и еве доказ за изолацијата на македонија(повеке би рекол притисок-ама нашиве политичари најважно е да граѓаните во македонија да им се прв приоритет.
NATO urged Macedonia on Monday to help settle a long-standing row with Greece over its name and improve its chances of being invited to join the alliance at a summit in April. Greece has said it will block Macedonia's NATO and European Union accession until the two agree on a name for its northern neighbour.
Greece has rejected the name Macedonia ever since the state broke away from Yugoslavia in 1991, saying it implies territorial ambitions against Greece's own northern province of Macedonia, birthplace of Alexander the Great.
"We have to realise that Greece is a staunch member of NATO. Aspiring nations are not members of NATO and that is the basic difference," NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said.
Scheffer said any invitation would be based on the performance of the aspiring member, adding that neighbourly relations with a current NATO member was a "dear principle."
"(Invitations) will depend on performance. Performance is also the key word here in the name issue. There is a difference of being in and not being in (NATO)," he said in response to a question on Macedonia's chances of joining the military bloc.
"I hope that the solution for this issue can be found. That would be a real big plus," Scheffer said after meeting Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyanni.
U.N. envoy Matthew Nimetz made his latest proposal for a deal last month in the hope of resolving the dispute before the NATO summit in Bucharest.
But a new round of talks with both sides that began on Friday at the United Nations in New York has not yet yielded any progress.
Macedonia, which hopes for an invitation to join NATO at the summit, uses its name in bilateral ties with many countries, but is called "The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" at the United Nations, and by NATO and the European Union.
Protesters stoned the Greek representative office in Skopje last week, the second such incident in a fortnight, chanting anti-Greek slogans and singing the national anthem.
Greek Macedonian unions are planning a rally in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki on Wednesday, as is a small far-right party. Hundreds of thousands rallied in the city against the former Yugoslav republic in the early 1990s.