February 1, 1985
To the Congress of the United States:
During 1984, at the request of the Congress, I forwarded two reports to the Congress on arms
control compliance. The first, forwarded last January, was an in-depth analysis of seven specific
issues of violations or probable violations by the Soviet Union of arms control obligations and
commitments. The second report, forwarded in October, was an advisory study prepared
independently by the General Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament. These
reports indicate that there is cause for serious concern regarding the Soviet Union's conduct with
respect to observance of arms control agreements.
In the FY-1985 Defense Authorization Act and the Conference Report on that Act, the Congress
called for additional classified and unclassified reports regarding a wide range of questions
concerning the Soviet Union's compliance with arms control commitments. The Administration is
responding to these requests by providing both classified and unclassified reports which update
theseven issues initially analyzed in the January 1984 report, and analyze a number of additional
issues.
In this unclassified report the United States Government reaffirms the conclusions of its January
1984 report that the USSR has violated the Helsinki Final Act, the Geneva Protocol on Chemical
Weapons, the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, and two provisions of SALT II:
telemetry encryption and ICBM modernization. The United States Government also reaffirms its
previous conclusions that the USSR has probably violated the SS - 16 deployment prohibition of
SALT II and is likely to have violated the nuclear testing yield limit of the Threshold Test Ban
Treaty. In addition, the United States Government has determined that the USSR has violated the
ABM Treaty (through the siting, orientation and capability of the Krasnoyarsk Radar), violated
the Limited Test Ban Treaty, and violated the SALT II provision prohibiting more than one new
type of ICBM, and probably violated the ABM Treaty restriction on concurrent testing of SAM
and ABM components. Evidence regarding the USSR's compliance with the ABM Treaty
provision on component mobility was determined to be ambiguous. In addition, the United States
Government is concerned about Soviet preparations for a prohibited territorial ABM defense.
Further, the USSR was determined to be currently in compliance with those provisions of the
SALT I Interim Agreement and its implementing procedures that deal with reuse of dismantled
ICBM sites and with the reconfiguration of dismantled ballistic missile launching submarines.
Beyond the issues that are treated in the unclassified report released today, there are other
compliance issues that will not be publicly disclosed at this time but which remain under review.
As we continue to work on these issues, we will brief and consult with the Congress in detail and
will, to the maximum extent possible, keep the public informed on our findings.
In order for arms control to have meaning and credibly contribute to national security and to
global or regional stability, it is essential that all parties to agreements fully comply with them.
Strict compliance with all provisions of arms control agreements is fundamental, and this
Administration will not accept anything less. To do so would undermine the arms control process
and damage the chances for establishing a more constructive US-Soviet relationship.
As I stated last January, Soviet noncompliance is a serious matter. It calls into question important
security benefits from arms control, and could create new security risks. It undermines the
confidence essential to an effective arms control process in the future. With regard to the issues
analyzed in the January 1984 report, the Soviet Union has thus far not provided satisfactory
explanations nor undertaken corrective actions sufficient to alleviate our concerns. The United
States Government has vigorously pressed, and will continue to press, these compliance issues
with the Soviet Union through diplomatic channels.
Our approach in pursuing these issues with the Soviet Union is to ensure that both the letter and
intent of treaty obligations and commitments will be fulfilled. To this end the Administration is:
analyzing further issues of possible noncompliance; as noted above, seeking from the Soviet
Union through diplomatic channels explanations, clarifications, and, where necessary, corrective
actions; reporting on such issues to the Congress; and taking into account in our defense
modernization plans the security implications of arms control violations. At the same time, the
United States is continuing to carry out its own obligations and commitments under relevant
agreements. Our objectives in the new negotiations which begin in March are to reverse the
erosion of the ABM Treaty and to seek equitable, effectively verifiable arms control agreements
which will result in real reductions and enhance stability. While all of these steps can help,
however, it is fundamentally important that the Soviet Union take a constructive attitude toward
full compliance with all arms control obligations and commitments.
The Administration and the Congress have a shared interest in supporting the arms control
process. For this reason, increased understanding of Soviet violations or probable violations, and
a strong Congressional consensus on the importance of compliance to achieving effective arms
control, will strengthen our efforts both in the new negotiations and in seeking corrective actions
from the Soviet Union.
I look forward to continued close consultation with the Congress as we seek to make progress in
resolving compliance issues and in negotiating sound arms control agreements.
Ronald Reagan
The White House,
February 1, 1985.
Note: The text of the President's unclassified report was included in the White House press
release.