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Overview
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Pursuant to a
congressional request, GAO reviewed how:
- the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO)
Partnership for Peace (PFP) program is helping
aspiring members prepare for possible NATO
membership;
- U.S. assistance efforts are helping aspiring
partner countries to prepare for possible NATO
membership;
- other NATO members' efforts are being coordinated
with NATO and U.S. efforts; and
- aspiring countries are preparing themselves for
possible NATO membership. In addressing these
objectives, GAO focused on efforts aimed at
improving partners' ability to work militarily
with NATO, but did not evaluate prospective
members' political and economic efforts to
prepare for membership.
GAO noted that:
- NATO, the United States, and other NATO members
are assisting prospective new members in areas
relevant to NATO's principles for expansion;
- GAO's analysis indicates the assistance provided
under these programs is generally consistent with
prospective members' needs, as those needs were
identified to GAO by NATO, U.S., and prospective
member officials;
- through exercises, symposia, training, and other
activities, NATO's $26.2 million PFP program is
helping partner countries begin to improve their
ability to work more closely with NATO in
PFP-related activities;
- the six countries that GAO reviewed are using PFP
primarily to take part in hundreds of
NATO-sponsored exercises, training sessions,
communications efforts, and other activities;
- these events are limited to peacekeeping, search
and rescue, and similar missions;
- while U.S. and NATO officials cannot
quantitatively measure the extent to which such
events would enhance a future member's ability to
work closely with other NATO members on the full
range of NATO activities, they believe that the
events are improving the ability of partner
forces to interoperate with NATO;
- U.S. bilateral assistance efforts generally
complement NATO's PFP program, fall within areas
of cooperation designated by NATO and its PFP
partners, and reflect an emphasis on helping PFP
forces work with NATO forces;
- while it has programmed $308.6 million in fiscal
year 1995 to 1997 funds for such assistance to 23
PFP partners, the United States has focused 46
percent of this amount on efforts involving
Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania,
Slovakia, and Slovenia;
- about 60 percent of these funds for the six
countries is for the purchase of nonlethal
military hardware;
- other NATO members are also assisting PFP
partners, although GAO could not determine the
overall value of such aid;
- while NATO seeks to improve its mechanism for
coordinating members' assistance efforts, the
United States and other major donors are
attempting to coordinate directly with one
another by exchanging detailed information among
themselves;
- also, NATO's military command has set up a
database of PFP and bilateral events;
- each of the six countries that GAO reviewed has
formally informed NATO of its interest in joining
NATO and has identified various steps it believes
are needed to address NATO's expectations for new
members.
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