Military Exchange Operations and Morale, Welfare, and Recreation Programs: Hearings Before the Morale, Welfare, and Recreation Panel of the Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, First Session, Hearings Held November 6 and 7, 1991, Volume 5

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Page 25 - ... the institution of a system ensuring that competition in the Common Market is not distorted...
Page 67 - Any Member State may take such measures as it considers necessary for the protection of the essential interests of its security which are connected with the production of or trade in arms, munitions and war material.
Page 142 - Defense, the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Naval Operations and the Commandant of the Marine Corps, we have a multitude of initiatives well underway to make our infrastructure more effective and less costly.
Page 7 - Chairman, Subcommittee on Investigations Committee on Armed Services House of Representatives Dear Mr. Chairman: This is...
Page 57 - Memorandum for Secretaries of the Military Departments. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Under Secretaries of Defense Director, Defense Research and Engineering. Assistant Secretaries of Defense...
Page 8 - ASER states that merchandise and services sold through military exchanges should be priced in a substantially uniform manner at the lowest practicable level consistent with the primary mission of the military exchanges of providing the authorized patrons with articles and services necessary for their health, comfort, and convenience.
Page 64 - There is not one of the peoples or provinces that constituted the Empire of the Habsburgs to whom gaining their independence has not brought the tortures which ancient poets and theologians had reserved for the damned.
Page 67 - Parties are determined to maintain the technological and industrial conditions necessary for their security. They shall work to that end both at national level and, where appropriate, within the framework of the competent institutions and bodies . (c) Nothing in this Title shall impede closer co-operation in the field of security between certain of the High Contracting Parties within the framework of the Western European Union or the Atlantic Alliance.
Page 183 - Defense does not know the extent to which foreign-sourced parts and components are incorporated in the systems it acquires. There is no systematic, established means to identify foreign-sourced parts and components and, hence, no way to determine the extent of foreign dependencies or vulnerabilities. There have been a number of ad hoc efforts that have identified specific foreign dependencies and preliminary indications that foreign dependencies are increasing. In a national emergency, the consequences...
Page 67 - No Member State shall be obliged to supply information the disclosure of which it considers contrary to the essential interests of its security; (b) Any Member State may take such measures as it considers necessary for the protection of the essential interests of its security...

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