Title | Document type |
NATO-Private Sector Dialogues focus on NATO 2030 initiative02 Jun. 2021 to AI, emerging technologies like hypersonic weapons, quantum and nanotechnologies and autonomous systems were also on the agenda. Participants also discussed the vital importance of cooperation between NATO and the private sector to achieve NATO | News |
Conversation with NATO Deputy Secretary General Mircea Geoană at the Defence Disrupted conference19 May. 2021 citizens, not only young ones, but mainly the young ones, are also looking with concern to issues that could be: autonomous weapon systems, the use of AI and big data into some applications that could also be seen as deviating from our moral compass, if you | |
Speech by NATO Deputy Secretary General Mircea Geoană in the Spring Meeting of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly17 May. 2021 in 21st century, namely the development of lethal autonomous weapons. Such systems are gradually becoming central to contemporarily military strategy, especially thanks to the leaps of the AI field. Yet they create a moral hazard by incentivising | Opinion |
Discussion with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at the Council on Foreign Relations' "Morse Lecture" series12 Mar. 2021 and then more assertive Russia which we have seen over the last years. And since 2014, not least because of the Russian behavior, not only in Ukraine, Crimea, but also elsewhere, and also the deployment of new novel weapon systems, the violation of the INF | Opinion |
Conversation between NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Rose Gottemoeller, Payne Distinguished Lecturer at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), Stanford University09 Mar. 2021 and disruptive technologies with enormous potential, both in a constructive but also in a destructive way. Second, I strongly believe that new and disruptive technologies like artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, big data, biotech, facial recognition | Opinion |
NATO: keeping Europe safe in an uncertain world - Speech by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at the College of Europe in Bruges04 Mar. 2021 military capabilities, new nuclear weapons, long range missiles, intercontinental missiles. Just over the last five years, they have deployed 80 new battleships, which is actually the same amount of naval capabilities as the total navy of the United Kingdom | Opinion |
"NATO2030: future-proofing the Alliance" - Remarks by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg at the Munich Security Conference 2021 (online event)19 Feb. 2021 in more. We need also to make sure that we maintain our technological edge. So anything we can do on innovation, on understand the full impact of artificial intelligence, quantum computing, autonomous weapon systems for our security is of course also about | Opinion |
Online press conference by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg following the first day of the meetings of NATO Defence Ministers17 Feb. 2021 technologies as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, autonomous systems, facial recognition, all of that will reshape the nature of warfare fundamentally. We need to make sure that we keep the technological edge which has served NATO so well for so many | Opinion |
Press conference by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg ahead of the meetings of NATO Defence Ministers on 17 and 18 February at NATO Headquarters15 Feb. 2021 to the NATO Mission in Afghanistan. And our priority remains to prevent Afghanistan again becoming a safe haven for international terrorists. But, of course, as we stay in Afghanistan, we also realise that one of the best weapons we have in the fight | Opinion |
NATO 2030 Young Leaders’ recommendations and conversation with the Secretary General04 Feb. 2021 intelligence, facial recognition, autonomous weapons systems, quantum computing and all of that combined, it’s not only changing our civilian societies, but it’s also fundamentally changing the way conflicts will be fought in the future. And, therefore, NATO | Opinion |