Title | Document type |
"Farewell to war" by Christoph Bertram, Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies01 Jan. 2006 required for war-fighting because its lead nation, the United States, has more than enough forces to fight and win conventional wars against any power on the globe. For reasons that according to Andrew J. Bacevich in The New American Militarism (Oxford | Opinion |
'NATO’s role in Gulf security' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer at the State of Qatar / NATO / Rand conference in Doha, Qatar02 Dec. 2005 that NATO would try to use a specific blueprint for cooperation with others. For example, even among our 26 member nations there exists no single unified model of defence reform. What you see instead are several models, developed in light of specific | Opinion |
“Keeping NATO relevant: A shareholders report” - Speech by the NATO Secretary General at the NATO PA in Copenhagen15 Nov. 2005 , collective defence remains the cornerstone of this Alliance . Article 5 is the strongest promise sovereign nations can give to each other. In an uncertain world, this is a most precious asset – an asset that we must defend and preserve. At the same time | Opinion |
"Bridging cultural divisions" by Francis Ghilès, senior fellow at the European Institute of the Mediterranean in Barcelona01 Oct. 2005 egalitarianism, whereas social relations between the two sides are governed by a neo-colonial model. What is true here is, to a lesser extent, true of many facets of relations between the Arab world and the West. Colonial legacy We must, however, come back | Opinion |
Video background briefing by the NATO Spokesman16 Sep. 2005 the NATO Response Force can be used. Ministers, of course, discussed various options. Options which, of course, covered the spectrum. Some Ministers leaned towards a model where the NATO Response Force would be kept more in reserve for extreme contingencies | Opinion |
Gijs de Vries: EU counter-terrorism coordinator01 Jul. 2005 , the model of the European Union is bottom up. The central role in the fight against terrorism is with national authorities. The more they do to improve internal coordination in national governments, say between police forces, intelligence agencies | Opinion |
"Boosting NATO’s CBRN capabilities" by Christopher Bennett, Editor NATO review01 Jul. 2005 , Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Defence Battalion is both an effective solution to a capabilities shortfall and a model for future NATO transformation. NATO’s | Opinion |
Address by the Minister of Defence of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (ª) at the meeting of the EAPC09 Jun. 2005 persistently and patiently modeled its national defence reforms. The PARP Ministerial Guidance 2005 direct the Partners' defence reforms towards further enhancement of their interoperability and development of operational capabilities for participation | Opinion |
Report by DASG External Relations, PDD, at the working luncheon for all delegates at the EAPC Security Forum in Åre, Sweden25 May. 2005 there was sighted as a model in moving the standards process forward in Kosovo where each organisation was playing a part, destruction of small arms and ammunition, security sector reform, border management, these have been mentioned already, were referred | Opinion |
Panel 3 “Central Asia - Future Cooperation in the EAPC” - EAPC Security Forum25 May. 2005 that you see mostly on television is the secular internationalist cabal model. It is characterized by the presence of two and a half thousand NGOs, very strong United Nations presence, and the support functions; the grain distributions, the building | Opinion |