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NATO: Defence Minister's Meeting: Final Communique, 97-12-02
PRESS COMMUNIQUE M-NAC-D-2(97)149
For immediate release
2nd December 1997
MEETING OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL
IN DEFENCE MINISTERS SESSION HELD IN BRUSSELS
ON 2ND DECEMBER 1997
FINAL COMMUNIQUE
- The North Atlantic Council met in Defence Ministers Session in Brussels
on 2nd December 1997.
- At their Summit Meeting in Madrid on 8th-9th July, our Heads of State
and Government took key steps to shape the new NATO to meet the challenges
of the 21st century. They brought the different strands of NATO's ongoing
adaptation together, responding to the profound changes in the evolving
security environment, and gave far-reaching directions for future work.
They reaffirmed the Alliance's commitment to the core function of
collective defence, to strengthening the indispensable transatlantic link,
to developing the European Security and Defence Identity within the
Alliance and, in light of the new security challenges facing the Alliance,
underlined the importance of ensuring the Alliance's military effectiveness
for the full range of its missions. They gave their full endorsement to
the decisions taken at this Spring's Ministerial meetings designed to
reflect the movement towards greater integration and cooperation in Europe,
including in the security and defence fields.
- We reviewed today the implementation of the Summit decisions in the
defence field and noted with satisfaction the progress achieved since the
Summit. Substantial progress has been achieved on the Long Term Study and
an agreement has been reached on a new command structure as a whole, and in
particular on the type, number and location of Headquarters. The accession
negotiations with the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland have been
successfully concluded. The first steps in implementing the NATO-Russia
Founding Act as well as the NATO-Ukraine Charter have been taken. Progress
in implementing the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council has been achieved. As
Defence Ministers we will continue to play our full part in shaping the new
European security structure to which the Madrid Summit made such a
fundamental contribution.
- We reviewed the ongoing operations by the NATO-led Stabilization Force
(SFOR) in Bosnia and Herzegovina. We welcomed the active approach being
taken by SFOR to help accelerate the implementation of the Peace Agreement
in accordance with the Sintra Declaration and Council decisions. This has
included operations to bring the Republika Srpska Specialist Police into
compliance with Annex 1A of the Peace Agreement, and to support the High
Representative's decision to suspend the broadcasting of programmes that
were in persistent and blatant contravention of the Peace Agreement. SFOR
also played an essential role in facilitating the peaceful conduct of the
municipal elections in September and the Republika Srpska assembly
elections in November which were both carried out under the OSCE's
supervision. SFOR also continued support for IPTF, for the International
Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia, and for a safe and secure
environment that facilitates a return of refugees. We expressed our warmest
thanks to the men and women of SFOR for their outstanding performance.
- Despite the progress already achieved, much remains to be done to
consolidate the peace before we can be confident that it is irreversible.
Our countries are committed to supporting the maintenance and further
strengthening of peace, stability and democracy in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
We remain determined to support those who are committed to the Peace
Agreement and to oppose those who seek to obstruct the peace process. We
call on the parties to the Peace Agreement to live up fully to their
obligations, including full cooperation in the transfer of persons indicted
for war crimes to the International Criminal Tribunal in The Hague. We
welcome progress with regard to confidence building measures and arms
control as covered in articles 2 and 4 of Annex 1B of the Peace Agreement.
We also attach great importance to further progress in this field. We look
forward to next week's Ministerial meeting of the Peace Implementation
Council in Bonn, which should give further impetus to the peace process.
- Our Heads of State and Government have declared that the Alliance has a
commitment to promoting stability in the region. NATO is now in the
process of conducting the twelve-month review of SFOR operations, on the
basis of advice from the NATO Military Authorities and in consultation with
the non-NATO contributing countries. With regard to the final six months
of SFOR's mission, we confirmed that the force would continue its firm and
even-handed approach to implementing its mandate and supporting civil
implementation. With this in mind, we consider that SFOR should continue
at its present force levels, subject to prudent adjustments, until
otherwise directed. On this basis, we invited the Council in Permanent
Session to consult the non-NATO contributors before the meeting of Foreign
Ministers on 16th December. Looking ahead, we confirmed the Alliance's
long-term interest in stability and a secure environment in Bosnia and
Herzegovina to allow the Peace Agreement to be further implemented. We
asked the Council in Permanent Session to provide politico-military
guidance to the NATO Military Authorities to develop without commitment a
full range of distinct options identifying potential tasks and necessary
associated forces for a future NATO-led military presence in Bosnia and
Herzegovina following the end of SFOR's mandate. This should be taken
forward in the light of the Peace Implementation Conference in Bonn on 9th
and 10th December and the decisions of Foreign Ministers in the North
Atlantic Council on 16th December. We have also endorsed an initial set of
security cooperation activities with Bosnia and Herzegovina, including both
entities and all three parties. These activities are to be coordinated
through the Bosnian Presidency's Standing Committee on Military Matters
(SCMM) with the aim of promoting confidence and cooperation among the
Bosnian armed forces and encouraging the development of democratic
practices and central defence mechanisms such as the SCMM.
