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<title>Center for Strategic Decision Research, Peter Struck, Michele Alliot-Marie, General George Joulwan, SACEUR, General James L. Jones, SHAPE, NATO, EU, BDLI, ILA, EADS, Northrop Grumman, Under Secretary Michael Wynne, Assistant Secretary Linton Wells, Ambassador William Burns, NATO Military Committee Chairman General Harald Kujat, General Dynamics, Boeing, Global Security Terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan, Rainer Hertrich, David Stafford</title>
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        <td width="66" height="68"><p><img src="../2004book/logo-kevin-web.jpg" width="60" height="66"></p>        </td>
        <td width="538"><div align="center"><span class="style5">22nd International Workshop on Global Security<br>
<em>Chantilly/Paris, 10-12 June 2005 </em><br>
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      <p align="center" class="style17"><strong>Table of Contents</strong></p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="preface.htm">Preface</a></span></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 1 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><a href="alliotmarie.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (English version) </a><span class="style217"><strong></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="alliotmarie-french.htm">French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie (French version) </a><a href="reid.htm">UK Defense Minister John Reid</a></strong></span><span class="style217"><strong><a href="graham.htm">Canadian Defense Minister Bill Graham </a></strong></span><span class="style219"><a href="weissingerbaylon.htm">Workshop Chairman Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="liska.htm">Slovak Defense Minister Juraj Liska </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="erjavec.htm">Slovenian Defense Minister Karl Erjavec </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="svinarov.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Nikolay Svinarov </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="kujat.htm">NATO Military Committee Chair Gen Harald Kujat </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="koenig.htm">Acting US Ambassador to NATO John Koenig </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schuwirth.htm">SHAPE Chief of Staff Gen Rainer Schuwirth </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="back.htm">Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum Cmdr Gen Gerhard Back </a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 2 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"><a href="perrindebrichambaut.htm">French MOD Dir for Strat Affairs Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="dipaola.htm">Italian Chief of Defense Adm Giampaolo Di Paola </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="naumann.htm">fmr German Chief of Defense Gen  Klaus Naumann </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="perruche.htm">EU Military Staff Director Gen Jean-Paul Perruche </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="klein.htm">US Assist to Secretary of Defense Dale Klein </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="gergorin.htm">EADS Exec Vice President Jean-Louis Gergorin </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="george.htm">UK Parliament Member Bruce George </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="ranque.htm">Thales Chairman &amp; CEO Denis Ranque</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="tarasyuk.htm">Ukranian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="fasslabend.htm">Austrian Natl Assembly Member Minister Werner Fasslabend</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="pickering.htm">Boeing Sr Vice President Amb Thomas Pickering</a></span><a href="rooseveltinstitution.htm">Roosevelt Institution </a></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 3 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="auroy.htm">French MOD DGA Force Systems &amp; Cooperation Director Patrick Auroy </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lind.htm">Swedish Natl Armaments Director Jan-Olof Lind </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="weise.htm">German Armaments Dir Hans-Heinrich Weise </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="volkman.htm">US Under Secretary of Defense Office Intl Coop Director Alfred Volkman </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="stanhope.htm">Dep Supreme Allied Cmdr Transformation Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="lahoud.htm">MBDA President &amp; CEO Marwan Lahoud </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="courtot.htm">SAFRAN Sr Vice President Francois Courtot </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="bertolone.htm">Alenia Aeronautica CEO Giovanni Bertolone </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="harris.htm">Lockheed Martin President Scott Harris </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="schneider.htm">Northrop Grumman President Kent Schneider </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="wells.htm">US Assist Secretary of Defense Linton Wells </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="vice.htm">Northrop Grumman Vice President Thomas Vice</a></span></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17">Part 4 </p>
