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Promoting Peace and
Democracy
June 8, 1982
Current Policy No.399
United States Department of State
Bureau of Public Affairs
Washington, D.C.
Following
is an address by President Reagan before the British Parliament,
London, June 8, 1982, during his trip to France, the Vatican,
Italy, the United Kingdom, and the Federal Republic of Germany,
June 2-11, 1982.
The journey
of which this visit forms a part is a long one.
Already it has taken me to two great cities of the
West—Rome and Paris—and to the economic summit at Versailles.
There, once again, our sister democracies have proved
that, even in a time of severe economic strain, free peoples
can work together freely and voluntarily to address problems
as serious as inflation, unemployment, trade, and economic
development in a spirit of cooperation and solidarity.
Other milestones lie ahead.
Later this week in Germany, we and our NATO allies
will discuss measures for our joint defence and America’s
latest initiatives for a more peaceful, secure world through
arms reductions.
Each
stop of this trip is important, but, among them all, this
moment occupies a special place in my heart and the hearts
of my countrymen—a moment of kinship and homecoming in these
hallowed halls. Speaking
for all Americans, I want to say how very much at home we
feel in your house.
Every American would, because this is—as we have been
so eloquently told—one of democracy’s shrines.
Here the rights of free people and the processes of
representation have been debated and refined.
It
has been said that an institution is the lengthening shadow
of man. This
institution is the lengthening shadow of all the men and women
who have sat here and all those who have voted to send representatives
here.
This
is my second visit to Great Britain as President of the United
States. My first
opportunity to stand on British soil occurred almost a year
and a half ago when your Prime Minister graciously hosted
a diplomatic dinner at the British Embassy in Washington.
Mrs. Thatcher said then that she hoped that I was not
distressed to find staring down at me from the grand staircase
a portrait of His Royal Majesty King George III.
She suggested it was best to let bygones be bygones
and-in view of our two countries’ remarkable friendship in
succeeding years—she added that most Englishmen today would
agree with Thomas Jefferson that “a little rebellion now and
then is a very good thing.”
>From
here I will go on to Bonn and then Berlin, where there stands
a grim symbol of power untamed.
The Berlin Wall, that dreadful gray gash across the
city, is in its third decade. It is the fitting signature of the regime that built it.
And a few hundred kilometers behind the Berlin Wall
there is another symbol.
In the center of Warsaw there is a sign that notes
the distances to two capitals.
In one direction it points toward Moscow.
In the other it points toward Brussels, headquarters
of Western Europe’s tangible unity.
The marker says that the distances from Warsaw to Moscow
and Warsaw to Brussels are equal. The sign makes this point: Poland is not East or West.
Poland is at the center of European civilization.
It has contributed mightily to that civilization.
It is doing so today by being magnificently unreconciled
to oppression.
Poland’s
struggle to be Poland, and to secure the basic rights we often
take for granted, demonstrates why we dare not take those
rights for granted.
Gladstone, defending the Reform Bill of 1866, declared:
“You cannot fight against the future.
Time is on our side.”
It was easier to believe in the march of democracy
in Gladstone’s day, in that high noon of Victorian optimism.
We
are approaching the end of a bloody century plagued by a terrible
political invention—totalitarianism.
Optimism comes less easily today, not because democracy
is less vigorous but because democracy's enemies have refined
their instruments of repression.
Yet optimism is in order because, day by day, democracy
is proving itself to be a not-at-all fragile flower.
From
Stettin on the Baltic to Varna on the Black Sea, the regimes
planted by totalitarianism have had more than 30 years to
establish their legitimacy. But non—not one regime—has yet been able to risk free elections.
Regimes planted by bayonets do not take root.
The
strength of the Solidarity movement in Poland demonstrates
the truth told in an underground joke in the Soviet Union.
It is that the Soviet Union would remain a one-party
nation even if an opposition party were permitted, be- cause
everyone would join the opposition party.
America’s
time as a player on the stage of world history has been brief. I think understanding this fact has always made you patient
with your younger cousins.
Well, not always patient—I do recall that on one occasion
Sir Winston Churchill said in exasperation about one of our
most distinguished diplomats: “He is the only case I know
of a bull who carries his china shop with him.”
Threats
to Freedom
Witty
as Sir Winston was, he also had that special attribute of
great statesmen—the gift of vision, the willingness to see
the future based on the experience of the past.
