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   <TITLE>President Constantinescu </TITLE>
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<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+3>The Security
of Central Europe</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>

<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+2>President
of Romania Emil Constantinescu</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>

<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">REPAIRING THE DIVISIONS
OF CENTRAL EUROPE</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Seventy years ago, an American
journalist, a witness to the Bolshevik revolution, wrote a book about the
ten days that shook the world. Those ten days opened the way to a division
of Europe that appeared for a long time to be irreversible: a fracture
between liberty and repression, between democracy and the egalitarian delusion
of communism.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">A series of events in 1997,
too recent to enable us to grasp their true historical dimension, may warrant
a description of the period of time over which they occurred as �the ten
days that stabilized Europe�: May 21, Kiev�the historic reconciliation
between Poland and Ukraine; May 25, Bucharest�the historic reconciliation
between Romania and Hungary; May 27, Paris�the signing of the Founding
Act between the North Atlantic Alliance and the Russian Federation; May
28, the Hague�52 heads of state and government commemorated the Marshall
Plan and outlined the future structure of an undivided continent; May 28
and 29, Sintra�a privileged relationship was established between NATO and
Ukraine; May 31, Kiev�the treaty between Ukraine and the Russian Federation
was signed; June 2, Constantza�the treaty between Romania and Ukraine was
signed.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">It may seem paradoxical
that the dynamics and obvious acceleration of peaceful solutions to the
division of Europe have been to a considerable extent the work of a military-political
organization: the North Atlantic Alliance. An old Latin dictum, <I>si vis
pacem, para bellum</I>, says that if you want peace, prepare for war. At
no time has this phrase been more credible than during the past five decades,
when peace was safeguarded thanks to the existence of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization. Far from being a mere coalition built around increasingly
sophisticated weaponry, NATO was conceived and has continued to develop
to this day as an alliance built around a set of values.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">What values are these? And
for what reason were they deemed important enough to justify an extensive
display of power, energy, and intelligence in order to protect them?</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The values NATO is built
on are representative of democracy, political pluralism, freedom of business
initiative, protection of human rights, tolerance, and the right to dissent.
The aggregate of these values has defined Western civilization for a long
time. These values can and must become today the shared assets of Europe
as a whole because they are, together and individually, the only values
that measure up to the dignity of the human being. Communism, while it
ruled over the countries of Central Europe for five decades, was at the
opposite pole, a form of domination, not one of existence; it was an instrument
designed to obliterate values, not to encourage them.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The fracture between the
far west of Europe and its central zone is of recent date, and it actually
interrupted a long record of European development that, particularly after
World War I, had begun to exhibit a growing unity. The fracture was of
a political nature, and was perceived as a strategic frontier between a
Europe consistently attached to democratic values and another Europe whose
political class vehemently denied those values.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The peace arrangements after
World War II apportioned the countries of Central Europe according to the
great victors' wishes, with little regard to the countries' participation
in one camp or another or to their contribution to victory. With that peace
came the assignation of their status as belonging to one of the two poles
of the post-war order. For some of those states the assignation went as
far as incorporation into the Soviet Union or a refusal to separate them
from the multinational states to which they already belonged.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The smaller states in Western
and Northern Europe, Austria in the central part of the continent, and
Greece in its southern part, were able to benefit from the values and democratic
attitude of the United States, France, Britain, and, later, Germany; but
the other states of Central Europe were placed under a much more dramatic
influence: the Communist authority. In that process, Prague was not only
a pivot of resistance to foreign occupation but also the symbol of peaceful
liberation from the Communist rule. Prague is now a symbol of regional
identity. That is why I feel that any analysis of Central Europe's security
outlook, such as the one we are engaged in today, cannot possibly find
a more appropriate venue.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The end of the Cold War
gave an historic chance to the Central European states to choose for themselves
their own national security system. This choice was limited, however, by
each state's military capability and by its defense potential. For those
states that acquired their independence in the past few years and for those
that once belonged to the Warsaw Pact, that potential, and the national
defense culture in particular, was distorted, over a span of at least two
generations, by the nations' dependence on the Communist military bloc.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">MEMBERSHIP IN AN ENLARGED
NATO</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">For that reason, as early as
1990, the strategic priorities of the Central European states were both
to modernize their armed forces (most often starting with the restoration
of their national identity) and to seek support from NATO, the only credible
collective-defense institution, in order to obtain a security umbrella
that had formerly been offered only at the cost of subordinating their
sovereignty, independence, and even their national identity.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The natural way in which
the countries of Central Europe recovered, without exception, their democratic
traditions after 1990 proved that the above-mentioned fracture had not
been a structural one. The way in which the states once hidden behind the
Iron Curtain perceived the North Atlantic Alliance's enlargement message
also proved that the estrangement between the two Europes had been nothing
but a temporary setback.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">I can confidently state
that the process of NATO enlargement is not proceeding from west to east
but rather from east to west, founded on the free and well-informed choice
of the Central European states themselves. Perhaps surprisingly, the fastest
and most enthusiastic response to the initiative to open the Alliance did
not come primarily from the countries situated on the former fault line,
but rather from those farthest east: Romania and the Baltic States.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">ROMANIAN ACCESSION TO NATO
AND REFORM</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Romanian society does not regard
accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a form of protection
against a threat, but rather as a way to regain an identity that was unjustly
denied to it for five decades. For us, NATO is not a shelter but a community
based on shared values, now recovered.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Romania has inherited a
complex security position not so much because of the Soviet Communist influence,
from which it was relatively independent, but rather because of the irrational
autarchy to which our country was reduced by the domestic brand of Communism.
