Ljubljana hosts NATO parliamentary assembly meeting
3.6.2005 - Michael Manske
Slovenia has been a NATO member for a year now. During this time, the
country has taken on some serious tasks with peace missions to a number of
tense areas including Afghanistan and Kosovo. Its role was acknowledged by
the NATO parliamentary assembly meeting in Ljubljana this week.
Slovenia was a bit of a latecomer to the NATO alliance, missing the
alliance's first wave of expansion into Eastern Europe in 1999, when it
took on the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. But the government was
keen on joining NATO, and after the public backed membership in a
referendum, Slovenia successfully joined in 2004. The following busy year
was topped off this week by a NATO parliamentary assembly in the Slovenian
capital, Ljubljana.
Among the topics discussed: the expansion of the alliance into the western
Balkans, of which Slovenia has long been considered a stepping stone.
Slovenia's Prime Minister Janez Jansa explained some of the topics
discussed at the assembly:
"The topics were bilateral cooperation and NATO expansion. Slovenia
is interested in NATO expansion into the West Balkans. We think that this
expansion could contribute to a greater stability and a more stable peace
in our region. Especially in West Balkans, NATO has had a key role in
ensuring stability. We are aware that especially in Kosovo, NATO will have
to control stability for some time, including Slovenia's cooperation that
is becoming more prominent in this region. With all other factors, lasting
solutions must be found to stabilize the situation in Kosovo."
Also in attendance was NATO's secretary general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer,
who also stressed the pressing problem of Kosovo and its importance to
NATO:
"Kosovo is entering, I think, a very crucial period with the standard
evaluation - later perhaps possible status talks. NATO has an important
responsibility there, as 18.000 of our troops are in KFOR securing
stability in Kosovo, which is so essential for any political process
taking place there."
The secretary general also thanked Slovenia for its contributions to
trouble spots like Kosovo and Afghanistan, citing it as proof that small
countries also have a role to play in the alliance.
He also encouraged members to remain committed to the alliance, whose
purpose has increasingly been questioned since the collapse of the Soviet
Union. The secretary general stressed that NATO's workload will actually
increase in the future:
"I will encourage all allies, including Slovenia, to do as much as
they can to participate in NATO's operations and ambitions, because I
think the demands on NATO will not diminish. They will grow. This does not
mean NATO is the world policeman but it does mean that calls on NATO to
project stability will grow stronger instead of weaker."
It remains to be seen how Slovenia and the countries of the former
Yugoslavia will handle these future challenges.