It is this sense of history, this understanding of
the past, that I want to talk with you about today, for it
is in remembering what we share of the past that our two nations
can make common cause for the future
We
have not inherited an easy world.
If developments like the industrial revolution, which
began here in England, and the gifts of science and technology
have made life much easier for us, they have also made it
more dangerous. There
are threats now to our freedom, indeed, to our very existence,
that other generations could never even have imagined.
There
is, first, the threat of global war.
No president, no congress, no prime minister, no parliament
can spend a day entirely free of this threat.
And I don’t have to tell you that in today’s world,
the existence of nuclear weapons could mean, if not the extinction
of mankind, then surely the end of civilization as we know
it.
That
is why negotiations on intermediate-range nuclear forces now
under- way in Europe and the START talks—Strategic Arms Reduction
Talks—which will begin later this month, are not just critical
to American or Western policy; they are critical to mankind.
Our commitment to early success in these negotiations
is firm and unshakable and our purpose is clear: reducing
the risk of war by reducing the means of waging war on both
sides.
At
the same time, there is a threat posed to human freedom by
the enormous power of the modern state.
History teaches the dangers of government that overreaches;
political control taking precedence over free economic growth,
secret police, mindless bureaucracy—all combining to stifle
individual excellence and personal freedom.
Now
I am aware that among us here and throughout Europe, there
is legitimate disagreement over the extent to which the public
sector should play a role in a nation’s economy and life.
But on one point all of us are united: our abhorrence
of dictatorship in all its forms, but most particularly totalitarianism
and the terrible inhumanities it has caused in our time: the
great purge, Auschwitz and Dachau, the Gulag and Cambodia.
Historians
looking back at our time will note the consistent restraint
and peaceful intentions of the West.
They will note that it was the democracies who refused
to use the threat of their nuclear monopoly in the 1940s and
early 1950s for territorial or imperial gain.
Had that nuclear monopoly been in the hands of the
Communist world, the map of Europe—indeed, the world—would
look very different today.
And certainly they will note it was not the democracies
that invaded Afghanistan or suppressed Polish solidarity or
used chemical and toxin warfare in Afghanistan and Southeast
Asia.
If
history teaches anything, it teaches that self-delusion in
the face of unpleasant facts is folly.
We see around us today the marks of our terrible dilemma—predictions
of doomsday, anti-nuclear demonstrations, an arms race in
which the West must for its own protection be an unwilling
participant. At
the same time, we see totalitarian forces in the world who
seek subversion and conflict around the globe to further their
barbarous assault on the human spirit.
What,
then, is our course? Must civilization perish in a hail of
fiery atoms? Must freedom wither in a quiet, deadening accommodation
with totalitarian evil?
Sir Winston Churchill refused to accept the inevitability
of war or even that it was imminent. He said:
I
do not believe that Soviet Russia desires war.
What they desire is the fruits of war and the indefinite
expansion of their power and doctrines.
But what we have to consider here today, while time
remains, is the permanent prevention of war and the establishment
of conditions of freedom and democracy as rapidly as possible
in all countries.
The
Crisis of Totalitarianism
This
is precisely our mission today: to preserve freedom as well
as peace. It
may not be easy to see, but I believe we live now at a turning
point. In an
ironic sense, Karl Marx was right.
We are witnessing today a great revolutionary crisis—a
crisis where the demands of the economic order are conflicting
directly with those of the political order.
But the crisis is happening not in the free, non-Marxist
West but in the home of Marxism-Leninism, the Soviet Union.
It is the Soviet Union that runs against the tide of
history by denying human freedom and human dignity to its
citizens. It
also is in deep economic difficulty .The rate of growth in
the national product has been steadily declining since the
1950s and is less than half of what it was then.
The dimensions of this failure are astounding; a country
which employs one-fifth of its population in agriculture is
unable to feed its own people.
Were it not for the tiny private sector tolerated in
Soviet agriculture, the country might be on the brink of famine.
These private plots occupy a bare 3% of the arable
land but account for nearly one-quarter of Soviet farm output
and nearly one- third of meat products and vegetables.
Overcentralized,
with little or no incentives, year after year the Soviet system
pours its best resources into the making of instruments of
destruction. The
constant shrinkage of economic growth combined with the growth
of military production is putting a heavy strain on the Soviet
people.