- We welcomed the successful conclusion of accession talks with the Czech
Republic, Hungary and Poland and look forward to the signing of the
Protocols of Accession at the forthcoming meeting of Foreign Ministers. We
reviewed the significant steps that have already been taken to assist the
invited nations to prepare for their future military roles and obligations
as Alliance members. In particular the defence planning work done within
the Alliance, building on the full information provided by the three
invited countries through their replies to NATO's Defence Planning
Questionnaire, has created a solid foundation for the development of Target
Force Goals which will constitute a major step towards defining in detail
the military contributions which the future members will make to the
Alliance on accession. We stressed the importance of effectively assisting
invited countries in preparing for membership and welcomed the proposal to
develop, using PfP tools and mechanisms, a cooperation programme with the
invited countries, which is comprehensive in nature and ensures
transparency between multilateral and bilateral assistance programmes.
- At their meeting in Madrid, Allied Heads of State and Government noted
that admitting new members will have resource implications for the
Alliance. They directed the Council in Permanent Session to bring to an
early conclusion the concrete analysis of the resource implications of the
forthcoming enlargement, drawing on the continuing work on military
implications. We took note of a report on the resource implications of the
accession of the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland to the Alliance, which
has been prepared by the competent bodies of the Alliance on the basis of a
substantial analysis by the NATO Military Authorities. We noted that the
invitees plan to increase significantly their defence spending and to
contribute appropriately to the Alliance's commonly-funded budgets. The
report concludes that the available and planned military forces and their
capabilities of the current Allies and the three invitees are sufficient to
ensure fully the collective defence of all members of the enlarged Alliance
in the present and foreseeable security environment and that the Czech
Republic, Hungary and Poland will also make valuable contributions to the
Alliance's ability to perform the full range of its missions. It provides
an initial assessment of those costs which would be eligible for common
funding, amounting to the equivalent of about 1.5 billion US dollars over a
period of 10 years, of which 1.3 billion US dollars would be for the
Security Investment Programme. The impact of these costs on the commonly
funded budgets of the Alliance will be assessed in a further report on the
Alliance's medium-term resource plan which will be presented to us at our
Spring meeting. We recognise in this context the important role which the
military common-funded programmes will play in integrating the new
members. Overall, the analysis of the resource implications of the
accession of the three new members has justified the confidence of Heads of
State and Government that in the present and foreseeable security
environment in Europe, Alliance costs associated with the accession of the
three invitees will be manageable, and that the resources necessary to meet
these costs will be provided in accordance with our agreed procedures under
which each Ally bears its fair share.
- NATO enlargement is linked to and part of a comprehensive process which
comprises the following elements: broad cooperation with Partners within
the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council and the enhanced Partnership for
Peace Programme; a strong, stable and enduring partnership with Russia
based on the Founding Act on Mutual Relations, Cooperation and Security
between NATO and the Russian Federation, signed in Paris on 27th May 1997;
a distinctive Partnership with Ukraine, which was founded by means of the
Charter, signed in Madrid on 9th July 1997; and an enhanced Mediterranean
Dialogue. All these elements contribute to establishing the foundation of a
Euro-Atlantic area characterised by cooperative security and reliable
stability, and are supplemented by the work of the OSCE, in particular on a
"Common and Comprehensive Security Model for the 21st Century" in
accordance with the decision of the OSCE Lisbon Summit in 1996.
- We, as Defence Ministers, remain fully committed to the implementation
of the process of enlargement in the terms set up by paragraph 8 of the
Madrid Declaration on Euro-Atlantic Security and Cooperation, in which the
Heads of State and Government of the member countries of the North Atlantic
Alliance clearly reaffirmed that NATO remains open to new members under
Article 10 of the North Atlantic Treaty. We look forward to the
continuation with interested Partners of the Alliance's intensified
dialogues, for which modalities have been agreed and which will cover the
full range of political, military, financial and security issues related to
membership.
