Title | Document type |
"This Ain't Your Daddy's NATO” Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at a Conference on the Marshall Legacy: The ...12 Nov. 2003 and in the wider security policy community, who have taken the inheritance of past generations of Atlanticists, from George Marshall onward, and remodelled it for a new age. Believe it or not, the new NATO really does do you justice. (ª) Turkey recognises | Opinion |
How did NATO survive the Cold War? NATO's transformation after the Cold War from 1989 to the present Video lecture by Jamie...06 Nov. 2003 NATO's ability to respond. The decisive moment, in this respect, undoubtedly occurred in the 1980s, during the saga over the deployment of cruise and Pershing weapons, nuclear weapons, in Europe. This of course, today, in an age when nuclear weapons | Opinion |
Speech by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the 2003 NATO Science Partnership Prize Award Ceremony22 Oct. 2003 belief in the value of science partnership. Also because we are here today to award this special Prize to two very deserving scientists, Dr. Larichev and Dr. Otten. You all know that one of the real miracles of our modern age is medical imaging. Today | Opinion |
The Challenge of Rebuilding Societies after War Reflections by Mr Carl Bildt at the conference "The Challenge of Rebuilding ...16 Oct. 2003 incalculable destruction upon the aggressor, was the only game in town. Then, for some fleeing moments, we believed that we had entered into a new age of new harmony and new order. But instead of history coming to its end, we saw it coming back | Opinion |
All dressed up with somewhere to go: NATO and Out of Area Peace Operations Address by Gareth Evans, President of Internation...16 Oct. 2003 and where many of those men and boys who were killed in those ugly days unsuccessfully sought sanctuary. It was the hard crucible of the Balkans that brought NATO into the modern age, and it is the experience gleaned there that could usefully guide a broader | Opinion |
Remarks by Kris Janowski, Spokesman, UNHCR16 Oct. 2003 ' golden age of public diplomacy. Cynics would say that the outpouring of financial support for humanitarian involvement in the Balkans was a mere "fig leaf" masking lack of political or military action. Perhaps, but it was also a result of public diplomacy | Opinion |
"Jaap de Hoop Scheffer: Diplomatic long distance runner" - Profile by Robert van de Roer01 Oct. 2003 .” This is the attitude of the drilled diplomat he is. Now at the top of the diplomatic ladder, he clambered onto the bottom rung at an early age. Jakob Gijsbert de Hoop Scheffer was born in Amsterdam in 1948, the son of a Catholic mother and a father who converted | Opinion |
"The ties that bind" by Julian Lindley-French, director of European Security Policy at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy01 Jul. 2003 . It is remarkable how much appears to have changed in so little time. Indeed, a re-reading of December 2002’s EU-NATO Declaration on ESDP, the breakthrough agreement between the European Union and NATO, suggests that it was negotiated in a more genteel age. At one | Opinion |
Statement by Nikolay Svinarov, Minister of Defense of Bulgaria at the meeting of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council13 Jun. 2003 time in the last decade of the 20th century Europe witnessed wars the causes of which were typical for the Middle Ages – ethnic and religious contradictions. It is a very sad fact that even at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century | Opinion |
Remarks by Robert G. Bell, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Defence Investment03 Apr. 2003 Alliance Ground Surveillans (AGS)) is already well established. Indeed, the Chairman of the Military Committee, General Kujat, has repeatedly emphasized that he viewed such core NATO “enablers” as the “glue” that would hold the NRF together. This reflects | Opinion |