Even though the Romanian military culture was protected, starting in the
sixties, from the Soviet imprint, it did not incorporate the expertise
acquired in the West over all those years. Also, after 1990, Romania no
longer had a collective security arrangement. That is why it has become
imperative for our armed forces to be modernized and for the state to accede
to NATO.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Military modernization has
proved to be the reform taking place most quickly in Romania. Our national
military traditions and values, which have remained largely unadulterated
even during the Communist years, have made access to the Western military
culture easier; Western military processes have been immediately absorbed
throughout the military hierarchy. Over a period of only a few years, armed
forces reform has produced a radical change in both command and control
structures and the configuration of combat units. Once condemned to isolation,
the Romanian military's international vocation has been successfully expressed
since 1991 in their participation in international peacekeeping and crisis-management
missions in Europe, Africa, and the Gulf.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">A CENTRAL EUROPEAN SECURITY
SYSTEM</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Probably the most amazing aspect
of the NATO enlargement process is the fact that, even before they could
be certain of membership, most candidate countries in Central Europe met
almost all the basic targets set by the organization. If NATO was only
a military institution, these countries would have been able to meet those
objectives only once they were inside the Alliance. But the wish to join
NATO has brought about the emergence of a security system that, in other
times, only the Alliance could have provided. The Central European Initiative,
the Central European Free Trade Agreement, the Poland-Ukraine Treaty, the
Romania-Hungary Treaty, and the Romania-Ukraine Treaty have created a joint
political fabric covering an area even wider than the one traditionally
described as Central Europe. This web of agreements and treaties, which
was not masterminded by a single command center, demonstrates that a whole
chapter in international-relations strategic thinking has come to an end.
I believe that, seven years after the collapse of totalitarianism, Central
Europe is able to send its own message to the world: <I>the new name for
security is prosperity.</I></FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">THE BENEFITS OF SIMULTANEOUS
CENTRAL EUROPEAN ACCESSION</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">It is not empires and their
armies that are our enemies today, but rather underdevelopment, corruption,
unlawful financial markets, drug and arms trafficking, organized crime,
and terrorism. But even beyond the imperfections of the economic and social
changes in Central Europe, and beyond the difficulties inherent in change,
experience has brought with it a common store of wisdom that can actually
enrich the Alliance itself. What I mean to say is that I am aware of everything
that NATO can offer to us, but I am also persuaded that our presence inside
the Alliance will enhance the organization not only in terms of quantity
but, in equal measure, in terms of quality.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Central Europe's geographic
and strategic space, confined between countries with an imperial history�France
and Germany to the west, Russia to the east, Turkey and Italy to the south�is
filled with states that have small-or medium-sized areas and populations
ranging between 2 million and 40 million. Throughout history, the importance
of the Central European peoples was gauged primarily by the yardstick of
Great Power perceptions and interests.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The defense potential of
these states is now being reevaluated. As long as military strategy was
dominated by the concept of possessing and controlling territories, attention
was focused on the Continental countries that acted as a bridge or, at
times, a buffer between the great rivals. The globalization of strategic
interests has now shifted attention to the areas that have access to the
seas�with Central Europe�s direct access to the Baltic, the Adriatic, and
the Black Seas assuming great importance. That access can only be ensured
through the simultaneous accession to NATO of Poland, Slovenia, and Romania.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Because of its sea access,
the Danube-Black Sea transport system has acquired special significance,
particularly in light of the newly discovered, huge resources of oil and
gas in the Caspian basin. By using that system, NATO could connect to a
new source of energy that may be even larger than that in the Gulf, a point
of major importance since the continued intensive exploitation of the North
Sea deposits may cause their gradual depletion.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO could also benefit
from having Poland and Romania provide a north-to-south axis linking the
Baltic Sea to the Black Sea while avoiding tense situations and promoting
a cooperative relationship with the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine, and Russia.
Development of the Alliance along a west-to-east axis covering Slovenia,
Hungary, and Romania could play a stabilizing role in the Balkan region
by putting to use the good relations that Romania enjoys with Bulgaria
and Serbia.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The simultaneous integration
of Romania and Slovenia would strengthen NATO's southern flank, obviously
the one most exposed. In the medium and long term, threats to collective
security that the Alliance will most likely have to face will come especially
from the southeast and south, from an arc of crisis comprising the Caucasus,
Central Asia, the Middle East, the Gulf area, and North Africa. The proliferation
of arms trafficking, militant fundamentalism, and crime and drugs largely
originates from that direction.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Romania's location at the
point where geopolitical and strategic axes meet makes it the �knot� that
can close the regional security network while providing fluent operational
communications between the flanks of the Alliance.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">THE RISKS OF REDIVIDING
CENTRAL EUROPE</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">It would be extremely disturbing
if, as the result of political and strategic surgery, Central Europe were
divided into states that are prepared for NATO membership and those that
are unprepared. This would leave outside the Alliance not only one country
or another, but the most precious asset that Central Europe can offer:
the fundamentally common experience of change that is, ultimately, indivisible.