- We noted with appreciation the report by the Senior Political Committee
(Reinforced) on the implementation of the enhanced Partnership for Peace.
We welcomed the progress achieved so far, in particular decisions to
establish PfP Staff Elements at the strategic and regional levels of NATO's
military command structure, and have mandated a report for May 1998 on the
possibility of establishing them also at the sub-regional level. We also
welcomed proposals for the further development of the Planning and Review
Process (PARP) to introduce Ministerial Guidance and to develop as a matter
of priority Partnership Goals for interested Partner nations, establishing
international military posts for Partners at the Partnership Coordination
Cell, and the identification of the first PfP projects to be supported
under the NATO Security Investment Programme. We also welcome the Alliance
work now begun with Partners to develop a political-military framework for
NATO-led PfP operations. We fully support the consultations in the
framework of the EAPC on issues of regional cooperation. These initiatives
are cornerstones of the new Partnership and the keys to developing a more
operational Partnership in which Partners play a greater role in planning
and executing PfP activities, exercises and operations and participate in
the Alliance's new missions. We also reviewed with satisfaction the
efforts under PfP to assist Albania in restructuring its armed forces.
- Partnership for Peace has become a focal point for our efforts to
enhance practical cooperation between Alliance and Partner nations in the
security field. We look forward to our second meeting of the Euro-Atlantic
Partnership Council in Defence Minister session tomorrow in which we will
begin to fulfil our commitment to make the EAPC a substantial body that
engages Partners and enhances security consultations and practical
cooperation.
- We will play our full part as Defence Ministers in giving substance to
NATO's new partnership with the Russian Federation. We look forward to the
first meeting of the NATO-Russia Permanent Joint Council at the level of
Defence Ministers tomorrow. We noted with satisfaction that the work
programmes of the Council for this year and next year include a growing
number of political-military projects. In this respect we confirm our
strong wish to contribute to the work of the Council and to the
implementation of the political-military provisions of the Founding Act on
Mutual Relations, Cooperation and Security between NATO and the Russian
Federation. We attach particular importance to the development of an
Individual Partnership Programme with Russia in the framework of the
Partnership for Peace. We welcomed the appointment by the Russian
Federation of a military representative to NATO. The first meeting of the
Permanent Joint Military Committee in Chiefs of Defence Session on 4th
December will further enhance mutual understanding between NATO and the
Russian Federation on military issues. All of these valuable developments
will contribute to the spirit of shared purposes that has marked
NATO-Russian cooperation in IFOR and SFOR.
- We fully support the development of the political-military aspects of
the Charter on a Distinctive Partnership between NATO and Ukraine. This
process will be built on an intensified practical military cooperation
between NATO and Ukraine within the framework of the Partnership for Peace
and on participation within IFOR and SFOR. We support the establishment of
a Joint Working Group on Defence Reform which is expected to start its work
shortly.
- Security in the whole of Europe is closely linked with stability and
security in the Mediterranean. We therefore confirm our support for the
enhanced dialogue between NATO and six countries in the Mediterranean
region: Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco, and Tunisia. We
welcome the first meetings of these countries with the Mediterranean
Cooperation Group, which was established at the Madrid Summit to have
overall responsibility for the Mediterranean Dialogue. We look forward to
a progress report next year on the implementation of the first work
programme of the enhanced Mediterranean dialogue, as a basis on which to
build in order to strengthen further confidence-building and cooperation in
the region.
- We welcomed further progress on NATO's internal adaptation. Work
undertaken since the Summit has continued to focus on three main and linked
areas: the development of the Alliance's future command structure; the
implementation of the Combined Joint Task Force (CJTF) concept; and the
building of the European Security and Defence Identity (ESDI) within the
Alliance. We endorsed a comprehensive report on the various aspects of
this work.
