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Strategic
Defense Initiative
Ronald
Reagan
March
23, 1983
My
fellow Americans, thank you for sharing
your time with me tonight.
The
subject I want to discuss with you, peace
and national security, is both timely and
important. Timely, because I've reached a
decision which offers a new hope for our
children in the 21st century, a decision
I'll tell you about in a few minutes. And
important because there's a very big
decision that you must make for
yourselves. This subject involves the most
basic duty that any President and any
people share, the duty to protect and
strengthen the peace.
At
the beginning of this year, I submitted to
the Congress a defense budget which
reflects my best judgment of the best
understanding of the experts and
specialists who advise me about what we
and our allies must do to protect our
people in the years ahead. That budget is
much more than a long list of numbers, for
behind all the numbers lies America's
ability to prevent the greatest of human
tragedies and preserve our free way of
life in a sometimes dangerous world. It is
part of a careful, long-term pla n to make
America strong again after too many years
of neglect and mistakes.
Our
efforts to rebuild America's defenses and
strengthen the peace began 2 years ago
when we requested a major increase in the
defense program. Since then, the amount of
those increases we first proposed has been
reduced by half, through improvements in
management and procurement and other
savings.
The
budget request that is now before the
Congress has been trimmed to the limits of
safety. Further deep cuts cannot be made
without seriously endangering the security
of the Nation. The choice is up to the men
and women you've elected to the Congress,
and that means the choice is up to you.
Tonight,
I want to explain to you what this defense
debate is all about and why I'm convinced
that the budget now before the Congress is
necessary, responsible, and deserving of
your support. And I want to offer hope for
the future.
But
first, let me say what the defense debate
is not about. It is not about spending
arithmetic. I know that in the last few
weeks you've been bombarded with numbers
and percentages. Some say we need only a
5-percent increase in defense spending.
The so-called alternate budget backed by
liberals in the House of Representatives
would lower the figure to 2 to 3 percent,
cutting our defense spending by $163
billion over the next 5 years. The trouble
with all these numbers is that they tell
us little about the kind of defense
program America needs or the benefits and
security and freedom that our defense
effort buys for us.
What
seems to have been lost in all this debate
is the simple truth of how a defense
budget is arrived at. It isn't done by
deciding to spend a certain number of
dollars. Those loud voices that are
occasionally heard charging that the
Government is trying to solve a security
problem by throwing money at it are
nothing more than noise based on
ignorance. We start by considering what
must be done to maintain peace and review
all the possible threats against our
security. Then a strategy for
strengthening peace and defending against
those threats must be agreed upon. And,
finally, our defense establishment must be
evaluated to see what is necessary to
protect against any or all of the
potential threats. The cost of achieving
these ends is totaled up, and the result
is the budget for national defense.
There
is no logical way that you can say, let's
spend x billion dollars less. you can only
say, which part of our defense measures do
we believe we can do without and still
have security against all contingencies?
Anyone in the Congress who advocates a
percentage or a specific dollar cut in
defense spending should be made to say
what part of our defenses he would
eliminate and he should be candid enough
to acknowledge that his cuts mean cutting
our commitments to allies or inviting
greater risk or both.
The
defense policy of the United States is
based on a simple premise: The United
States does not start fights. We will
never be an aggressor. We maintain our
strength in order to deter and defend
against aggression–to preserve freedom
and peace.
Since
the dawn of the atomic age, we've sought
to reduce the risk of war by maintaining a
strong deterrent and by seeking genuine
arms control. "Deterrence" means
simply this: making sure any adversary who
thinks about attacking the United States,
or our allies, or our vital interests,
concludes that the risks to him outweigh
any potential gains. Once he understands
that, he won't attack. We maintain the
peace through our strength; weakness only
invites aggression.
This
strategy of deterrence has not changed. It
still works. But what it takes to maintain
deterrence has changed. It took one kind
of military force to deter an attack when
we had far more nuclear weapons than any
other power; it takes another kind now
that the Soviets, for example, have enough
accurate and powerful nuclear weapons to
destroy virtually all of our missiles on
the ground. Now, this is not to say that
the Soviet Union is planning to make war
on us. Nor do I believe a war is
inevitable–quite the contrary. But what
must be recognized is that our security is
based on being prepared to meet all
threats.
There
was a time when we depended on coastal
forts and artillery batteries, because,
with the weaponry of that day, any attack
would have had to come by sea. Well, this
is a different world, and our defenses
must be based on recognition and awareness
of the weaponry possessed by other nations
in the nuclear age.
