April 27, 1983
Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Congress, honored guests, and my
fellow Americans:
A number of times in past years, Members of Congress and a President have come together in
meetings like this to resolve a crisis. I have asked for this meeting in the hope that we can prevent
one.
It would be hard to find many Americans who aren't aware of our stake in the Middle East, the
Persian Gulf, or the NATO line dividing the free world from the Communist bloc. And the same
could be said for Asia.
But in spite of, or maybe because of, a flurry of stories about places like Nicaragua and El
Salvador and, yes, some concerted propaganda, many of us find it hard to believe we have a stake
in problems involving those countries. Too many have thought of Central America as just that
place way down below Mexico that can't possibly constitute a threat to our well-being. And that's
why I've asked for this session. Central America's problems do directly affect the security and the
well-being of our own people. And Central America is much closer to the United States than
many of the world troublespots that concern us. So, we work to restore our own economy; we
cannot afford to lose sight of our neighbors to the south.
El Salvador is nearer to Texas than Texas is to Massachusetts. Nicaragua is just as close to
Miami, San Antonio, San Diego, and Tucson as those cities are to Washington, where we're
gathered tonight.
But nearness on the map doesn't even begin to tell the strategic importance of Central America,
bordering as it does on the Caribbean -- our lifeline to the outside world. Two-thirds of all our
foreign trade and petroleum pass through the Panama Canal and the Caribbean. In a European
crisis at least half of our supplies for NATO would go through these areas by sea. It's well to
remember that in early 1942, a handful of Hitler's submarines sank more tonnage there than in all
of the Atlantic Ocean. And they did this without a single naval base anywhere in the area. And
today, the situation is different. Cuba is host to a Soviet combat brigade, a submarine base capable
of servicing Soviet submarines, and military air bases visited regularly by Soviet military
aircraft.
Because of its importance, the Caribbean Basin is a magnet for adventurism. We're all aware of
the Libyan cargo planes refueling in Brazil a few days ago on their way to deliver ``medical
supplies'' to Nicaragua. Brazilian authorities discovered the so-called medical supplies were
actually munitions and prevented their delivery.
You may remember that last month, speaking on national television, I showed an aerial photo of
an airfield being built on the island of Grenada. Well, if that airfield had been completed, those
planes could have refueled there and completed their journey.
If the Nazis during World War II and the Soviets today could recognize the Caribbean and
Central America as vital to our interests, shouldn't we, also? For several years now, under two
administrations, the United States has been increasing its defense of freedom in the Caribbean
Basin. And I can tell you tonight, democracy is beginning to take root in El Salvador, which, until
a short time ago, knew only dictatorship.
The new government is now delivering on its promises of democracy, reforms, and free elections.
It wasn't easy, and there was resistance to many of the attempted reforms, with assassinations of
some of the reformers. Guerrilla bands and urban terrorists were portrayed in a worldwide
propaganda campaign as freedom fighters, representative of the people. Ten days before I came
into office, the guerrillas launched what they called ``a final offensive'' to overthrow the
government. And their radio boasted that our new administration would be too late to prevent
their victory.
Well, they learned that democracy cannot be so easily defeated. President Carter did not hesitate.
He authorized arms and munitions to El Salvador. The guerrilla offensive failed, but not America's
will. Every President since this country assumed global responsibilities has known that those
responsibilities could only be met if we pursued a bipartisan foreign policy.
As I said a moment ago, the Government of El Salvador has been keeping its promises, like the
land reform program which is making thousands of farm tenants, farm owners. In a little over 3
years, 20 percent of the arable land in El Salvador has been redistributed to more than 450,000
people. That's one in ten Salvadorans who have benefited directly from this program.
El Salvador has continued to strive toward an orderly and democratic society. The government
promised free elections. On March 28th, a little more than a year ago, after months of
campaigning by a variety of candidates, the suffering people of El Salvador were offered a chance
to vote, to choose the kind of government they wanted. And suddenly, the so-called freedom
fighters in the hills were exposed for what they really are -- a small minority who want power for
themselves and their backers, not democracy for the people. The guerrillas threatened death to
anyone who voted. They destroyed hundreds of buses and trucks to keep the people from getting
to the polling places. Their slogan was brutal: ``Vote today, die tonight.'' But on election day, an
unprecedented 80 percent of the electorate braved ambush and gunfire and trudged for miles,
many of them, to vote for freedom. Now, that's truly fighting for freedom. We can never turn our
backs on that.
