Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs
President John F. Kennedy
Delivered in person before a joint session of Congress
May 25, 1961
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice
President, my copartners in Government, gentlemen-and ladies:
The
Constitution imposes upon me the obligation to "from time to time
give to the Congress information of the State of the Union." While
this has traditionally been interpreted as an annual affair, this
tradition has been broken in extraordinary times.
These
are extraordinary times. And we face an extraordinary challenge. Our
strength as well as our convictions have imposed upon this nation the
role of leader in freedom's cause.
No
role in history could be more difficult or more important. We stand for
freedom.
That
is our conviction for ourselves--that is our only commitment to others.
No friend, no neutral and no adversary should think otherwise. We are
not against any man--or any nation--or any system--except as it is
hostile to freedom. Nor am I here to present a new military doctrine,
bearing any one name or aimed at any one area. I am here to promote the
freedom doctrine.
I.
The
great battleground for the defense and expansion of freedom today is the
whole southern half of the globe--Asia, Latin America, Africa and the
Middle East--the lands of the rising peoples. Their revolution is the
greatest in human history. They seek an end to injustice, tyranny, and
exploitation. More than an end, they seek a beginning.
And
theirs is a revolution which we would support regardless of the Cold
War, and regardless of which political or economic route they should
choose to freedom.
For
the adversaries of freedom did not create the revolution; nor did they
create the conditions which compel it. But they are seeking to ride the
crest of its wave--to capture it for themselves.
Yet
their aggression is more often concealed than open. They have fired no
missiles; and their troops are seldom seen. They send arms, agitators,
aid, technicians and propaganda to every troubled area. But where
fighting is required, it is usually done by others--by guerrillas
striking at night, by assassins striking alone--assassins who have taken
the lives of four thousand civil officers in the last twelve months in
Vietnam alone--by subversives and saboteurs and insurrectionists, who in
some cases control whole areas inside of independent nations.
[At
this point the following paragraph, which appears in the text as
signed and transmitted to the Senate and House of Representatives, was
omitted in the reading of the message:
They
possess a powerful intercontinental striking force, large forces for
conventional war, a well-trained underground in nearly every country,
the power to conscript talent and manpower for any purpose, the
capacity for quick decisions, a closed society without dissent or free
information, and long experience in the techniques of violence and
subversion. They make the most of their scientific successes, their
economic progress and their pose as a foe of colonialism and friend of
popular revolution. They prey on unstable or unpopular governments,
unsealed, or unknown boundaries, unfilled hopes, convulsive change,
massive poverty, illiteracy, unrest and frustration.]
With
these formidable weapons, the adversaries of freedom plan to consolidate
their territory--to exploit, to control, and finally to destroy the
hopes of the world's newest nations; and they have ambition to do it
before the end of this decade. It is a contest of will and purpose as
well as force and violence--a battle for minds and souls as well as
lives and territory. And in that contest, we cannot stand aside.
We
stand, as we have always stood from our earliest beginnings, for the
independence and equality of all nations. This nation was born of
revolution and raised in freedom. And we do not intend to leave an open
road for despotism.
There
is no single simple policy which meets this challenge. Experience has
taught us that no one nation has the power or the wisdom to solve all
the problems of the world or manage its revolutionary tides--that
extending our commitments does not always increase our security--that
any initiative carries with it the risk of a temporary defeat--that
nuclear weapons cannot prevent subversion--that no free people can be
kept free without will and energy of their own--and that no two nations
or situations are exactly alike.
Yet
there is much we can do--and must do. The proposals I bring before you
are numerous and varied. They arise from the host of special
opportunities and dangers which have become increasingly clear in recent
months. Taken together, I believe that they can mark another step
forward in our effort as a people. I am here to ask the help of this
Congress and the nation in approving these necessary measures.