We
can't afford to believe that we will never
be threatened. There have been two world
wars in my lifetime. We didn't start them
and, indeed, did everything we could to
avoid being drawn into them. But we were
ill-prepared for both. Had we been better
prepared, peace might have been preserved.
For
20 years the Soviet Union has been
accumulating enormous military might. They
didn't stop when their forces exceeded all
requirements of a legitimate defensive
capability. And they haven't stopped now.
During the past decade and a half, the
Soviets have built up a massive arsenal of
new strategic nuclear weapons–weapons
that can strike directly at the United
States.
As
an example, the United States introduced
its last new intercontinental ballistic
missile, the Minute Man III, in 1969, and
we're now dismantling our even older Titan
missiles. But what has the Soviet Union
done in these intervening years? Well,
since 1969 the Soviet Union has built five
new classes of ICBM's, and upgraded these
eight times As a result, their missiles
are much more powerful and accurate than
they were several years ago, and they
continue to develop more, while ours are
increasingly obsolete.
The
same thing has happened in other areas.
Over the same period, the Soviet Union
built 4 new classes of submarine-launched
ballistic missiles and over 60 new missile
submarines. We built 2 new types of
submarine missiles and actually withdrew
10 submarines from strategic missions. The
Soviet Union built over 200 new Backfire
bombers, and their brand new Blackjack
bomber is now under development. We
haven't built a new long-range bomber
since our B-52's were deployed about a
quarter of a century ago, and we've
already retired several hundred of those
because of old age. Indeed, despite what
many people think, our strategic forces
only cost about 15 percent of the defense
budget.
Another
example of what's happened: in 1978 the
Soviets had 600 intermediaterange nuclear
missiles based on land and were beginning
to add the SS-20–a new, highly accurate,
mobile missile with 3 warheads. We had
none. Since then the Soviets have
strengthened their lead. By the end of
1979, when Soviet leader Brezhnev declared
"a balance now exists," the
Soviets had over 800 warheads. We still
had none. A year ago this month, Mr.
Brezhnev pledged a moratorium, or freeze,
on SS-20 deployment. But by last August,
their 800 warheads had become more than
1,200. We still had none. Some freeze. At
this time Soviet Defense Minister Ustinov
announced "approximate parity of
forces continues to exist." But the
Soviets are still adding an average of 3
new warheads a week, and now have 1,300.
These warheads can reach their targets in
a matter of a few minutes. We still have
none. So far, it seems that the Soviet
definition of parity is a box score of
1,300 to nothing, in their favor.
So,
together with our NATO allies, we decided
in 1979 to deploy new weapons, beginning
this year, as a deterrent to their SS-20ss
and as an incentive to the Soviet Union to
meet us in serious arms control
negotiations. We will begin that
deployment late this year. At the same
time, however, we're willing to cancel our
program if the Soviets will dismantle
theirs. This is what we've called a
zero-zero plan. The Soviets are now at the
negotiating table–and I think it's fair
to say that without our planned
deployments, they wouldn't be there.
Now
let's consider conventional forces. Since
1974 the United States has produced 3,050
tactical combat aircraft. By contrast, the
Soviet Union has produced twice as many.
When we look at attack submarines, the
United States has produced 27 while the
Soviet Union has produced 61. For armored
vehicles, including tanks, we have
produced 11,200. The Soviet Union has
produced 54,000–nearly 5 to 1 in their
favor. Finally, with artillery, we've
produced 950 artillery and rocket
launchers while the Soviets have produced
more than 13,000–a staggering 14-to-1
ratio.
There
was a time when we were able to offset
superior Soviet numbers with higher
quality, but today they are building
weapons as sophisticated and modern as our
own.
As
the Soviets have Increased their military
power, they've been emboldened to extend
that power. They're spreading their
military influence in ways that can
directly challenge our vital interests and
those of our allies.
The
following aerial photographs, most of them
secret until now, illustrate this point in
a crucial area very close to home: Central
America and the Caribbean Basin. They're
not dramatic photographs. But I think they
help give you a better understanding of
what I'm talking about.
This
Soviet intelligence collection facility,
less than a hundred miles from our coast,
is the largest of its kind in the world.
