Showing posts with label CHICAGO NATO SUMMIT 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHICAGO NATO SUMMIT 2012. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

PRESIDENT SAYS CHICAGO SUMMIT REAFFIRMS COMMITMENT TO COLLECTIVE SECURITY


Photo Credit:  Wikimedia  
FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE 
Summit Reaffirms Commitment to Collective Security, Obama Says
By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
CHICAGO, May 20, 2012 - A year and a half after the NATO members at their summit in Lisbon, Portugal, pledged bold action to revitalize the future alliance, heads of state and government are reaffirming commitment to their collective defense and security, President Barack Obama said here today.

In an opening ceremony of the 25th summit, Obama and NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen stood together to shake the hands of fellow leaders arriving to attend the meeting's first session of the North Atlantic Council.

"In these difficult economic times, we can work together and pool our resources," Obama said. "NATO is a force multiplier, and the initiatives we will endorse today will allow each of our nations to accomplish what none of us could achieve alone. We can all be proud that in Lisbon we committed, and now in Chicago we are delivering."

Before the council began its work, another ceremony honored NATO military personnel for service in the alliance's operational theaters. Meeting participants rose as representatives of the armed services of the 28 allied nations entered the room and stood before the heads of state and government.

"As we meet here," Rasmussen said, "over 135,000 men and women are deployed on NATO-led operations. Their daily actions have helped to save countless lives in areas of conflict, crisis or catastrophe."

Soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines "put their lives on the line every day so that we can enjoy our lives free from fear and danger," the secretary-general said. "We owe them all a deep debt of gratitude, so it is right that we begin our summit today with a tribute to them."

Obama took the opportunity to salute Navy Adm. James G. Stavridis, commander of the U.S. European Command and NATO's supreme allied commander for Europe; Gen. Stephane Abrial of the French air force, NATO's supreme allied commander for transformation; and Marine Corps Gen. John R. Allen, commander of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.

The president also commended "all of our men and women who are serving in uniform on our behalf, and especially those who are serving today in Afghanistan."

For more than 65 years, Obama said, NATO has been the bedrock of its members' common security, of freedom and of prosperity. "And though the times may have changed," he added, "the fundamental reason for our alliance has not."

The president said nations are stronger and more prosperous when they stand together.
"In good times and in bad, our alliance has endured," he said. "In fact, it has thrived, because we share an unbreakable commitment to the freedom and security of our citizens. We've seen this from the Cold War to the Balkans, from Afghanistan to Libya. And that's the spirit that we need to sustain here in Chicago, and with an alliance that is focused squarely on the future."

Over the next two days, Obama said, the alliance's leaders meet first as allies and then with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and international partners to chart the next phase of the transition to Afghan forces having security responsibility for their whole country.

Just as the NATO allies have sacrificed together for their common security, he said, "we will stand together, united, in our determination to complete this mission."

Obama said he looks forward to meeting with NATO's neighbors and partners around the world who have been so critical to NATO operations, including those in Afghanistan and Libya.

"It will be another reminder that NATO is truly a hub of a network of global security partners," the president said. "There is nothing else like it on Earth."

Referring to the work ahead during the summit, Rasmussen said partnerships are more important than ever in today's world, where threats might come from anywhere.

"In a fast-changing world, we remain each other's indispensible partners," the secretary general said. "Together, we will keep NATO capable of responding to the security challenges of tomorrow, because no country and no continent can deal with them alone. "Together, we will make our partnerships deeper, broader and stronger, because today's threats are no longer confined within individual borders."

Sunday, May 20, 2012

NATO 2012 SUMMIT IN CHICAGO


Photo:  Soldier Field Viewed From McCormick Place, Chicago.  Credit:  Wikimedia.
FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
Secretary General Kicks Off NATO Summit in Chicago
By Cheryl Pellerin
CHICAGO, May 20, 2012 - NATO's largest-ever summit opened here today to focus on keeping Afghanistan secure, ensuring NATO's capability in the 21st century, and enhancing the alliance's global network of partners, Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.

Representatives from 60 countries and organizations have gathered in this busy midwestern U.S. city for a meeting that NATO officials characterize as preparation for the alliance's future.

President Barack Obama arrived this morning after hosting a daylong G-8 summit at Camp David in Maryland with leaders of Great Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia.

Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta is here to participate in discussions and attend North Atlantic Council sessions on 21st-century NATO capabilities, the long-term commitment of nations participating in the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, and NATO partnerships.

Panetta also will convene a working dinner of his fellow defense ministers, attend a signing ceremony for the purchase by 13 NATO allies of a ground surveillance system for future alliance operations, and join Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki for a visit to a first-of-its-kind joint Defense Department-VA hospital in north Chicago.

During a short preliminary briefing on the first day of the two-day international meeting, Rasmussen said discussions today will focus on security in an age of austerity.

"We will ensure that the alliance has the capabilities to deal with the security challenges of the future, even as we tackle the economic challenges of the present," he told reporters at the summit's media center at McCormick Place on the shore of Lake Michigan.

"We will adopt a concrete package of multinational projects which can provide greater security for all our citizens at lower cost, we will embrace a renewed culture of cooperation which we call 'smart defense,' and I expect we will take the first step to make our missile defense system operational," he added.

Tomorrow, on the second day of the summit, Rasmussen said, "we will meet 13 of our most active partners around the globe, from Europe to Asia and the Middle East, because today's security challenges are global and they need global solutions."

NATO will continue to cooperate with partners from around the world, building on successes "so that we can provide more security for NATO, for our partners, and for the world," he added.

Tomorrow also will be the day that summit participants shape the next stage of NATO's engagement with Afghanistan. "We will complete transition of security responsibility to the Afghans by the end of 2014, but we will continue to support them for the long term," Rasmussen said.

NATO officials and ISAF partners will meet with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, leaders of many countries in the region and beyond, and key international organizations, the secretary general added.

"This will be a powerful demonstration of the commitment of the whole international community to the future of Afghanistan," he said.

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