II. ECONOMIC AND
SOCIAL PROGRESS AT HOME
The
first and basic task confronting this nation this year was to turn
recession into recovery. An affirmative anti-recession program,
initiated with your cooperation, supported the natural forces in the
private sector; and our economy is now enjoying renewed confidence and
energy. The recession has been halted. Recovery is under way.
But
the task of abating unemployment and achieving a full use of our
resources does remain a serious challenge for us all. Large-scale
unemployment during a recession is bad enough, but large-scale
unemployment during a period of prosperity would be intolerable.
I
am therefore transmitting to the Congress a new Manpower Development and
Training program, to train or retrain several hundred thousand workers,
particularly in those areas where we have seen chronic unemployment as a
result of technological factors in new occupational skills over a
four-year period, in order to replace those skills made obsolete by
automation and industrial change with the new skills which the new
processes demand.
It
should be a satisfaction to us all that we have made great strides in
restoring world confidence in the dollar, halting the outflow of gold
and improving our balance of payments. During the last two months, our
gold stocks actually increased by seventeen million dollars, compared to
a loss of 635 million dollars during the last two months of 1960. We
must maintain this progress--and this will require the cooperation and
restraint of everyone. As recovery progresses, there will be temptations
to seek unjustified price and wage increases. These we cannot afford.
They will only handicap our efforts to compete abroad and to achieve
full recovery here at home. Labor and management must--and I am
confident that they will--pursue responsible wage and price policies in
these critical times. I look to the President's Advisory Committee on
Labor Management Policy to give a strong lead in this direction.
Moreover,
if the budget deficit now increased by the needs of our security is to
be held within manageable proportions, it will be necessary to hold
tightly to prudent fiscal standards; and I request the cooperation of
the Congress in this regard--to refrain from adding funds or programs,
desirable as they may be, to the Budget--to end the postal deficit, as
my predecessor also recommended, through increased rates--a deficit
incidentally, this year, which exceeds the fiscal 1962 cost of all the
space and defense measures that I am submitting today--to provide full
pay-as-you-go highway financing--and to close those tax loopholes
earlier specified. Our security and progress cannot be cheaply
purchased; and their price must be found in what we all forego as well
as what we all must pay.
III. ECONOMIC AND
SOCIAL PROGRESS ABROAD
I
stress the strength of our economy because it is essential to the
strength of our nation. And what is true in our case is true in the case
of other countries. Their strength in the struggle for freedom depends
on the strength of their economic and their social progress.
We
would be badly mistaken to consider their problems in military terms
alone. For no amount of arms and armies can help stabilize those
governments which are unable or unwilling to achieve social and economic
reform and development. Military pacts cannot help nations whose social
injustice and economic chaos invite insurgency and penetration and
subversion. The most skillful counter-guerrilla efforts cannot succeed
where the local population is too caught up in its own misery to be
concerned about the advance of communism.
But
for those who share this view, we stand ready now, as we have in the
past, to provide generously of our skills, and our capital, and our food
to assist the peoples of the less-developed nations to reach their goals
in freedom--to help them before they are engulfed in crisis.
This
is also our great opportunity in 1961. If we grasp it, then subversion
to prevent its success is exposed as an unjustifiable attempt to keep
these nations from either being free or equal. But if we do not pursue
it, and if they do not pursue it, the bankruptcy of unstable
governments, one by one, and of unfilled hopes will surely lead to a
series of totalitarian receiverships.
Earlier
in the year, I outlined to the Congress a new program for aiding
emerging nations; and it is my intention to transmit shortly draft
legislation to implement this program, to establish a new Act for
International Development, and to add to the figures previously
requested, in view of the swift pace of critical events, an additional
250 million dollars for a Presidential Contingency Fund, to be used only
upon a Presidential determination in each case, with regular and
complete reports to the Congress in each case, when there is a sudden
and extraordinary drain upon our regular funds which we cannot
foresee--as illustrated by recent events in Southeast Asia--and it makes
necessary the use of this emergency reserve. The total amount
requested--now raised to 2..65 billion dollars--is both minimal and
crucial. I do not see how anyone who is concerned--as we all are--about
the growing threats to freedom around the globe--and who is asking what
more we can do as a people--can weaken or oppose the single most
important program available for building the frontiers of freedom.