What
we see here is a political structure that no longer corresponds
to its economic base, a society where productive forces are
hampered by political ones.
The decay of the Soviet experiment should come as no
surprise to us. Wherever
the comparisons have been made between free and closed societies—West
Germany and East Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia, Malaysia
and Vietnam—it is the democratic countries that are prosperous
and responsive to the needs of their people.
And one of the simple but overwhelming facts of our
time is this: of all the millions of refugees we’ve seen in
the modern world, their flight is always away from, not toward,
the Communist world.
Today on the NATO line, our military forces face East
to prevent a possible invasion.
On the other side of the line, the Soviet forces also
face East—to prevent their people from leaving.
The
hard evidence of totalitarian rule has caused in mankind an
uprising of the intellect and will.
Whether it is the growth of the new schools of economics
in America or England or the appearance of the so-called “new
philosophers” in France, there is one unifying thread running
through the intellectual work of these groups: rejection of
the arbitrary power of the state, the refusal to subordinate
the rights of the individual to the superstate, the realization
that collectivism stifles all the best human impulses.
Struggle
Against Oppression
Since
the exodus from Egypt, historians have written of those who
sacrificed and struggled for freedom: the stand at Thermopylae,
the revolt of Spartacus, the storming of the Bastille, the
Warsaw uprising in World War II.
More recently we have seen evidence of this same human
impulse in one of the developing nations in Central America.
For months and months the world news media covered
the fighting in El Salvador.
Day after day we were treated to stories and film slanted
toward the brave freedom fighters battling oppressive government
forces in behalf of the silent, suffering people of that tortured
country.
Then
one day those silent, suffering people were offered a chance
to vote, to choose the kind of government they wanted.
Suddenly the freedom fighters in the hills were exposed
for what they really are: Cuban-backed guerrillas who want
power for themselves and their backers, not democracy for
the people. They
threatened death to any who voted and destroyed hundreds of
busses and trucks to keep people from getting to the polling
places. But on election day the people of El Salvador, an unprecedented
1.4 million of them, braved ambush and gunfire and trudged
miles to vote for freedom.
They
stood for hours in the hot sun waiting for their turn to vote.
Members of our Congress who went there as observers
told me of a woman who was wounded by rifle fire who refused
to leave the line to have her wound treated until after she
had voted. A
grandmother, who had been told by the guerrillas she would
be killed when she returned from the polls, told the guerrillas:
"you can kill me, kill my family, kill my neighbors,
but you can’t kill us all.” The real freedom fighters of El
Salvador turned out to be the people of that country—the young,
the old, and the in-between.
Strange, but in my own country there has been little
if any news coverage of that war since the election.
Perhaps
they’ll say it’s because there are newer struggles now—on
distant islands in the South Atlantic young men are fighting
for Britain. And,
yes, voices have been raised protesting their sacrifices for
lumps of rock and earth so far away.
But those young men aren’t fighting for mere real estate. They fight for a cause, for the belief that armed aggression
must not be allowed to succeed and that people must participate
in the decisions of government under the rule of law.
If there had been firmer support for that principle
some 45 years ago, perhaps our generation wouldn’t have suffered
the bloodletting of World War II.
In
the Middle East the guns sound once more, this time in Lebanon,
a country that for too long has had to endure the tragedy
of civil war, terrorism, and foreign intervention and occupation.
The fighting in Lebanon on the part of all parties
must stop, and Israel should bring its forces home.
But this is not enough.
We must all work to stamp out the scourge of terrorism
that in the Middle East makes war an ever-present threat.
But
beyond the troublespots lies a deeper, more positive pattern. Around the world today the democratic revolution is gathering
new strength. In
India, a critical test has been passed with the peaceful change
of governing political parties.
In Africa, Nigeria is moving in remarkable and unmistakable
ways to build and strengthen its democratic institutions.
In the Caribbean and Central America, 16 of 24 countries
have freely elected governments.
And in the United Nations, 8 of the 10 developing nations
which have joined the body in the past 5 years are democracies.
In
the Communist world as well, man’s instinctive desire for
freedom and self-determination surfaces again and again.
To be sure, there are grim reminders of how brutally
the police state attempts to snuff out this quest for self-rule:
1953 in East Germany, 1956 in Hungary, 1968 in Czechoslovakia,
1981 in Poland. But
the struggle continues in Poland, and we know that there are
even those who strive and suffer for freedom within the confines
of the Soviet Union itself.
