| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1992 - 156 páginas
...doctrine and it said that the Soviet military threat has disappeared and that the biggest risks now come "from the adverse consequences of instabilities that...by many countries in Central and Eastern Europe." That is now NATO doctrine, that the biggest risks now are from adverse consequences from instabilities... | |
| United States. Congress. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe - 1993 - 100 páginas
...analysis. What they said was that with the end of the Cold War, the real risks to allied security would arise from "the serious economic, social, and political...by many countries in Central and Eastern Europe." They have the right diagnosis, but they have no prescriptions to offer. Meeting just a couple of months... | |
| Richard Henry Ullman - 1996 - 240 páginas
...strategic concept." The danger the alliance faced was no longer "calculated aggression" from Moscow but "instabilities that may arise from the serious economic,...by many countries in central and eastern Europe." :q The final communiques for this meeting and the Oslo meeting of NATO foreign ministers the following... | |
| David Leyton-Brown - 354 páginas
...strategic balance in Europe. In addition, a new, broader definition of risk was adopted, which included 'serious economic, social and political difficulties,...faced by many countries in central and eastern Europe' (Globe and Mail, 8 November). Lastly, NATO invited nonSoviet WTO states, the USSR, and the Baltic states... | |
| James M. Goldgeier - 2010 - 244 páginas
...London the year before to remain relevant in a Europe no longer divided by the cold war. It noted, "Risks to Allied security are less likely to result...by many countries in Central and Eastern Europe." It spoke of the need for dialogue and cooperation with its former adversaries, and to ease concerns... | |
| Tariq Ali - 2000 - 454 páginas
...'risk' to the security of its members, according to a very extensive definition of possible 'risks': Risks to Allied security are less likely to result...countries in Central and Eastern Europe . . . The stability and peace of the countries on the southern periphery of Europe are important for the security... | |
| 556 páginas
...out-of-area operations. According to this concept, NATO must be capable of responding to instability arising from "the serious economic, social and political difficulties,...are faced by many countries in Central and Eastern Europe."39 In 1994 NATO affirmed this expanded orientation when it declared its "offer to support,... | |
| Ted Galen Carpenter - 2001 - 198 páginas
...from the adverse consequences of instabilities that may arise from the serious social and economic difficulties, including ethnic rivalries and territorial...are faced by many countries in central and eastern Europe.'55 The summiteers did not draw a direct, explicit link between these new security challenges... | |
| Joyce P. Kaufman - 2002 - 278 páginas
...outlines what were then identified as the potentially greatest risks to security. Specifically, it states, "Risks to Allied security are less likely to result...are faced by many countries in Central and Eastern Europe"27 (emphasis added). Given these changes, the Strategic Concept then outlined the main security... | |
| Michael Charles Pugh, Waheguru Pal Singh Sidhu - 2003 - 324 páginas
...Europe. This was reflected in NATO's "New Strategic Concept," approved in November 1991, which stated: Risks to Allied security are less likely to result...many countries in central and eastern Europe. [The resulting tensions could] lead to crises inimical to European stability and even to armed conflicts,... | |
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