Leaders from the 26 members of Nato are meeting in
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato's secretary-general, paid tribute to the 50,000 Nato soldiers serving around the world in missions such as
Discussions in the Latvian capital will centre on the mooted Nato Response Force (NRF), enlargement, closer co-operation with Nato's non-alliance partners and a mission statement on its long-term vision.
Also on the agenda was further enlargement of Nato beyond the inclusion of new full members.
Scheffer said: "Never before has there been greater demand for the security Nato can provide.
US General James Jones, Nato's military commander, was busy trying to put the final touches to the NRF, a 25,000-strong fully equipped response contingent to be dispatched to the world's crisis flashpoints at short notice.
Besides enlargement, Nato will formalize closer ties with nations already working with the alliance such as
Potential new members such as
And following on from comments on Tuesday from George Bush, the
Longer-term goal
Leaders were also set to discuss Nato's longer-term goal of transforming the alliance into a force able to face up to the security challenges of the 21st century, such as terrorism and weapons of mass destruction.
On Tuesday evening the leaders had a working dinner to thrash out solutions to the alliance's high-stakes mission in
With a resurgent Taliban in the south and east of the country and a president barely able to set foot outside
Restrictions being lifted
It was understood that Dutch and Romanian delegations could lift all their restrictions, while the Czechs, the Danes, the Hungarians and the Greeks were also said to be prepared to relax some of their conditions.
Scheffer said on Wednesday: "Contributing to peace and stability in
"Making our forces more modern needs investment. Defense cannot be assured on the cheap."
Photo Caption
Canadian soldier in