- Substantial progress has been achieved on the Long Term Study and an
agreement has been reached on a new command structure as a whole, and in
particular on the type, number and location of Headquarters. The structure
will comprise two Strategic Commands (SC), one for the Atlantic and one for
Europe. SC Atlantic will comprise three Regional Commands (RC), RC West
(Norfolk), RC East (Northwood) and RC Southeast (Lisbon) as well as
STRIKFLTLANT and SUBACLANT, both based at Norfolk. In SC Europe, two RCs
are foreseen - RC North (Brunssum) and RC South (Naples). Two component
commands (CC) - CC Air (Ramstein) and CC Nav (Northwood) - will report to
RC North together with three Joint Sub-Regional Commands (JSRC) - JSRC
Centre (Heidelberg), JSRC Northeast (Karup) and JSRC North (Stavanger). RC
South will command two CCs - CC Air and CC Nav (both at Naples) - and four
JSRCs - JSRC Southeast (Izmir), JSRC SouthCentre (Larissa), JSRC South
(Verona) and JSRC SouthWest (Madrid). Taken together, this will represent
a reduction from 65 headquarters at present to 20 in the proposed new
command structure. We tasked the NATO Military Authorities to develop a
detailed plan, as proposed by the MC, for the transition to the new command
structure, for consideration and endorsement by Ministers next year.
- Once in place, the new command structure will enable the Alliance to
perform the whole range of its roles and missions more effectively and
flexibly while providing appropriate roles for all Allies participating and
strengthening the transatlantic link. In implementing it, we will ensure
that it is fully functional, militarily efficient and cost effective, and
will also take account of ESDI and CJTF requirements and, by this, enable
the Alliance, based on the concept of separable but not separate
capabilities, to provide European command arrangements able to prepare,
support, command and conduct operations under the political control and
strategic direction of the WEU. The new command structure will also
provide for participation of Partner countries and will facilitate the
integration of the future new members into the Alliance's military
structures.
- Allies welcomed the intention of Spain to join the new military
structure as soon as possible. Spain's full participation will enhance its
overall contribution to the security of the Alliance, help develop the
European Security and Defence Identity within NATO and strengthen the
transatlantic link.
- The implementation of the Combined Joint Task Force (CJTF) concept will
enhance the Alliance's ability to plan and conduct quickly and efficiently
a wide range of military operations. It will thus represent an important
source of flexibility in the capabilities available to NATO. In addition,
CJTFs will greatly contribute to building ESDI within the Alliance by
responding to the requirement to provide deployable headquarters for
WEU-led operations using NATO assets and capabilities. They will also
provide enhanced opportunities for the participation of non-NATO nations in
NATO-led operations. For these reasons we noted with satisfaction the
continuing successful implementation of the CJTF concept. We welcome the
holding of the first CJTF trial last month. The lessons learned from this
and subsequent trials, including in due course trials and exercises for
WEU-led CJTF operations, will be taken into account in the further
implementation of the concept.
- At their meetings in Berlin and Brussels in June 1996 NATO Foreign and
Defence Ministers resolved to build ESDI within the Alliance, based on the
concept of separable but not separate capabilities. We noted with
satisfaction the further progress achieved towards defining practical
arrangements for WEU-led operations making use of Alliance assets and
capabilities. This has included the detailed development of mechanisms for
the identification, release, monitoring and return or recall of NATO assets
and capabilities; arrangements designed to ensure close consultation
between NATO and WEU on, inter alia, the planning and conduct of WEU-led
operations involving the use of such assets and capabilities, including
measures for intensified sharing of information and intelligence in the
context of such operations; the provision from NATO's command structure of
headquarters elements and command positions to command and conduct WEU-led
operations; the development of an exercise programme designed to test
procedures for NATO support of a WEU-led operation, leading to a joint
NATO-WEU crisis management exercise planned for 2000, to be followed by a
CJTF exercise based on a WEU-led operation, taking into account decisions
on European command arrangements and the provision of NATO assets and
capabilities to the WEU; and the incorporation of requirements for WEU-led
operations into NATO's defence planning based, inter alia, on the WEU's
illustrative mission profiles.
- We reviewed ongoing work on modalities for the WEU's further
involvement in the Alliance's defence planning process on the basis of the
Alliance's revised defence planning procedures. This work is being carried
out in cooperation with the WEU. As ESDI within the Alliance is taking
shape, cooperation with the WEU is becoming increasingly close. We
therefore welcomed the steady strengthening of NATO-WEU working relations
as illustrated by regular joint Council meetings and also joint meetings of
subordinate bodies. We also welcomed the results of the WEU Ministerial
Council in Erfurt that aim at enhanced forms of cooperation between WEU and
NATO, supporting the process of translating the political directives
formulated by the respective Ministerial Councils into practical links
between both organisations leading in particular to arrangements for
WEU-led operations making use of Alliance assets and capabilities.
- We directed the Council in Permanent Session to pursue further work, as
required, on internal adaptation and to report to us at our next meeting.
