September 26, 1983
Mr. Secretary-General, Mr. President, distinguished delegates, ladies and gentlemen of the world:
Thank you for granting me the honor of speaking today, on this first day of general debate in the
38th Session of the General Assembly. Once again I come before this body preoccupied with
peace. Last year I stood in this chamber to address the Special Session on Disarmament. Well,
I've come today to renew my nation's commitment to peace. And I have come to discuss how we
can keep faith with the dreams that created this organization.
The United Nations was founded in the aftermath of World War II to protect future generations
from the scourge of war, to promote political self-determination and global prosperity, and to
strengthen the bonds of civility among nations. The founders sought to replace a world at war
with a world of civilized order. They hoped that a world of relentless conflict would give way to a
new era, one where freedom from violence prevailed.
Whatever challenges the world was bound to face, the founders intended this body to stand for
certain values, even if they could not be enforced, and to condemn violence, even if it could not
be stopped. This body was to speak with the voice of moral authority. That was to be its greatest
power.
But the awful truth is that the use of violence for political gain has become more, not less,
widespread in the last decade. Events of recent weeks have presented new, unwelcome evidence
of brutal disregard for life and truth. They have offered unwanted testimony on how divided and
dangerous our world is, how quick the recourse to violence. What has happened to the dreams of
the U.N.'s founders? What has happened to the spirit which created the United Nations?
The answer is clear: Governments got in the way of the dreams of the people. Dreams became
issues of East versus West. Hopes became political rhetoric. Progress became a search for power
and domination. Somewhere the truth was lost that people don't make wars, governments do.
And today in Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and the North Pacific, the weapons of
war shatter the security of the peoples who live there, endanger the peace of neighbors, and create
ever more arenas of confrontation between the great powers. During the past year alone, violent
conflicts have occurred in the hills around Beirut, the deserts of Chad and the western Sahara, in
the mountains of El Salvador, the streets of Suriname, the cities and countryside of Afghanistan,
the borders of Kampuchea, and the battlefields of Iran and Iraq.
We cannot count on the instinct for survival to protect us against war. Despite all the wasted lives
and hopes that war produces, it has remained a regular, if horribly costly, means by which nations
have sought to settle their disputes or advance their goals. And the progress in weapons
technology has far outstripped the progress toward peace. In modern times, a new, more
terrifying element has entered into the calculations -- nuclear weapons. A nuclear war cannot be
won, and it must never be fought. I believe that if governments are determined to deter and
prevent war, there will not be war.
Nothing is more in keeping with the spirit of the United Nations Charter than arms control. When
I spoke before the Second Special Session on Disarmament, I affirmed the United States
Government's commitment, and my personal commitment, to reduce nuclear arms and to
negotiate in good faith toward that end. Today, I reaffirm those commitments.
The United States has already reduced the number of its nuclear weapons worldwide, and, while
replacement of older weapons is unavoidable, we wish to negotiate arms reductions and to
achieve significant, equitable, verifiable arms control agreements. And let me add, we must ensure
that world security is not undermined by the further spread of nuclear weapons. Nuclear
nonproliferation must not be the forgotten element of the world's arms control agenda.
At the time of my last visit here, I expressed hope that a whole class of weapons systems, the
longer range INF -- intermediate nuclear forces -- could be banned from the face of the Earth. I
believe that to relieve the deep concern of peoples in both Europe and Asia, the time was ripe, for
the first time in history, to resolve a security threat exclusively through arms control. I still believe
the elimination of these weapons -- the zero option -- is the best, fairest, most practical solution to
the problem. Unfortunately, the Soviet Union declined to accept the total elimination of this class
of weapons.
When I was here last, I hoped that the critical strategic arms reduction talks would focus, and
urgently so, on those systems that carry the greatest risk of nuclear war -- the fast-flying,
accurate, intercontinental ballistic missiles which pose a first-strike potential. I also hoped the
negotiations could reduce by one-half the number of strategic missiles on each side and reduce
their warheads by one-third. Again, I was disappointed when the Soviets declined to consider
such deep cuts, and refused as well to concentrate on these most dangerous, destabilizing
weapons.
Well, despite the rebuffs, the United States has not abandoned and will not abandon the search for
meaningful arms control agreements. Last June I proposed a new approach toward the START
negotiations. We did not alter our objective of substantial reductions, but we recognized that
there are a variety of ways to achieve this end. During the last round of Geneva talks, we
presented a draft treaty which responded to a number of concerns raised by the Soviet Union. We
will continue to build upon this initiative.
Similarly, in our negotiations on intermediate-range nuclear forces, when the Soviet leaders
adamantly refused to consider the total elimination of these weapons, the United States made a
new offer. We proposed, as an interim solution, some equal number on both sides between zero
and 572. We recommended the lowest possible level. Once again, the Soviets refused an equitable
solution and proposed instead what might be called a ``half zero option'' -- zero for us and many
hundreds of warheads for them. And that's where things stand today, but I still haven't given up
hope that the Soviet Union will enter into serious negotiations.