The acres and acres of antennae fields and
intelligence monitors are targeted on key
U.S. military installations and sensitive
activities. The installation in Lourdes,
Cuba, is manned by 1,500 Soviet
technicians. And the satellite ground
station allows instant communications with
Moscow. This 28 square-mile facility has
grown by more than 60 percent in size and
capability during the past decade.
In
western Cuba, we see this military
airfield and it complement of modern,
Soviet-built Mig-23 aircraft. The Soviet
Union uses this Cuban airfield for its own
long-range reconnaissance missions. And
earlier this month, two modern Soviet
antisubmarine warfare aircraft began
operating from it. During the past 2
years, the level of Soviet arms exports to
Cuba can only be compared to the levels
reached during the Cuban missile crisis 20
years ago.
This
third photo, which is the only one in this
series that has been previously made
public, shows Soviet military hardware
that has made its way to Central America.
This airfield with its Ml-8 helicopters,
anti-aircraft guns, and protected fighter
sites is one of a number of military
facilities in Nicaragua which has received
Soviet equipment funneled through Cuba,
and reflects the massive military buildup
going on in that country.
On
the small island of Grenada, at the
southern end of the Caribbean chain, the
Cubans, with Soviet financing and backing,
are in the process of building an airfield
with a 10,000-foot runway. Grenada doesn't
even have an air force. Who is it intended
for? The Caribbean is a very important
passageway for our international commerce
and military lines of communication. More
than half of all American oil imports now
pass through the Caribbean. The rapid
buildup of Grenada's military potential is
unrelated to any conceivable threat to
this island country of under 110,000
people and totally at odds with the
pattern of other eastern Caribbean States,
most of which are unarmed.
The
Soviet-Cuban militarization of Grenada, in
short, can only be seen as power
projection into the region. And it is in
this important economic and strategic area
that we're trying to help the Governments
of El Salvador, Costa Rica, Honduras, and
others in their struggles for democracy
against guerrillas supported through Cuba
and Nicaragua.
These
pictures only tell a small part of the
story. I wish I could show you more
without compromising our most sensitive
intelligence sources and methods. But the
Soviet Union is also supporting Cuban
military forces in Angola and Ethiopia.
They have bases in Ethiopia and South
Yemen, near the Persian Gulf oil fields-
They've taken over the port that we built
at Carn Ranh Bay in Vietnam. And now for
the first time in history, the Soviet Navy
is a force to be reckoned with in the
South Pacific.
Some
people may still ask: Would the Soviets
ever use their formidable military power?
Well, again, can we afford to believe they
won't? There is Afghanistan. And in
Poland, the Soviets denied the will of the
people and in so doing demonstrated to the
world how their military power could also
be used to intimidate.
The
final fact is that the Soviet Union is
acquiring what can only be considered an
offensive military force. They have
continued to build far more
intercontinental ballistic missiles than
they could possibly need simply to deter
an attack. Their conventional forces are
trained and equipped not so much to defend
against an attack as they are to permit
sudden, surprise offensives of their own.
Our
NATO allies have assumed a great defense
burden, including the military draft in
most countries. We're working with them
and our other friends around the world to
do more. Our defensive strategy means we
need military forces that can move very
quickly, forces that are trained and ready
to respond to any emergency.
Every
item in our defense program–our ships,
our tanks, our planes, our funds for
training and spare parts–is intended for
one all-important purpose: to keep the
peace. Unfortunately, a decade of
neglecting our military forces had called
into question our ability to do that.
When
I took office in January 1981, I was
appalled by what I found: American planes
that couldn't fly and American ships that
couldn't sail for lack of spare parts and
trained personnel and insufficient fuel
and ammunition for essential training. The
inevitable result of all this was poor
morale in our Armed Forces, difficulty in
recruiting the brightest young Americans
to wear the uniform, and difficulty in
convincing our most experienced military
personnel to stay on.
There
was a real question then about how well we
could meet a crisis. And it was obvious
that we had to begin a major modernization
program to ensure we could deter
aggression and preserve the peace in are
the years ahead.
We
had to move immediately to improve the
basic readiness and staying power of our
conventional forces, so they could
meet–and therefore help deter–a
crisis. We had to make up for lost years
of investment by moving forward with a
long-term plan to prepare our forces to
counter the military capabilities our
adversaries were developing for the
future.
I
know that all of you want peace, and so do
I. I know too that many of you seriously
believe that a nuclear freeze would
further the cause of peace. But a freeze
now would make us less, not more, secure
and would raise, not reduce, the risks of
war. It would be largely unverifiable and
would seriously undercut our negotiations
on arms reduction. It would reward the
Soviets for their massive military buildup
while preventing us from modernizing our
aging and increasingly vulnerable forces.
