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NATO Week and Remembrance Day: planning for the future, and remembering the past

This week we have been celebrating NATO Week in Armenia – an annual opportunity for both NATO member states and the Armenian government to present to a wider public what we have been doing together and why both sides value the partnership.

As the NATO Contact Point Embassy, I and our defence liaison team – Lt-Col Steve Phillips, our Defense Attache, and Sergey Mirzoyan, our Defence Relations officer – were keen to support the busy programme of events organised by the MFA. Highlights for me included:

I also enjoyed my trip to Gyumri with John Heffern (US Ambassador), Steve Phillips (our Defence Attache), Bill Lahue (NATO Liaison Officer from Tbilisi) and Ambassador Mkrchyan (from the MFA), to give a presentation at Gyumri University about NATO. This event underlined a couple of points which for me are at the core of the messages we wanted to get out this week:

So – it’s been a really well-organised and thought-provoking week. But there’s another reason why I’ve been thinking about our armed forces all this week. November 11 is Remembrance Day in the UK – the day we remember the sacrifice made by brave servicemen and women, those injured in the line of duty, and the families they leave behind.

Ever since the end of World War I (brought to an end by a ceasefire at 11am on the eleventh day of the eleventh month in 1918), we have marked this day.

And we support the charity which looks after the welfare of ex-Servicemen and their families, the Royal British Legion, by buying a poppy – the flower which bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in World War I (£40m was raised last year).

This simple red flower is a symbol both of the blood spilled in the war, and of new life even amid devastation – a mark of respect for the sacrifice of so many, and a reminder that all our efforts should be directed to avoiding the carnage of war again.

This is also a good message to underline in NATO week.

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