Title | Document type |
Intervention by Ilir Meta, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Albania at the Meeting of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council04 Jun. 2003 of Partnership in dealing with them Intervention by Ilir Meta, Deputy Prime Ministerand Minister of Foreign Affairs of Albaniaat the Meeting of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Councilat the level of Ministers of Foreign Affairs | Opinion |
Address by Ilinka Mitreva, Minister of Foreign Affairs, of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ª at the EAPC Meeting04 Jun. 2003 to enhance the stability in the Balkans, and the Euro-Atlantic Area as a whole. I will take the Charter of Partnership that Macedonia, Albania and Croatia signed with the United States on May 2nd of this year, to illustrate past achievements and demonstrate | Opinion |
Final Communiqué - Ministerial meeting of the North Atlantic Council03 Jun. 2003 in May 2004. This round of enlargement will not be the last. NATO’s door remains open. We commend Albania, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Croatia for their continuing reform efforts and their pursuit of regional cooperation | Official text |
Opening statement by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson at the Meeting of the North Atlantic Council03 Jun. 2003 closer and more tailored cooperation among 46 countries from Albania to Uzbekistan. The strategic Partnership that we have with the European Union has been formalised in the groundbreaking Berlin Plus arrangements and applied in the first EU military | Opinion |
Fifth anniversary of the Euro-Atlantic Disaster Response Coordination Centre03 Jun. 2003 , a humanitarian crisis in South-eastern Europe called for the attention of the international community. The EADRCC was tasked to deal with the consequences of the refugee flow from Kosovo into Albania and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ª in the spring | News |
Landmine project closing ceremony in Ukraine27 May. 2003 the destruction of small arms, light weapons and their munitions. The policy provides a framework for the development of initiatives on a project-by-project basis. Projects in Albania, Moldova and Ukraine have already been established under this policy umbrella | News |
Comments by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertsonon the Policy Recommendations adopted by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly a...16 May. 2003 will remain open to European democracies willing and able to assume the responsibilities and obligations of membership, in accordance with Art 10 of the Washington Treaty. The invitees from Prague will not be the last. NATO will continue to help Albania | Opinion |
"The road to Kabul" by Diego A. Ruiz Palmer, Planning Section in NATO's new Operations Division01 Apr. 2003 . Contributions remained relatively stable. Belgium and Portugal ceased their participation because of competing commitments to NATO-led operations in the Balkans, but five additional Partner nations joined the force: Albania, Azerbaijan, Ireland, Lithuania | Opinion |
"Rebuilding relationships" by Sir Timothy Garden, Centre for Defence Studies, King's College London01 Apr. 2003 Afghanistan, Angola, Albania, Australia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania, Marshall Islands | Opinion |
"Looking forward to a Balkan Big MAC" - Nano Ruzin, Macedonia's ambassador to NATO01 Apr. 2003 , Macedonia aspires to joining the Alliance, together with Albania and Croatia, at its next summit, which after Prague's Big Bang could be a Balkan Big MAC. Macedonia's brush with disaster has been a sobering experience, shattering the casual optimism | Opinion |