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  • Guatemala Mal' 5, 1999 Belgium Brussels Discussed the Kosovo conflict with NATO officials Germany Frankfurt, Ramstein and Spangdahlem Air Force Bases, Bonn, Ingelhcim Addressed U.S. military personnel and md With Chancellor Schroeder. Lat~r met
  • to Europe to obtain support for a policy of lifting the UN anns embargo agailist Bosnia, and thus leveling the playing field in the conflict, and deploying NATO air strikes to support the Muslim forces in Bosnia. His efforts were unsuccessful. In the summer
  • of GATT Multilateral Trade negotiations concluded. On January I, 1995, the World Trade Organization (WTO) replaced GATT as a forum for promoting international commerce. January 10-11,1994; President Clinton attended a NATO Summit Meeting in Brusscis
  • during a private visit. January 30-31, 1994 Chancellor Helmut Koh! Germany Working visit. Fcbrunry 10-12, 1994 Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokav.a Japan Working visit. Fehruary 1]-15, Kazakhstan Official working visit. 1994 President Nursultan
  • on unlillate 1995, Bosnia would be ravaged by wur, 2 US/NATO OPERATIONS DURING THE BOSNI,\ CONFLICT (19~J2-1995) As the conflict developed. it quickly became apparent to the internalional community that extensive political and diplomatic efforts would
  • XI. Europe and the New Independent States Doc. /\'0. XI-J Descriptio" Dayton Pence Agreement Documents, Dayton) Ohio, November 21, 1995; 3 pr· Xl-2 NATO Press Release: The Alliance's Strategic Concept ap11rovcd by I-leads or Stale and Guvernment
  • ): In another "consular notification" case, Germany filed proceedings in March 1999 charging that tbe authorities in Arizona had failed to provide required notice to two brothers, both German nationals, in violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
  • .......................................................... " .. ,.." .............. 151 Enlargement, Adaptation, and Actions of the North Atlantic Treaty j Organization (NATO) ...................................................................... 153 The New Transatlantic Agenda: U.S.-EU Relations
  • . arms transfers went to NATO allies. other major friends such as Japan and the 34 Republic of Korea, and important friends and coalition partners such as Israel and Saudi Arahia. Regional Security The Department of State worked closely
  • Ole tho•• proposi1'l9 miracle lolution•.will ~. necelalry. Q Mr. Prelident, Germany raeently requested that the famous ~rt1cl. 'S of thaNATO Pact ,hould apply for the .ecuri ty f
  • of Commerce Frankfurt" Germany . " January 18; 1994 , , It is indeed a great pleasure to speak to you in the aftermath of a very important week in U.S. - European relations. President Clinton and the leaders of Europe have just concluded an important
  • . Founding Act ...........................••.• I). ~ew Strategic Concept for NATO........................ Chapter 7 81 84 88 89 Preparing for \Var in Cyberspace A. ELIGIBLE RECEiVER.................................... 93 Il. SOLAR SUNRISE
  • 1999 " I, " i I , August 11,: 1999 , 'i' 99-69 Out-of-Qycle Review Highlights Progress on Current Telecommunications Interconnection Arrat;lgements in Germany , August 23,; ~ 999 99-70 WTO Al1'pellate Body Confirms that India4 Import
  • and other stolen assets; a history of the origins of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization prcparc
  • benefit, and ultimately the rule of law: , 20f8 I . 81221004:22 PM http://www.ustr.gov/speechesibarshefskylbarshefsky_82.html - Collective security, reflected by the United Nations, NATO, the Rio, Treaty and our alliances with the Pacific democracies
  • . in response to the end of the Cold War, resource constraints, and terrorist threats, The reunification of Germany, the emergence of the newly independent states from the fonner Soviet Union (NIS), tile hreak-ur> of the Yugoslavian republics
  • on Human Rights and a series of later Conventions; and the collective security commitments of the United Nations, NATO arid our Pacific alliances -- they believed that open markets would give nations greater stakes in stability and prosperity beyond
  • helped create and develop the rules and institutions which have promoted peace and prosperity throughout the world: NATO, the United Nations, the Bretton Woods institutions, the GAIT and now the World Trade Organi:z:ation. And in the future
  • and Germany's has , 4 ,I •• 1 I declined 2 percent. • The United States is the largest, exporter in the wor~~, and no country is better . . positione:d for the enormous opportunities in the: growing global economy . ., After years of doubt and soul
