IT IS A GREAT PLEASURE for Mrs. Kennedy and for me, for
the Vice President and Mrs. Johnson, and for the Members of Congress, to
welcome the Ambassadorial Corps of our Hemisphere, our long time friends,
to the White House today. One hundred and thirty-nine years ago this week
the United States, stirred by the heroic struggle of its fellow Americans,
urged the independence and recognition of the new Latin American Republics.
It was then, at the dawn of freedom throughout this hemisphere, that Bolívar
spoke of his desire to see the Americas fashioned into the greatest region
in the world, "greatest," he said, "not so much by virtue of her area and
her wealth, as by her freedom and her glory."
Never in the long history of
our hemisphere has this dream been nearer to fulfillment, and never has
it been in greater danger.
The genius of our scientists
has given us the tools to bring abundance to our land, strength to our
industry, and knowledge to our people. For the first time we have the capacity
to strike off the remaining bonds of poverty and ignorance - to free our
people for the spiritual and intellectual fulfillment which has always
been the goal of our civilization.
Yet at this very moment of maximum
opportunity, we confront the same forces which have imperiled America throughout
its history - the alien forces which once again seek to impose the despotisms
of the Old World on the people of the New.
I have asked you to come here
today so that I might discuss these challenges and these dangers.
We meet together as firm and
ancient friends, united by history and experience and by our determination
to advance the values of American civilization. For this New World of ours
is not a mere accident of geography. Our continents are bound together
by a common history, the endless exploration of new frontiers. Our nations
are the product of a common struggle, the revolt from colonial rule. And
our people share a common heritage, the quest for the dignity and the freedom
of man.
The revolutions which gave us
birth ignited, in the words of Thomas Paine, "a spark never to be extinguished."
And across vast, turbulent continents these American ideals still stir
man's struggle for national independence and individual freedom. But as
we welcome the spread of the American revolution to other lands, we must
also remember that our own struggle - the revolution which began in Philadelphia
in 1776, and in Caracas in 1811 - is not yet finished. Our hemisphere's
mission is not yet completed. For our unfulfilled task is to demonstrate
to the entire world that man's unsatisfied aspiration for economic progress
and social justice can best be achieved by free men working within a framework
of democratic institutions. If we can do this in our own hemisphere, and
for our own people, we may yet realize the prophecy of the great Mexican
patriot, Benito Juarez, that "democracy is the destiny of future humanity."
As a citizen of the United States
let me be the first to admit that we North Americans have not always grasped
the significance of this common mission, just as it is also true that many
in your own countries have not fully understood the urgency of the need
to lift people from poverty and ignorance and despair. But we must turn
from these mistakes - from the failures and the misunderstandings of the
past to a future full of peril, but bright with hope.
Throughout Latin America, a
continent rich in resources and in the spiritual and cultural achievements
of its people, millions of men and women suffer the daily degradations
of poverty and hunger. They lack decent shelter or protection from disease.
Their children are deprived of the education or the jobs which are the
gateway to a better life. And each day the problems grow more urgent. Population
growth is outpacing economic growth - low living standards are further
endangered - and discontent - the discontent of a people who know that
abundance and the tools of progress are at last within their reach - that
discontent is growing. In the words of José Figueres, "once dormant
peoples are struggling upward toward the sun, toward a better life."
If we are to meet a problem
so staggering in its dimensions, our approach must itself be equally bold
- an approach consistent with the majestic concept of Operation Pan America.
Therefore I have called on all people of the hemisphere to join in a new
Alliance for Progress - Alianza para Progreso - a vast cooperative
effort, unparalleled in magnitude and nobility of purpose, to satisfy the
basic needs of the American people for homes, work and land, health and
schools - techo, trabajo y tierra, salud y escuela.
First, I propose that
the American Republics begin on a vast new Ten Year Plan for the Americas,
a plan to transform the 1960's into a historic decade of democratic progress.
These 10 years will be the years
of maximum progress - maximum effort, the years when the greatest obstacles
must be overcome, the years when the need for assistance will be the greatest.
And if we are successful, if
our effort is bold enough and determined enough, then the close of this
decade will mark the beginning of a new era in the American experience.
The living standards of every American family will be on the rise, basic
education will be available to all, hunger will be a forgotten experience,
the need for massive outside help will have passed, most nations will have
entered a period of self-sustaining growth, and though there will be still
much to do, every American Republic will be the master of its own revolution
and its own hope and progress.
Let me stress that only the
most determined efforts of the American nations themselves can bring success
to this effort. They, and they alone, can mobilize their resources, enlist
the energies of their people, and modify their social patterns so that
all, and not just a privileged few, share in the fruits of growth. If this
effort is made, then outside assistance will give vital impetus to progress;
without it, no amount of help will advance the welfare of the people.
Thus if the countries of Latin
America are ready to do their part, and I am sure they are, then I believe
the United States, for its part, should help provide resources of a scope
and magnitude sufficient to make this bold development plan a success -
just as we helped to provide, against equal odds nearly, the resources
adequate to help rebuild the economies of Western Europe. For only an effort
of towering dimensions can ensure fulfillment of our plan for a decade
of progress.
Secondly, I will shortly
request a ministerial meeting of the Inter-American Economic and Social
Council, a meeting at which we can begin the massive planning effort which
will be at the heart of the Alliance for Progress.
For if our Alliance is to succeed,
each Latin nation must formulate long-range plans for its own development,
plans which establish targets and priorities, ensure monetary stability,
establish the machinery for vital social change, stimulate private activity
and initiative, and provide for a maximum national effort. These plans
will be the foundation of our development effort, and the basis for the
allocation of outside resources.