How we conduct ourselves here in the Western democracies
will determine whether this trend continues.
Fostering
Democracy
No,
democracy is not a fragile flower; still, it needs cultivating.
If the rest of this century is to witness the gradual
growth of freedom and democratic ideals, we must take actions
to assist the campaign for democracy.
Some argue that we should encourage democratic change
in rightwing dictatorships but not in Communist regimes.
To accept this preposterous notion—as some well-meaning
people have—is to invite the argument that, once countries
achieve a nuclear capability, they should be allowed an undisturbed
reign of terror over their own citizens.
We reject this course.
As
for the Soviet view, President Brezhnev repeatedly has stressed
that the competition of ideas and systems must continue and
that this is entirely consistent with relaxation of tensions
and peace. We
ask only that these systems begin by living up to their own
constitutions, abiding by their own laws, and complying with
the international obligations they have undertaken.
We ask only for a process, a direction, a basic code
of decency—not for an instant transformation.
We
cannot ignore the fact that even without our encouragement,
there have been and will continue to be repeated explosions
against repression in dictatorships.
The Soviet Union itself is not immune to this reality.
Any system is inherently unstable that has no peaceful
means to legitimize its leaders.
In such cases the very repressiveness of the state
ultimately drives people to resist it—if necessary, by force.
While
we must be cautious about forcing the pace of change, we must
not hesitate to declare our ultimate objectives and to take
concrete actions to move toward them.
We must be staunch in our conviction that freedom is
not the sole prerogative of a lucky few but the inalienable
and universal right of all human beings.
So states the U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
which, among other things, guarantees free elections.
The
objective I propose is quite simple to state: to foster the
infrastructure of democracy—the system of a free press, unions,
political parties, universalities—which allows a people to
choose their own way, to develop their own culture, to reconcile
their own differences through peaceful means.
This
is not cultural imperialism; it is providing the means for
genuine self-determination and protection for diversity.
Democracy already flourishes in countries with very
different cultures and historical experiences.
It would be cultural condescension, or worse, to say
.that any people prefer dictatorship to democracy.
Who would voluntarily choose not to have the right
to vote, decide to purchase government propaganda handouts
instead of independent newspapers, prefer government to worker-controlled
unions, opt for land to be owned by the state instead of those
who till it, want government repression of religious liberty,
a single political party instead of a free choice, a rigid
cultural orthodoxy instead of democratic tolerance and diversity?
Since
1917 the Soviet Union has given covert political training
and assistance to Marxist-Leninists in many countries.
Of course, it also has promoted the use of violence
and subversion by these same forces.
Over the past several decades, West European and other
social democrats, christian democrats and liberals have offered
open assistance to fraternal political and social institutions
to bring about peaceful and democratic progress.
Appropriately for a vigorous new democracy, the Federal
Republic of Germany’s political foundations have become a
major force in this effort.
U.S.
Proposals
We
in America now intend to take additional steps, as many of
our allies have already done, toward realizing this same goal.
The chairmen and other leaders of national Republican
and Democratic party organizations are initiating a study
with the bipartisan American Political Foundation to determine
how the United States can best contribute—as a nation—to the
global campaign for democracy now gathering force.
They will have the cooperation of congressional leaders
of both parties along with representatives of business, labor,
and other major institutions in our society.
I
look forward to receiving their recommendations and to working
with these institutions and the Congress in the common task
of strengthening democracy throughout the world.
It is time that we committed ourselves as a nation—in
both the public and private sectors—to assisting democratic
development.
We
plan to consult with leaders of other nations as well.
There is a proposal before the Council of Europe to
invite parliamentarians from democratic countries to a meeting
next year in Strasbourg.
That prestigious gathering would consider ways to help
democratic political movements.
This
November in Washington there will take place an international
meeting on free elections and next spring there will be-a
conference of world authorities on constitutionalism and self-government
hosted by the Chief Justice of the United States. Authorities from a number of developing and developed countries—judges,
philosophers, and politicians with practical experience—have
agreed to explore how to turn principle into practice and
further the rule of law.
At
the same time, we invite the Soviet Union to consider with
us how the competition of ideas and values—which it is committed
to support—can be conducted on a peaceful and reciprocal basis.