IV
All
that I have said makes it clear that we are engaged in a world-wide
struggle in which we bear a heavy burden to preserve and promote the
ideals that we share with all mankind, or have alien ideals forced upon
them. That struggle has highlighted the role of our Information Agency.
It is essential that the funds previously requested for this effort be
not only approved in full, but increased by 2 million, 400 thousand
dollars, to a total of 121 million dollars.
This
new request is for additional radio and television to Latin America and
Southeast Asia. These tools are particularly effective and essential in
the cities and villages of those great continents as a means of reaching
millions of uncertain peoples to tell them of our interest in their
fight for freedom. In Latin America, we are proposing to increase our
Spanish and Portuguese broadcasts to a total of 154 hours a week,
compared to 42 hours today, none of which is in Portuguese, the language
of about one-third of the people of South America. The Soviets, Red
Chinese and satellites already broadcast into Latin America more than
134 hours a week in Spanish and Portuguese. Communist China alone does
more public information broadcasting in our own hemisphere than we do.
Moreover, powerful propaganda broadcasts from Havana now are heard
throughout Latin America, encouraging new revolutions in several
countries.
Similarly,
in Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Thailand, we must communicate our
determination and support to those upon whom our hopes for resisting the
communist tide in that continent ultimately depend. Our interest is in
the truth.
V. OUR PARTNERSHIP
FOR SELF-DEFENSE
But
while we talk of sharing and building and the competition of ideas,
others talk of arms and threaten war. So we have learned to keep our
defenses strong--and to cooperate with others in a partnership of
self-defense. The events of recent weeks have caused us to look anew at
these efforts.
The
center of freedom's defense is our network of world alliances, extending
from NATO, recommended by a Democratic President and approved by a
Republican Congress, to SEATO, recommended by a Republican President and
approved by a Democratic Congress. These alliances were constructed in
the 1940's and 1950's--it is our task and responsibility in the 1960's
to strengthen them.
To
meet the changing conditions of power--and power relationships have
changed--we have endorsed an increased emphasis on NATO's conventional
strength. At the same time we are affirming our conviction that the NATO
nuclear deterrent must also be kept strong. I have made clear our
intention to commit to the NATO command, for this purpose, the 5 Polaris
submarines originally suggested by President Eisenhower, with the
possibility, if needed, of more to come.
Second,
a major part of our partnership for self-defense is the Military
Assistance Program. The main burden of local defense against local
attack, subversion, insurrection or guerrilla warfare must of necessity
rest with local forces. Where these forces have the necessary will and
capacity to cope with such threats, our intervention is rarely necessary
or helpful. Where the will is present and only capacity is lacking, our
Military Assistance Program can be of help.
But
this program, like economic assistance, needs a new emphasis. It cannot
be extended without regard to the social, political and military reforms
essential to internal respect and stability. The equipment and training
provided must be tailored to legitimate local needs and to our own
foreign and military policies, not to our supply of military stocks or a
local leader's desire for military display. And military assistance can,
in addition to its military purposes, make a contribution to economic
progress, as do our own Army Engineers.
In
an earlier message, I requested 1.6 billion dollars for Military
Assistance, stating that this would maintain existing force levels, but
that I could not foresee how much more might be required. It is now
clear that this is not enough. The present crisis in Southeast Asia, on
which the Vice President has made a valuable report--the rising threat
of communism in Latin America--the increased arms traffic in Africa--and
all the new pressures on every nation found on the map by tracing your
fingers along the borders of the Communist bloc in Asia and the Middle
East--all make clear the dimension of our needs.
