Good evening.
The week before last was an especially moving one here in Washington.
The Vietnam veterans finally came home once and for all to America's
heart. They were welcomed with tears, with pride, and with a monument
to their great sacrifice. Many of their names, like those of our
Republic's greatest citizens, are now engraved in stone in this
city that belongs to all of us. On behalf of the Nation, let me
again thank the Vietnam veterans from the bottom of my heart for
their courageous service to America.
Seeing those moving scenes, I know mothers of a new generation
must have worried about their children and about peace. And that's
what I'd like to talk to you about tonight -- the future of our
children in a world where peace is made uneasy by the presence of
nuclear weapons.
A year ago, I said the time was right to move forward on arms control.
I outlined several proposals and said nothing would have a higher
priority in this administration. Now, a year later, I want to report
on those proposals and on other efforts we're making to ensure the
safety of our children's future.
The prevention of conflict and the reduction of weapons are the
most important public issues of our time. Yet, on no other issue
are there more misconceptions and misunderstandings. You, the American
people, deserve an explanation from your Government on what our
policy is on these issues. Too often, the experts have been content
to discuss grandiose strategies among themselves and cloud the public
debate in technicalities no one can understand. The result is that
many Americans have become frightened and, let me say, fear of the
unknown is entirely understandable. Unfortunately, much of the information
emerging in this debate bears little semblance to the facts.
To begin, let's go back to what the world was like at the end of
World War II. The United States was the only undamaged industrial
power in the world. Our military power was at its peak, and we alone
had the atomic weapon. But we didn't use this wealth and this power
to bully; we used it to rebuild. We raised up the war-ravaged economies,
including the economies of those who had fought against us. At first,
the peace of the world was unthreatened, because we alone were left
with any real power, and we were using it for the good of our fellow
man. Any potential enemy was deterred from aggression because the
cost would have far outweighed the gain.
As the Soviets power grew, we still managed to maintain the peace.
The United States had established a system of alliances, with NATO
as the centerpiece. In addition, we grew even more respected as
a world leader with a strong economy and deeply held moral values.
With our commitment to help shape a better world, the United States
also pursued, and always pursued, every diplomatic channel for peace.
And for at least 30 years after World War II, the United States
still continued to possess a large military advantage over the Soviet
Union. Our strength deterred, that is, prevented, aggression against
us.
This nation's military objective has always been to maintain peace
by preventing war. This is neither a Democratic nor a Republican
policy. It's supported by our allies and, most important of all,
it's worked for nearly 40 years.
What do we mean when we speak of "nuclear deterrence"? Certainly,
we don't want such weapons for their own sake. We don't desire excessive
forces or what some people have called "overkill." Basically, it's
a matter of others knowing that starting a conflict would be more
costly to them than anything they might hope to gain. And, yes,
it is sadly ironic that in these modern times, it still takes weapons
to prevent war. I wish it did not.
We desire peace. But peace is a goal, not a policy. Lasting peace
is what we hope for at the end of our journey; it doesn't describe
the steps we must take nor the paths we should follow to reach that
goal.
I intend to search for peace along two parallel paths: deterrence
and arms reductions. I believe these are the only paths that offer
any real hope for an enduring peace.
And let me say I believe that if we follow prudent policies, the
risk of nuclear conflict will be reduced. Certainly, the United
States will never use its forces except in response to attack. Through
the years, Soviet leaders have also expressed a sober view of nuclear
war. And if we maintain a strong deterrent, they are exceedingly
unlikely to launch an attack.
Now, while the policy of deterrence has stood the test of time,
the things we must do in order to maintain deterrence have changed.
You often hear that the United States and the Soviet Union are in
an arms race. Well, the truth is that while the Soviet Union has
raced, we have not. As you can see from this blue U.S. line,01 in
constant dollars, our defense spending in the 1960's went up because
of Vietnam. And then it went downward through much of the 1970's.
And now follow the red line, which is Soviet spending. It's gone
up and up and up. In spite of a stagnating Soviet economy, Soviet
leaders invest 12 to 14 percent of their country's gross national
product in military spending -- two to three times the level we
invest.
