Address to the 42d
Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, New York
September 21, 1987
Mr.
President, Mr. Secretary-General, Ambassador Reed, honored guests, and
distinguished delegates: Let me first welcome the Secretary-General back from
his pilgrimage for peace in the Middle East. Hundreds of thousands
have already fallen in the bloody conflict between Iran and Iraq. All men and women of
good will pray that the carnage can soon be stopped, and we pray that the
Secretary-General proves to be not only a pilgrim but also the architect of a
lasting peace between those two nations. Mr. Secretary-General, the United States supports you, and may
God guide you in your labors ahead.
Like
the Secretary-General, all of us here today are on a kind of pilgrimage. We
come from every continent, every race, and most religions to this great hall of
hope, where in the name of peace we practice diplomacy. Now, diplomacy, of
course, is a subtle and nuanced craft, so much so that it's said that when one
of the most wily diplomats of the 19th century passed away other diplomats
asked, on reports of his death, ``What do you suppose the old fox meant by
that?''
But
true statesmanship requires not merely skill but something greater, something
we call vision -- a grasp of the present and of the possibilities of the
future. I've come here today to map out for you my own vision of the world's
future, one, I believe, that in its essential elements is shared by all
Americans. And I hope those who see things differently will not mind if I say
that we in the United States believe that the place
to look first for shape of the future is not in continental masses and sealanes, although geography is, obviously, of great
importance. Neither is it in national reserves of blood and iron or, on the other
hand, of money and industrial capacity, although military and economic strength
are also, of course, crucial. We begin with something that is far simpler and
yet far more profound: the human heart.
All
over the world today, the yearnings of the human heart are redirecting the
course of international affairs, putting the lie to the myth of materialism and
historical determinism. We have only to open our eyes to see the simple
aspirations of ordinary people writ large on the record of our times.
Last
year in the Philippines, ordinary people
rekindled the spirit of democracy and restored the electoral process. Some said
they had performed a miracle, and if so, a similar miracle -- a transition to
democracy -- is taking place in the Republic of Korea. Haiti, too, is making a
transition. Some despair when these new, young democracies face conflicts or
challenges, but growing pains are normal in democracies. The United States had them, as has every
other democracy on Earth.
In
Latin
America,
too, one can hear the voices of freedom echo from the peaks and across the
plains. It is the song of ordinary people marching, not in uniforms and not in
military file but, rather, one by one, in simple, everyday working clothes,
marching to the polls. Ten years ago only a third of the people of Latin America and the Caribbean lived in democracies or
in countries that were turning to democracy; today over 90 percent do.
But
this worldwide movement to democracy is not the only way in which simple,
ordinary people are leading us in this room -- we who are said to be the makers
of history -- leading us into the future. Around the world, new businesses, new
economic growth, new technologies are emerging from the workshops of ordinary
people with extraordinary dreams.
Here
in the United States, entrepreneurial energy
-- reinvigorated when we cut taxes and regulations -- has fueled the current
economic expansion. According to scholars at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, three-quarters of the more than 13\1/2\ million new jobs that we
have created in this country since the beginning of our expansion came from
businesses with fewer than 100 employees, businesses started by ordinary people
who dared to take a chance. And many of our new high technologies were first
developed in the garages of fledgling entrepreneurs. Yet America is not the only, or
perhaps even the best, example of the dynamism and dreams that the freeing of
markets set free.
In
India and China, freer markets for
farmers have led to an explosion in production. In Africa, governments are
rethinking their policies, and where they are allowing greater economic freedom
to farmers, crop production has improved. Meanwhile, in the newly
industrialized countries of the Pacific rim, free markets in services
and manufacturing as well as agriculture have led to a soaring of growth and
standards of living. The ASEAN nations, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan have created the true
economic miracle of the last two decades, and in each of them, much of the
magic came from ordinary people who succeeded as entrepreneurs.