I
therefore request the Congress to provide a total of 1.885 billion
dollars for Military Assistance in the coming fiscal year--an amount
less than that requested a year ago--but a minimum which must be assured
if we are to help those nations make secure their independence. This
must be prudently and wisely spent--and that will be our common
endeavor. Military and economic assistance has been a heavy burden on
our citizens for a long time, and I recognize the strong pressures
against it; but this battle is far from over, it is reaching a crucial
stage, and I believe we should participate in it. We cannot merely state
our opposition to totalitarian advance without paying the price of
helping those now under the greatest pressure.
VI. OUR OWN MILITARY
AND INTELLIGENCE SHIELD
In
line with these developments, I have directed a further reinforcement of
our own capacity to deter or resist non-nuclear aggression. In the
conventional field, with one exception, I find no present need for large
new levies of men. What is needed is rather a change of position to give
us still further increases in flexibility.
Therefore,
I am directing the Secretary of Defense to undertake a reorganization
and modernization of the Army's divisional structure, to increase its
non-nuclear firepower, to improve its tactical mobility in any
environment, to insure its flexibility to meet any direct or indirect
threat, to facilitate its coordination with our major allies, and to
provide more modern mechanized divisions in Europe and bring their
equipment up to date, and new airborne brigades in both the Pacific and
Europe.
And
secondly, I am asking the Congress for an additional 100 million dollars
to begin the procurement task necessary to re-equip this new Army
structure with the most modern material. New helicopters, new armored
personnel carriers, and new howitzers, for example, must be obtained
now.
Third,
I am directing the Secretary of Defense to expand rapidly and
substantially, in cooperation with our Allies, the orientation of
existing forces for the conduct of non-nuclear war, paramilitary
operations and sub-limited or unconventional wars.
In
addition our special forces and unconventional warfare units will be
increased and reoriented. Throughout the services new emphasis must be
placed on the special skills and languages which are required to work
with local populations.
Fourth,
the Army is developing plans to make possible a much more rapid
deployment of a major portion of its highly trained reserve forces. When
these plans are completed and the reserve is strengthened, two
combat-equipped divisions, plus their supporting forces, a total of
89,000 men, could be ready in an emergency for operations with but 3
weeks' notice--2 more divisions with but 5 weeks' notice--and six
additional divisions and their supporting forces, making a total of 10
divisions, could be deployable with less than 8 weeks' notice. In short,
these new plans will allow us to almost double the combat power of the
Army in less than two months, compared to the nearly nine months
heretofore required.
Fifth,
to enhance the already formidable ability of the Marine Corps to respond
to limited war emergencies, I am asking the Congress for 60 million
dollars to increase the Marine Corps strength to 190,000 men. This will
increase the initial impact and staying power of our three Marine
divisions and three air wings, and provide a trained nucleus for further
expansion, if necessary for self-defense.
Finally,
to cite one other area of activities that are both legitimate and
necessary as a means of self-defense in an age of hidden perils, our
whole intelligence effort must be reviewed, and its coordination with
other elements of policy assured. The Congress and the American people
are entitled to know that we will institute whatever new organization,
policies, and control are necessary.
VII. CIVIL DEFENSE
One
major element of the national security program which this nation has
never squarely faced up to is civil defense. This problem arises not
from present trends but from national inaction in which most of us have
participated. In the past decade we have intermittently considered a
variety of programs, but we have never adopted a consistent policy.
Public considerations have been largely characterized by apathy,
indifference and skepticism; while, at the same time, many of the civil
defense plans have been so far-reaching and unrealistic that they have
not gained essential support.
This
Administration has been looking hard at exactly what civil defense can
and cannot do. It cannot be obtained cheaply. It cannot give an
assurance of blast protection that will be proof against surprise attack
or guaranteed against obsolescence or destruction. And it cannot deter a
nuclear attack.
We
will deter an enemy from making a nuclear attack only if our retaliatory
power is so strong and so invulnerable that he knows he would be
destroyed by our response. If we have that strength, civil defense is
not needed to deter an attack. If we should ever lack it, civil defense
would not be an adequate substitute.