I might add that the defense share of our United States Federal
budget has gone way down, too. Watch the blue line again. In 1962,
when John Kennedy was President, 46 percent, almost half of the
Federal budget, went to our national defense. In recent years, about
one quarter of our budget has gone to defense, while the share for
social programs has nearly doubled. And most of our defense budget
is spent on people, not weapons.
The combination of the Soviets spending more and the United States
spending proportionately less changed the military balance and weakened
our deterrent. Today, in virtually every measure of military power,
the Soviet Union enjoys a decided advantage.
This chart shows the changes in the total number of international
missiles and bombers. You will see that in 1962 and in 1972, the
United States forces remained about the same -- even dropping some
by 1982. But take a look now at the Soviet side. In 1962, at the
time of the Cuban missile crisis, the Soviets could not compare
with us in terms of strength. In 1972, when we signed the SALT I
treaty, we were nearly equal. But in 1982 -- well, that red Soviet
bar stretching above the blue American bar tells the story.
I could show you chart after chart where there's a great deal of
red and a much lesser amount of U.S. blue. For example, the Soviet
Union has developed a third more land-based international ballistic
missiles than we have. Believe it or not, we froze our number in
1965 and have deployed no additional missiles since then.
The Soviet Union upon to sea 60 new ballistic missile submarines
in the last 15 years. Until last year, we hadn't commissioned one
in that same period.
The Soviet Union has built over 200 modern backfire bombers and
is building 30 more a year. For 20 years, the United States has
deployed no new strategic bombers. Many of our B-52 bombers are
now older than the pilots who fly them.
The Soviet Union now has 600 of the missiles considered most threatening
by both sides -- the intermediate-range missiles based on land.
We have none. The United States withdrew its intermediate-range
land-based missiles from Europe almost 20 years ago.
The world has also witnessed unprecedented growth in the area of
Soviet conventional forces. The Soviets far exceed us in the number
of tanks, artillery pieces, aircraft, and ships they produce every
year. What is more, when I arrived in this office. I learned that
in our own forces we had planes that couldn't fly and ships that
couldn't leave port mainly for lack of spare part and crewmembers.
The Soviet military buildup must not be ignored. We've recognized
the problem and, together with our allies, we've begun to correct
the imbalance. Look at this chart of projected real defense spending
for the next several years. Here is the Soviet line. Let us assume
the Soviets rate of spending remains at the level they've followed
since the 1960's. The blue line is the United States. If my defense
proposals are passed, it will still take 5 years before we come
close to the Soviet level. Yet, the modernization of our strategic
and conventional forces will assure that deterrence works and peace
prevails.
Our deployed nuclear forces built before the age of microcircuits.
It's not right to ask our young men and women in uniform to maintain
and operate such antiques. Many have already given their lives to
missile explosions and aircraft accidents caused by the old age
of their equipment. We must replace and modernize our forces, and
that's why I decided to proceed with the production and deployment
of the new ICBM known as the MX.
Three earlier Presidents worked to develop this missile. Based
on the best advice that I could get, I concluded that the MX is
the right missile at the right time. On the other hand, when I arrived
in office I felt the proposal on where and how to base the missile
simply cost too much in terms of money and the impact on our citizens'
lives. I've concluded, however, it's absolutely essential that we
proceed to produce this missile and that we base it in a series
of closely based silos at Warren Air Force Base, near Cheyenne,
Wyoming.
This plan requires only half as many missiles as the earlier plan
and will fit in an area of only 20 square miles. It is the product
of around-the-clock research that has been underway since I directed
a search for a better, cheaper way. I urge the Members of Congress
who must pass this plan to listen and examine the facts before they
come to their own conclusion.
Some may question what modernizing our military has to do with
peace. Well, as I explained earlier, a secure force keeps others
from threatening us, and that keeps the peace. And just as important,
it also increases the prospects of reaching significant arms reductions
with the Soviets, and that's what we really want.
The United States wants deep cuts in the world's arsenal of weapons,
but unless we demonstrate the will to rebuild our strength and restore
the military balance, the Soviets, since they're so far ahead, have
little incentive to negotiate with us. Let me repeat that point
because it goes to the heart of our policies. Unless we demonstrate
the will to rebuild our strength, the Soviets have little incentive
to negotiate. If we hadn't begun to modernize, the Soviet negotiators
would know we had nothing to bargain with except talk. They would
know we were bluffing without a good hand, because they know what
cards we hold just as we know what's in their hand.