In
Latin
America,
this same lesson of free markets, greater opportunity, and growth is being
studied and acted on. President Sarney of Brazil spoke for many others
when he said that ``private initiative is the engine of economic development.
In Brazil we have learned that
every time the state's penetration in the economy increases, our liberty
decreases.'' Yes, policies that release to flight ordinary people's dreams are
spreading around the world. From Colombia to Turkey to Indonesia, governments are
cutting taxes, reviewing their regulations, and opening opportunities for
initiative.
There
has been much talk in the halls of this building about the right to
development. But more and more the evidence is clear that development is not
itself a right. It is the product of rights: the right to own property; the
right to buy and sell freely; the right to contract; the right to be free of
excessive taxation and regulation, of burdensome government. There have been
studies that determined that countries with low tax rates have greater growth
than those with high rates.
We're
all familiar with the phenomenon of the underground economy. The scholar
Hernando de Soto and his colleagues have
examined the situation of one country, Peru, and described an
economy of the poor that bypasses crushing taxation and stifling regulation.
This informal economy, as the researchers call it, is the principal supplier of
many goods and services and often the only ladder for upward mobility. In the
capital city, it accounts for almost all public transportation and most street
markets. And the researchers concluded that, thanks to the informal economy,
``the poor can work, travel, and have a roof over their heads.'' They might have
added that, by becoming underground entrepreneurs themselves or by working for
them, the poor have become less poor and the nation itself richer.
Those
who advocate statist solutions to development should
take note: The free market is the other path to development and the one true
path. And unlike many other paths, it leads somewhere. It works. So, this is
where I believe we can find the map to the world's future: in the hearts of
ordinary people, in their hopes for themselves and their children, in their
prayers as they lay themselves and their families to rest each night. These
simple people are the giants of the Earth, the true builders of the world and
shapers of the centuries to come. And if indeed they triumph, as I believe they
will, we will at last know a world of peace and freedom, opportunity and hope,
and, yes, of democracy -- a world in which the spirit of mankind at last
conquers the old, familiar enemies of famine, disease, tyranny, and war.
This
is my vision -- America's vision. I recognize
that some governments represented in this hall have other ideas. Some do not
believe in democracy or in political, economic, or religious freedom. Some
believe in dictatorship, whether by one man, one party, one class, one race, or
one vanguard. To those governments I would only say that the price of
oppression is clear. Your economies will fall farther and farther behind. Your
people will become more restless. Isn't it better to listen to the people's
hopes now rather than their curses later?
And
yet despite our differences, there is one common hope that brought us all to
make this common pilgrimage: the hope that mankind will
one day beat its swords into plowshares, the hope of peace. In no place on
Earth today is peace more in need of friends than the Middle East. Its people's yearning
for peace is growing. The United States will continue to be an
active partner in the efforts of the parties to come together to settle their
differences and build a just and lasting peace.
And
this month marks the beginning of the eighth year of the Iran-Iraq war. Two
months ago, the Security Council adopted a mandatory resolution demanding a
cease-fire, withdrawal, and negotiations to end the war. The United States fully supports
implementation of Resolution 598, as we support the Secretary-General's recent
mission. We welcomed Iraq's acceptance of that
resolution and remain disappointed at Iran's unwillingness to
accept it. In that regard, I know that the President of Iran will be addressing
you tomorrow. I take this opportunity to call upon him clearly and
unequivocally to state whether Iran accepts 598 or not. If
the answer is positive, it would be a welcome step and major breakthrough. If
it is negative, the Council has no choice but rapidly to adopt enforcement
measures.
For
40 years the United States has made it clear, its
vital interest in the security of the Persian Gulf and the countries that
border it. The oil reserves there are of strategic importance to the economies
of the free world. We're committed to maintaining the free flow of this oil and
to preventing the domination of the region by any hostile power. We do not seek
confrontation or trouble with Iran or anyone else. Our
object is -- or, objective is now, and has been at every stage, finding a means
to end the war with no victor and no vanquished. The increase in our naval
presence in the Gulf does not favor one side or the other. It is a response to
heightened tensions and followed consultations with our friends in the region.