Members of this Congress who went there as observers told me of a woman who was wounded
by rifle fire on the way to the polls, who refused to leave the line to have her wound treated until
after she had voted. Another woman had been told by the guerrillas that she would be killed when
she returned from the polls, and she told the guerrillas, ``You can kill me, you can kill my family,
you can kill my neighbors. You can't kill us all.'' The real freedom fighters of El Salvador turned
out to be the people of that country -- the young, the old, the in-between -- more than a million of
them out of a population of less than 5 million. The world should respect this courage and not
allow it to be belittled or forgotten. And again I say, in good conscience, we can never turn our
backs on that.
The democratic po,itical parties and factions in El Salvador are coming together around the
common goal of seeking a political solution to their country's problems. New national elections
will be held this year, and they will be open to all political parties. The government has invited the
guerrillas to participate in the election and is preparing an amnesty law. The people of El Salvador
are earning their freedom, and they deserve our moral and material support to protect it.
Yes, there are still major problems regarding human rights, the criminal justice system, and
violence against noncombat- ants. And, like the rest of Central America, El Salvador also faces
severe economic problems. But in addition to recession-depressed prices for major agricultural
exports, El Salvador's economy is being deliberately sabotaged.
Tonight in El Salvador -- because of ruthless guerrilla attacks -- much of the fertile land cannot be
cultivated; less than half the rolling stock of the railways remains operational; bridges, water
facilities, telephone and electric systems have been destroyed and damaged. In one 22-month
period, there were 5,000 interruptions of electrical power. One region was without electricity for
a third of the year.
I think Secretary of State Shultz put it very well the other day: ``Unable to win the free loyalty of
El Salvador's people, the guerrillas,'' he said, ``are deliberately and systematically depriving them
of food, water, transportation, light, sanitation, and jobs. And these are the people who claim they
want to help the common people.'' They don't want elections because they know they'd be
defeated. But, as the previous election showed, the Salvadoran people's desire for democracy will
not be defeated.
The guerrillas are not embattled peasants, armed with muskets. They're professionals, sometimes
with better training and weaponry than the government's soldiers. The Salvadoran battalions that
have received U.S. training have been conducting themselves well on the battlefield and with the
civilian population. But so far, we've only provided enough money to train one Salvadoran soldier
out of ten, fewer than the number of guerrillas that are trained by Nicaragua and Cuba.
And let me set the record straight on Nicaragua, a country next to El Salvador. In 1979 when the
new government took over in Nicaragua, after a revolution which overthrew the authoritarian rule
of Somoza, everyone hoped for the growth of democracy. We in the United States did, too. By
January of 1981, our emergency relief and recovery aid to Nicaragua totalled $118 million -- more
than provided by any other developed country. In fact, in the first 2 years of Sandinista rule, the
United States directly or indirectly sent five times more aid to Nicaragua than it had in the 2 years
prior to the revolution. Can anyone doubt the generosity and the good faith of the American
people?
These were hardly the actions of a nation implacably hostile to Nicaragua. Yet, the Government
of Nicaragua has treated us as an enemy. It has rejected our repeated peace efforts. It has broken
its promises to us, to the Organization of American States and, most important of all, to the
people of Nicaragua.
No sooner was victory achieved than a small clique ousted others who had been part of the
revolution from having any voice in the government. Humberto Ortega, the Minister of Defense,
declared Marxism-Leninism would be their guide, and so it is.
The Government of Nicaragua has imposed a new dictatorship. It has refused to hold the elections
it promised. It has seized control of most media and subjects all media to heavy prior censorship.
It denied the bishops and priests of the Roman Catholic Church the right to say Mass on radio
during Holy Week. It insulted and mocked the Pope. It has driven the Miskito Indians from their
homelands, burning their villages, destroying their crops, and forcing them into involuntary
internment camps far from home. It has moved against the private sector and free labor unions. It
condoned mob action against Nicaragua's independent human rights commission and drove the
director of that commission into exile.
