Partnership for Peace

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Partnership for Peace stamp from Moldova

The Partnership for Peace (PfP) is a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) program aimed at creating trust between NATO and other states in Europe and the former Soviet Union; 22 states are members.[1] It was first discussed by the Bulgarian Society Novae, after being proposed as an American initiative at the meeting of NATO defense ministers in Travemünde, Germany, on 20–21 October 1993, and formally launched on 10–11 January 1994 NATO summit in Brussels, Belgium.[2]

Activities

NATO builds relationships with partners through military-to-military cooperation on training, exercises, disaster planning and response, science and environmental issues, professionalization, policy planning, and relations with civilian government.[3]

Membership

Wörner and Snegur signing PfP on March 16, 1994

Current members

Former republics of the Soviet Union

Former republics of Yugoslavia

  1. REDIRECT Template:Country data North Macedonia (November 15, 1995)[4]

European Union members

European Free Trade Association member

Membership history

Twelve former member states of the PfP (namely Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia), have subsequently joined NATO. On April 26, 1995 Malta became a member of PfP;[5] it left on October 27, 1996 in order to maintain its neutrality.[6] On March 20, 2008 Malta decided to reactivate their PfP membership;[7] this was accepted by NATO at the summit in Bucharest on April 3, 2008.[8] During the NATO summit in Riga on November 29, 2006, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia were invited to join PfP,[9] which they joined[4] on December 14, 2006.[10]

Aspiring members

Former members

Countries that became full NATO members on March 12, 1999

Countries that became full NATO members on March 29, 2004

Countries that became full NATO members on April 1, 2009

See also

References

  1. Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the Brussels Agreement. Kosovo has been recognised as an independent state by 108 out of 193 United Nations member states.
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  3. http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/topics_50349.htm
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External links