But
this deterrent concept assumes rational calculations by rational men.
And the history of this planet, and particularly the history of the 20th
century, is sufficient to remind us of the possibilities of an
irrational attack, a miscalculation, an accidental war, [or a war of
escalation in which the stakes by each side gradually increase to the
point of maximum danger] which cannot be either foreseen or deterred. It
is on this basis that civil defense can be readily justifiable--as
insurance for the civilian population in case of an enemy
miscalculation. It is insurance we trust will never be needed--but
insurance which we could never forgive ourselves for foregoing in the
event of catastrophe.
Once
the validity of this concept is recognized, there is no point in
delaying the initiation of a nation-wide long-range program of
identifying present fallout shelter capacity and providing shelter in
new and existing structures. Such a program would protect millions of
people against the hazards of radioactive fallout in the event of
large-scale nuclear attack. Effective performance of the entire program
not only requires new legislative authority and more funds, but also
sound organizational arrangements.
Therefore,
under the authority vested in me by Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1958, I
am assigning responsibility for this program to the top civilian
authority already responsible for continental defense, the Secretary of
Defense. It is important that this function remain civilian, in nature
and leadership; and this feature will not be changed.
The
Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization will be reconstituted as a
small staff agency to assist in the coordination of these functions. To
more accurately describe its role, its title should be changed to the
Office of Emergency Planning.
As
soon as those newly charged with these responsibilities have prepared
new authorization and appropriation requests, such requests will be
transmitted to the Congress for a much strengthened Federal-State civil
defense program. Such a program will provide Federal funds for
identifying fallout shelter capacity in existing, structures, and it
will include, where appropriate, incorporation of shelter in Federal
buildings, new requirements for shelter in buildings constructed with
Federal assistance, and matching grants and other incentives for
constructing shelter in State and local and private buildings.
Federal
appropriations for civil defense in fiscal 1962 under this program will
in all likelihood be more than triple the pending budget requests; and
they will increase sharply in subsequent years. Financial participation
will also be required from State and local governments and from private
citizens. But no insurance is cost-free; and every American citizen and
his community must decide for themselves whether this form of survival
insurance justifies the expenditure of effort, time and money. For
myself, I am convinced that it does.
VIII. DISARMAMENT
I
cannot end this discussion of defense and armaments without emphasizing
our strongest hope: the creation of an orderly world where disarmament
will be possible. Our aims do not prepare for war--they are efforts to
discourage and resist the adventures of others that could end in war.
That
is why it is consistent with these efforts that we continue to press for
properly safeguarded disarmament measures. At Geneva, in cooperation
with the United Kingdom, we have put forward concrete proposals to make
clear our wish to meet the Soviets half way in an effective nuclear test
ban treaty--the first significant but essential step on the road towards
disarmament. Up to now, their response has not been what we hoped, but
Mr. Dean returned last night to Geneva, and we intend to go the last
mile in patience to secure this gain if we can.
Meanwhile,
we are determined to keep disarmament high on our agenda--to make an
intensified effort to develop acceptable political and technical
alternatives to the present arms race. To this end I shall send to the
Congress a measure to establish a strengthened and enlarged Disarmament
Agency.
Finally,
if we are to win the battle that is now going on around the world
between freedom and tyranny, the dramatic achievements in space which
occurred in recent weeks should have made clear to us all, as did the
Sputnik in 1957, the impact of this adventure on the minds of men
everywhere, who are attempting to make a determination of which road
they should take. Since early in my term, our efforts in space have been
under review. With the advice of the Vice President, who is Chairman of
the National Space Council, we have examined where we are strong and
where we are not, where we may succeed and where we may not. Now it is
time to take longer strides--time for a great new American
enterprise--time for this nation to take a clearly leading role in space
achievement, which in many ways may hold the key to our future on earth.
