NATO şi armata română

  • Subiect: By 1958, Romania had become a faithful ally of the Warsaw Pact. Despite the critical moments occurred in 1956, that originated in the Hungarian revolution and the riots in Poland, Romania managed to avoid the ''uncomfortable allay" label, if just for a short time. Romania's ingrate position would be caused by the Soviet troops that had not yet retreated from the Romanian territory. Yet, a favourable premise rose just when the leaders in Bucharest were considering enhancing Romania's international credibility. At the beginning of the '60s, the USA launched the "building bridges policy" whose purpose was to redefine its relationship with communist countries. All along different war scenarios imagined by NATO command structures, Romania was being pictured as a neutral country, its territory being considered banned from NATO raids and missiles attacks, including nuclear ones. A new Europe was emerging, now that the totalitarian regimes in Central and Eastern Europe crashed down and the Warsaw Pact had been dissolved. Thus, the November 21st-22nd 2002 NATO Summit, held in Prague, marked Romania's repositioning within the structures of one of the strongest collective defence organizations in history.
  • Limba de redactare: română, engleză
  • Secţiunea: Istorie contemporană
  • Vezi publicația: Sargetia. Acta Musei Devensis
  • Editura: Qual Media
  • Loc publicare: Cluj
  • Anul publicaţiei: 2007-2008
  • Referinţă bibliografică pentru nr. revistă: XXXV-XXXVI; anul 2007-2008; subtitlu: Acta Musei Devensis
  • Paginaţia: 740-750
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