March 30, 1984
To the Congress of the United States:
There is enclosed a draft of a Joint Resolution to approve the ``Compact of Free Association,'' the
negotiated instrument setting forth the future political relationship between the United States and
two political jurisdictions of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
The Compact of Free Association is the result of more than fourteen years of continuous and
comprehensive negotiations, spanning the administrations of four Presidents. The transmission of
the proposed Joint Resolution to you today marks the last step in the Compact approval
process.
The full text of the Compact is part of the draft Joint Resolution, which I request be introduced,
referred to the appropriate committees for consideration, and enacted. I also request that the
Congress note the agreements subsidiary to the Compact. Also enclosed is a section-by-section
analysis to facilitate your consideration of the Compact.
The defense and land use provisions of the Compact extend indefinitely the right of the United
States to foreclose access to the area to third countries for military purposes. These provisions are
of great importance to our strategic position in the Pacific and enable us to continue preserving
regional security and peace.
Since 1947, the islands of Micronesia have been administered by the United States under a
Trusteeship Agreement with the United Nations Security Council. This Compact of Free
Association with the governments of the Federated States of Micronesia and the Republic of the
Marshall Islands would fulfill our commitment under that agreement to bring about
self-government. Upon termination of the Trusteeship Agreement, another political jurisdiction of
the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, will become a
commonwealth of the United States.
The Compact of Free Association was signed for the United States by Ambassador Fred M.
Zeder, II, on October 1, 1982, with the Federated States of Micronesia, and on June 25, 1983,
with the Republic of the Marshall Islands. It is the result of negotiations between the United
States and broadly representative groups of delegates from the prospective freely associated
states.
In 1983, United Nations-observed plebiscites produced high voter participation, and the Compact
was approved by impressive majorities. In addition to approval in the plebiscites, the Compact has
been approved by the governments of the Republic of the Marshall Islands and the Federated
States of Micronesia in accordance with their constitutional processes.
Enactment of the draft Joint Resolution approving the Compact of Free Association would be a
major step leading to the termination of the Trusteeship Agreement with the United Nations
Security Council, which the United States entered into by Joint Resolution on July 18, 1947.
Therefore, I urge the Congress to approve the Compact of Free Association.
Ronald Reagan
The White House,
March 30, 1984.