[Released February 12, 1962. Dated February 7, 1962]
Dear Mr. Chairman:
We are taking the unusual step
of addressing this message to you in order to express our own views, as
well as to solicit yours, on what we can jointly do to increase the prospects
of success at the new disarmament negotiations which will begin in Geneva
in March.
We are convinced that a supreme
effort must be made and the three of us must accept a common measure of
personal obligation to seek every avenue to restrain and reverse the mounting
arms race. Unless some means can be found to make at least a start in controlling
the quickening arms competition, events may take their own course and erupt
in a disaster which will afflict all peoples, those of the Soviet Union
as well as of the United Kingdom and the United States.
Disarmament negotiations in
the past have been sporadic and frequently interrupted. Indeed, there has
been no sustained effort to come to grips with this problem at the conference
table since the three months of meetings ending in June of 1960, over a
year and a half ago. Before that, no real negotiations on the problem of
general disarmament had taken place since negotiations came to an end in
September 1957.
It should be clear to all of
us that we can no longer afford to take a passive view of these negotiations.
They must not be allowed to drift into failure. Accordingly, we propose
that we three accept a personal responsibility for directing the part to
be played by our representatives in the forthcoming talks, and that we
agree beforehand that our representatives will remain at the conference
table until concrete results have been achieved, however long this may
take.
We propose that our negotiators
seek progress on three levels. First, they should be instructed to work
out a program of general and complete disarmament which could serve as
the basis for the negotiation of an implementing treaty or treaties. Our
negotiators could thus build upon the common ground which was found in
the bilateral talks between the United States and the USSR which took place
this summer, and which were reflected in the Statement of Agreed Principles
of September 20, 1961. Secondly, our negotiators should attempt to
ascertain the widest measure of disarmament which would be implemented
at the earliest possible time while still continuing their maximum efforts
to achieve agreement on those other aspects which present more difficulty.
Thirdly, our negotiators should try to isolate and identify initial measures
of disarmament which could, if put into effect without delay, materially
improve international security and the prospects for further disarmament
progress. We do not believe that these triple objectives need conflict
with one another and an equal measure of urgency should be attached to
each.
As a symbol of the importance
which we jointly attach to these negotiations, we propose that we be represented
at the outset of the disarmament conference by the Foreign Ministers of
our three
countries, who would declare their readiness to return to participate
personally in the negotiations as the progress made by our permanent representatives
warrants. We assume, in this case, the foreign ministers of other states
as well will wish to attend. The status and progress of the conference
should, in addition, be the subject of more frequent communications among
the three of us. In order to give impetus to the opening of the disarmament
negotiations, we could consider having the Foreign Ministers of our three
countries convene at Geneva in advance of the opening of the conference
to concert our plans.
At this time in our history,
disarmament is the most urgent and the most complex issue we face. The
threatening nature of modern armaments is so appalling that we cannot regard
this problem as a routine one or as an issue which may be useful primarily
for the scoring of propaganda victories. The failure in the nuclear test
conference, which looked so hopeful and to the success of which we attached
such a high priority in the Spring of 1961, constitutes a discouraging
background for our new efforts. However, we must be resolved to overcome
this recent setback, with its immediate consequences, and forego fruitless
attempts to apportion blame. Our renewed effort must be to seek and find
ways in which the competition between us, which will surely persist for
the foreseeable future, can be pursued on a less dangerous level. We must
view the forthcoming disarmament meetings as an opportunity and a challenge
which time and history may not once again allow us.
We would welcome an early expression
of your views.
JOHN F. KENNEDY
HAROLD MACMILLAN
[Nikita Khrushchev, Chairman, Council of Ministers, Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics, The Kremlin, Moscow, U.S.S.R.]