You may recall that in 1969 the Soviets didn't want to negotiate
a treaty banning anti-ballistic missiles. it was only after our
Senate narrowly voted to fund an anti-ballistic missile program
that the Soviets agreed to negotiate. We then reached an agreement.
We also know that one-sided arms control doesn't work. We've tried
time and time again to set an example by cutting our own forces
in the hope that the Soviets would do likewise. The result has always
been that they keep building.
I believe our strategy for peace will succeed. Never before has
the United States proposed such a comprehensive program of nuclear
arms control. Never in our history have we engaged in so many negotiations
with the Soviets to reduce nuclear arms and to find a stable peace.
What we are saying to them is this: We will modernize our military
in order to keep the balance for peace, but wouldn't it be better
if we both simply reduced our arsenals to a much lower level?
Let me begin with the negotiations on the intermediate-range nuclear
forces that are currently underway in Geneva. As I said earlier,
the most threatening of these forces are the land-based missiles
which the Soviet Union now has aimed at Europe, the Middle East,
and Asia.
This chart shows the number of warheads on these Soviet missiles.
In 1972 there were 600. The United States was at zero. In 1977 there
were 600. The United States was still at zero. Then the Soviets
began deploying powerful new missiles with three warheads and a
reach of thousands of miles -- the SS-20. Since then, the bar has
gone through the roof -- the Soviets have added a missile with three
warheads every week. Still, you see no United States blue on the
chart. Although the Soviet leaders earlier this year declared they'd
frozen deployment of this dangerous missile, they have in fact continued
deployment.
Last year, on November 18th, I proposed the total, global elimination
of all these missiles. I proposed that the United States would deploy
no comparable missiles, which are scheduled for late 1983, if the
Soviet Union would dismantle theirs. We would follow agreement on
the land-based missiles with limits on other intermediate-range
systems.
The European governments strongly support our initiative. The Soviet
Union has thus far shown little inclination to take this major step
to zero levels. Yet I believe, and I'm hoping, that as the talks
proceed and as we approach the scheduled placement of our new systems
in Europe, the Soviet leaders will see the benefits of such a far-reaching
agreement.
This summer we also began negotiations on strategic arms reductions,
the proposal we call START. Here we're talking about intercontinental
missiles, the weapons with a longer range than the intermediate
range ones I was just discussing. We're negotiating on the basis
of deep reductions. I proposed in May that we cut the number of
warheads on these missiles to an equal number, roughly one-third
below current levels. I also proposed that we cut the number of
missiles themselves to an equal number, about half the current U.S.
level. Our proposals would eliminate some 4,700 warheads and some
2,250 missiles. I think that would be quite a service to mankind.
This chart shows the current level of United States ballistic missiles,
both land- and sea-based. This is the Soviet level. We intend to
convince the Soviets it would be in their own best interest to reduce
these missiles. Look at the reduced numbers both sides would have
under our proposal -- quite a dramatic change. We also seek to reduce
the total destructive power of these missiles and other elements
of United States and Soviet strategic forces.
In 1977, when the last administration proposed more limited reductions,
the Soviet Union refused even to discuss them. This time their reaction
has been quite different. Their opening position is a serious one,
and even though it doesn't meet our objective of deep reductions,
there's no question we're heading in the right direction. One reason
for this change is clear. The Soviet Union knows that we are now
serious about our own strategic programs and that they must be prepared
to negotiate in earnest.
We also have other important arms control efforts underway. In
the talks in Vienna on mutual and balanced force reduction, we've
proposed cuts in military personnel to a far lower and equal level.
And in the 40-nation Committee on Disarmament in Geneva, we're working
to develop effective limitations on nuclear testing and chemical
weapons. The whole world remains outraged by the Soviets and their
allies use of biological and chemical weapons against defenseless
people in Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Laos. This experience makes
ironclad verification all the more essential for arms control.
There is, of course, much more that needs to be done. In an age
when intercontinental missiles can span half the globe in less than
half an hour, it's crucial that Soviet and American leaders have
clear understanding of each other's capabilities and intentions.
