The Estonian government on 14 November approved the country's security policy principles.
Published:
17 November 2000 y., Friday
The Estonian government on 14 November approved the country's security policy principles. NATO had earlier recommended the approval of such a document. In its final form, the document states that Estonia does not foresee any direct military threat in the near future but notes that organized crime, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and possible environmental disasters are possible threats to state security.
Other non-military risks include mass migration caused by ethnic or economic disasters, international terrorism, and trade with drugs and weapons. Foreign Minister Toomas Hendrik Ilves noted that the participation of the Ministries of the Environment, Social Affairs, Economics, and Interior Affairs in preparing the document, together with the Defense Ministry, indicates that security is not solely a military issue.
Šaltinis:
ETA
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The apparent winner of Ukraine's presidential run-off election, Viktor Yushchenko, said Tuesday the struggle to bring democracy to the country is not over and urged his supporters to renew a government blockade
more »
The Central Election Commission announced in Kyiv that opposition candidate Viktor Yuschenko was the official winner in Ukraine's repeat presidential vote on 26 December
more »
Iran wants to develop military cooperation with neighboring Azerbaijan, Iranian Defense Minister Ali Shamkhani said after meeting his Azeri counterpart
more »
The European Union has hailed the preliminary results of the general elections in Ukraine
more »
Ukraine opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has claimed victory in the re-run of the presidential election
more »
The European commission expects the EU's 25 member governments to agree on a significant loosening of the controversial stability and growth pact by spring to kickstart faltering economic growth and create more jobs in the eurozone
more »
The Russian-German summit consultations have resulted in important intergovernmental agreements and commercial contracts signed
more »
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signalled a readiness to discuss EU involvement to ease the situation in war-torn Chechnya
more »
UKRAINE'S presidential rivals launched a live nationally-televised debate in the capital Kiev today
more »
Hungary became the second country to ratify the European Union`s constitution after parliament overwhelmingly voted Tuesday to back the text
more »