  • operator effidency and expertise. " The IC also has expanded information sharc'1g with our allies. NATO for the first time received reportir,g on the proEferat:on of weapons of mass destruction. Tactical inteiligence also helped prOtect and guide
  • own people and its neighbors~ Together with the integration of Russia,this is an opportunity which means as much for the next ce:ntury as the return of Germany and Japan to the worl,d economy meant for the postw~era. Our trade policy will help us
  • : the United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human Righm; NATO and our Pacific alliances; the IMF and the World Bank; and the commitment to open trade under the rule oflaw embodied by the trading system known then as the GATT and now the WTO
  • prbnurily to allies und major coalition partners such as NATO member states and IsraeL U.S. Goals The policy issued by the President will serve the following goals: 1) To ensure that our military forces can continue to enjoy technological advantages over
  • don1t think that: there ever was a real difference between them. And' our' qovernment position is clear, and we'll keep trying to work for ,peace in Bosnia, We'll make our air forces available as part of the NATO strategy, as part of the UNPROFOR
  • and raise living standards; but to strengthen peace. Since then, their successors have added 112 new members to the 23 founding nations: first, Germany and Japan, thdn much of the developing world, and most recently the: series of countries in Europe
  • /OO TOE 12:22 VAX 202 647 7663 HGlsinkl. 30£3 STATE AC CAe • March 21, 1997 12/&100 1:34PM 1
  • ," Previous speeches have dealt with Asia, Latin. America. Europe. , North America, Japan; Germany, the Big Emerging Markets, China, India, Brazil, Argentina, the National Export Strategy, Trade and Technology, Tr~de and the Information Age, U.S. Trade Law
  • commercial officer for a nation of reactions {)of other countries. I have 150 mlllion people.: Other economic long thl}ught the State Department powers, such as Germany Aod Japan, needs an "America Desk." This ?evote .far more. personnel to promot­
  • and institutions ~at have served us well for nearly '. . six decades: I I .,., I. - Collective security, reflected by the United Nations, NATO and our'atliances with Japan, South Korea, and other Pacific tlernocracies.': : - Commitment to human rights
  • country that posed a threat to the national security of the United States. Coincident with the establishment of the U.S. export control regime was the establishment of a multilateral counterpart involving our NATO aHies. With a. great deal of critical
  • these findings. For example, Germany was able to increase substanti:dly ils average wage between 1985 .and }989 ut the same lime that tOWer wage Spain and Portugal were integrated Into the European Community. J1IEUE A liE STUJ)If~'i ON !J0711 sm!'s OF 7111
  • Subcommittee 1. concernld that the Ll.bon InltlatIYe, In liE project lal/olvlng safety training for Soviet deslgrutd nuclear poIer pllnts, has ldoquate ...11 buSiness partlc1patlon. _Sintt the project I. coordinated among up to 24 NATO and Europaan taa.unlty
  • steadily i)1creased sinc~ the policy was implemented, with 1,149 individuals dischargec;l in . 1998, up froml597 in 1994.10 Currently, the United States and Turkey are the only members oftl~e NATO alliance that still bar gay and lesbian individuals from
  • through FY: 1999, Congress passGd a $1.9 billion FY 1999 supplemental appropriation. In Spring 1999, the United States and its NATO allies conducted their successful ajr campaign to halt Serbian aggression in Kosovo. NATO also began refugee relief
  • thete's anything uniquely cultural about America that restricts that iri its application that can't .be tradsferred within the cultural . I context of Japan. We see it happening elsewhere, begrudgingly in Germany, to a degree in France, l aggressively
  • Saturday, July 1, through Tuesday, July 11, Under Secretary Gus Schumacher will attend bilateral meetings in Russia, Poland, Germany, and Italy. On Thursday, July 13, Under Secretary Shirley R. Watkins will conduct a National Food Stamp Conversation
  • customers in Canada, Singapore and Germany. A minorily-owned compnny which N-'Cnme profitable in its eighth month, IDS has succeedcd in a competitive marketplace by adhering to the strategy of producing and ticl_ivering quality products at (ompetilivc prices
