Remarks to American
Military Personnel and Their Families in Keflavik, Iceland
October 12, 1986
Thank
you very much, Ambassador Ruwe, Admiral McVadon, men and women of our Armed Forces, and my fellow
Americans. Thank you all. It's good to feel so at home. And I want to apologize
for being so late. As you know, General Secretary Gorbachev and I were to have
concluded our talks at noon, after more than 7 ½ hours
of meetings over the last 2 days. But when the hour for departure arrived, we
both felt that further discussions would be valuable. So, I called Nancy and told her I wouldn't
be home for dinner. [Laughter] She said she understood; in about 6\1/2\ hours,
I'll find out. [Laughter]
Well,
the talks we've just concluded were hard and tough, and yet I have to say
extremely useful. We spoke about arms control, human rights, and regional
conflicts. And of course, Mr. Gorbachev and I were frank about our
disagreements. We had to be. In several critical areas, we made more progress
than we anticipated when we came to Iceland. We moved toward
agreement on drastically reduced numbers of intermediate-range nuclear missiles
in both Europe and Asia. We approached
agreement on sharply reduced strategic arsenals for both our countries. We made
progress in the area of nuclear testing. But there remained, at the end of our
talks, one area of disagreement.
While
both sides seek reduction in the number of nuclear missiles and warheads
threatening the world, the Soviet Union insisted that we sign
an agreement that would deny to me and to future Presidents for 10 years the
right to develop, test, and deploy a defense against nuclear missiles for the
people of the free world. This, we could not and will not do. So, late this
afternoon, I made to the General Secretary an entirely new proposal: a 10-year
delay in deployment of SDI in exchange for the complete elimination of all
ballistic missiles from the respective arsenals of both nations. So long as
both the United States and the Soviet Union prove their good faith
by destroying nuclear missiles year by year, we would not deploy SDI. The
General Secretary said he would consider our offer, but only if we restricted
all work on SDI to laboratory research, which would have killed our defensive
shield.
We
came to Iceland to advance the cause of
peace, and though we put on the table the most far-reaching arms control
proposal in history, the General Secretary rejected it. However, we made great
strides in Iceland in resolving most of
our differences, and we're going to continue the effort.
But this brings me to my main reason in coming to Keflavik today -- to see you all
and express my gratitude, gratitude for a job well done. I hope you all know
the importance of your mission here. Iceland has always held a
strategic position in the Atlantic, commanding, if you
will, the sea between the Old World and the New. Since this
is Columbus Day -- I have to be careful of this -- but many of those who
believe that the Vikings were the first Europeans to discover the Americas hold that the ancient
Norse sailors first heard of North America from an Icelander.
And during World
War II, Iceland
played a crucial role in the battle for freedom. Early in the war,
German U-boats began to exact a devastating toll, including the shipping that
supplied the British people with food from the United States. Between March and
December 1941 the Germans sank ships, totaling more than a million tons.
Churchill watched with growing disquiet as his nation was pushed closer and
closer to starvation. In April of 1941 the British established bases on this
island for escort groups and aircraft. In July we joined them, with the consent
of the Icelandic authorities, with bases of our own. These operations, staged
from this very island, proved decisive in the balance of the entire struggle.
In Churchill's words: ``The escort groups became ever
more efficient and as their power grew, that of the U-boats declined. Europe was saved to continue
the struggle for freedom.''
I
cite all this history because if Iceland was crucial to the
cause of freedom then, it is even more important today. The U.S. and Iceland are joined together as
members of NATO. And here you are, thousands of miles
from home, closer, indeed, to the Soviet naval bases on the Kola Peninsula than to our own east
coast. And in view of those naval bases and other potential threats, you serve
as a vanguard for Iceland, the United States, and all the NATO
allies. You monitor military air traffic, you track submarines, and you monitor
shipping movements in the vital sealanes between the United States, Iceland, and Europe. You perform all these
tasks with efficiency and dedication -- in short, with a keen sense of duty.
