Title | Document type |
''Renewing the Transatlantic security community in the age of globalisation'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Central Military Club, Sofia, Bulgaria21 May. 2010 this transformation – we must accelerate it. When the Washington Treaty was signed, in April 1949, it created a new partnership between North America and Western Europe, with a pledge of mutual defence at its core. Yet common fear was not the main motivating | Opinion |
'NATO 2020: Assured Security; Dynamic Engagement' - Analysis and Recommendations of the Group of Experts on a New Strategic Concept for NATO17 May. 2010 supportive of international norms. The two primary sources of instability are longstanding -- the rivalry between India and Pakistan, and the dangerous government of the People’s Republic of North Korea (DPRK). The DPRK’s nuclear weapons programme warrants | Official text |
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea visits NATO11 May. 2010 From the event High resolution photos Video of the visit (natochannel.tv) Foreign Minister of the Republic of Korea addresses North Atlantic Council | Photo gallery |
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea visits the NATO Headquarters11 May. 2010 The Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea, Mr. Myung-Hwan Yu will visit the NATO Headquarters and meet the Secretary General, Mr. Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Minister Myung-Hwan Yu will also address the North Atlantic Council chaired | Pressrelease |
Foreign Minister of the Republic of Korea addresses North Atlantic Council11 May. 2010 . The Secretary General welcomed the Republic of Korea's important contribution to the Alliance's mission in Afghanistan. The Secretary General and Minister Yu also discussed regional security issues, and Minister Yu addressed the North Atlantic Council | News |
Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at Georgetown University22 Feb. 2010 vision. Right now, Iran and North Korea are looking in quite the opposite direction. And more and more countries are looking to acquire missiles. In the coming years, we might well see more fingers on more triggers. And so missile defence has become | Opinion |
Remarks of Madeleine K. Albright at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Moscow, Russia11 Feb. 2010 weapons andadvanced missile technology, particularly in North Korea and Iran. We worry about the activities of international networks that traffic illegally in guns, narcotics and human beings, and about the effects of climate change and lack of energy | Opinion |
NATO in the 21st Century: Towards Global Connectivity: Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Munich Security Conference08 Feb. 2010 mutated into a global franchise. Cyber attacks or energy cut-offs can seriously destabilise a country. Iran and North Korea have made the risks of nuclear proliferation very clear. Piracy has mutated, once again, into a major threat to international | 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 with those problems, for example, Iran's nuclear program, or North Korea's nuclear program or whatever, we have to deal with those issues through other means, for example, reference to the UN Security Council that in the case of Iran at the moment plans | 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 Nuclear Proliferation Treaty that gives us some guarantees that all of these new nuclear reactors around the world that people are foreseeing aren't simply going to allow more regimes, like Iran or North Korea, to process their own fuel, to enrich | Opinion |