Title | Document type |
Press conference by US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, following the working lunch of the North Atlantic Council09 Feb. 2005 . The Europeans are floating this idea of technical consultations with the US and Japan to make sure that technologies which are sensitive are not transferred. Could that reassure you at all? Could that be the basis of an understanding? Rice: Well we are still | Opinion |
Press briefing by the NATO Senior Civilian Representative in Afghanistan and the Minister for Counter Narcotics of Afghanistan20 Jan. 2005 very senior representation from Afghanistan. We also have representatives from the United Nations here; the EU; the OSCE; Japan representing the G-8 as the lead nation for Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration; and the UK as the G-8 lead | Opinion |
Video interview with Habibullah Qaderi, Afghan Minister for Anti-Narcotics20 Jan. 2005 , Japan and that is the money we depend on. We have to do some development at work so that we stand on our own feet, and if we can achieve that I'm hundred percent sure that we'll be able to eradicate and see to it that no one | Opinion |
"Taking the transformation agenda forward" by Mark Joyce, Royal United Services Institute in London01 Jan. 2005 such as China, Japan and India. He has also encouraged a thorough review of NATO's relationships with the European Union and the United Nations against the background of the Alliance's new proactive posture. In language that would have been inconceivable | Opinion |
'NATO, the Mediterranean and the Middle East: The successor generation' - Keynote address by Deputy Secretary General, Alessandro Minuto Rizzo at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) Conference29 Nov. 2004 , Japan and Australia. But two decisions that have attracted greatest interest, and are the subject of this conference, were our decisions to enhance relations with our Mediterranean Dialogue partners and to launch the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative | Opinion |
Global NATO? Remarks by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Schefferat the Clingendael Institute29 Oct. 2004 , China and Japan, to name just some of the most obvious. And we must build new ties to the Broader Middle East, including to the countries of the Gulf region. Ladies and Gentlemen, Today's security threats are global in nature. Hence, a narrow | Opinion |
Address by Deputy Secretary General Ambassador Alessandro Minuto Rizzo at the Istituto Affari Internazionali in Rome, Italy08 Oct. 2004 with our Partners, especially those in the Caucasus and Central Asia. We continue to deepen our partnerships with Russia and with Ukraine. And we are strengthening our dialogue with countries as far away as China, Japan and Australia. But probably of most | Opinion |
Address by Deputy Secretary General Ambassador Alessandro Minuto Rizzo at the Istituto Affari Internazionali in Rome, Italy08 Oct. 2004 with our Partners, especially those in the Caucasus and Central Asia. We continue to deepen our partnerships with Russia and with Ukraine. And we are strengthening our dialogue with countries as far away as China, Japan and Australia. But probably of most | Opinion |
Lord Ashdown: Bosnian High Representative01 Oct. 2004 ? These extensive international powers certainly didn't do German democracy any harm. It's not unusual to have an international administration for an interim period in the aftermath of a conflict. This was the case in both Germany and Japan in the aftermath | Opinion |
"Examining the SFOR experience" by Gregory G. Johnson, USN (Ret.) commanded AFSOUTH01 Oct. 2004 movement and legislative changes of the 1960s. Moreover, Germany and Japan were both subjected to prolonged international attention after the Second World War before eventually emerging as political and economic powers constructed on a Western democratic | Opinion |