And, ladies and gentlemen of our Armed Forces, on behalf of a grateful
Commander in Chief, I salute you!
I
can't resist telling you a little story that I've just told the marine guard at
the Embassy. The story has to do with saluting. I was a second lieutenant of
horse cavalry back in the World War II days. As I told the admiral, I wound up
flying a desk for the Army Air Force. And so, I know all the rules about not
saluting in civilian clothes and so forth, and when you should or shouldn't.
But then when I got this job -- [laughter] -- and I would be approaching Air
Force One or Marine One and those marines would come to a salute and I --
knowing that I am in civilian clothes -- I would nod and say hello and think
they could drop their hand, and they wouldn't. They just stood there. So, one
night over at the Commandant's quarters, Marine Commandant's quarters in
Washington, and I was getting a couple of highballs, and I didn't -- [laughter]
-- know what to do with them. So, I said to the Commandant -- I said, ``Look, I
know all the rules about saluting in civilian clothes and all, but if I am the
Commander in Chief, there ought to be a regulation that would permit me to
return a salute.'' And I heard some words of wisdom. He said, ``I think if you
did, no one would say anything.'' [Laughter]
So,
if you see me on television and I'm saluting, you know that I've got authority
for it now -- [laughter] -- and I do it happily. But you know there are some
people here I can't salute, of course, because they're civilians. But seeing
them does bring to mind all the sacrifices that your families make. So, whether
your families are here or back home, the next time you see them or write a
letter, you tell them for me their President thanks them -- and so does all America. [Applause] It seems to
me, we have one more round of applause still to go. The talks that we've
concluded could never have been had it not been for the generosity of the
people of Iceland. [Applause]
Well,
it's time to go now. Nancy's waiting dinner.
[Laughter] After all, Congress is still in session, and I have to get back and
keep an eye on them. [Laughter] Sometimes they get strange ideas about reducing
pay rates for the military. But don't worry, I'll never let them.
Since
I'm so far away from them right now -- [laughter] -- I'm going to take a chance
and tell you a little story, I think, about them. [Laughter] You know, when I
think of them sometimes, and particularly the opposition that wants to do those
ridiculous things, I think of those three fellows that came out of a building
one day and found they'd locked themselves out of their car. And one of them
said, ``Well, somebody get a wire coathanger.'' And
he said, ``I can straighten it out and use it and get in and flip the handle
and open it.'' And the second one said, ``You can't do
that. Somebody would see you doing it and think you're stealing the car.'' And
the third one said, ``Well, we'd better do something pretty quick, because it's
starting to rain and the top's down.'' [Laughter]
But
in closing, let me say simply this: You are not here on NATO's frontline, you're not making the sacrifice of leaving home
and friends so far behind merely to keep the world from getting worse. You're
here to make it better, for you're here in the name of liberty. Yes, the
ultimate goal of American foreign policy is not just the prevention of war, but
the expansion of freedom -- to see that every nation, every people, every
person, some day enjoys the blessings of liberty. All that you do has
strengthened world peace, the peace in which the flame of freedom can continue
to burn and spread its light throughout the world.
I
have to tell you that of all the things that I'm proud of in this job, none
match the pride that I have in those of you who are wearing the uniform of your
country -- you young men and women. God bless you.
Many
years ago, at the beginning of World War II, General George Marshall was asked
what was our secret weapon. And he said then, ``Just
the best blankety-blank kids in the world.'' Well, I
have to tell you, we've still got that secret weapon.
God
bless all of you. Thank you very much.
Note:
The President spoke at 8:11 p.m. at Keflavik International Airport. In his opening
remarks, the President referred to U.S. Ambassador to Iceland Nicholas Ruwe and Rear Adm. Eric A. McVadon,
USN, Commander Icelandic Defense Force. Following his remarks, the President
returned to Washington, DC.