The joint political fabric that I mentioned earlier would thus be destroyed,
and the old divide would simply be replaced by a new one, a less militarized
one, of course, but as material as the one that used to extend the Berlin
Wall from the Baltic to the Adriatic. Replacing a dismantled curtain with
a half-opened door is tantamount to trying to rebuild that curtain.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Increasing the complexities
of geography, setting up new barriers, and thinking in terms of half-opened
doors will undoubtedly present us with a risk that is hard to take. This
risk is not linked to military strength, security, or stability but it
is rather to assume once again that the values of democracy, pluralism,
a free market system, and human rights are the exclusive property of a
Western world that, in the long run, would prove less ambitious than the
peoples of Central Europe had thought it to be for decades. These people
found in themselves the power to put an end to the totalitarian regime
using as a model the great family of western democracies, of which NATO
is a symbol. Just like the other peoples of Central Europe, Romanians want
to share with those democracies the experience they have acquired�of resistance
and solidarity, victory over fear, and belief in the force of reason. We
wish to become a NATO member because of the determination of Alliance member-states
to serve as international guardians of democracy and freedom.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
ROMANIAN EFFORTS TOWARD NATO COMPLIANCE</H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Since 1990, Romania's interest
in guarding freedom and democracy has found concrete expression in political,
diplomatic, and military undertakings. As a result of dynamic and consistent
initiatives and actions, my country is now situated in a privileged position,
at the crossroads of a complex system of political and economic initiatives.
I refer here to the trilateral cooperation schemes among Poland, Ukraine,
and Romania; Romania, Ukraine, and Moldova; Romania, Bulgaria, and Greece;
and Romania, Hungary, and Austria. Moreover, Romania is a bridge between
the provisions of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Agreement and the
Central European Free Trade Agreement.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">In the military sphere,
considerable efforts have been made in order to adapt Romania's armed forces
to the NATO requirements of interoperability and compatibility. Several
cooperative programs have also been launched in the field of defense production
with various companies from NATO member-states. Participation in joint
exercises under Partnership for Peace, as well as actual involvement in
IFOR and SFOR, shows that Romania has the capability to contribute directly
to crisis-management and peacekeeping efforts.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Our wish to become a member
of NATO is an act of political will in favor of peace and civilization,
targets we are ready and willing to reach. I am confident that the predominant
role that democratic values now play in NATO, as compared to its purely
military dimension, will succeed, at the end of the day, in overcoming
the reservations that the Great Power Russia may have towards NATO enlargement.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">OVERCOMING RUSSIA'S FEARS</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The reservations or fears that
Russia has expressed concerning the integration of the Baltic States into
the North Atlantic Alliance remind me of an experience we in Romania had
in our domestic political scene. For seven years, the crypto-Communist
structures that were in power in Romania after the fall of the totalitarian
regime accused the democratic parties of harboring feelings of revenge,
of intending to induce chaos and economic and social instability. The only
practical way to prove that those accusations were false was through the
actual coming to power of the democratic opposition, through free and fair
elections. And, indeed, none of those early fears have come true.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">I give this example because
it can be applied to Eastern Europe. The first wave of NATO enlargement
will not diminish the chances for integration of the Baltic States. And
once an enlarged NATO becomes reality, Russia will find that its current
fears are not justified and that, far from posing a threat, an enlarged
Alliance will offer much improved opportunities for cooperation.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO MEMBERSHIP AS AN ECONOMIC
OPTION</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Belonging to NATO today can
be considered an option of a state's domestic policy. But the issues such
an option entails are not exclusively military. Countries are no longer
faced today with the danger of foreign military occupation, but rather
with the threat of being defeated economically. The great dangers are,
and will continue to be, related to the stability of the financial and
banking systems, to the stability of social relations, and to the level
of corruption and organized crime. NATO membership stands as a firm option
for a solid economy and a sound social system, able to support the integration
effort without causing social crises.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Membership is also a shield
against the potential danger of rising nationalist Communism, which has
fed and continues to feed on real or imagined internal and external dangers.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">CONCLUDING REMARKS</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Throughout history, European
architecture has been built by wars. We now have the historic opportunity
to freely shape this architecture, for the countries involved in this process
are no longer marked by ideological segregation and are no longer held
under the sway of military domination. Instead, they now freely share the
aspiration to belong to a model of prosperity, dignity, and democracy.
As Victor Hugo once said, there is something more powerful than any army,
namely an idea whose time has come.</FONT></FONT>

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