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<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+3>The Ultimate
Removal of the Reminiscences of Yalta</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>

<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+2>Foreign
Minister of Hungary Dr. L&aacute;szl&oacute; Kov&aacute;cs</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>

<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+2>&nbsp;</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">I am honored to tell you that
this is the fourth time that I have attended a NATO Workshop. When I received
my first invitation in 1990, I was an opposition member of the first democratically
elected Hungarian parliament. Then, in 1993, we Hungarians hosted the NATO
Workshop. Last year I participated in the Workshop in Poland, and this
year's Workshop is my fourth. Twice I attended a Workshop as an opposition
MP and twice as Minister of Foreign Affairs. Quite a lot has changed since
I first participated, not only for Hungary but for the Alliance and the
entire security environment.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The Yalta Agreement served
only as a cradle of bipolarity, reflecting the spheres of interest that
limited the operation of smaller countries and deprived the Central and
Eastern European countries of their sovereignty, forcing them into a military
bloc dominated by the Soviet Union. Yalta sharply divided Europe, a continent
built on common history and on a common cultural heritage.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">During the decades of bipolarity�those
of the Cold War and then those of d&eacute;tente�security was predominantly
a military concept. Security in the time of bipolarity was based on the
balance of strategic nuclear forces, on the balance of the two global powers'
overkill capabilities, and on mutual deterrence. It was a zero-sum game,
since the security of either side could be strengthened only to the detriment
of the other. Yalta antagonized the whole of Europe for decades, but the
real victims were the Central and Eastern European countries, which were
forced to accept Soviet dominance, the Soviet economic model, and the Communist
ideology.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">It was the Soviet Union
that forced the Central and Eastern European countries to refuse the Marshall
Plan, resulting in decades-long economic stagnation and in a low level
of competition that preserved the obsolete economic structure of the region.
Finally, however, gradual changes in the balance of forces between the
United States and the Soviet Union, the process of d&eacute;tente, a freer
flow of people and ideas exposed the Central and Eastern European countries
to the effects of freedom, democracy, a market economy, and national independence.
The will and determination of the people of Central and Eastern Europe
swept the bipolar system away. The Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact, the Comecon,
and the Berlin Wall have all collapsed.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">SECURITY TODAY</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">With bipolarity gone, we no
longer face the threat of world war, of global nuclear conflict. And security
is no longer a predominantly military category. Non-military elements,
such as political, economic, social, human, and minority rights as well
as environmental factors are becoming more and more important. Security
is no longer based on mutual deterrence but on cooperation. It is also
no longer a zero-sum game, but dynamic, flexible, and always on the move.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">There are, however, new
security risks for Central and Eastern Europe to face. Some are of a general
nature, such as organized crime, drug trafficking, international terrorism,
pollution, and weapons proliferation. Others are specific to a region:
difficulties of economic transition; social tensions that act as a hotbed
for extremist tendencies, both on the right and on the left; a lack of
or a low level of democratic traditions; the surfacing of radical, aggressive,
nationalists violating the rights of minorities or fomenting ethnic cleansing;
and border challenges that can result in inter-ethnic or inter-state conflicts
and in mass migration. Consequently, only a few years after the formal
collapse of the Yalta system and the end of the bipolar world order, a
new division may take shape in Europe�a division, this time, between a
secure, stable, and prosperous Western Europe and an unpredictable Eastern
Europe lacking security and stability, facing enormous economic problems,
social tensions, and potential ethnic conflicts. The crisis in the former
Yugoslavia, the tragic war in Bosnia proved that the lack of security in
the East and the South can affect stability in the West and the North.
So the new security risks must be properly addressed for the sake of the
entire continent.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">THE BEST RESPONSE TO THE
RISK OF A NEW DIVISION</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The most efficient, the most
cost-effective, and the most complete response to the dangers of this possible
new division is the enlargement of the Euro-Atlantic community, the enlargement
of NATO, and the enlargement of the European Union. Hungary welcomes the
Madrid NATO Summit that will start the process of enlargement, and welcomes
the Amsterdam EU Summit that confirmed that talks on accession would begin
in January 1998.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Enlargement</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Enlargement is a process that
should continue to move forward step by step. Accession to NATO will be
based on shared values and the specified criteria, values that must not
be merely verbally supported but implemented while the accession criteria
are being met. But the gradual enlargement of NATO must not result in a
new division. The Madrid Summit must explicitly state that the process
of enlargement is open-ended; the first wave will be followed by others.
Applicant countries that do not yet qualify should receive a clear message
stating what they must do and what they must accomplish in order to qualify
for the next round of enlargement.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Support and Assistance</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO should support and help
those countries that want to join the Alliance to meet the accession criteria.
The North Atlantic Cooperation Council has provided an effective framework
for dialogue between NATO members and the Central and Eastern European
countries that has helped us to learn what NATO expects from applicants.
PFP has also helped the applicant countries to meet the criteria of membership
and to prepare for accession. Now the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council
will involve applicant countries even more closely and more effectively
in joint activities between NATO and its Partners. The Council will also
have a new role after the process of enlargement starts: preventing any
division between the expanding Alliance and the Partner countries�between
the old, the new, and the would-be members of NATO.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">An enlarging NATO will certainly
fit into the new, now-emerging, all-European security architecture. This
all-European security architecture will be based on the principle of indivisibility
of security, as well as on the complexity of security, including both military
and non-military elements. The major building blocks of this all-European
security architecture will be (a) expanding Euro-Atlantic and European
institutions such as NATO, the European Union, the Western European Union,
and the Council of Europe; (b) the special relationship between the enlarging
NATO and countries such as the Russian Federation and the Ukraine; (c)
the regional structures of cooperation such as the Central European Initiative,
the Baltic Sea Agreement, the Black Sea Cooperation, the Central European
Free Trade Association, and the South European Cooperation Initiative,
all of which contribute to stability; (d) the bilateral arrangements such
as the basic treaties between Hungary and its neighbors and other countries,
and the European stability that has given multilateral dimensions as well
as more political weight to these bilateral treaties; and (e) the OSCE,
the only pan-European structure with more than 50 member-states.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Inter-Institution Relationships</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">As far as relations between
the various security structures and institutions are concerned, we should
avoid overlapping and rivalry. The pervading principle should be cooperation
on the basis of comparative advantages. Each and every institution has
some specific advantage that the others do not have. NATO has the military
potential that can make peace when necessary, as it did in Bosnia. The
European Union has the ability to contribute to economic stability and
prosperity. The Council of Europe has a unique record and rich experience
working for human rights and minority rights, and has established standards
and norms that help to prevent ethnic tensions and conflicts. The regional
structures and bilateral arrangements have the ability to contribute to
stability through cooperation. And, last but not least, the OSCE has an
effective crisis-prevention, crisis-management, and post-conflict rehabilitation
mechanism that has been tested and proved in Chechnya and in other trouble
spots in the former Soviet Union and in the former Yugoslavia, particularly
in Bosnia.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">CONCLUDING REMARKS</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">To conclude, I want to stress
that enlarging NATO�extending and strengthening cooperation with would-be
members and Partners�will fit perfectly in the now-emerging all-European
security architecture; contribute to the ultimate removal of the reminiscences
of the Yalta Agreement; prevent any new continental division from occurring;
and contribute to the unification of Europe on its basis of common history,
common cultural heritage, shared values, and common interest in security,
stability, prosperity, and a democratic world order.</FONT></FONT>

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