I
believe we possess all the resources and talents necessary. But the
facts of the matter are that we have never made the national decisions
or marshalled the national resources required for such leadership. We
have never specified long-range goals on an urgent time schedule, or
managed our resources and our time so as to insure their fulfillment.
Recognizing
the head start obtained by the Soviets with their large rocket engines,
which gives them many months of leadtime, and recognizing the likelihood
that they will exploit this lead for some time to come in still more
impressive successes, we nevertheless are required to make new efforts
on our own. For while we cannot guarantee that we shall one day be
first, we can guarantee that any failure to make this effort will make
us last. We take an additional risk by making it in full view of the
world, but as shown by the feat of astronaut Shepard, this very risk
enhances our stature when we are successful. But this is not merely a
race. Space is open to us now; and our eagerness to share its meaning is
not governed by the efforts of others. We go into space because whatever
mankind must undertake, free men must fully share.
I
therefore ask the Congress, above and beyond the increases I have
earlier requested for space activities, to provide the funds which are
needed to meet the following national goals:
First,
I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal,
before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning
him safely to the earth. No single space project in this period will be
more impressive to mankind, or more important for the long-range
exploration of space; and none will be so difficult or expensive to
accomplish. We propose to accelerate the development of the appropriate
lunar space craft. We propose to develop alternate liquid and solid fuel
boosters, much larger than any now being developed, until certain which
is superior. We propose additional funds for other engine development
and for unmanned explorations--explorations which are particularly
important for one purpose which this nation will never overlook: the
survival of the man who first makes this daring flight. But in a very
real sense, it will not be one man going to the moon--if we make this
judgment affirmatively, it will be an entire nation. For all of us must
work to put him there.
Secondly,
an additional 23 million dollars, together with 7 million dollars
already available, will accelerate development of the Rover nuclear
rocket. This gives promise of some day providing a means for even more
exciting and ambitious exploration of space, perhaps beyond the moon,
perhaps to the very end of the solar system itself.
Third,
an additional 50 million dollars will make the most of our present
leadership, by accelerating the use of space satellites for world-wide
communications.
Fourth,
an additional 75 million dollars--of which 53 million dollars is for the
Weather Bureau--will help give us at the earliest possible time a
satellite system for world-wide weather observation.
Let
it be clear--and this is a judgment which the Members of the Congress
must finally make--let it be clear that I am asking the Congress and the
country to accept a firm commitment to a new course of action, a course
which will last for many years and carry very heavy costs: 531 million
dollars in fiscal '62--an estimated seven to nine billion dollars
additional over the next five years. If we are to go only half way, or
reduce our sights in the face of difficulty, in my judgment it would be
better not to go at all.
Now
this is a choice which this country must make, and I am confident that
under the leadership of the Space Committees of the Congress, and the
Appropriating Committees, that you will consider the matter carefully.
It
is a most important decision that we make as a nation. But all of you
have lived through the last four years and have seen the significance of
space and the adventures in space, and no one can predict with certainty
what the ultimate meaning will be of mastery of space.
I
believe we should go to the moon. But I think every citizen of this
country as well as the Members of the Congress should consider the
matter carefully in making their judgment, to which we have given
attention over many weeks and months, because it is a heavy burden, and
there is no sense in agreeing or desiring that the United States take an
affirmative position in outer space, unless we are prepared to do the
work and bear the burdens to make it successful. If we are not, we
should decide today and this year.
This
decision demands a major national commitment of scientific and technical
manpower, materiel and facilities, and the possibility of their
diversion from other important activities where they are already thinly
spread. It means a degree of dedication, organization and discipline
which have not always characterized our research and development
efforts. It means we cannot afford undue work stoppages, inflated costs
of material or talent, wasteful interagency rivalries, or a high
turnover of key personnel.
New
objectives and new money cannot solve these problems. They could in
fact, aggravate them further--unless every scientist, every engineer,
every serviceman, every technician, contractor, and civil servant gives
his personal pledge that this nation will move forward, with the full
speed of freedom, in the exciting adventure of space.
