the scale and quality of the threat. We reviewed information on the continuing Warsaw Pact efforts to modernize and restructure their nuclear forces. We welcomed the recent announcements | Official text |
NATO Speech: 40th Anniversary of NATO Address to the North Atlantic Council (<a href="#footnotes"><sup>1</sup></a>) by Secre...04 Apr. 1989 that in reality they are asked to pay only the smallest price for the greatest of all human benefits - peace in freedom. That we maintain principled, conceptual leadership. It is not for us to match the unilateral reductions of the Warsaw Pact, which enjoys | Opinion |
Stability in Europe - NATO's way forward Address given by Secretary General, Manfred Wörner to the Annual Meeting of the Wor...01 Feb. 1989 . Indeed, the Soviet Union possesses more tanks and artillery than all the other members of the Warsaw Pact and the Alliance combined. It is these weapons, together with armoured troop carriers, that are ideally suited to large-scale offensive operations | Opinion |
Conventional Arms Control - Statement issued by the North Atlantic Council Meeting in Ministerial Session09 Dec. 1988 preponderance. Indeed, the Soviet Union itself possesses more tanks and artillery than all the other members of the Warsaw Pact and the Alliance combined. And they are concentrated in a manner which raises grave concerns about the strategy which | Official text |
Statement on Conventional Arms Control issued by the North Atlantic Council at the level of NATO Heads of State and Government held at NATO HQ, Brussels09 Dec. 1988 preponderance. Indeed, the Soviet Union itself possesses more tanks and artillery than all the other members of the Warsaw Pact and the Alliance combined. And they are concentrated in a manner which raises grave concerns about the strategy which | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Manfred Wörner02 Dec. 1988 welcome and are encouraged by the signs of change in the policies of the Soviet Union, under the leadership of Mr. Gorbachev, and of some other members of the Warsaw Pact. These offer the potential for improved and progressively more stable East-West | Official text |
Alastair Buchan Memorial Lecture by Secretary General, Manfred Wörner23 Nov. 1988 , for the foreseeable future the ingenuity of defence planners will see to it that none of the members of NATO, or of the Warsaw Pact, is beyond their reach. So, immunity is not possible. But can we in the Alliance secure greater safety, both from nuclear weapons | Opinion |