1997 Madrid summit

The 1997 Madrid summit was a meeting of the heads of state and heads of government of the sixteen members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and their partner countries held in Madrid, Spain, on 8–9 July 1997. It was the 15th NATO summit and the second in 1997, the previous one being held in Paris. The summit was notable for inviting three new members, Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic to join the alliance.

NATO Summit Madrid 1997
1997 Madrid Summit
Host countrySpain
Date8–9 July 1997
Venue(s)Institución Ferial de Madrid
CitiesMadrid
Follows1997 Paris summit
Precedes1999 Washington summit
Websitewww.nato.int

Summit

Venue

The summit was held at the pavilions of the IFEMA fairgrounds. The government of Spain allocated 1.3 billion pesetas (€7.8 million) for the development of the summit.[1]

NATO Enlargement

The topic of enlargement was the main focus of the summit. The result of the summit was that Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic were invited to join NATO. Fellow Visegrád Group member Slovakia was excluded from this invitation. Slovakia had held a referendum on NATO membership in May 1997, but turnout in the referendum failed to achieve the required 50% of eligible voters and government sabotage was blamed, which in turn was viewed as one of a string of undemocratic measures taken by Prime Minister Vladimír Mečiar.[2] A majority of NATO members reportedly supported France's proposal to also immediately invite Romania and Slovenia as members, but this was strongly opposed by U.S. President Bill Clinton, and even an "iron-clad guarantee" that they could be invited in two years time was watered-down in favor of an "open door" policy for new potential members.[3] A main concern for the United States was the cost of potentially raising the military standards of the new Eastern European members. Estimates put this cost at as much as US$10 billion, which participants worried could lead to the treaty recognizing the new members being rejected by the Republican-held U.S. Senate.[4]

Distinctive Partnership

Additionally, a "Charter on a Distinctive Partnership" was signed between NATO and Ukraine, creating the NATO-Ukraine Commission and establishing relations between the two,[5] and a declaration supporting peace efforts in Bosnia-Herzegovina was read and signed by participants.[6]

Participants

The official meetings were led by NATO Secretary General Javier Solana. One notable absence from the summit was Boris Yeltsin, President of Russia, which was instead represented by lower level bureaucrats.[7][8]

Secretary of Defense William Cohen, accompanied by National Security Advisor Samuel Burger (left) and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright (right), speaks during a press conference, held 8 July 1997, at the Miguel Ángel Hotel, Madrid, Spain. The three policy leaders talked to reporters about the historic decision, made earlier in the day at the NATO summit, to invite Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic, three former members of the now defunct Warsaw Pact, to begin accession negotiations to join the NATO alliance.
Key
Non-NATO member
Country or
organization
Head of DelegationTitle
 NATOJavier SolanaSecretary General
 Albania[a]Bashkim FinoPrime Minister
 Armenia[a]Alexander ArzumanyanMinister of Foreign Affairs
 Austria[a]Viktor KlimaChancellor
 Azerbaijan[a]Heidar AlievPresident
 Belarus[a]Alexander LukashenkoPresident
 BelgiumJean-Luc DehaenePrime Minister
 Bulgaria[a]Petar StoyanovPresident
 CanadaJean ChrétienPrime Minister
 Czech Republic[a]Václav HavelPresident
 DenmarkPoul Nyrup RasmussenPrime Minister
 Estonia[a]Lennart MeriPresident
 Finland[a]Martti AhtisaariPresident
 FranceJacques ChiracPresident
 Georgia[a]Eduard ShevardnadzePresident
 GermanyHelmut KohlChancellor
 GreeceCostas SimitisPrime Minister
 Hungary[a]Gyula HornPrime Minister
 IcelandDavíð OddssonPrime Minister
 ItalyRomano ProdiPrime Minister
 Kazakhstan[a]Auyeskhan KyrbasovAmbassador
 Latvia[a]Guntis UlmanisPresident
 Lithuania[a]Algirdas BrazauskasPresident
 LuxembourgJean-Claude JunckerPrime Minister
 FYR Macedonia[a]Kiro GligorovPresident
 Moldova[a]Petru LucinschiPresident
 NetherlandsWim KokPrime Minister
 NorwayThorbjørn JaglandPrime Minister
 Poland[a]Aleksander KwaśniewskiPresident
 PortugalAntónio GuterresPrime Minister
 Romania[a]Emil ConstantinescuPresident
 Russia[a]Valery SerovDeputy Chairman of the Government
 Slovakia[a]Vladimír MečiarPrime Minister
 Slovenia[a]Janez DrnovšekPrime Minister
 SpainJosé María Aznar (host)Prime Minister
 Sweden[a]Göran PerssonPrime Minister
  Switzerland[a]Adolf OgiFederal Councillor
 TurkeySüleyman DemirelPresident
 Turkmenistan[a]Çary NiýazowAmbassador to France
 Ukraine[a]Leonid KuchmaPresident
 United KingdomTony BlairPrime Minister
 United StatesBill ClintonPresident
 Uzbekistan[a]Abdulaziz KamilovMinister of Foreign Affairs

Other events

On the evening of 8 July 1997, King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofía welcomed the heads of State, of Government, of Delegations and their companions at the Royal Palace, where they hosted a state dinner.[9]

See also

References

External links