X. CONCLUSION
In
conclusion, let me emphasize one point. It is not a pleasure for any
President of the United States, as I am sure it was not a pleasure for
my predecessors, to come before the Congress and ask for new
appropriations which place burdens on our people. I came to this
conclusion with some reluctance. But in my judgment, this is a most
serious time in the life of our country and in the life of freedom
around the globe, and it is the obligation, I believe, of the President
of the United States to at least make his recommendations to the Members
of the Congress, so that they can reach their own conclusions with that
judgment before them. You must decide yourselves, as I have decided, and
I am confident that whether you finally decide in the way that I have
decided or not, that your judgment--as my judgment--is reached on what
is in the best interests of our country.
In
conclusion, let me emphasize one point: that we are determined, as a
nation in 1961 that freedom shall survive and succeed--and whatever the
peril and set-backs, we have some very large advantages.
The
first is the simple fact that we are on the side of liberty--and since
the beginning of history, and particularly since the end of the Second
World War, liberty has been winning out all over the globe.
A
second real asset is that we are not alone. We have friends and allies
all over the world who share our devotion to freedom. May I cite as a
symbol of traditional and effective friendship the great ally I am about
to visit--France. I look forward to my visit to France, and to my
discussion with a great Captain of the Western World, President de
Gaulle, as a meeting of particular significance, permitting the kind of
close and ranging consultation that will strengthen both our countries
and serve the common purposes of world-wide peace and liberty. Such
serious conversations do not require a pale unanimity--they are rather
the instruments of trust and understanding over a long road.
A
third asset is our desire for peace. It is sincere, and I believe the
world knows it. We are proving it in our patience at the test ban table,
and we are proving it in the UN where our efforts have been directed to
maintaining that organization's usefulness as a protector of the
independence of small nations. In these and other instances, the
response of our opponents has not been encouraging.
Yet
it is important to know that our patience at the bargaining table is
nearly inexhaustible, though our credulity is limited that our hopes for
peace are unfailing, while our determination to protect our security is
resolute. For these reasons I have long thought it wise to meet with the
Soviet Premier for a personal exchange of views. A meeting in Vienna
turned out to be convenient for us both; and the Austrian government has
kindly made us welcome. No formal agenda is planned and no negotiations
will be undertaken; but we will make clear America's enduring concern is
for both peace and freedom--that we are anxious to live in harmony with
the Russian people--that we seek no conquests, no satellites, no
riches--that we seek only the day when "nation shall not lift up
sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."
Finally,
our greatest asset in this struggle is the American people--their
willingness to pay the price for these programs--to understand and
accept a long struggle--to share their resources with other less
fortunate people--to meet the tax levels and close the tax loopholes I
have requested--to exercise self-restraint instead of pushing up wages
or prices, or over-producing certain crops, or spreading military
secrets, or urging unessential expenditures or improper monopolies or
harmful work stoppages--to serve in the Peace Corps or the Armed
Services or the Federal Civil Service or the Congress--to strive for
excellence in their schools, in their cities and in their physical
fitness and that of their children--to take part in Civil Defense--to
pay higher postal rates, and higher payroll taxes and higher teachers'
salaries, in order to strengthen our society--to show friendship to
students and visitors from other lands who visit us and go back in many
cases to be the future leaders, with an image of America--and I want
that image, and I know you do, to be affirmative and positive--and,
finally, to practice democracy at home, in all States, with all races,
to respect each other and to protect the Constitutional rights of all
citizens.
I
have not asked for a single program which did not cause one or all
Americans some inconvenience, or some hardship, or some sacrifice. But
they have responded and you in the Congress have responded to your
duty--and I feel confident in asking today for a similar response to
these new and larger demands. It is heartening to know, as I journey
abroad, that our country is united in its commitment to freedom and is
ready to do its duty.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|