  • defense Of consequence management capabilities. NATO Defense Group on Proliferation (DGP): Even before the QDR, the DCp'-lftmcnt bt:gan by working with Alncrica's long-standing allies in Europe and clcswhcrc to develop common approaches
  • Cum'cnlionol Armed Forces in Europe (CFE) The 1992 CFE Treaty had its first Review Conference in May 1996. It revised the Treaty's flank provisions to meet Russian and Ukrainian concerns, and mandated adapting the treaty to change it from a NATO~Warsaw Pact
  • ........ ,......... " .... " .. , B. NATO ~:ol.rgcOlent .....................•..........••••...... C. NA'fO-Russia Founding Act ..... ,••. ,', ....... " ..•. " .... D. New Strategic Concept for NATO........................ Chapter 7 Preparing for 'Varin Cyberspace 81 84 88
  • to regional and global problems, During her tenure, the Sccrctury paid the greatest attention to cementing the U.S. key relationships and harnessing them to constructive ends', Examples included enlarging NATO and adapting it to the challenges of the new
  • be told and retold and never forgotten. , ".,. Nothing makes the case more powerfully for why: the United States and our NATO allies are pursuing their mission in Kosoyo, and why we cannot give ~p until the evils perpetrated by Milosevic and his regime
  • Congress to pass a juvenile for its advice and Consent to make Hungary, crime biH that provides more prosecutors find Poland, and the. Czech Republic the newest probation officers, to crack dow'll on gangs members of NATO. for 50 years, NATO and guns
  • , democratic. and multi~elhnic Europe, no longer threatened by Soviet power, and the need to help the emerging, democratic nations under a stable NATO-Russian cooperative security arrangement. • American h1tcrests in East Timor were humanitarian
  • .. General Jones also served as Commander iri Chief.of the U.S. Air Forces in Europe. Concurrent with this duty, he was Commander of the Fourth Allied Tactical Air Force and led the way toward establishing the integrated air headquarters in NATO's Central
  • undennine NATO and KFOR, as it would call into question the credibility ofour commitments and could precipi!.te withdrawals by .other allies. Alliance unity defeated Milosevic last year. We should not sacrifice that now. As General Clark has noted in his
  • diplomo.cy through its integration into the policy process. Negotiations on such issues as NATO enlargement. Jraqi sanctions, and global climate change show Ihe value of being proactive in infonning and influencing foreign publics. NGOs, .and others
  • , assigned functional areas for the Joinl Spectrum Centcr include, but arc not limited to: • Serving as the DoD spectrum management focal point and authority for intemalional ([TU and NATO) and national potie),. planning, and oversight; • Overseeing
  • of the Cdd Was: inevitabJy has raised the question whether th~ international secwit~ and economic institutions key to sustaining the triumphant Western i&a1s and policies -- the North . . Atlantic Treaty Organiiation (NATO), the United Nations, the IMF
  • fundraiser and AFL-CIO meeting'. Brussels, Belgium The VICE PRESIDENT met with G-7 Telecommunications Ministers, the President of the EU, and NATO leaders. 3 March 1995 New Yorl" NY The VICE PRESIDENT toured the Community Empowemlcnt Zone. 5
  • this. where mest of the land I.!S prtvatcly owned. He nato that Congtess haa pJehty ot money. The Land and Water Consuvauon we Intend [0 show how a new FUnd ge.nmt"WJ. bundredll of ttUllioM of doJ.. u.nJ.t of the park system will lars annually through
  • also made an address at the NATO 50th Anniversary Commc11lorution, April 22. 1999 Front Royal, VA VICE PRESIDENT hiked the Dickey Ridge Scenic Troillo Ihe Dickey Ridge Visitors Cenler. After lunch the VICE PRESIDENT made remarks at an Earth Day
  • of national impOrtance. Most major democracies have national refe~enda, For example, in recent years, Italians have voted on divorce; Spain voted on membership in . 'NATO; and Austria and'Sweden voted o~.the use of.nuclear power. In.~he U,S" 43 states 3tlow
  • broadly and expansively, and to offer the baldest possible proposals to address them. You do not nead any advice from me about building a democratic peace. The basie elements Of yQUr leqaey--a ~ore open world economy, an expanded NATO,. intelliqe..nt
  • of these, provisions would have serious repe~cussions for our relationship with this important NATO ally. There are a number of other objectionable language provisions in the Senate version of the bill as presented below. The House bill either does not have a~y