Gentlemen:
I want to express a very warm
welcome to all of you. This exchange of meetings came out of a conference
which we had with your Prime Minister and myself more than a year and a
half ago. You were the first host and were most generous to us.
We are glad to have you here
because these meetings, if they are going to be useful, should be much
more than a formality. They really ought to get down to the very hard business
which concerns both Japan and the United States, which is the maintenance
of our felicitous relationship and also decisions about what actions we
ought to take in common and in partnership in the whole Pacific and Asiatic
area.
A good deal of attention is
given in the United States to the miracle of the Common Market. But I must
say that the Japanese program of the last 10 years and the results it has
brought really is the most extraordinary, modern industrial miracle; a
crowded island and a people who seemed a decade ago to be at almost a standstill
have brought about an economic growth rate which is higher than any industrialized
country in the world, and which shows no sign of diminishing. This is really
the result of the effort of the Japanese people themselves, and the very
effective leadership which they have had.
It is a source of satisfaction
to me that the United States has played at least a supporting role in this
emergence of Japan as a great, free, and quite rightly proud country. As
I said when we had the occasion of the meeting in September which the Economic
Minister attended, at a luncheon here, the United States looks for its
security east and west and south; to Europe, to Latin America, and to Japan,
and beyond Japan to the maintenance of the independent nations in Asia.
It seems to me that our two
countries need to talk about two matters, or at least two levels. One is
this direct question of trade and economic policy, and there are a good
many matters which concern Japan and also concern the United States. They
cause irritants in our relationships, there are bound to be clashes of
interest, they are inevitable. We should attempt to smooth them over without
permitting them ever to mar the basic self-interest which we both have
in maintaining these very strong ties together, and we recognize that every
action which we take in regard to trade or every action which Japan takes
is bound to cause discontent in some elements of our two countries.
Those problems can be dealt
with. They are bound to cause some adjustments. They are bound to cause
difficulties, but they, in my opinion, are not the major problems we are
faced with, but they deserve attention periodically, and I am glad they
are going to be talked about at this meeting.
In the East, because of the
development of Western Europe and of NATO, the combination of Western Europe
and the United States seems to me to give assurance against an advance
by the Soviet Union into Western Europe. Our problem now, of course, is
that with the rise of the Communist power in China combined with an expansionist,
Stalinist philosophy, our major problem, in a sense a major problem, is
how we can contain the expansion of communism in Asia so that we do not
find the Chinese moving out into a dominant position in all of Asia, with
its hundreds and hundreds of millions of people in Asia, while Western
Europe is building a more prosperous life for themselves.
Now, this seems to me to concern
Western Europe, but it also most directly concerns the two countries who
are in the strongest position, really, Japan and the United States. The
United States, as you know, bears responsibilities in Latin America to
attempt to contain the expansion of communism, in Western Europe itself
and through the SEATO treaty in Southeast Asia, as well as its commitments
to South Korea and to the Republic of China, but we are only 180 million
people. We are spread very thin around the world.
There are a billion people in
the Communist empire operating from central lines and in a belligerent
phase of their national development. So that I think this is a period of
great danger for Asia, and I hope that in the months ahead thought can
be given to what role we can play as partners, because Japan and the United
States are partners, what role we can play to attempt to prevent the domination
of Asia by a Communist movement which is in its essence today a believer
in not only the class struggle, but also in the international class struggle
of a third world war.
So that we want you to know
you are most welcome here at this time. We regard ourselves as very commonly
committed to this great effort - Japan, the United States, Western Europe
- and expanding from these vital areas, all those other countries which
desire to be independent, so that you are most welcome here.
I hope that you will go home
realizing that the United States regards as essential to its security your
security. We hope that you feel the same way and that we can move in the
sixties, Japan and the United States, playing a useful role in the defense
of freedom in a most important part of the globe.
I will say that we have a mountain
available to any of the Cabinet Ministers who want to indicate their friendship
to the United States by climbing it as a compliment to Secretary Udall
- perhaps the Finance Minister. In any case, I hope that you will all join
with me in toasting the Japanese people, to their welfare and prosperity
and peace, to the Prime Minister and to his leadership, and to the members
of the government who are here, and most of all to the very good health
of the Emperor.