Statement on the 11th
Anniversary of the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
August 1, 1986
Eleven
years ago today the United States, Canada, and 33 European
countries signed in Helsinki the Final Act of the
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). The signatories
undertook to observe important standards of international conduct and to pursue
practical steps to reduce the barriers dividing Europe between East and West.
Of special importance to the West, the Final Act affirmed basic human rights
and fundamental freedoms.
The
Final Act is an eloquent statement of hopes and goals to which the United States fully subscribed,
because its principles were rooted in our own philosophy and traditions. The United States remains firmly
committed to the full implementation of the Final Act in all its provisions and
to the indivisibility of its human, security, and economic dimensions.
Unfortunately, the Soviet Union and its East European allies have repeatedly
failed to carry out many of their Helsinki pledges. There has been
limited progress since the signing of the Final Act. But the reality of Europe's division remains, and
the most important promises of a decade ago have not been kept. That was our
assessment on the 10th anniversary last year. It remains our assessment today.
Eastern Governments continue to impede the free flow of people, information,
and ideas. They continue to repress those who seek to exercise freedoms of
religion, thought, conscience, and belief. They continue to disregard Final Act
provisions as they choose.
As
we commemorate this 11th anniversary, we should recall the hopes for greater
peace and freedom in Europe expressed a decade ago.
The Final Act recognized the interrelationship between these goals, that the
interests of individual human beings are a fundamental part of progress toward
peace in Europe, that a more stable peace
among nations depends on greater freedom for the people of Europe. The ambitious goals of
the Helsinki process can be achieved
only through balanced progress on all fronts. The next followup
meeting of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe will open in Vienna this November. An
important task of that meeting will be to take stock of the promises made and
the promises kept, and to weigh the balance among the various dimensions of the
Helsinki process. Governments
must be made to account at Vienna for their commitments.
The meeting must also address the challenge of achieving balanced progress if
the Final Act is to have meaning in the daily lives of all citizens whose
governments have undertaken its obligations.
The
United States takes its commitments
under the Final Act seriously and will continue to strive for the full realization
of its goals for all the peoples of Europe. We call upon others to
do likewise. We will work to ensure that the upcoming meeting in Vienna will mark a step toward
making the promises of Helsinki's first decade a
reality in its second.