In short, after all these acts of repression by the government, is it any wonder that opposition has
formed? Contrary to propaganda, the opponents of the Sandinistas are not diehard supporters of
the previous Somoza regime. In fact, many are anti-Somoza heroes and fought beside the
Sandinistas to bring down the Somoza government. Now they've been denied any part in the new
government because they truly wanted democracy for Nicaragua and they still do. Others are
Miskito Indians fighting for their homes, their lands, and their lives.
The Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua turned out to be just an exchange of one set of autocratic
rulers for another, and the people still have no freedom, no democratic rights, and more poverty.
Even worse than its predecessor, it is helping Cuba and the Soviets to destabilize our
hemisphere.
Meanwhile, the Government of El Salvador, making every effort to guarantee democracy, free
labor unions, freedom of religion, and a free press, is under attack by guerrillas dedicated to the
same philosophy that prevails in Nicaragua, Cuba, and, yes, the Soviet Union. Violence has been
Nicaragua's most important export to the world. It is the ultimate in hypocrisy for the unelected
Nicaraguan Government to charge that we seek their overthrow, when they're doing everything
they can to bring down the elected Government of El Salvador. [Applause] Thank you. The
guerrilla attacks are directed from a headquarters in Managua, the capital of Nicaragua.
But let us be clear as to the American attitude toward the Government of Nicaragua. We do not
seek its overthrow. Our interest is to ensure that it does not infect its neighbors through the
export of subversion and violence. Our purpose, in conformity with American and international
law, is to prevent the flow of arms to El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, and Costa Rica. We
have attempted to have a dialog with the Government of Nicaragua, but it persists in its efforts to
spread violence.
We should not, and we will not, protect the Nicaraguan Government from the anger of its own
people. But we should, through diplomacy, offer an alternative. And as Nicaragua ponders its
options, we can and will -- with all the resources of diplomacy -- protect each country of Central
America from the danger of war.
Even Costa Rica, Central America's oldest and strongest democracy -- a government so peaceful
it doesn't even have an army -- is the object of bullying and threats from Nicaragua's dictators.
Nicaragua's neighbors know that Sandinista promises of peace, nonalliance, and nonintervention
have not been kept. Some 36 new military bases have been built. There were only 13 during the
Somoza years. Nicaragua's new army numbers 25,000 men, supported by a militia of 50,000. It is
the largest army in Central America, supplemented by 2,000 Cuban military and security advisers.
It is equipped with the most modern weapons -- dozens of Soviet-made tanks, 800 Soviet-bloc
trucks, Soviet 152-millimeter howitzers, 100 anti-aircraft guns, plus planes and helicopters. There
are additional thousands of civilian advisers from Cuba, the Soviet Union, East Germany, Libya,
and the PLO. And we're attacked because we have 55 military trainers in El Salvador.
The goal of the professional guerrilla movements in Central America is as simple as it is sinister:
to destabilize the entire region from the Panama Canal to Mexico. And if you doubt beyond this
point, just consider what Cayetano Carpio, the now-deceased Salvadoran guerrilla leader, said
earlier this month. Carpio said that after El Salvador falls, El Salvador and Nicaragua would be
``arm-in-arm and struggling for the total liberation of Central America.''
Nicaragua's dictatorial junta, who themselves made war and won power operating from bases in
Honduras and Costa Rica, like to pretend that they are today being attacked by forces based in
Honduras. The fact is, it is Nicaragua's government that threatens Honduras, not the reverse. It is
Nicaragua who has moved heavy tanks close to the border, and Nicaragua who speaks of war. It
was Nicaraguan radio that announced on April 8th the creation of a new, unified, revolutionary
coordinating board to push forward the Marxist struggle in Honduras.
Nicaragua, supported by weapons and military resources provided by the Communist bloc,
represses its own people, refuses to make peace, and sponsors a guerrilla war against El
Salvador.
President Truman's words are as apt today as they were in 1947 when he, too, spoke before a
joint session of the Congress:
``At the present moment in world history, nearly every nation must choose between alternate
ways of life. The choice is not too often a free one. One way of life is based upon the will of the
majority and is distinguished by free institutions, representative government, free elections,
guarantees of individual liberty, freedom of speech and religion, and freedom from political
oppression. The second way of life is based upon the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the
majority. It relies upon terror and oppression, a controlled press and radio, fixed elections, and the
suppression of personal freedoms.
