The core provision of the treaty is Article V, which states:
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2 History 3 Secretaries General of NATO 4 Supreme Allied Commanders Europe (SACEUR) 5 External links |
From the foundation in 1949 or with the year of accession.
Member States
France is still a member of NATO but retired from the military command in 1966. Iceland, the sole member of NATO which does not have its own military force, joined on the condition that they would not be forced to participate in warfare.
March 17, 1948: Benelux, France, and the United Kingdom signed the Treaty of Brussels which is a precursor to the NATO Agreement.
April 4, 1949: NATO treaty signed in Washington, DC.
May 14, 1955: Warsaw Pact treaty signed in Warsaw by the
Soviet Union and its satellite states in order to counterbalance NATO. Both organisations were opposing sides in the Cold War. After the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, the Warsaw Pact disintegrated.
1966: Charles de Gaulle decides to remove France from NATO's military command to pursue its own nuclear
defence program. This precipitates the relocation of the NATO Headquarters from Paris, France to Brussels, Belgium by October 16, 1967. While the political headquarters is located in Brussels the military headquarters, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE), are located just south of Brussles, in the town of Mons.
March 31, 1991: The Warsaw Pact comes to an end. It is officially dissolved on July 1.
March 24, 1999: NATO saw its first military engagement in the Kosovo War, where it waged an 11-week bombing campaign against Serbia and Montenegro that and ending on June 11, 1999.
July 8, 1997: Three former communist countries, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland are invited
to joined NATO. They join in 1999.
November 21, 2002: During the Prague (Czech Republic) summit seven countries are invited to start talks
in order to join the Alliance: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Bulgaria and
Romania. The invited countries are expected to join NATO in 2004.
Albania and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia will probably be told they have not met the economic,
political and military reform criteria and will have to wait. Croatia applied only in 2002 and has just started the process.
September 13, 2001: NATO invoked, for the first time in its history, an article in its charter that states that any attack on a member state is considered an attack against the entire alliance. This came in response to the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack.
February 10, 2003: NATO faced a serious crisis because of France and Belgium breaking the procedure of silent approval concerning the timing of protective measures for Turkey in case of a possible war with Iraq. Germany did not use its right to break the procedure but said it supported the veto.
April 16, 2003: NATO agreed to take command in August of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The decision came at the request of Germany and the Netherlands, the two nations leading ISAF at the time of the agreement. It was approved unanimously by all 19 NATO ambassadors. The handover of control to NATO took place on August 11, and marked first time in NATO's history that it took charge of a mission outside the north Atlantic area. Canada had originally been slated to take over ISAF by itself on that date.
See also: Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council, OSCE, Partnership for Peace, WEU, UN, Atlantic CouncilHistory
Secretaries General of NATO
Supreme Allied Commanders Europe (SACEUR)
Note: starting with Ridgway all SACEUR have been simultaneously Commander in Chief, US European Command (CINCEUR)