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Conference
NATO'S Role in the Changing Security
Environment in Europe
Vilnius, Lithuania 18-19 May, 2000
Vilnius Statement
We have gathered today in Vilnius to demonstrate our solidarity
and commitment to the creation of a Europe whole and free in an
alliance including the countries of Europe, the United States and
Canada as the foundation for stability and security in the 21st
century.
We subscribe to the fundamental and common values of the
Euro-Atlantic community, including a belief in individual liberty,
the free market and the rule of law. We not only share these
values but consider ourselves to have contributed to their
development in Europe over the centuries. Our desire to integrate
into the institutions of the Euro-Atlantic community emanates from
our readiness to assume our fair share of responsibility for the
common defense and to add our voice to the debate on our common
future. Having experienced the consequences of political
indifference towards the fate of others far too often in our own
history, we are committed to defend these values in order to
contribute to freedom and peace.
We recognize that security for Europe and North America lies in
maintaining a strong transatlantic alliance. Today, we reaffirm
our commitment to the completion of the historic project of a
Europe whole and free. In this regard, we welcome the
contributions of the newest members of the Alliance, Poland, the
Czech Republic, and Hungary as an important step in achieving this
vision. Their membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
has enhanced European stability and contributed significantly to
the military strength and political cohesion of NATO.
We are not only prepared for the responsibilities and burdens of
NATO membership today, but we are already coordinating our defense
structures and policies with the Alliance and contributing to NATO
political and military undertakings. Furthermore, we remain
committed to practical and political efforts to further improve
the specific qualifications of our countries, including
implementation of the Membership Action Plan. While each country
should be considered on its own merits, we believe that the
integration of each democracy will be a success for us all and the
integration of all our countries will be a success for Europe and
NATO.
We welcome the commitment by NATO Heads of State at the Washington
Summit that the transatlantic link remains as important for our
future as it has been in the past and that NATO will remain the
institution of choice when Europe and the United States decide to
act together. The Alliance remains the foundation of the
collective defense of its members and must be capable of
addressing both current and future threats to our common values
through crisis management.
We also welcome the commitment of the European Union to build a
Common European Security and Defense Policy that fulfills
Europe’s aspirations and strengthens the transatlantic link, and
we are ready to contribute to those efforts. We recognize that
NATO and the European Union are the two central foundations of the
Euro-Atlantic community and that we must pursue accession in both
institutions if we are to fully re-integrate our democracies into
the community we share. We recognize that these aspirations are
complementary, and we are committed to pursuing both objectives in
parallel.
We are determined to contribute to the efforts of the European
Union as well as to NATO missions. The stabilization,
reconstruction and integration of South-East Europe into the
European mainstream is in our common interest. Therefore, we
pledge our continued support for the efforts of the international
community to restore stability in the Western Balkans.
We are firmly convinced that the integration of our democracies
into NATO and the EU will facilitate the creation of a free,
prosperous and undivided Europe. Today, we reiterate our common
commitment to work together cooperatively to achieve this goal.
Our goal will not be reached until each of us, as well as other
European democracies sharing the values of the Euro- Atlantic
community and able to bear its common responsibilities, has been
fully integrated into these institutions. We call upon the member
states of NATO to fulfill the promise of the Washington Summit to
build a Europe whole and free. We call upon the member states at
the next NATO Summit in 2002 to invite our democracies to join
NATO.
May 19, 2000, Vilnius, Lithuania
For Bulgaria H.E. Mrs. Nadezhda Mihailova Minister of Foreign
Affairs
For Estonia H.E. Mr. Toomas Hendrik Ilves Minister of Foreign
Affairs
For Latvia H.E. Mr. Indulis Bçrziòð Minister of Foreign Affairs
For Lithuania H.E. Mr. Algirdas Saudargas Minister
of Foreign Affairs
For Romania H.E. Mr. Petre Roman Deputy Prime Minister, Minister
of Foreign Affairs
For Slovakia H.E. Mr. Eduard Kukan Minister of Foreign Affairs
For Slovenia H.E. Mr. Dimitrij Rupel Minister of Foreign Affairs
For Albania Mr. Xhufi Pellumb Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
For Macedonia Mr. Nikola Dimitrov Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs
Calendar of Events
| NOVEMBER 2001- MAY 2002 |
Chairmanship of Republic of Lithuania in the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe |
| JANUARY 2002 |
Spanish Presidency in the EU. |
| FEBRUARY
2002 |
Wehrkunde Conference, Germany. |
| MARCH
2002 |
V10 Foreign Ministers meeting, Bucharest, Romania; Parliamentary
elections in Denmark. |
| APRIL 2002 |
Review and
assessments of 3rd MAP cycle. |
| MAY 2002 |
Presidential
elections in France; NAC & EAPC Foreign ministers meeting,
Reykjavik, Iceland. |
| JUNE 2002 |
NAC (D) & EAPC (D); Parliamentary
elections in France. |
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