Date: Mon, 26 Apr 1999 10:43 -0400 From: The White House <Publications-Admin at Pub.Pub.WhiteHouse.Gov> Subject: 1999-04-24 NATO Fact Sheet on Defense Capabilities Initiative To: Public-Distribution@[198.137.240.100] Precedence: Bulk Document-ID: pdi://oma.eop.gov.us/1999/4/26/7.text.1 URL:
http://www.pub.whitehouse.gov/uri-res/I2R?urn:pdi://oma.eop.gov.us/1999/4/26/7. text.1 Delivered-By-The-Graces-Of: White House Electronic Publications Keywords: Defense, Fact-Sheet, Foreign, International-Security, Security,
Staff-Report, World-Order
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary ________________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release April 24, 1999
NATO Summit:
Defense Capabilities Initiative
Fact Sheet
The Defense Capabilities Initiative (DCI) is an effort to ensure that the Alliance has conventional military forces that are designed and equipped for 21st century missions. At the Washington Summit, NATO's 19 leaders adopted a "common operational vision" for NATO militaries; endorsed a report that examined changing Allied conventional military needs and identified key shortfalls; and launched a program to develop Allied defense capabilities in five key areas. The areas identified for focus are:
- Effective engagement: the ability to engage effectively and with appropriate assets in a number of different areas, including humanitarian assistance, force protection, and high-intensity combat;
- Deployability and mobility: the ability to move forces efficiently and effectively;
- Sustainability and logistics: the ability to sustain engagements by delivering supplies and support equipment in a timely, organized manner, supporting prolonged operations through rotation of forces;
- Survivability: the ability to survive and operate in a wide range of environments, including chemical, biological, terrorist, or electronic attacks;
- Command, Control and Communications: the ability to establish and maintain effective command and control arrangements and communications links, interoperable with national systems and including a deployable capability for crisis response operations.
To ensure effective implementation of the DCI, NATO's leaders established a High-Level Steering Group (HLSG) to coordinate, prioritize, and integrate the efforts of the appropriate NATO committees.