To the Congress o f the United States:
I have the honor to transmit
the first annual report of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency.
The Agency was established by
the Act of September 26, 1961, and has thus been in existence for only
four months. This report, submitted pursuant to law, describes not only
its own initial activities, but also the work of predecessor agencies which
it is continuing.
The existence of this new Agency
is a source of strength to me, in the performance of my responsibility
to pursue a new type of world security which will increase our own prospects
of living in peace and freedom. I know that this goal is the desire of
the Congress and the American people to leave no stone unturned in their
search for a peaceful world.
This report of activities indicates
that the new Agency is moving surely toward the achievement of greater
effectiveness and flexibility in disarmament negotiations. The development
of this kind of skill and responsibility is essential to the serious pursuit
of security through disarmament.
On March 14, our representatives
will meet with the representatives of 17 other nations in a forum established
by resolution of the United Nations General Assembly to seek to negotiate
a comprehensive disarmament treaty program. When I appeared before the
United Nations last September, I submitted a program for general and complete
disarmament in a peaceful world. It is my hope and expectation that the
forthcoming conference will make significant progress toward the achievement
of the goal of disarmament with effective methods of insuring compliance.
Never before in the history
of man has the importance of arms control and disarmament been so great.
For this reason, I urge your support of this Agency in the great and difficult
tasks which it will face in the future.
JOHN F. KENNEDY