``I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting
attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures. I believe that we must assist
free peoples to work out their own destinies in their own way. I believe that our help should be
primarily through economic and financial aid which is essential to economic stability and orderly
political processes.
``Collapse of free institutions and loss of independence would be disastrous not only for them but
for the world. Discouragement and possibly failure would quickly be the lot of neighboring
peoples striving to maintain their freedom and independence.''
The countries of Central America are smaller than the nations that prompted President Truman's
message. But the political and strategic stakes are the same. Will our response -- economic,
social, military -- be as appropriate and successful as Mr. Truman's bold solutions to the problems
of postwar Europe?
Some people have forgotten the successes of those years and the decades of peace, prosperity,
and freedom they secured. Some people talk as though the United States were incapable of acting
effectively in international affairs without risking war or damaging those we seek to help.
Are democracies required to remain passive while threats to their security and prosperity
accumulate? Must we just accept the destabilization of an entire region from the Panama Canal to
Mexico on our southern border? Must we sit by while independent nations of this hemisphere are
integrated into the most aggressive empire the modern world has seen? Must we wait while
Central Americans are driven from their homes like the more than a million who've sought refuge
out of Afghanistan, or the 1\1/2\ million who have fled Indochina, or the more than a million
Cubans who have fled Castro's Caribbean utopia? Must we, by default, leave the people of El
Salvador no choice but to flee their homes, creating another tragic human exodus?
I don't believe there's a majority in the Congress or the country that counsels passivity,
resignation, defeatism, in the face of this challenge to freedom and security in our own
hemisphere. [Applause] Thank you. Thank you.
I do not believe that a majority of the Congress or the country is prepared to stand by passively
while the people of Central America are delivered to totalitarianism and we ourselves are left
vulnerable to new dangers.
Only last week, an official of the Soviet Union reiterated Brezhnev's threat to station nuclear
missiles in this hemisphere, 5 minutes from the United States. Like an echo, Nicaragua's
Commandante Daniel Ortega confirmed that, if asked, his country would consider accepting those
missiles. I understand that today they may be having second thoughts.
Now, before I go any further, let me say to those who invoke the memory of Vietnam, there is no
thought of sending American combat troops to Central America. They are not needed --
[applause] -- --
Thank you. And, as I say, they are not needed and, indeed, they have not been requested there.
All our neighbors ask of us is assistance in training and arms to protect themselves while they
build a better, freer life.
We must continue to encourage peace among the nations of Central America. We must support
the regional efforts now underway to promote solutions to regional problems.
We cannot be certain that the Marxist-Leninist bands who believe war is an instrument of politics
will be readily discouraged. It's crucial that we not become discouraged before they do.
Otherwise, the region's freedom will be lost and our security damaged in ways that can hardly be
calculated.
If Central America were to fall, what would the consequences be for our position in Asia, Europe,
and for alliances such as NATO? If the United States cannot respond to a threat near our own
borders, why should Europeans or Asians believe that we're seriously concerned about threats to
them? If the Soviets can assume that nothing short of an actual attack on the United States will
provoke an American response, which ally, which friend will trust us then?
The Congress shares both the power and the responsibility for our foreign policy. Tonight, I ask
you, the Congress, to join me in a bold, generous approach to the problems of peace and poverty,
democracy and dictatorship in the region. Join me in a program that prevents Communist victory
in the short run, but goes beyond, to produce for the deprived people of the area the reality of
present progress and the promise of more to come.
Let us lay the foundation for a bipartisan approach to sustain the independence and freedom of the
countries of Central America. We in the administration reach out to you in this spirit.
We will pursue four basic goals in Central America:
First, in response to decades of inequity and indifference, we will support democracy, reform, and
human freedom. This means using our assistance, our powers of persuasion, and our legitimate
leverage to bolster humane democratic systems where they already exist and to help countries on
their way to that goal complete the process as quickly as human institutions can be changed.
Elections in El Salvador and also in Nicaragua must be open to all, fair and safe. The international
community must help. We will work at human rights problems, not walk away from them.
