Donald Rumsfeld (born July 9, 1932 in Evanston, Illinois) served as the United States Secretary of Defense on two occasions, between November 20, 1975 and January 20, 1977, and in his second term between January 20, 2001 nad December 18, 2006. Rumsfeld's other political roles include being the 6th White House Chief of Staff, the 9th US Ambassador to NATO, and the third Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity.
Just about anything COULD happen, but this would be a pretty long shot. The US has its own stockpile of thermonuclear weapons, so we're not utterly dependent on NATO to protect us.
No he could not, and in fact, no US president could. NATO is an organization comprised of twenty-eight member countries. One country might decide to withdraw from NATO, but the organization would continue to exist. Thus, even if the US under Mr. Trump left NATO, there would still be many other nations that would continue to participate. As the NATO website says, "NATO’s essential purpose is to safeguard the freedom and security of its members through political and military means." Of course, the US is considered a very important part of NATO, but with or without its participation, other nations would still be members.
Each member nation is represented by an Ambassador or Permanent Representative supported by a national delegation composed of advisers and officials who represent their country on different NATO committees. The Council also meets from time to time at the level of Heads of State and Heads of Government or Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Ministers of Defense.
No. Not a part of NATO. NATO-friendly, but not a member.
NATO was form in 1949
NATO is the acronym...
No, Kyrgyzstan is not a member of NATO.
No, Iraq is not a member country of NATO, but NATO does have a special partnership with Iraq.
The membership of NATO was expanded as new NATO to include new members.
There are 538 NATO delegates
the NATO was formed in 1955