The decision which the American people make
tomorrow will affect many areas of our national life: The growth of our
economy and the employment of our workers, the education of our young and
the welfare of our older citizens, the development of our great rivers,
and the prosperity of our abundant farms.
But of all the great issues whose ultimate
resolution may depend upon tomorrow's choice, none is more important or
more urgent than the issue of peace, whether, in the sixties, the world
will move closer to a secure peace in which freedom can flourish, or whether
we will drift toward armed conflict, with all its terrors and potential
for destruction.
For no issue more sharply divides the two
parties and the two candidates in this election than the issue of peace.
Of course, both Mr. Nixon and myself share the common desire of all Americans
for a peaceful world but throughout this campaign we have differed, and
differed sharply, as to the most effective way to pursue peace, on the
course American must take if Communist attack is to be deterred, tensions
relieved, and the vast resources, which now go to build weapons, are eventually
to be used to advance the welfare of all men.
Mr. Nixon believes that peace can be achieved
through conferences and commissions, through meetings and good-will tours
through special missions and propaganda gimmicks. But words and gestures,
talks and visits, will not bring peace in the future, just as they have
failed to bring peace during the past 8 years.
We face a ruthless and implacable enemy bent
on world domination. An enemy supremely confident of its ultimate victory
and willing to seek that victory by whatever method seems likely to succeed.
The Soviet Union recognizes and respects only
one obstacle to its ambitions and that is the strength of its opponents;
only a strong and vital America can convince the Communists that any attempt
at armed aggression will cost them too dearly to be worth the gamble; only
a strong and vital America can maintain the leadership of the alliance
of free nations. Only a strong and vital America can maintain the leadership
of the alliance of free nations. Only a strong and vital America can become
the model of Democratic progress to the newly emerging nations who are
looking for guidance and for help.
Therefore, if elected, I pledge myself and
my party to begin work immediately on a program to achieve peace through
strength.
First, we will strenghten our military power
to the point where no aggressor will dare attack, now or in the future.
Two days ago an independent study made for the Department of the Army concluded
that unless we acted immediately we might "become a world power inferior
to the U.S.S.R." But America must not become inferior to any nation. For
an inferior America endangers peace and the survival of freedom. Therefore,
we will build a mobile retaliatory force incapable of destruction by surprise
attack, and modernize and strengthen our conventional forces so as to deter
limited war.
Second, we will act to strengthen America
here at home, by working to reverse the current decline in our rate of
economic growth and rate of employment, by meeting the needs of our people
for medical care, for education, for housing and all the rest, and by assuring
every American, of every race and creed equal opportunity in all the activities
of our national life. In this way we can convince the people of the developing
nations that the road to progress is freedom's road - that democracy, not
communism, offers the brightest hope for their future.
Third, we will strengthen the political and
economic independence of those nations newly emerging on the bottom half
of the globe to prevent in those countries the chaos and despair on which
Communist expansion thrives.
Such an effort requires not only long-term
development loans but education, student exchanges, stepped up Voice of
America broadcasts, concerned and competent Ambassadors, and a wide range
of measures designed to increase the strength of freedom and stimulate
the economic advance on which freedom often depends.
Fourth, we will strengthen our planning the
preparation for disarmament. One of the most glaring failures of the past
8 years has been our failure to prepare properly for any arms control conference
since the end of the Korean war. As a result we have allowed the Soviet
Union to take the initiative and win the propaganda victories while our
blunder often made it seem to others that America, not Russia, was the
real obstacle to disarmament. It is no longer enough to have only 100 men,
in the entire Government, working on the complex problem of arms control.
We must immediately establish a National Peace Agency, an Arms Control
Research Institute, to work full time on these problems.
Fifth, we will strengthen man's hopes for
freedom in those countries where Communist despotism now rules. From Peiping
to Warsaw, from Budapest to Havana, millions of people have lost their
freedom. We must constantly remind them through stepped-up Voice of America
broadcasts, through exchange of information, and through economic help
where that help seems likely to decrease their dependence on Moscow, we
must remind them that America looks forward to the day when they will be
free.
If we pursue these programs, if we are willing
to forego the easy but fatal course of thinking that we can talk our way
into a peaceful world, for the course of the action and effort and sacrifice
which the Democratic Party offers, then I believe that we will move toward
the day which was promised mankind almost 2,000 years ago, the day when
there will be "peace on earth and good will toward men."