By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 21, 2012 – Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton said at NATO’s summit in Chicago today that member
nations are committed to the organization’s open-door membership policy, which
she called a “powerful motivation” for countries wishing to join the alliance.
Speaking at a meeting of NATO’s
decision-making body, the North Atlantic Council, Clinton said the prospect of
gaining membership in the alliance spurs countries to “implement difficult but
necessary reforms, resolve internal differences as well as differences with
their neighbors, and contribute to security operations that benefit themselves
and all of us.”
The open-door policy has produced some
of the alliance’s most active and committed members, she said, and has helped
to promote stability and cooperation in central and eastern Europe.
According to NATO agreements, the
alliance is open to any European country able to meet the commitments and
obligations of membership and contribute to security in the Euro-Atlantic area.
Since 1949, NATO’s membership has
increased from 12 to 28 countries through six rounds of enlargement. Albania and
Croatia, which were invited to join NATO at the alliance’s April 2008 summit in
Bucharest, Romania, formally became members April 1, 2009.
Georgia is advancing toward NATO
membership, and Macedonia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina are also working
to become alliance members.
Clinton said the United States is deeply
committed to NATO’s open-door policy. “It is in that spirit that we welcome our
aspirant nations here today,” she said.
“We will keep working with each of them,
both bilaterally and through NATO, to help them implement finally the reforms
needed to meet the standards for membership,” she added. “As I said yesterday,
I believe this summit should be the last summit that is not an enlargement
summit.”
Clinton said NATO looks to aspiring
member nations to demonstrate that they share NATO’s values and =are willing
and able to meet the standards for membership. “And we promise to help them as
they do so because this is in our interest,” she added.
Gaining membership can be a lengthy and
challenging process, Clinton acknowledged.
“We need to stick with it and remember
our ultimate goal: a stronger, more durable, more effective NATO,” she said,
adding that enlargement of the alliance, done right, is a core element of
NATO’s purpose and its community.
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