Title | Document type |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Lord Carrington.12 Oct. 1984 policy matters, including the trends in the balance of nuclear forces of NATO and the Warsaw Pact, the maintenance of the security and survivability of NATO's nuclear weapons, and the prospects for the resumption of arms reduction negotiations between | Official text |
Washington Statement on East-West Relations issued by the Foreign Ministers at the North Atlantic Council Meeting31 May. 1984 these and other areas of common interest in pursuing their efforts to promote more constructive dialogue and cooperation with the members of the Warsaw Pact with a view to achieving genuine detente. The Allies support the continuation and strengthening | Official text |
Final Communiqué17 May. 1984 control agreements which are both equitable and verifiable. Ministers noted with concern the steady accumulation of Soviet military power and the scale of modernisation of Warsaw Pact forces across the entire spectrum, conventional to strategic | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Mr. J. Luns.04 Apr. 1984 of the United States and the United Kingdom to maintain the deterrent capabilities of their strategic forces. They also discussed a wide range of security matters, from the trends in the balance of nuclear forces of NATO and the Warsaw Pact to the prospects | Official text |
Final Communiqué23 Dec. 1983 of nuclear forces of NATO and the Warsaw Pact, the preparations of NATO's Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) missile deployments, and the state of arms control negotiations between the United-States and the Soviet Union on strategic nuclear forces | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Mr. J. Luns.09 Dec. 1983 tension. Rejecting any spirit of confrontation, the Allies reaffirm their determination to develop contacts and co-operation with the Warsaw Pact countries on the basis of mutual interest. While maintaining a firm and realistic attitude, the Allies would | Official text |
Declaration of Brussels issued by the Foreign Ministers at the North Atlantic Council Meeting Brussels09 Dec. 1983 or reversed by concrete results at the negotiating table . In this spirit we wish to see an early resumption of the INF negotiations which the Soviet Union has discontinued 1 . We urge the countries of the Warsaw Pact to seize the opportunities we offer | Official text |
Final Communiqué Chairman: Mr. J. Luns06 Dec. 1983 is a defensive alliance and is committed to preserve the peace at the lowest level of forces capable of deterring the Warsaw Pact threat. In this respect Ministers recalled the recent Alliance decision at Montebello to withdraw 1,400 nuclear warheads from Europe | Official text |
The Montebello Decision on Reductions of Nuclear Forces, announced by the Nuclear Planning Group in Ministerial Session27 Oct. 1983 the maintenance of forces at the lowest level capable of deterring the Warsaw Pact threat. Consistent with this policy the Alliance since 1977 has been conducting analyses aimed at assuring that nuclear weapons in NATO's armoury are held to the minimum number | Official text |
Final Communiqué of the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Ministerial Session, held in Paris, France02 Jun. 1983 Ministers noted CNAD's efforts to exploit emerging technologies in order to improve the defensive posture of the Alliance, while taking into account the need to prevent the transfer of militarily relevant technology to the Warsaw Pact. Ministers | Official text |