Last June in Berlin, and again at the United Nations Special Session
on Disarmament, I vowed that the United States would make every
effort to reduce the risks of accident and misunderstanding and
thus to strengthen mutual confidence between the United States and
the Soviet Union. Since then, we've been actively studying detailed
measures to implement this Berlin initiative.
Today I would like to announce some of the measures which I've
proposed in a special letter just sent to the Soviet leadership
and which I've instructed our Ambassadors in Geneva to discuss with
their Soviet counterparts. They include, but also go beyond, some
of the suggestions I made in Berlin.
The first of these measures involves advance notification of all
United States and Soviet test launches of intercontinental ballistic
missiles. We will also seek Soviet agreement on notification of
all sea-launched ballistic missiles as well as intermediate-range
land-base ballistic missiles of the type we're currently negotiating.
This would remove surprise and uncertainty at the sudden appearance
of such missiles on the warning screens of the two countries.
In another area of potential misunderstanding, we propose to the
Soviets that we provide each other with advance notification of
our major military exercises. Here again, our objective is to reduce
the surprise and uncertainty surrounding otherwise sudden moves
by either side.
These sorts of measures are designed to deal with the immediate
issues of miscalculation in time of crisis. But there are deeper,
longer-term problems as well. In order to clear away some of the
mutual ignorance and suspicion between our two countries, I will
propose that we both engage in broad-ranging exchange of basic data
about our nuclear forces. I am instructing our Ambassadors at the
negotiations on both strategic and intermediate forces to seek Soviet
agreement on an expanded exchange of information. The more one side
knows about what the other side is doing, the less room there is
for surprise and miscalculation.
Probably everyone has heard of the so-called Hotline, which enables
me to communicate directly with the Soviet leadership in the event
of a crisis. The existing Hotline is dependable and rapid, with
both ground and satellite links. But because it's so important,
I've also directed that we carefully examine any possible improvements
to the existing Hotline system.
Now, although we've begun negotiations on these many proposals,
this doesn't mean we've exhausted all the initiatives that could
help to reduce the risk of accidental conflict. We'll leave no opportunity
unexplored, and we'll consult closely with Senators Nunn, Jackson,
and Warner, and other Members of the Congress who've made important
suggestions in this field.
We're also making strenuous efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear
weapons to additional countries. It would be tragic if we succeeded
in reducing existing arsenals only to have new threats emerge in
other areas of the world.
Earlier, I spoke of America's contributions to peace following
World War II, of all we did to promote peace and prosperity for
our fellow man. Well, we're still those same people. We still seek
peace above all else.
I want to remind our own citizens and those around the world of
this tradition of American good will, because I am concerned about
the effects the nuclear fear is having on our people. The most upsetting
letters I receive are from schoolchildren who write to me as a class
assignment. It's evident they've discussed the most night-marish
aspects of a nuclear holocaust in their classrooms. Their letters
are often full of terror. Well, this should not be so.
The philosopher, Spinoza, said, "Peace is a virtue, a state of
mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice." Well,
those are the qualities we want our children to inherit, not fear.
They must grow up confident if they're to meet the challenges of
tomorrow as we will meet the challenges of today.
I began these remarks speaking of our children. I want to close
on the same theme. Our children should not grow up frightened. They
should not fear the future. We're working to make it peaceful and
free. I believe their future can be the brightest, most exciting
of any generation. We must reassure them and let them know that
their parents and the leaders of this world are seeking, above all
else, to keep them safe and at peace. I consider this to be a sacred
trust.
My fellow Americans, on this Thanksgiving when we have so much
to be grateful for, let us give special thanks for our peace, our
freedom, and our good people.
I've always believed that this land was set aside in an uncommon
way, that a divine plan placed this great continent between the
oceans to be found by a people from every corner of the Earth who
had a special love of faith, freedom, and peace.
Let us reaffirm America's destiny of goodness and good will. Let
us work for peace and, as we do, let us remember the lines of the
famous old hymn: "O God of Love, O King of Peace, make wars throughout
the world to cease."
Thank you. Good night, and God bless you.
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