      <p align="left" class="style17"><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="novotny.htm">Czech Ambassador to India Jaromir Novotny </a></span><span class="style219"><a href="rinkevics.htm">Latvian MOD State Secretary Edgars Rinkevics</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="plangu.htm">Romanian MOD State Secretary for Policy Ion Mircea Plangu </a></span><span class="style219"> </span><span class="style219"><a href="kouts.htm">Estonian Defense Forces Cmdr Adm Tarmo Kouts </a></span><br>
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        <h1 align="center"><span class="style20"><strong>The North Atlantic Alliance and Its Security Strategy: <br>
          Go Where It Is Needed<br>
          <br>
        </strong></span></h1>
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              <td width="78"> <em><img width="75" height="91" src="kujat_clip_image002.jpg"></em> </td>
              <td>&nbsp;</td>
              <td width="321"><div align="center"><span class="style29">General Harald Kujat<br>
  Chairman of the NATO Military Committee</span></div></td>
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        <p align="left" class="style21">I could not have hoped for a finer  public event to close my mandate as Chairman of the NATO Military Committee,  nor could I have hoped for such an excellent audience to convey what will be my  parting shot, my last message in an official capacity. Before I begin I would  like to say that while I am ending my much-enjoyed term as chairman I am  confident of the Military Committee&rsquo;s future.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30">SUPPORTING THE TRANSATLANTIC LINK&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">The key question of this  workshop is, &ldquo;How should we respond to the present challenges?&rdquo; In my view,  because the risks know no boundaries and are as fluid as sand through your  fingers, dealing with them requires innovation, creativity, and a strong desire  to take the fight to the source to protect our societies. Furthermore, I  believe that no nation can afford to operate in a vacuum. Because of the  elusiveness of the risks, partnerships, cooperation, and alliances are the  secrets to a successful security strategy.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">In 2004, when I addressed the  workshop in Berlin,  I spoke about what NATO had been doing for the past few years, where we were  going, and, more important, what our purpose was. I also discussed the  transatlantic link, which, as far as NATO is concerned, is an absolutely  fundamental pillar of our security strategy. Defense-industrial cooperation is  a critical enabler of that link. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Notwithstanding the ripple  effects on transatlantic relations caused by the debate on support to Turkey on the eve of coalition intervention in Iraq in 2003, NATO remains the United States&rsquo;  preferred security partner. If you stop for a minute and make a cold,  fact-based, calculation of which countries have both the interest and the  capabilities to help maintain security on a global scale, the answer is found  around the table at NATO Headquarters.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">While the capabilities gap  between the United States  and the non-American Allies is very real, some nations, such as France, are  leaders in deploying assets on the ground. Indeed, France remains one of the most important contributors to NATO  operations. In Kosovo, for example, where the situation is relatively calm but  unstable, 2,300 French soldiers represent 17% of Alliance  contributors, third behind Italy  and Germany.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">The development of a strong  &ldquo;Europe de la D&eacute;fense,&rdquo; with initiatives such as the European Union&rsquo;s Battle  Groups concept, will indirectly strengthen NATO&rsquo;s capabilities as well as  benefit the transatlantic link, complementing both while achieving unity of  purpose. Perhaps a scheme to allow the land Battle Groups to train with the  NATO Response Force would be a good way to reinforce this complementary  approach. We have tried to promote such an approach because nations have only  one set of forces, and they can be assigned to NATO or the European Union but  not both at the same time.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Within NATO we have also  taken steps to sustain the transatlantic link. For example, we have taken  measures to accelerate the political-military decision-making process by  providing more transparency earlier in the process. The Alliance&rsquo;s chiefs of defense are intimately  woven into this course of action and are the key to success. The Military  Committee is the first place where NATO&rsquo;s command structure will face the  litmus test of the nations&rsquo; collective and consensual sovereignty.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30">IMPROVING NATO OPERATIONS&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Much has been said in the  past year about increasing the usability of forces for NATO operations. I would  add that we must also focus on increasing the availability of forces. Allies  have told us time and again that, in this fluid security environment in which  nations are very often engaged outside the NATO framework, they want to achieve  greater operations predictability. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Of course, clear political  guidance is vital for the work of the NATO military authorities and for the  delivery of thorough and timely military advice for speedy decision-making in  council. But political guidance and decision making are only two parts of the  process needed to achieve a higher degree of predictability, and they too often  risk remaining only words if they are not followed by concrete implementation  and commitments on the ground. Too frequently, force generation has been  pointed to as the culprit in delivering forces and capabilities once decisions  have been made. But we know that the problem is much more complex: It has its  roots in outdated delivery processes for capabilities and funding mechanisms as  well as in a lack of national political will and commitment that is, in most  cases, a product of limited financial resources.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">The military has an important  role to play in these processes if we are to treat the &ldquo;illness&rdquo; rather than  its most visible symptoms. This is why the Military Committee started its work  in autumn of 2004 when the chiefs of defense agreed on a comprehensive approach  to improving NATO&rsquo;s ability to conduct military operations. The key principles  and objectives of that approach, which are guiding the Committee&rsquo;s work  reviewing intelligence, logistics and resource planning, force designation,  force activation, and deployment procedures, are:&nbsp; </p>
        <ul type="disc">
          <li class="style21">First, to provide nations, early in the       process and before a decision is made, with more visibility, transparency,       and predictability on current and future commitments to determine what is       available&nbsp; </li>
          <li class="style21">Second, to improve our military preparedness by       elaborating generic plans based on realistic situations that are       frequently reassessed on the basis of mid-term actionable intelligence&nbsp; </li>
          <li class="style21">Third, to propose ways to use more common and       multinational funding to address at least some of the most urgent       capabilities shortfalls.&nbsp;</li>
        </ul>
        <p align="center" class="style30">THE NATO RESPONSE FORCE&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">The NATO Response Force is at  the center of this work and process. It provides the rationale, the  requirement, and the catalyst for transforming the way we do business. But a  great deal of work remains to be done if we want the NRF to reach its final  operational capability in 2006. The Military Committee has always put the NRF  at the top of its priorities list and the chiefs of defense recently gave their  guidance for further Military Committee work to implement the NRF. <strong>&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">I would like to add to our  priorities list the issue of funding. The need to change our approach to  funding operations and the NRF is more than urgent. The current mechanism is no  longer relevant, nor is it equitable or suitable for the NRF. It has severely  impacted nations&rsquo; willingness to contribute to NRF rotations and to the  development of the critical capabilities we need if we want the Force to  accomplish the missions for which it was established.&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="center" class="style30">A MULTINATIONAL DEFENSE-INDUSTRIAL  COOPERATION&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">The NRF and improved  capabilities are not the only vectors of a strong transatlantic link.  Defense-industrial cooperation is also needed for a strong link. The end of the  Cold War left the world with considerable overcapacity to develop arms, but  with little money to meet the requirements to modernize; reductions in defense  budgets did not help in transforming our capabilities. To add to this problem,  our ability to tolerate collateral damage decreased as conflict became more  visible, which means we need more precision-guided munitions. In addition, our  governments are expected by their constituents to project stability abroad as  well as prevent insecurity at home, which means expeditionary capabilities. And  the list goes on and on. &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">As the security challenges  went global, so did the arms industry. But the arms market has shrunk and so  has the industry. This does not necessarily equate to a safer world, as we  know. The bottom line  is that 21st century national defense markets  are too small, in most countries, to sustain the high-technology defense  production that is necessary to defeat insecurity. The creation in 2004 of the European  Defense Agency will go, I believe, a long way in smoothing the rough edges of  multinational cooperation. It is important that we reduce the fragmentation of  the European markets so that we can encourage the creation of an  internationally competitive industry built on a strong technological base. Such  an industry has become unavoidable as the costs of state-of-the-art military  technology have become prohibitive. However, any decision to permit the  transfer of technology will obviously remain subordinate to sovereign  governments. This is where we need to make progress and try to break down the  remaining barriers to the development of cheaper and more relevant  solutions.