With their pr esent margin of superiority,
why should they agree to arms reductions
knowing that we were prohibited from
catching up?
Believe
me, it wasn't pleasant for someone who had
come to Washington deterrmined to reduce
government spending, but we had to move
forward with the task of repairing our
defenses or we would lose our ability to
deter conflict now and in the future. We
had to demonstrate to any adversary that
aggression could not succeed, and that the
only real solution was substantial,
equitable, and effectively verifiable arms
reduction–the kind we're working for
right now in Geneva.
Thanks
to your strong support, and bipartisan
support from the Congress, we began to
turn things around. Already, we're seeing
some very encouraging results. Quality
recruitment and retention are up
dramatically–more high school graduates
are choosing military careers, and more
experienced career personnel are choosing
to stay. our men and women in uniform at
last are getting the tools and training
they need to do their jobs.
Ask
around today, especially among our young
people, and I think you will find a whole
new attitude toward serving their country
This reflects more than just better pay,
equipment, and leadership. You the
American people have sent a signal to
these young people that it is once again
an honor to wear the uniform. That's not
something you measure in a budget, but
it's a very real part of our nation's
strength.
It'll
take us longer to build the kind of
equipment we need to keep peace in the
future, but we've made a good start.
We
haven't built a new long-range bomber for
21 years. Now we're building the B-1. We
hadn't launched one new strategic
submarine for 17 years. Now we're building
one Trident submarine a year. our
land-based missiles are increasingly
threatened by the many huge, new Soviet
ICBM's. We're determining how to solve
that problem. At the same time, we're
working in the START and INF negotiations
with the goal of achieving deep reductions
in the strategic and intermediate nuclear
arsenals of both sides.
We
have also begun the long-needed
modernization of our conventional forces.
The Army is getting its first new tank in
20 years. The Air Force is modernizing.
We're rebuilding our Navy, which shrank
from about a thousand ships in the late
1960's to 453 during the 1970's. Our
nation needs a superior navy to support
our military forces and vital interests
overseas. We're now on the road to
achieving a 600-ship navy and increasing
the amphibious capabilities of our
marines, who are now serving the cause of
peace in Lebanon. And we're building a
real capability to assist our friends in
the vitally important Indian Ocean and
Persian Gulf region.
This
adds up to a major effort, and it isn't
cheap. It comes at a time when there are
many other pressures on our budget and
when the American people have already had
to make major sacrifices during the
recession. But we must not be misled by
those who would make defense once again
the scapegoat of the Federal budget.
The
fact is that in the past few decades we
have seen a dramatic shift in how we spend
the taxpayer's dollar. Back in 1955,
payments to individuals took up only about
20 percent of the Federal budget. For
nearly three decades, these payments
steadily increased and, this year, will
account for 49 percent of the budget. By
contrast, in 1955 defense took up more
than half of the Federal budget. By 1980
this spending had fallen to a low of 23
percent. Even with the increase that I am
requesting this year, defense will still
amount to only 28 percent of the budget.
The
calls for cutting back the defense budget
come in nice, simple arithmetic. They're
the same kind of talk that led the
democracies to neglect their defenses in
the 1930's and invited the tragedy of
World War II. We must not let that grim
chapter of history repeat itself through
apathy or neglect.
This
is why I'm speaking to you tonight to urge
you to tell your Senators and Congressmen
that you know we must continue to restore
our military strength. If we stop in
midstream, we will send a signal of
decline, of lessened will, to friends and
adversaries alike. Free people must
voluntarily through open debate and
democratic means, meet the challenge that
totalitarians pose by compulsion. It's up
to us, in our time, to choose and choose
wisely between the hard but necessary task
of preserving peace and freedom and the
temptation to ignore our duty and blindly
hope for the best while the enemies of
freedom grow stronger day by day.
The
solution is well within our grasp. But to
reach it, there is simply no alternative
but to continue this year, in this budget,
to provide the resources we need to
preserve the peace and guarantee our
freedom.
Now,
thus far tonight I've shared with you my
thoughts on the problems of national
security we must face together. My
predecessors in the Oval Office have
appeared before you on other occasions to
describe the threat posed by Soviet power
and have proposed steps to address that
threat. But since the advent of nuclear
weapons, those steps have been
increasingly directed toward deterrence of
aggression through the promise of
retaliation.