- We reiterate the key importance of the principle of multinationality
throughout Alliance structures for Alliance solidarity and cohesion, the
conduct of Alliance missions and as a guard against renationalisation. In
this context, we welcomed the most recent agreements between Germany and
the Netherlands signed in October relating to the development and deeper
integration of the German-Netherlands Corps and the establishment by Italy
and Spain of the Spanish-Italian Amphibious Force (SIAF), both of which are
available to NATO and the WEU (SIAF is also available in the framework of
EUROMARFOR) to carry out both collective defence missions and peace support
operations.
- At their Summit in Madrid in July 1997, our Heads of State and
Government mandated an examination, and an update as necessary, of the
Alliance's Strategic Concept. Recognising that the security environment
has changed since 1991, this work will ensure that the Strategic Concept is
fully consistent with Europe's new security situation and challenges, and
will confirm our commitment to the core function of Alliance collective
defence and the indispensable transatlantic link. Today, we have endorsed
terms of reference for the examination, and updating as necessary, of the
Alliance Strategic Concept. We directed the Council in Permanent Session
to initiate work early in 1998 for presentation to Heads of State and
Government at their next Summit meeting in April 1999. We attach great
importance to this task and look forward to receiving a progress report at
our next meeting.
- NATO's continual effort to address the risks posed by the proliferation
of nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) weapons and their means of
delivery demonstrate the continuing adaptation of the Alliance to the new
security environment. In this context, the principal goal of the Alliance
and its members is to prevent proliferation from occurring, or, should it
occur, to reverse it through diplomatic means. We welcome progress achieved
with international disarmament and non-proliferation instruments and attach
utmost importance to their full implementation and rigorous
verification. We nevertheless recognize that proliferation, which at
present poses risks to the Alliance, can continue to occur despite our
preventive efforts and can pose a direct military threat to Allies'
populations, territory, and forces. We remain committed to continue
improving the Alliance defence posture against NBC weapons to which the
Senior Defence Group on Proliferation (DGP) is making an important
contribution within the framework of its mandate.
- The risks associated with proliferation are a key component of the
changed security environment since 1991 and we will ensure they are fully
reflected in our strategy and plans. We noted with concern recent and
ongoing proliferation developments that underline the necessity of dealing
with the evolving proliferation threat.
- We welcome the progress being made by the NATO Military Authorities to
implement the Alliance Policy Guidelines for Military Operations in an NBC
Weapons Environment, which will facilitate the adaptation of NATO's
operational doctrine, concepts, and plans and focus training and exercises
on the risks posed by NBC weapons and their means of delivery. The DGP
will undertake further consultations and cooperation with Partner nations
to address defence efforts against the risks posed by NBC weapons and their
means of delivery, and to examine probable areas for future cooperation.
- We also note the DGP's ongoing effort to undertake a comprehensive
analysis of progress the Alliance has made towards intensifying and
expanding NATO's defence efforts against proliferation risks since the 1994
Brussels Summit and look forward to receiving a report at our Spring
meeting.
- European security requires the widest cooperation and coordination
among participating States and European and transatlantic organisations.
Reiterating that the OSCE is particularly well suited as a forum to enhance
cooperation and interaction among such mutually reinforcing organisations
and institutions, we welcome the OSCE initiative on developing the Platform
for Cooperative Security within the framework of the Security Model for the
21st Century to strengthen non-hierarchical cooperation between security
institutions. NATO supports and has already contributed to this initiative
in cooperation with other security organisations.
- We welcomed progress achieved in the Joint Consultative Group (JCG)
towards adapting the CFE Treaty to the changing European security
environment so as to ensure continued stability throughout the Treaty's
Area of Application. As part of these negotiations, members of the
Alliance have provided information on intended overall reductions in
entitlements of Treaty Limited Equipment which they would be prepared to
take in the context of an adapted Treaty based on national and territorial
ceilings. We call on other States Parties to do likewise. The Alliance
remains committed to preserving the viability of the CFE Treaty as a
cornerstone of European security, and to ensuring that this adaptation
enhances the security of all States Parties. We encourage all States
Parties to work constructively towards the objective of an early conclusion
of the adaptation negotiations. Until the adapted Treaty enters into
force, implementation of the current CFE Treaty and continued respect of
its provisions must be ensured.
- In addition, we encourage ratification of the Open Skies Treaty by
those parties who have not done so to permit entry into force of the Treaty
at the earliest moment.