When the tension diminishes, so will our presence.
The
United States is gratified by many
recent diplomatic developments: the unanimous adoption of Resolution 598, the
Arab League's statement at its recent meeting in Tunis, and the
Secretary-General's visit. Yet problems remain.
The
Soviet
Union
helped in drafting and reaching an agreement on Resolution 598, but outside the
Security Council, the Soviets have acted differently. They called for removal
of our Navy from the Gulf, where it has been for 40 years. They made the false
accusation that somehow the United States, rather than the war
itself, is the source of tension in the Gulf. Well, such statements are not
helpful. They divert attention from the challenge facing us all: a just end to
the war. The United States hopes the Soviets will
join the other members of the Security Council in vigorously seeking an end to
a conflict that never should have begun, should have ended long ago, and has
become one of the great tragedies of the postwar era.
Elsewhere
in the region, we see the continuing Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. After nearly 8 years,
a million casualties, nearly 4 million others driven into exile, and more
intense fighting than ever, it's time for the Soviet Union to leave. The Afghan
people must have the right to determine their own future free of foreign
coercion. There is no excuse for prolonging a brutal war or propping up a
regime whose days are clearly numbered. That regime offers political proposals
that pretend compromise, but really would ensure the perpetuation of the
regime's power. Those proposals have failed the only significant test: They
have been rejected by the Afghan people. Every day the resistance grows in
strength. It is an indispensable party in the quest for a negotiated solution.
The
world community must continue to insist on genuine self-determination, prompt
and full Soviet withdrawal, and the return of the refugees to their homes in
safety and honor. The attempt may be made to pressure a few countries to change
their vote this year, but this body, I know, will vote overwhelmingly, as every
year before, for Afghan independence and freedom. We have noted General
Secretary Gorbachev's statement of readiness to withdraw. In April I asked the Soviet Union to set a date this year
when this withdrawal would begin. I repeat that request now in this forum for
peace. I pledge that, once the Soviet Union shows convincingly that
it's ready for a genuine political settlement, the United States is ready to be helpful.
Let
me add one final note on this matter. Pakistan, in the face of
enormous pressure and intimidation, has given sanctuary to Afghan refugees. We
salute the courage of Pakistan and the Pakistani
people. They deserve strong support from all of us.
Another
regional conflict, we all know, is taking place in Central America, in Nicaragua. To the Sandinista
delegation here today I say: Your people know the true nature of your regime.
They have seen their liberties suppressed. They have seen the promises of 1979
go unfulfilled. They have seen their real wages and personal income fall by
half -- yes, half -- since 1979, while your party elite live lives of privilege
and luxury. This is why, despite a billion dollars in Soviet-bloc aid last year
alone, despite the largest and best equipped army in Central America, you face a popular
revolution at home. It is why the democratic resistance is able to operate
freely deep in your heartland. But this revolution should come as no surprise
to you; it is only the revolution you promised the people and that you then
betrayed.
The
goal of United States policy toward Nicaragua is simple. It is the
goal of the Nicaraguan people and the freedom fighters, as well. It is
democracy -- real, free, pluralistic, constitutional democracy. Understand
this: We will not, and the world community will not, accept phony
democratization designed to mask the perpetuation of dictatorship. In this
200th year of our own Constitution, we know that real democracy depends on the
safeguards of an institutional structure that prevents a concentration of
power. It is that which makes rights secure. The temporary relaxation of
controls, which can later be tightened, is not democratization.
And,
again, to the Sandinistas, I say: We continue to hope that Nicaragua will become part of the
genuine democratic transformation that we have seen throughout Central America in this decade. We
applaud the principles embodied in the Guatemala agreement, which links
the security of the Central American democracies to democratic reform in Nicaragua. Now is the time for
you to shut down the military machine that threatens your neighbors and
assaults your own people. You must end your stranglehold on internal political
activity. You must hold free and fair national elections. The media must be
truly free, not censored or intimidated or crippled by indirect measures, like
the denial of newsprint or threats against journalists or their families.