This
approach to stability through offensive
threat has worked. We and our allies have
succeeded in preventing nuclear war for
more than three decades. In recent months,
however, my advisers, including in
particular the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have
underscored the necessity to break out of
a future that relies solely on offensive
retaliation for our security.
Over
the course of these discussions, I've
become more and more deeply convinced that
the human spirit must be capable of rising
above dealing with other nations and human
beings by threatening their existence.
Feeling this way, I believe we must
thoroughly examine every opportunity for
reducing tensions and for introducing
greater stability into the strategic
calculus on both sides.
One
of the most important contributions we can
make is, of course, to lower the level of
all arms, and particularly nuclear arms.
We're engaged right now in several
negotiations with the Soviet Union to
bring about a mutual reduction of weapons.
I will report to you a week from tomorrow
my thoughts on that score. But let me just
say, I'm totally committed to this course.
If
the Soviet Union will join with us in our
effort to achieve major arms reduction we
will have succeeded in stabilizing the
nuclear balance. Nevertheless, it will
still be necessary to rely on the specter
of retaliation, on mutual threat. And
that's a sad commentary on the human
condition. Wouldn't it be better to save
lives than to avenge them? Are we not
capable of demonstrating our peaceful
intentions by applying all our abilities
and our ingenuity to achieving a truly
lasting stability? I think we are. Indeed,
we must.
After
careful consultation with my advisers,
including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, I
believe there is a way. Let me share with
you a vision of the future which offers
hope. It is that we embark on a program to
counter the awesome Soviet missile threat
with measures that are defensive. Let us
turn to the very strengths in technology
that spawned our great industrial base and
that have given us the quality of life we
enjoy today.
What
if free people could live secure in the
knowledge that their security did not rest
upon the threat of instant U.S.
retaliation to deter a Soviet attack, that
we could intercept and destroy strategic
ballistic missiles before they reached our
own soil or that of our allies?
I
know this is a formidable, technical task,
one that may not be accomplished before
the end of this century. Yet, current
technology has attained a level of
sophistication where it's reasonable for
us to begin this effort. It will take
years, probably decades of effort on many
fronts. There will be failures and
setbacks, just as there will be successes
and breakthroughs. And as we proceed, we
must remain constant in preserving the
nuclear deterrent and maintaining a solid
capability for flexible response. But
isn't it worth every investment necessary
to free the world from the threat of
nuclear war? We know it is.
In
the meantime, we will continue to pursue
real reductions in nuclear arms,
negotiating from a position of strength
that can be ensured only by modernizing
our strategic forces. At the same time, we
must take steps to reduce the risk of a
conventional military conflict escalating
to nuclear war by improving our nonnuclear
capabilities.
America
does possess now the technologies to
attain very significant improvements in
the effectiveness of our conventional,
nonnuclear forces. Proceeding boldly with
these new technologies, we can
significantly reduce any incentive that
the Soviet Union may have to threaten
attack against the United States or its
allies.
As
we pursue our goal of defensive
technologies, we recognize that our allies
rely upon our strategic offensive power to
deter attacks against them. Their vital
interests and ours are inextricably
linked. Their safety and ours are one. And
no change in technology can or will alter
that reality. We must and shall continue
to honor our commitments.
I
clearly recognize that defensive systems
have limitations and raise certain
problems and ambiguities. If paired with
offensive systems, they can be viewed as
fostering an aggressive policy, and no one
wants that. But with these considerations
firmly in mind, I call upon the scientific
community in our country, those who gave
us nuclear weapons, to turn their great
talents now to the cause of mankind and
world peace, to give us the means of
rendering these nuclear weapons impotent
and obsolete.
Tonight,
consistent with our obligations of the ABM
treaty and recognizing the need for closer
consultation with our allies, I'm taking
an important first step. I am directing a
comprehensive and intensive effort to
define a long-term research and
development program to begin to achieve
our ultimate goal of eliminating the
threat posed by strategic nuclear
missiles. This could pave the way for arms
control measures to eliminate the weapons
themselves. We seek neither military
superiority nor political advantage. Our
only purpose–one all people share–is
to search for ways to reduce the danger of
nuclear war.
My
fellow Americans, tonight we're launching
an effort which holds the promise of
changing the course of human history.
There will be risks, and results take
time. But I believe we can do it. As we
cross this threshold, I ask for your
prayers and your support.
Thank
you, good night, and God bless you.
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