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Those who are against  technology transfer usually raise the spectre of the dangers of proliferation.  But it is important to note that barriers could be erected to prevent  technology from landing in the wrong hands, and these barriers would be agreed  to multilaterally by like-minded nations. Having said that, however, I think it  is still premature to assert that the internationalization of the defense industry  will mean the end of governmental authority over national armament production.  The state is still master when it comes to deciding how this process will play  out, and governments will remain the critical bastion of control. The middle  powers must accept the reality of internationalization and adjust their  organization to fit within the global defense-industrial system.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Harmonization, then, is the  key to success. The Alliance Ground Surveillance system, with its TIPS  solution, is an excellent example of what can be achieved when organizations  cooperate. NATO&rsquo;s Research and Technology Organization can certainly interface  with the industry, and I encourage all to exploit this connection.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30">DEVELOPING A BROADER MIDDLE EAST POLICY&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Another requirement of a  successful security strategy is to have an engaging policy regarding the  broader Middle East. There, the Alliance is very active,  following its new perspective that providing security means reaching out. NATO  currently contributes to stability in the Middle East  in a number of ways. First, together with the members of the Mediterranean  Dialogue, we seek to examine how NATO&rsquo;s existing mechanisms could be focused to  suit the specific need of each individual nation. For example, the Partnership  for Peace program could certainly be adapted and used with our partners to the  south. However, as we do this work, we must remain very conscious that  specificity is key, and that each and every nation with which we interface has  its own set of priorities as far as security is concerned. Those countries must  remain in the driver&rsquo;s seat, and cooperation will go only as fast and as far as  they, individually, want it to go. But if we are unable to extend the  Partnership for Peace <em>per se</em> to the south, we can certainly work towards  applying its spirit and its standards.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style30">COOPERATING IN THE WAR AGAINST  TERRORISM&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Still another element of our  strategy is to achieve greater cooperation in the fight against terrorism. In  that field, I am very encouraged by the progress we have made since the  Istanbul Summit. In the fall of 2004, for the first time ever, the NATO chiefs  of defense met with their counterparts in the Mediterranean Dialogue. After  agreeing to continue meeting twice a year, we met again in May of 2005 in Brussels. I am very happy  to report that we made substantial progress, especially regarding the exchange  of intelligence; the mechanisms for such exchanges will soon be put in place.  &nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">Another point of  encouragement is that several countries have expressed a desire to participate  in NATO&rsquo;s Operation Active Endeavour, our Article 5 naval operation in the Mediterranean Sea to defeat terrorism. We are now  establishing the modalities to enable that participation, especially with Israel and Algeria, and we hope to finalize  our arrangements soon.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="center" class="style29 style31"><strong>CONCLUDING REMARKS&nbsp;</strong> </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">I would like to conclude by  saying that NATO is the only organization that engages North America and Europe both politically and militarily. It has the  structures necessary to effectively manage politically as well as the means to  conduct militarily peace-support operations. To defeat insecurity, we need such  structured intergovernmental security organizations and we need multinational  solutions to capability deficiencies.&nbsp; </p>
        <p align="left" class="style21">While there is still too much  Cold War-era materiel, we continue to find it extremely challenging to deploy  assets in theaters of operation. To meet this challenge we need to raise the  predictability of operational commitments while promoting a climate of  industrial cooperation to enable nations to transform their forces as well as  improve their security culture. The adoption of what I call a comprehensive  approach to operations planning will close the loop with the defense industry  and put the Alliance  in a much better position to deliver security. In fact, now that the last &ldquo;Star  Wars&rdquo; film has been released, I can confidently say that the North Atlantic  Alliance will remain the most successful security alliance in the galaxy!&nbsp; </p>
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        <h1 align="left" class="style20 style21">&nbsp;</h1>
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