Exiles must be allowed to return to minister, to live, to work, and to organize
politically. Then, when persecution of religion has ended and the jails no
longer contain political prisoners, national reconciliation and democracy will
be possible. Unless this happens, democratization will be a fraud. And until it
happens, we will press for true democracy by supporting those fighting for it.
Freedom
in Nicaragua or Angola or Afghanistan or Cambodia or Eastern Europe or South Africa or anyplace else on the
globe is not just an internal matter. Some time ago the Czech dissident writer
Vaclav Havel warned the world that ``respect for
human rights is the fundamental condition and the sole genuine guarantee of
true peace.'' And Andrei Sakharov in his Nobel
lecture said: ``I am convinced that international confidence, mutual
understanding, disarmament, and international security are inconceivable
without an open society with freedom of information, freedom of conscience, the
right to publish, and the right to travel and choose the country in which one
wishes to live.'' Freedom serves peace; the quest for peace must serve the
cause of freedom. Patient diplomacy can contribute to a world in which both can
flourish.
We're
heartened by new prospects for improvement in East-West and particularly
U.S.-Soviet relations. Last week Soviet Foreign Minister Shevardnadze visited Washington for talks with me and
with the Secretary of State, Shultz. We discussed the full range of issues,
including my longstanding efforts to achieve, for the first time, deep
reductions in U.S. and Soviet nuclear
arms. It was 6 years ago, for example, that I proposed the zero-option for U.S. and Soviet longer
range, intermediate-range nuclear missiles. I'm pleased that we have now agreed
in principle to a truly historic treaty that will eliminate an entire class of U.S. and Soviet nuclear weapons.
We also agreed to intensify our diplomatic efforts in all areas of mutual
interest. Toward that end, Secretary Shultz and the Foreign Minister will meet
again a month from now in Moscow, and I will meet again
with General Secretary Gorbachev later this fall.
We
continue to have our differences and probably always will. But that puts a
special responsibility on us to find ways -- realistic ways -- to bring greater
stability to our competition and to show the world a constructive example of
the value of communication and of the possibility of peaceful solutions to
political problems. And here let me add that we seek, through our Strategic
Defense Initiative, to find a way to keep peace through relying on defense, not
offense, for deterrence and for eventually rendering ballistic missiles
obsolete. SDI has greatly enhanced the prospects for real arms reduction. It is
a crucial part of our efforts to ensure a safer world and a more stable
strategic balance.
We
will continue to pursue the goal of arms reduction, particularly the goal that
the General Secretary and I agreed upon: a 50-percent reduction in our
respective strategic nuclear arms. We will continue to press the Soviets for
more constructive conduct in the settling of regional conflicts. We look to the
Soviets to honor the Helsinki accords. We look for
greater freedom for the Soviet peoples within their country, more
people-to-people exchanges with our country, and Soviet recognition in practice
of the right of freedom of movement.
We
look forward to a time when things we now regard as sources of friction and
even danger can become examples of cooperation between ourselves and the Soviet Union. For instance, I have
proposed a collaboration to reduce the barriers between East and West in Berlin and, more broadly, in Europe as a whole. Let us work
together for a Europe in which force of the threat -- or, force,
whether in the form of walls or of guns, is no longer an obstacle to free
choice by individuals and whole nations. I have also called for more openness
in the flow of information from the Soviet Union about its military
forces, policies, and programs so that our negotiations about arms reductions
can proceed with greater confidence.
We
hear much about changes in the Soviet Union. We're intensely
interested in these changes. We hear the word glasnost, which is translated as
``openness'' in English. ``Openness'' is a broad term. It means the free,
unfettered flow of information, ideas, and people. It means political and
intellectual liberty in all its dimensions. We hope, for the sake of the
peoples of the U.S.S.R., that such changes will come. And we hope, for the sake
of peace, that it will include a foreign policy that respects the freedom and
independence of other peoples.