A greatly strengthened IA-ECOSOC,
working with the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Inter-American
Development Bank, can assemble the leading economists and experts of the
hemisphere to help each country develop its own development plan - and
provide a continuing review of economic progress in this hemisphere.
Third, I have this evening
signed a request to the Congress for $500 million as a first step in fulfilling
the Act of Bogotá. This is the first large-scale Inter-American
effort, instituted by my predecessor President Eisenhower, to attack the
social barriers which block economic progress. The money will be used to
combat illiteracy, improve the productivity and use of their land, wipe
out disease, attack archaic tax and land tenure structures, provide educational
opportunities, and offer a broad range of projects designed to make the
benefits of increasing abundance available to all. We will begin to commit
these funds as soon as they are appropriated.
Fourth, we must support
all economic integration which is a genuine step toward larger markets
and greater competitive opportunity. The fragmentation of Latin American
economies is a serious barrier to industrial growth. Projects such as the
Central American common market and free trade areas in South America can
help to remove these obstacles.
Fifth, the United States
is ready to cooperate in serious, case-by-case examinations of commodity
market problems. Frequent violent change in commodity prices seriously
injure the economies of many Latin American countries, draining their resources
and stultifying their growth. Together we must find practical methods of
bringing an end to this pattern.
Sixth, we will immediately
step up our Food for Peace emergency program, help establish food reserves
in areas of recurrent drought, help provide school lunches for children,
and offer feed grains for use in rural development. For hungry men and
women cannot wait for economic discussions or diplomatic meetings - their
need is urgent - and their hunger rests heavily on the conscience of their
fellow men.
Seventh, all the people
of the hemisphere must be allowed to share in the expanding wonders of
science - wonders which have captured man's imagination, challenged the
powers of his mind, and given him the tools for rapid progress. I invite
Latin American scientists to work with us in new projects in fields such
as medicine and agriculture, physics and astronomy, and desalinization,
to help plan for regional research laboratories in these and other fields,
and to strengthen cooperation between American universities and laboratories.
We also intend to expand our
science teacher training programs to include Latin American instructors,
to assist in establishing such programs in other American countries, and
translate and make available revolutionary new teaching materials in physics,
chemistry, biology, and mathematics, so that the young of all nations may
contribute their skills to the advance of science.
Eighth, we must rapidly
expand the training of those needed to man the economies of rapidly developing
countries. This means expanded technical training programs, for which the
Peace Corps, for example, will be available when needed. It also means
assistance to Latin American universities, graduate schools, and research
institutes.
We welcome proposals in Central
America for intimate cooperation in higher education - cooperation which
can achieve a regional effort of increased effectiveness and excellence.
We are ready to help fill the gap in trained manpower, realizing that our
ultimate goal must be a basic education for all who wish to learn.
Ninth, we reaffirm our
pledge to come to the defense of any American nation whose independence
is endangered. As its confidence in the collective security system of the
OAS spreads, it will be possible to devote to constructive use a major
share of those resources now spent on the instruments of war. Even now,
as the government of Chile has said, the time has come to take the first
steps toward sensible limitations of arms. And the new generation of military
leaders has shown an increasing awareness that armies cannot only defend
their countries - they can, as we have learned through our own Corps of
Engineers, they can help to build them.
Tenth, we invite our
friends in Latin America to contribute to the enrichment of life and culture
in the United States. We need teachers of your literature and history and
tradition, opportunities for our young people to study in your universities,
access to your music, your art, and the thought of your great philosophers.
For we know we have much to learn.
In this way you can help bring
a fuller spiritual and intellectual life to the people of the United States
- and contribute to understanding and mutual respect among the nations
of the hemisphere.
With steps such as these, we
propose to complete the revolution of the Americas, to build a hemisphere
where all men can hope for a suitable standard of living, and all can live
out their lives in dignity and in freedom.
To achieve this goal political
freedom must accompany material progress. Our Alliance for Progress is
an alliance of free governments, and it must work to eliminate tyranny
from a hemisphere in which it has no rightful place. Therefore let us express
our special friendship to the people of Cuba and the Dominican Republic
- and the hope they will soon rejoin the society of free men, uniting with
us in common effort.
This political freedom must
be accompanied by social change. For unless necessary social reforms, including
land and tax reform, are freely made - unless we broaden the opportunity
for all of our people - unless the great mass of Americans share in increasing
prosperity - then our alliance, our revolution, our dream, and our freedom
will fail. But we call for social change by free men - change in the spirit
of Washington and Jefferson, of Bolívar and San Martín and
Martín - not change which seeks to impose on men tyrannies which
we cast out a century and a half ago. Our motto is what it has always been
- progress yes, tyranny no - progreso sí, tiranía no!
But our greatest challenge comes
from within - the task of creating an American civilization where spiritual
and cultural values are strengthened by an ever-broadening base of material
advance - where, within the rich diversity of its own traditions, each
nation is free to follow its own path towards progress.
The completion of our task will,
of course, require the efforts of all governments of our hemisphere. But
the efforts of governments alone will never be enough. In the end, the
people must choose and the people must help themselves.
And so I say to the men and
women of the Americas - to the campesino in the fields, to the obrero
in the cities, to the estudiante in the schools - prepare your mind
and heart for the task ahead - call forth your strength and let each devote
his energies to the betterment of all, so that your children and our children
in this hemisphere can find an ever richer and a freer life.
Let us once again transform
the American continent into a vast crucible of revolutionary ideas and
efforts - a tribute to the power of the creative energies of free men and
women - an example to all the world that liberty and progress walk hand
in hand. Let us once again awaken our American revolution until it guides
the struggle of people everywhere - not with an imperialism of force or
fear - but the rule of courage and freedom and hope for the future of man.