June 2, 1984
My fellow Americans:
Top o' the mornin' to you. I'm speaking from a small town named Cong in western Ireland, first
stop on a 10-day trip that will also take Nancy and me to France and England.
We're in an area of spectacular beauty overlooking a large lake filled with islands, bays, and
coves. And those of you who, like me, can claim the good fortune of Irish roots, may appreciate
the tug I felt in my heart yesterday when we saw the Emerald Isle from Air Force One. I thought
of words from a poem about Ireland:
A place as kind as it is green,
The greenest place I've every seen.
I told our welcoming hosts that to stand with them on the soil of my ancestors was, for this
great-grandson of Ireland, a very special moment. It was a moment of joy.
Earlier today we were in Galway, a coastal city celebrating its 500th anniversary. Legend has it
Columbus prayed at a church there on his way to the New World. For a thousand years, Ireland
was considered the western edge of civilization and a place that continued to revere learning
during a time of darkness on the continent of Europe.
That reverence earned Ireland its reputation as the Island of Saints and Scholars. I was pleased to
address representatives of University College in Galway to speak to them of Ireland's many
contributions to America and to give thanks for those great, great forces of faith and love for
liberty and justice that bind our people.
The president of that institution, Dr. O'hEocha, also chaired a group called the New Ireland
Forum, which has sought to foster a spirit of tolerance and reconciliation in Northern Ireland, so
the spiral of violence that has cast so many innocent lives there -- or cost so many, I should say,
can be finally ended.
Ireland is a beautiful, proud, and independent land with a young and talented population. But they
have an employment problem. By the strength of our economy, and by the presence of some 300
U.S. firms here, Americans can and will help our Irish cousins create jobs and greater
opportunities. And, of course, what helps them will help us, too.
Tomorrow, Nancy and I will travel to Ballyporeen for a nostalgic visit to the original home of the
Reagan clan. On Monday, we'll be in Dublin, where I'll have the honor of addressing a joint
session of the Irish Parliament, as John Kennedy did here 21 years ago.
When we leave Ireland, we'll be participating in two events that mark America's determination to
help build a safer, more prosperous world.
On June 6th, I'll join former U.S. Army Rangers at the historic battlefield of Pointe du Hoc and,
later, President Mitterrand and other American veterans at Omaha Beach and Utah Beach on the
Normandy coast of France. Together we'll commemorate the 40th anniversary of D-day, the great
Allied invasion that set Europe on the course toward liberty, democracy, and peace.
That great battle and the war it helped bring to an end mark the beginning of nearly 40 years of
peace in Europe -- a peace preserved not by good will alone, but by the strength and moral
courage of the NATO alliance. On June 6th I will reaffirm America's faithful commitment to
NATO. If NATO remains strong and unified, Europe and America will remain free. If NATO can
continue to deter war, Europe and America can continue to enjoy peace -- 40 more years of
peace.
And let me make one thing very plain: A strong NATO is no threat to the Soviet Union. NATO is
the world's greatest peace movement. It never threatens; it defends. And we will continue trying
to promote a better dialog with the Soviet Union. The Soviets could gain much by helping us
make the world safer, particularly through arms reductions. That would free them to devote more
resources to their people and economy.
Growth and prosperity will occupy our attention when we return to London for the annual
economic summit of the major industrialized countries. And we'll be marking another important
anniversary: 50 years ago, America's leaders had the vision to enact legislation known as the
Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934. It helped bring an end to a terrible era of
protectionism that nearly destroyed the world's economies.
We'll talk about how best to maintain the recent progress that has lifted hopes for a worldwide
recovery for our common prosperity. You can be proud that the strength of the United States
economy has led the way. I believe continued progress lies with freer trade and more open
markets. Less protectionism will mean more progress, more growth, more jobs, a bigger slice of
the pie for everyone.
As we meet in Normandy and London, we'll have much to be thankful for, much to be optimistic
about, but still much to do.
Till next week, thanks for listening, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 5:06 p.m. from Ashford Castle in Cong, County Mayo, Ireland.