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U.S.
Says NATO Within Reach for Romania, Bulgaria
Tue
Mar 26, 6:37 AM ET
By Daniel Simpson
BUCHAREST (Reuters) - Washington wants to admit as many new countries
to NATO (news - web sites) as are fit to join, U.S. Deputy Secretary
of State Richard Armitage said Tuesday, leaving the door open for
Romania and Bulgaria if they press ahead with reforms. Diplomats
expect up to seven ex-communist nations to be invited to join the
alliance at a November summit in Prague, but Armitage said that
the onus was on them to "do the heavy lifting" before
then to justify their inclusion.
"We're looking to the widest possible accession," he told
a news conference after addressing a meeting of 10 east European
NATO hopefuls in Bucharest, where candidates sought to present a
unity of purpose to existing alliance members. "Our minds remain
open," Armitage told delegates after reading a letter from
Senate leaders which stressed Washington was serious about expanding
NATO in the Balkans, as existing members Greece and Turkey want,
but only if reforms continue.
"We have not made any decisions yet about which countries should
be invited to join NATO," he said, adding that candidates had
until late October to show they were ready. "Whether or not
you are invited to join NATO is truly in your own hands." For
Romania and Bulgaria this means continuing to overhaul their large
armed forces and answering questions about their political and economic
readiness, with a crackdown on the rampant corruption plaguing both
countries the top priority.
Encouraged by President Bush's call last year to extend NATO from
the Baltic to the Black Sea and helped by the shift in priorities
after the September 11 attacks, the two Balkan candidates believe
their moment may have come at last. "Our NATO membership will
complete a real democratic shield against terrorism, consolidating
the southern flank of the alliance," Bulgarian Prime Minister
Simeon Saxe-Coburg said. His Romanian counterpart Adrian Nastase
also called for NATO to fill in the gaps between western Europe
and the alliance's only Muslim member, Turkey, which is likely to
play a key part in any prospective U.S.-led operation against Iraq.
"NATO's enlargement toward this region will strengthen the
military capabilities of the alliance," Nastase said, noting
both nations' contribution to peacekeeping in former Yugoslavia
and support for coalition operations in Afghanistan. But they have
left it late to present a regional case, particularly when compared
to the Baltic lobbying group forged by Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia,
which diplomats view as almost certain to be invited to join NATO
in Prague. Slovenia is also seen as a virtual shoe-in, along with
Slovakia, provided its former autocratic leader Vladimir Meciar
is not reelected as prime minister later this year. Albania and
Macedonia, which also attended the summit, are not seen as viable
members for now, while Croatia has yet to start formal accession
preparations.
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