We are determined to spare no effort to achieve a sound, equitable, and verifiable agreement. And
for this reason, I have given new instructions to Ambassador Nitze in Geneva, telling him to put
forward a package of steps designed to advance the negotiations as rapidly as possible. These
initiatives build on the interim framework the United States advanced last March and address
concerns that the Soviets have raised at the bargaining table in the past.
Specifically, first, the United States proposes a new initiative on global limits. If the Soviet Union
agrees to reductions and limits on a global basis, the United States for its part will not offset the
entire Soviet global missile deployment through U.S. deployments in Europe. We would, of
course, retain the right to deploy missiles elsewhere.
Second, the United States is prepared to be more flexible on the content of the current talks. The
United States will consider mutually acceptable ways to address the Soviet desire that an
agreement should limit aircraft as well as missiles.
Third, the United States will address the mix of missiles that would result from reductions. In the
context of reductions to equal levels, we are prepared to reduce the number of Pershing II ballistic
missiles as well as ground-launched cruise missiles.
I have decided to put forward these important initiatives after full and extensive consultations with
our allies, including personal correspondence I've had with the leaders of the NATO governments
and Japan and frequent meetings of the NATO Special Consultative Group. I have also stayed in
close touch with other concerned friends and allies. The door to an agreement is open. It is time
for the Soviet Union to walk through it.
I want to make an unequivocal pledge to those gathered today in this world arena. The United
States seeks and will accept any equitable, verifiable agreement that stabilizes forces at lower
levels than currently exist. We're ready to be flexible in our approach, indeed, willing to
compromise. We cannot, however, especially in light of recent events, compromise on the
necessity of effective verification.
Reactions to the Korean airliner tragedy are a timely reminder of just how different the Soviets'
concept of truth and international cooperation is from that of the rest of the world. Evidence
abounds that we cannot simply assume that agreements negotiated with the Soviet Union will be
fulfilled. We negotiated the Helsinki Final Act, but the promised freedoms have not been
provided, and those in the Soviet Union who sought to monitor their fulfillment languish in
prison. We negotiated a biological weapons convention, but deadly yellow rain and other toxic
agents fall on Hmong villages and Afghan encampments. We have negotiated arms agreements,
but the high level of Soviet encoding hides the information needed for their verification. A newly
discovered radar facility and a new ICBM raise serious concerns about Soviet compliance with
agreements already negotiated.
Peace cannot be served by pseudo arms control. We need reliable, reciprocal reductions. I call
upon the Soviet Union today to reduce the tensions it has heaped on the world in the past few
weeks and to show a firm commitment to peace by coming to the bargaining table with a new
understanding of its obligations. I urge it to match our flexibility. If the Soviets sit down at the
bargaining table seeking genuine arms reductions, there will be arms reductions. The governments
of the West and their people will not be diverted by misinformation and threats. The time has
come for the Soviet Union to show proof that it wants arms control in reality, not just in
rhetoric.
Meaningful arms control agreements between the United States and the Soviet Union would make
our world less dangerous; so would a number of confidence-building steps we've already
proposed to the Soviet Union.
Arms control requires a spirit beyond narrow national interests. This spirit is a basic pillar on
which the U.N. was founded. We seek a return to this spirit. A fundamental step would be a true
nonalignment of the United Nations. This would signal a return to the true values of the charter,
including the principle of universality. The members of the United Nations must be aligned on the
side of justice rather than injustice, peace rather than aggression, human dignity rather than
subjugation. Any other alignment is beneath the purpose of this great body and destructive of the
harmony that it seeks. What harms the charter harms peace.
The founders of the U.N. expected that member nations would behave and vote as individuals,
after they had weighed the merits of an issue -- rather like a great, global town meeting. The
emergence of blocs and the polarization of the U.N. undermine all that this organization initially
valued.
We must remember that the nonaligned movement was founded to counter the development of
blocs and to promote detente between them. Its founders spoke of the right of smaller countries
not to become involved in others' disagreements. Since then, membership in the nonaligned
movement has grown dramatically, but not all the new members have shared the founders'
commitment of genuine nonalignment. Indeed, client governments of the Soviet Union, who have
long since lost their independence, have flocked into the nonaligned movement, and, once inside,
have worked against its true purpose. Pseudo nonalignment is no better than pseudo arms control.
The United States rejects as false and misleading the view of the world as divided between the
empires of the East and West. We reject it on factual grounds. The United States does not head
any bloc of subservient nations, nor do we desire to. What is called the West is a free alliance of
governments, most of whom are democratic and all of whom greatly value their independence.
What is called the East is an empire directed from the center which is Moscow.
The United States, today as in the past, is a champion of freedom and self-determination for all
people. We welcome diversity; we support the right of all nations to define and pursue their
national goals. We respect their decisions and their sovereignty, asking only that they respect the
decisions and sovereignty of others. Just look at the world over the last 30 years and then decide
for yourself whether the United States or the Soviet Union has pursued an expansionist policy.
Today, the United States contributes to peace by supporting collective efforts by the international
community. We give our unwavering support to the peacekeeping efforts of this body, as well as
other multilateral peacekeeping efforts around the world. The U.N. has a proud history of
promoting conciliation and helping keep the peace. Today, U.N. peacekeeping forces or observers
are present in Cyprus and Kashmir, on the Golan Heights and in Lebanon.
