Title | Document type |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington15 May. 1987 and Warsaw Pact nuclear, conventional and chemical forces as well as the unabated expansion of Warsaw Pact military capabilities across the board. Efforts to secure equitable and effectively verifiable reductions in military forces, both conventional | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington11 Dec. 1986 the participating states. We deplore the deficiencies of Warsaw Pact countries in honouring their commitments, particularly in the field of human rights and human contacts. We shall continue to insist on the full implementation of all agreements reached in the CSCE | Official text |
Brussels Declaration On Conventional Arms Control11 Dec. 1986 bear most immediately upon the essential security relationship in Europe, namely those belonging to the Alliance and the Warsaw Pact. In the light of the foregoing therefore, we are ready to initiate discussion on enhancing conventional stability | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington05 Dec. 1986 strategy of forward defence and flexible response, including the commitment to maintain a credible nuclear deterrent posture, has preserved peace for many years and remains fully valid. Against the background of existing Warsaw Pact strength and ongoing | Official text |
Statement on the Ministerial Meeting of the North Atlantic Council30 May. 1986 in conventional forces are also crucial in order to correct the present conventional imbalance between the Alliance and the Warsaw Pact. Beyond this, we aim at conventional stability throughout Europe. We have today made a separate statement on conventional arms | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington22 May. 1986 of the continuous build-up of Warsaw Pact conventional and nuclear forces. Our strategy of flexible response and forward defence continues to provide the most effective formula for ensuring security and stability at the lowest possible level of forces. Nuclear | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington13 Dec. 1985 years on US and Soviet and NATO and Warsaw Pact forces. The proposal embodies associated measures which open the way to the establishment of reliable force levels and which are essential to verify compliance with the Agreement's provisions. It responds | Official text |
Resource Guidance22 May. 1985 to support NATO's overall deterrence and defence objectives. There is a political and military need to improve NATO's conventional defence capabilities in relation to those of the Warsaw Pact in order to narrow the gap and reduce dependence on the early | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington.22 May. 1985 and, as reflected in the communiqués of our Luxembourg meeting, we. are determined to maintain the effectiveness of NATO's nuclear forces. But we are concerned that the current disparity between NATO's conventional forces and those of the Warsaw Pact risks an undue | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington.05 Dec. 1984 Search for equitable and verifiable arms control measures - deployment of Longer-Range INF (LRINF) missiles - growth of Warsaw Pact capabilities - strategy of flexible response and forward defence - problems of improving conventional forces - 1984 Annual | Official text |