Title | Document type |
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 |
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 and the Greater Middle East. We have also deepened our ties to institutions that share our values, such as the European Union and the United Nations. And we've engaged with countries as distant as Australia, New Zealand, South Korea and Japan, in addition | Opinion |
Lecture 2 - Climate change - Dr Jamie Shea, Director of Policy Planning in the Private Office of the Secretary General15 Dec. 2009 as it is now, a lapsus – Russia today. I'll come back on it in a moment. Second is the “new kids on the block”, as I call them. India has about 100 warheads, according to calculations, Pakistan about 60, North Korea – anything from 6 to 12, Israel, which has | 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 as it is now, a lapsus – Russia today. I'll come back on it in a moment. Second is the “new kids on the block”, as I call them. India has about 100 warheads, according to calculations, Pakistan about 60, North Korea – anything from 6 to 12, Israel, which has | Opinion |
NATO launches lecture series on new security challenges04 Dec. 2009 in the case of Iran and North Korea. Is it, however, inevitable that we will have more nuclear powers in the world of the 21st century? Is it too late for the international community to prevent nuclear proliferation and, if so, how should they respond | News |
NATO launches lecture series on new security challenges04 Dec. 2009 in the case of Iran and North Korea. Is it, however, inevitable that we will have more nuclear powers in the world of the 21st century? Is it too late for the international community to prevent nuclear proliferation and, if so, how should they respond | News |
Speech by NATO Deputy Secretary General Claudio Bisogniero at the China Institute for International Studies, Beijing, China16 Nov. 2009 are the security challenges that compel us to work together? The first one that comes to mind is terrorism, which has evolved from a purely national concern into a truly global threat. Second, with the nuclear programmes of North Korea and Iran, the proliferation | Opinion |
“Staying secure”: NATO launches new lecture series29 Oct. 2009 ): "These days there is a lot of focus on the prospects for the proliferation of nuclear weapons, particularly in the case of Iran and North Korea. Is it, however, inevitable that we will have more nuclear powers in the world of the 21st century? Is it too late | News |
Speech by Prof. Dr. Rob de Wijk on NATO’s new Strategic Concept, MCCS Lisbon19 Sep. 2009 to the Sahel in Africa, across the Middle East, through central Asia to the archipelagos of south east Asia. Nor should wet forget the Taiwan issue and North Korea. In this zone weapons of mass destruction are proliferating, along with their means of delivery | Opinion |
''NATO and Russia: A New Beginning'' - Speech by NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen at the Carnegie Endowment, Brussels18 Sep. 2009 tipping point. If North Korea stays nuclear, and if Iran becomes nuclear, some of their neighbours might feel compelled to follow their example. Such a multi-nuclear world is not in NATO’s interest – and it’s definitely not in Russia’s interest either | Opinion |