Second, in response to the challenge of world recession and, in the case of El Salvador, to the
unrelenting campaign of economic sabotage by the guerrillas, we will support economic
development. And by a margin of 2 to 1 our aid is economic now, not military. Seventy-seven
cents out of every dollar we will spend in the area this year goes for food, fertilizers, and other
essentials for economic growth and development. And our economic program goes beyond
traditional aid. The Caribbean Initiative introduced in the House earlier today will provide
powerful trade and investment incentives to help these countries achieve self-sustaining economic
growth without exporting U.S. jobs. Our goal must be to focus our immense and growing
technology to enhance health care, agriculture, industry, and to ensure that we who inhabit this
interdependent region come to know and understand each other better, retaining our diverse
identities, respecting our diverse traditions and institutions.
And, third, in response to the military challenge from Cuba and Nicaragua -- to their deliberate
use of force to spread tyranny -- we will support the security of the region's threatened nations.
We do not view security assistance as an end in itself, but as a shield for democratization,
economic development, and diplomacy. No amount of reform will bring peace so long as
guerrillas believe they will win by force. No amount of economic help will suffice if guerrilla units
can destroy roads and bridges and power stations and crops, again and again, with impunity. But
with better training and material help, our neighbors can hold off the guerrillas and give
democratic reform time to take root.
And, fourth, we will support dialog and negotiations both among the countries of the region and
within each country. The terms and conditions of participation in elections are negotiable. Costa
Rica is a shining example of democracy. Honduras has made the move from military rule to
democratic government. Guatemala is pledged to the same course. The United States will work
toward a political solution in Central America which will serve the interests of the democratic
process.
To support these diplomatic goals, I offer these assurances: The United States will support any
agreement among Central American countries for the withdrawal, under fully verifiable and
reciprocal conditions, of all foreign military and security advisers and troops. We want to help
opposition groups join the political process in all countries and compete by ballots instead of
bullets. We will support any verifiable, reciprocal agreement among Central American countries
on the renunciation of support for insurgencies on neighbors' territory. And, finally, we desire to
help Central America end its costly arms race and will support any verifiable, reciprocal
agreements on the nonimportation of offensive weapons.
To move us toward these goals more rapidly, I am tonight announcing my intention to name an
Ambassador at Large as my special envoy to Central America. He or she will report to me
through the Secretary of State. The Ambassador's responsibilities will be to lend U.S. support to
the efforts of regional governments to bring peace to this troubled area and to work closely with
the Congress to assure the fullest possible, bipartisan coordination of our policies toward the
region.
What I'm asking for is prompt congressional approval for the full reprograming of funds for key
current economic and security programs so that the people of Central America can hold the line
against externally supported aggression. In addition, I am asking for prompt action on the
supplemental request in these same areas to carry us through the current fiscal year and for early
and favorable congressional action on my requests for fiscal year 1984.
And finally, I am asking that the bipartisan consensus, which last year acted on the trade and tax
provisions of the Caribbean Basin Initiative in the House, again take the lead to move this vital
proposal to the floor of both Chambers. And, as I said before, the greatest share of these requests
is targeted toward economic and humanitarian aid, not military.
What the administration is asking for on behalf of freedom in Central America is so small, so
minimal, considering what is at stake. The total amount requested for aid to all of Central
America in 1984 is about $600 million. That's less than one-tenth of what Americans will spend
this year on coin-operated video games.
In summation, I say to you that tonight there can be no question: The national security of all the
Americas is at stake in Central America. If we cannot defend ourselves there, we cannot expect to
prevail elsewhere. Our credibility would collapse, our alliances would crumble, and the safety of
our homeland would be put in jeopardy.
We have a vital interest, a moral duty, and a solemn responsibility. This is not a partisan issue. It
is a question of our meeting our moral responsibility to ourselves, our friends, and our posterity.
It is a duty that falls on all of us -- the President, the Congress, and the people. We must perform
it together. Who among us would wish to bear responsibility for failing to meet our shared
obligation?
Thank you, God bless you, and good night.
Note: The President spoke at 8:04 p.m. in the House Chamber of the Capitol. He was introduced
by Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., Speaker of the House of Representatives. The address was broadcast
live on nationwide radio and television.