Title | Document type |
NATO and South-Eastern Europe Secretary General's Remarks at the Conference of the CeSPI/IAI-East West Institute on "Prospec...08 May. 2000 NATO and South-Eastern Europe Secretary | Opinion |
Secretary General's Farewell Speech to General Clark12 Apr. 2000 do: you succeeded. You led NATO's armed forces into the first major offensive military operation of its 50 year history. And you did so within the complex political and military framework of a 19 nation Alliance, and always under constant and intense | Opinion |
Why Markets Need NATO03 Apr. 2000 for its member nations for one day short of fifty-one years. Under NATO's protective umbrella, trade and commerce flourish -- and so do our common values. Some may argue that the end of the Cold War has changed the equation - that in today's world | Opinion |
NATO in the 21st Century: Challenges and Opportunities10 Mar. 2000 to NATO's efforts -- including those of Turkey, which contributes a mechanised battalion task force to KFOR. And despite the challenges we face in the short term, we will be patient. That is why those who regard incidents such as the flare-up in Mitrovica | Opinion |
Speech10 Feb. 2000 , and it continues to improve. There is no law of nature that would prevent us from achieving similar progress in Kosovo. Indeed, we have already seen real progress in just the few short months since the NATO-led peacekeeping force entered Kosovo. More than | Opinion |
"The Expanding Europe and its Relevance for both the British and the Germans" - Speech by02 Feb. 2000 of its history lie not in cultivating international abstinence, but in multinational engagement. This shift has been engineered with great political skill. And, as with unification, NATO has acted as the benign framework that made such a new role possible | Opinion |
"Security and Interdependence" Speech by Lord Robertson, NATO Secretary General to the French Institute For International Re...04 Nov. 1999 by Lord Robertson, NATO Secretary General to the French Institute For International Relations (IFRI) 04 Nov. 1999 | Last updated: 06 Nov. 2008 02:00 | Opinion |
Opening Remarks NATO-Japan Security Conference15 Oct. 1999 stand to benefit from sharing our experiences through a growing NATO-Japan dialogue. The last NATO-Japan conference was two years ago. Since then, much has happened. 1999 has been one of the most crucial years of NATO's history. In April, NATO leaders | Opinion |
Speech23 Sep. 1999 exceeded our highest expectations. So much so that making history has become an almost routine matter. Let me recall some of NATO's achievements: We have welcomed three new members, a development that ended Europe's Cold War lines of division | Opinion |
Speech by the Secretary General10 Sep. 1999 It is sometimes said that the Balkans produce more history than they can consume. NATO and many of you here today have participated in some of that history and it is useful to take a few moments to reflect on what we have experienced together and what lessons can | Opinion |