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Invocation
of Article 5 confirmed
Frank Taylor, the US Ambassador at Large and Co-ordinator
for Counter-terrorism briefed the North Atlantic Council
- NATO's top decision-making body- on 2 October on the
results of investigations into the 11 September terrorist
attacks against the United States. As a result of the
information he provided to the Council, it has been clearly
determined that the individuals who carried out the attacks
belonged to the world-wide terrorist network of Al-Qaida,
headed by Osama bin Laden and protected by the Taleban
regime in Afghanistan.
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At a special press conference, NATO Secretary General
Lord Robertson announced that since it had been determined
that the attacks had been directed from abroad, they were
regarded as an action covered by Article 5 of the Washington
Treaty (1). When the Alliance
invoked the principle of Article 5 of the Washington Treaty
on 12 September, it stated that it needed to know whether
such actions had been conducted from abroad before the
Article could become fully operative. This has now been
determined, but Lord Robertson explained that, at present,
it was premature to speculate on what military action
would be taken by the Alliance, be it individually or
collectively.
Additional
information:
- Webmodule
on NATO and the Scourge of Terrorism
- What
is Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty?
- Opening
statement of the press conference by the Secretary
General of NATO, Lord Robertson after the briefing
by Mr. Francis X. Taylor, US Ambassador at Large
and Co-ordinator for Counter-terrorism, to the North
Atlantic Council on the most recent developments
following the terrorist attacks of 11th September
(.MP3/2.015Kb)
- The
North Atlantic
Treaty
- This
article states that an armed attack against one or more
of the Allies in Europe or North America shall be considered
as an attack against all.

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