In addition to our encouragement of international diplomacy, the United States recognizes its
responsibilities to use its own influence for peace. From the days when Theodore Roosevelt
mediated the Russo-Japanese War in 1905, we have a long and honorable tradition of mediating
or damping conflicts and promoting peaceful solutions. In Lebanon, we, along with France, Italy,
and the United Kingdom, have worked for a cease-fire, for the withdrawal of all external forces,
and for restoration of Lebanon's sovereignty and territorial integrity. In Chad we have joined
others in supporting the recognized government in the face of external aggression. In Central
America, as in southern Africa, we are seeking to discourage reliance upon force and to construct
a framework for peaceful negotiations. We support a policy to disengage the major powers from
Third World conflict.
The U.N. Charter gives an important role to regional organizations in the search for peace. The
U.S. efforts in the cause of peace are only one expression of a spirit that also animates others in
the world community. The Organization of American States was a pioneer in regional security
efforts. In Central America, the members of the Contadora group are striving to lay a foundation
for peaceful resolution of that region's problems. In East Asia, the Asian countries have built a
framework for peaceful political and economic cooperation that has greatly strengthened the
prospects for lasting peace in their region. In Africa, organizations such as the Economic
Community of West African States are being forged to provide practical structures in the struggle
to realize Africa's potential.
From the beginning, our hope for the United Nations has been that it would reflect the
international community at its best. The U.N. at its best can help us transcend fear and violence
and can act as an enormous force for peace and prosperity. Working together, we can combat
international lawlessness and promote human dignity. If the governments represented in this
chamber want peace as genuinely as their peoples do, we shall find it. We can do so by reasserting
the moral authority of the United Nations.
In recent weeks, the moral outrage of the world seems to have reawakened. Out of the billions of
people who inhabit this planet, why, some might ask, should the death of several hundred shake
the world so profoundly? Why should the death of a mother flying toward a reunion with her
family or the death of a scholar heading toward new pursuits of knowledge matter so deeply?
Why are nations who lost no citizens in the tragedy so angry?
The reason rests on our assumptions about civilized life and the search for peace. The confidence
that allows a mother or a scholar to travel to Asia or Africa or Europe or anywhere else on this
planet may be only a small victory in humanity's struggle for peace. Yet what is peace if not the
sum of such small victories?
Each stride for peace and every small victory are important for the journey toward a larger and
lasting peace. We have made progress. We've avoided another world war. We've seen an end to
the traditional colonial era and the birth of a hundred newly sovereign nations. Even though
development remains a formidable challenge, we've witnessed remarkable economic growth
among the industrialized and the developing nations. The United Nations and its affiliates have
made important contributions to the quality of life on this planet, such as directly saving countless
lives through its refugee and emergency relief programs. These broad achievements, however,
have been overshadowed by the problems that weigh so heavily upon us. The problems are old,
but it is not too late to commit ourselves to a new beginning, a beginning fresh with the ideals of
the U.N. Charter.
Today, at the beginning of this 38th Session, I solemnly pledge my nation to upholding the
original ideals of the United Nations. Our goals are those that guide this very body. Our ends are
the same as those of the U.N.'s founders, who sought to replace a world at war with one where
the rule of law would prevail, where human rights were honored, where development would
blossom, where conflict would give way to freedom from violence.
In 1956 President Dwight Eisenhower made an observation on weaponry and deterrence in a
letter to a publisher. He wrote: ``When we get to the point, as we one day will, that both sides
know that in any outbreak of general hostilities, regardless of the element of surprise, destruction
will be both reciprocal and complete, possibly we will have sense enough to meet at the
conference table with the understanding that the era of armaments has ended and the human race
must conform its actions to this truth or die.'' He went on to say, ``. . . we have already come to a
point where safety cannot be assumed by arms alone . . . their usefulness becomes concentrated
more and more in their characteristics as deterrents than in instruments with which to obtain
victory. . . .''
Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, as we persevere in the search for a more secure world, we
must do everything we can to let diplomacy triumph. Diplomacy, the most honorable of
professions, can bring the most blessed of gifts, the gift of peace. If we succeed, the world will
find an excitement and accomplishment in peace beyond that which could ever be imagined
through violence and war.
I want to leave you today with a message I have often spoken about to the citizens of my own
country, especially in times when I felt they were discouraged and unsure. I say it to you with as
much hope and heart as I've said it to my own people. You have the right to dream great dreams.
You have the right to seek a better world for your people. And all of us have the responsibility to
work for that better world. And as caring, peaceful peoples, think what a powerful force for good
we could be. Distinguished delegates, let us regain the dream the United Nations once
dreamed.
Thank you.
Note: The President spoke at 10:34 a.m. in the General Assembly Hall at the United Nations
Headquarters Building. Upon arrival at the United Nations, the President met with
Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar de la Guerra and then with Jorge Illueca, President of
the 38th Session of the General Assembly, who introduced the President to the session.
Following his address, the President returned to the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.