Title | Document type |
Lecture 6 - Cyber attacks: hype or an increasing headache for open societies? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General02 Feb. 2010 All right, so, ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon. Good to see you. I will start with the good news – this is the last of the lectures on NATO's new security challenges, so you won't have to listen to any more of these after today. And then I | Opinion |
Lecture 5 - Failed and failing states: will they keep us busy in the next 20 years as they have during the last 20 years? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General26 Jan. 2010 was sort of struck by an inconsistency – this is lecture number 5, as Anthony said, the penultimate of the series, and yet when I think of my own personal life over the last 15 or 20 years, when I think of what NATO has been doing and when I think | Opinion |
Lecture 4 - Energy security: is this a challenge for the markets or for the strategic community as well? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General19 Jan. 2010 to the American automobile industry and I drink to the American oil industry”. Because by 1944 the US was producing 90 per cent of the high-Octane fuel for all of the Allies combined. Now, this is not a history class, but nonetheless it does bear thinking about | Opinion |
Opening remarks by The Hon. Madeleine K. Albright, Chair of the Group of Experts, at the Third Seminar on NATO's Strategic Concept, Oslo, 14 Jan 201014 Jan. 2010 period in the history of our Alliance. The Experts Group will complete our work by the end of April and the Strategic Concept should be in place by December, which means that we have some very hard work to do. In short order our collective task | Opinion |
Lecture 2 - Climate change - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General15 Dec. 2009 Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome everybody to the Institute for European Studies where today we are hosting the first of a series of lectures on NATO, but basically security in general. We have with us Dr. Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning...still | Opinion |
Lecture 1 - Nuclear proliferation: how should the international community respond? - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General10 Dec. 2009 Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome everybody to the Institute for European Studies where today we are hosting the first of a series of lectures on NATO, but basically security in general. We have with us Dr. Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning...still | Opinion |
''NATO as a guarantor of territorial defence and a provider of global security'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the conference ''NATO Talk around the Brandenburger Tor'' - Berlin - 26 November 200926 Nov. 2009 – and these forces were not just from Germany, but they were from several other NATO Allies too. And there was operational planning that ensured the collective risks and burdens were shared equally amongst Allies. In short, NATO’s defence posture in West Germany | Opinion |
Speech by Prof. Dr. Rob de Wijk on NATO’s new Strategic Concept, MCCS Lisbon19 Sep. 2009 that for the first time in NATO’s history there seems to be a willingness to discuss the meaning of Article 5. In 2006 Senator Lugar called on the alliance to come to the aid of any member whose energy sources are threatened by using the organization's Article 5 | Opinion |
''NATO and Russia: A New Beginning'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Carnegie Endowment, Brussels18 Sep. 2009 proposal concerns the short term. I would like NATO and Russia to strengthen their practical cooperation in the many areas where we have a clear common interest. Key among these areas is the fight against terrorism. The days when terrorism was a purely | Opinion |
First NATO Press conference by Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen03 Aug. 2009 making a speedy recovery. It is often said that NATO is the most successful Alliance in history. That’s been true for 60 years, and it’s just as true today. NATO is doing more, in more places, than it ever has before. Because it is a family of nations | Opinion |