For example, I am prepared to offer President Brazhnev
an opportunity to speak to the American people on our television,
if he will allow me the same opportunity with the Soviet people.
We also suggest that panels of our newsmen periodically
appear on each other’s television to discuss major events.
I
do not wish to sound overly optimistic, yet the Soviet Union
is not immune from the reality of what is going on in the
world. It has
happened in the past: a small ruling elite either mistakenly
attempts to ease domestic unrest through greater repression
and foreign adventure or it chooses a wiser course—it begins
to allow its people a voice in their own destiny.
Even
if this latter process is not realized soon, I believe the
renewed strength of the democratic movement, complemented
by a global campaign for freedom, will strengthen the prospects
for arms control and a world at peace.
I
have discussed on other occasions, including my address on
May 9th, the elements of Western policies toward
the Soviet Union to safeguard our interests and protect the
peace. What I
am describing now is a plan and a hope for the long term—the
march of freedom and democracy which will leave Marxism-Leninism
on the ash heap of history as it has left other tyrannies
which stifle the freedom and muzzle the self-expression of
the people.
That
is why we must continue our efforts to strengthen NATO
even as we move forward with our zero option initiative
in the negotiations on intermediate range forces and our proposal
for a one-third reduction in strategic ballistic missile warheads.
Dedication
to Western Ideals
Our
military strength is a prerequisite to peace, but let it be
clear we maintain this strength in the hope it will never
be used. For the ultimate determinant in the struggle now going on for
the world will not be bombs and rockets, but a test of wills
and ideas, a trial of spiritual resolve: the values we hold,
the beliefs we cherish, the ideals to which we are dedicated.
The
British people know that, given strong leadership, time, and
a little bit of hope, the forces of good ultimately rally
and triumph over evil.
Here among you is the cradle of self-government, the
mother of parliaments.
Here is the enduring greatness of the British contribution
to mankind, the great civilized ideas: individual liberty
, representative government, and the rule of law under God.
I
have often wondered about the shyness of some of us in the
West about standing for these ideals that have done so much
to ease the plight of man and the hardships of our imperfect
world. This reluctance
to use those vast resources at our command reminds me of the
elderly lady whose home was bombed in the blitz.
As the rescuers moved about they found a bottle of
brandy she’d stored behind the staircase, which was all that
was left standing. Since she was barely conscious, one of the workers pulled the
cork to give her a taste of it.
She came around immediately and said: “Here now, put
it back, that’s for emergencies.”
Well,
the emergency is upon us.
Let us be shy no longer—let us go to our strength.
Let us offer hope.
Let us tell the world that a new age is not only possible
but probable.
During
the dark days of the Second World War when this island was
incandescent with courage, Winston Churchill exclaimed about
Britain’s adversaries: “What kind of a people do they think
we are?” Britain’s adversaries found out what extraordinary
people the British are.
But all the democracies paid a terrible price for allowing
the dictators to underestimate us.
We dare not make that mistake again.
So let us ask ourselves: What kind of people do we
think we are? And let us answer: free people, worthy of freedom,
and determined not only to remain so but to help others gain
their freedom as well.
Sir
Winston led his people to great victory in war and then lost
an election just as the fruits of victory were about to be
enjoyed. But
he left office honourably—and, as it turned out, temporarily—knowing
that the liberty of his people was more important than the
fate of any single leader.
History recalls his greatness in ways no dictator will
ever know. And
he left us a message of hope for the future, as timely now
as when he first uttered it, as opposition leader in the Commons
nearly 27 years ago. He said: “When we look back on all the perils through which
we have passed and at the mighty foes we have laid low and
all the dark and deadly designs we have frustrated, why should
we fear for our future?
We have,” he said, “come safely through the worst.”
The
task I have set forth will long outlive our own generation.
But together, we, too, have come through the worst.
Let us now begin a major effort to secure the best—a
crusade for freedom that will engage the faith and fortitude
of the next generation.
For the sake of peace and justice, let us move toward
a world in which all people are at last free to determine
their own destiny.
Published
by the United States Department of State • Bureau of Public
Affairs Office
of Public Communication • Editorial Division • Washington,
D.C. • June 1982 Editor: Colleen Sussman • This material is
in the public domain and may be reproduced without permission;
citation of this source is appreciated.
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