- We acknowledge the significance of the opening of the Convention on the
prohibition of the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of
anti-personnel mines and on their destruction for signature on 3rd December
1997 in Ottawa, Canada. The impact of this agreement on NATO will be fully
assessed in the months ahead. We will take the necessary action to ensure
that national obligations under the Convention are compatible with our
obligations under the North Atlantic Treaty. We welcome the efforts
pursued at the Conference on Disarmament to deal with the issue of
anti-personnel land mines and urge the Conference on Disarmament to
intensify its effort to bring about an international instrument adhered to
universally.
- We welcome the ratification of the Chemical Weapons Convention by the
Russian Federation which represents a major step in strengthening the
comprehensive, global, and verifiable ban on chemical weapons. We
congratulate the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons on
the successful commencement of its work. In order to promote the
non-proliferation of chemical weapons on a global basis, we call on all
states which have not yet acceded to the Chemical Weapons Convention to do
so at the earliest possible date.
- We welcome the outcome of the recent US-Russia consultations aimed at
furthering the disarmament process and look forward to the prompt
ratification of the START II Treaty by the Russian Federation. START II
will provide a major contribution to international security through
reducing deployed U.S. and Russian strategic nuclear warheads by 40 percent
and eliminating multiple-warhead ICBMs. Entry-into-force of START II will
also allow the beginning of negotiations on START III, which will further
reduce strategic nuclear forces, and for the first time address strategic
nuclear warhead stockpile measures. We urge Russia to honour its
commitments as stated by President Yeltsin in 1992 to substantially reduce
its tactical nuclear weapons stockpile.
- We recalled that our Heads of State and Government reaffirmed the
importance they attach to the arrangements in the Alliance for consultation
on threats of a wider nature, including those linked to illegal arms trade
and acts of terrorism, which affect Alliance security interests, and
stressed the need for the most effective cooperation possible, in
accordance with their respective national legislation, to prevent and
suppress this scourge.
- We approved a report concluding the first phase of a major study by our
Conference of National Armaments Directors (CNAD) on the future role of
NATO in the armaments field, which is intended to focus armaments
activities more sharply on key NATO military requirements and improved
interoperability. We look forward to the completion of the study in
November next year. We continue to attach great importance to CNAD work
aimed at fulfilling the very important requirement for a minimum essential
NATO-owned and operated core capability supplemented by interoperable
national assets. Noting the options considered to date, we welcome the
determination of our Armaments Directors to search intensively for fresh
concepts and acquisition options to meet the requirements for the complete
Alliance Ground Surveillance capability, giving due consideration to an air
segment made up of both a NATO-owned and operated capability and
interoperable national assets, and a NATO-owned open architecture ground
segment. We look forward to the results of their work being highlighted in
their annual report to our Spring 1998 meeting.
- We look forward to the revision by the NATO Air Defence Committee of
the Alliance Air Defence Programme. We also attach importance to the work
undertaken by the Committee for European Airspace Coordination, in
particular with respect to the interoperability of the Air Command and
Control System (ACCS) and the European civil aviation harmonisation
programme, with the ultimate goal of improving air safety throughout the
whole European airspace. We note that the CNAD recently contributed to
proposals for adapting the Alliance's future ACCS to perform, as required,
tactical missile defence roles, and we look forward to receiving the
recommendations of the NATO Air Command and Control Management Organisation
on this issue. We also look forward to receiving this Spring a detailed
plan identifying the steps, decision documents and resources necessary to
establish, within NATO, programmes for layered tactical ballistic missile
defences.
- We welcome the practical measures of defence cooperation with Partners
already taken by NATO's armaments community, including the gradual and
progressive opening up of armaments groups to Partner participation and
efforts to establish a defence industrial dialogue between the defence
industries of NATO member countries and those of our Partners.
- NATO's comprehensive adaptation will continue. The intensifying
preparations for the integration of the three invitees; the steady progress
achieved in adapting NATO's internal structures to ensure the Alliance's
military effectiveness, to preserve the transatlantic link and to build the
European Security and Defence Identity within the Alliance; the successful
outreach to Partners; the development of a strong, stable and enduring
partnership with Russia and a distinctive partnership with Ukraine; our
enhanced Mediterranean dialogue; our engagement in Bosnia and Herzegovina
-- all of these far-reaching endeavours testify to the undiminished
vitality of the Alliance as the linchpin of security and stability in the
Euro-Atlantic area.
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