A joint statement

Published: 6 July 2001 y., Friday
Foreign ministers of ten countries that aspire to NATO membership -- Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia -- adopted a joint statement in Tallinn on 2 July which urged the alliance to extend invitations at the Prague summit in 2002 to all prepared candidates regardless of geography and history. The ministers praised the speech by U.S. President George W. Bush on European security in Warsaw last month and the positive impact of pro-enlargement statements by many European leaders. The participants agreed on the need for closer cooperation between the candidate countries in the run-up to the Prague summit. To that end, they will hold a summit conference in Sofia on 5 October, a prime minister meeting in Bucharest in the spring of 2002, and a high-level meeting in Riga in the summer of that year.
Šaltinis: rferl.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

George Bush would visit Ukraine

Brussels: Bush accepted Yuschenko's proposal and would visit Ukraine more »

EU-US summit opens

US President George W. Bush is attending a special summit between the US and the EU in Brussels today more »

Ukraine Participation in Russian Economic Zone in Doubt

Ukraine's new leaders have stopped short of rejecting membership in a new Moscow-led economic bloc of four ex-Soviet republics, but say the plan could hurt their European Union aspirations more »

Moscow shift: Ukraine, Georgia out of orbit

The Kremlin signaled a fundamental foreign policy shift today, acknowledging that two former Soviet republics, Ukraine and Georgia, are no longer part of the Russian orbit. more »

ECONOMIC INTERESTS

President of the self-proclaimed republic of Abkhazia Sergei Bagapsh believes that Sochi (March 6-7, 2003) Agreements must provide the basis for negotiations with Georgia more »

Multinational Black Sea Task Force

President Seeks Participation In Transdniester Talks, Multinational Black Sea Task Force more »

Latvia wants Russia to reject interstate declaration

Latvian Prime Minister Aigars Kalvitis said the Latvian Foreign Ministry has knowingly proposed a draft interstate declaration which cannot be accepted by Russia more »

NEW INITIATIVE OF KAZAKHSTAN'S PRESIDENT

Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev has proposed forming the Union of Central Asian States more »

Tbilisi Denies “Terrorists” Enter Russia from Georgia

Badri Bitsadze, the Commander of the Georgian Border Guard Department, denied allegations made by Russian Defense Minister Sergey Ivanov claiming that “terrorists” are entering Chechnya from Georgia more »

Saakashvili Hails MP Downsize

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili welcomed the decision of the Parliament to reduce the number of parliamentarians from the current 235 to 150, referring to it as “historic” more »