Title | Document type |
Lord Robertson in Croatia and Hungary16 Mar. 2000 to Budapest the following day to meet with Hungarian Prime Minister Orbn and Socialist Party leader, Lszl Kovcs, and to attend a working session with South East European Prime Ministers. The informal meeting with Prime Ministers from Albania, Bulgaria | News |
NATO Secretary General to visit the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Albania17 Feb. 2000 Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Albania 17 Feb. 2000 - | Press Release (2000)013 013 Issued on 17 Feb. 2000 | Last updated: 03 Nov. 2008 17:12 | News |
Lord Robertson in the Balkans17 Feb. 2000 NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson, went to the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 1 and Albania on 17 and 18 February as part of his tour of Partner countries. He thanked both countries for their interest in NATO's Membership Action Plan | News |
Toward stability in the Balkans...20 Jan. 2000 The Bulgarian government invited Prime Ministers of countries neighbouring the Former Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) - Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (1) and Romania - to meet for informal discussions | News |
Peacekeeping and Conflict Prevention: What risks and threats in Geopolitics in the Future? Intervention13 Jan. 2000 the immediate neighbourhood. Preventive deployments in FYROM and exercises in Albania clearly demonstrated our determination not to allow the conflict to spread. Last March we also created a Consultative Forum with seven countries in the region. All these steps | Opinion |
NATO Y2K Role22 Dec. 1999 on assistance requests among EAPC countries; and in co-operation with the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs, co-ordinate offers of international assistance. The 45 EAPC member countries are: Albania, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan | News |
Austrian Declaration16 Dec. 1999 operations in the Balkans -first AFOR. the humanitarian operation in Albania and now KFOR. Austria opted to participate in both. Our expectations concerning the modalities of partner involvement were guided by the Political-Military framework for NATO-ted PfP | Opinion |
Intervention16 Dec. 1999 the most adequate and functional solution in putting an end to genocide in Kosova and I take this opportunity to thank all the Allied nations for their serious engagement in stopping this tragedy. During the conflict Albania aligned itself totally | Opinion |
Final Communiqué - Ministerial Meeting of the North Atlantic Council held at NATO Headquarters, Brussels, on 15 December 199915 Dec. 1999 appreciation for the ongoing efforts of Albania and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in supporting KFOR. We are grateful to NATO's Partners and other nations for the substantial contributions they are making to efforts to bring peace and stability | Official text |
Statement03 Dec. 1999 Mr. Chairman, Dear colleagues, Last spring events and, in particular, the Kosova Crisis demonstrated the indispensable role of NATO in protecting stability, freedom and prosperity within the Euro-Atlantic area. During those critical months Albania | Opinion |