No
place should be better suited for discussions of peace than this hall. The
first Secretary-General, Trygve Lie, said of the
United Nations: ``With the danger of fire, and in the absence of an organized
fire department, it is only common sense for the neighbors to join in setting
up their own fire brigades.'' Joining together to drown the flames of war --
this, together with a Universal Declaration of Human Rights, was the founding
ideal of the United Nations. It is our continuing challenge to ensure that the
U.N. lives up to these hopes. As the Secretary-General noted some time ago, the
risk of anarchy in the world has increased, because the fundamental rules of
the U.N. Charter have been violated. The General Assembly has repeatedly
acknowledged this with regard to the occupation of Afghanistan. The charter has a
concrete practical meaning today, because it touches on all the dimensions of
human aspiration that I mentioned earlier -- the yearning for democracy and
freedom, for global peace, and for prosperity.
This
is why we must protect the Universal Declaration of Human Rights from being
debased as it was through the infamous ``Zionism is Racism'' resolution. We
cannot permit attempts to control the media and promote censorship under the
ruse of a so-called ``New World Information Order.'' We must work against
efforts to introduce contentious and nonrelevant
issues into the work of the specialized and technical agencies, where we seek
progress on urgent problems -- from terrorism to drug trafficking to nuclear proliferation
-- which threaten us all. Such efforts corrupt the charter and weaken this
organization.
There
have been important administrative and budget reforms. They have helped. The United States is committed to
restoring its contribution as reforms progress. But there is still much to do.
The United Nations was built on great dreams and great ideals. Sometimes it has
strayed. It is time for it to come home. It was Dag Hammarskjold who said: ``The end
of all political effort must be the well-being of the individual in a life of
safety and freedom.'' Well, should this not be our credo in the years ahead?
I
have spoken today of a vision and the obstacles to its realization. More than a
century ago a young Frenchman, Alexis de Tocqueville, visited America. After that visit he
predicted that the two great powers of the future world would be, on one hand,
the United States, which would be built, as he said, ``by the plowshare,'' and,
on the other, Russia, which would go forward, again, as he said, ``by the
sword.'' Yet need it be so? Cannot swords be turned to plowshares? Can we and
all nations not live in peace? In our obsession with antagonisms of the moment,
we often forget how much unites all the members of humanity. Perhaps we need
some outside, universal threat to make us recognize this common bond. I
occasionally think how quickly our differences worldwide would vanish if we
were facing an alien threat from outside this world. And yet, I ask you, is not
an alien force already among us? What could be more alien to the universal
aspirations of our peoples than war and the threat of war?
Two
centuries ago, in a hall much smaller than this one, in Philadelphia, Americans met to draft
a Constitution. In the course of their debates, one of them said that the new
government, if it was to rise high, must be built on the broadest base: the
will and consent of the people. And so it was, and so it has been.
My
message today is that the dreams of ordinary people reach to astonishing
heights. If we diplomatic pilgrims are to achieve equal altitudes, we must
build all we do on the full breadth of humanity's will and consent and the full
expanse of the human heart. Thank you, and God bless
you all.
Note: President Reagan
spoke at 11:02
a.m. in the General Assembly
Hall. In his opening remarks, he referred to United Nations President Peter
Florin, Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar de la Guerra, and Under
Secretary-General for Political and General Assembly Affairs Joseph V. Reed,
Jr. Following his address, President Reagan met with the Secretary-General in
the Indonesian Lounge. He then went to the U.S. Mission for a meeting with allied Foreign Ministers and bilateral
meetings with Prime Minister Mohammed Khan Junejo of Pakistan, Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone of Japan, and President Vinicio Cerezo Arevalo of Guatemala. Following the meetings, he returned to Washington, DC.