Title | Document type |
"How global can NATO go?" - Video lecture by Jamie Shea, Deputy Assistant Secretary General for External Relations09 Mar. 2004 , in the Partnership for Peace. And those triple-nons, in addition to China, now include Japan, with which NATO conducts an annual high-level security dialogue, and Australia, which is coming here next week for its annual strategic session with the Alliance. We've had | Opinion |
"Building effective partnerships" by Christopher Bennett, editor of "NATO Review"01 Jul. 2003 -Atlantic area. Japan has attached considerable importance to its relations with the Alliance with the result that regular, biannual NATO-Japan security conferences have taken place since the early 1990s. Two NATO secretary generals — Manfred Wörner in 1991 | Opinion |
Press Conference by NATO Secretary General, Lord Robertson and Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov13 May. 2003 mean, first of all, such countries as South Korea, Japan, China and the Russian Federation. Also, previously, we’re in favour of a nuclear-free status of the Korean Peninsula and we have been in favour of the retuning of North Korea into all | 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 |
"A Transforming Alliance" - Speech by NATO Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, to the Cambridge Union Society03 Feb. 2003 countries with which we have informal contacts, such as China and Japan, Australia and New Zealand, India and Pakistan, South Korea and countries in South America. These transformed relationships, with other institutions | Opinion |
Missile Defence: A View from NATO An Address by Robert G. Bell, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Defense Support03 Jun. 2002 Japan in 1998 (excepting, of course, the members of the Rumsfeld Commission and some other like-minded analysts), and moved quickly to respond to this development, Europe is not yet convinced that the compelling evidence with regard to rogue - state long | Opinion |
"NATO And The Challenge Of Terrorism: Reflections On The Way Forward" Speech by NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson at The...07 Mar. 2002 these and various other elements together to a coherent whole. In closing, let me point to yet another lesson, not from the Cold War but from World War Two. Winston Churchill famously argued "In victory, magnanimity". We applied this lesson to Germany and Japan | Opinion |
Press Conference22 Nov. 2001 with the Russian Federation. Brodeur: This will be the last question. A gentleman, please, in the front. Q: Japan Broadcasting Corporation, NHK. In what occasion Russia can have -- (inaudible) -- could you tell me some concrete example? Robertson | Opinion |
Press Point08 May. 2001 also want to let you to know that the Deputy Secretary of State is currently in Asia -- Japan and Korea -- to also have consultations with our friends and allies. This close relationship with friends and allies, and the consultative process is extremely | Opinion |
Address05 Oct. 2000 , was helped on several occasions by Turkey, UK, Japan, France, Italy, Netherlands, Greece, Ukraine, and others. This is not even including the food, training and technical assistance in the agriculture, energy, and military sectors. The role of our friends | Opinion |