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Defense and National Security
March
23, 1983
Ronald Reagan
My fellow Americans, thank you for sharing your time with me tonight.
The subject I want to discuss with you, peace and national security, is
both timely and important. Timely, because I've reached a decision which
offers a new hope for our children in the 21st century, a decision I'll
tell you about in a few minutes. And important because there's a very big
decision that you must make for yourselves. This subject involves the most
basic duty that any President and any people share, the duty to protect
and strengthen the peace.
At the beginning of this year, I submitted to the Congress a defense
budget which reflects my best judgment of the best understanding of the
experts and specialists who advise me about what we and our allies must do
to protect our people in the years ahe ad. That budget is much more than a
long list of numbers, for behind all the numbers lies America's ability to
prevent the greatest of human tragedies and preserve our free way of life
in a sometimes dangerous world. It is part of a careful, long-term pla n
to make America strong again after too many years of neglect and mistakes.
Our efforts to rebuild America's defenses and strengthen the peace
began 2 years ago when we requested a major increase in the defense
program. Since then, the amount of those increases we first proposed has
been reduced by half, through improvements in management and procurement
and other savings.
The budget request that is now before the Congress has been trimmed to
the limits of safety. Further deep cuts cannot be made without seriously
endangering the security of the Nation. The choice is up to the men and
women you've elected to the Congress, and that means the choice is up to
you.
Tonight, I want to explain to you what this defense debate is all about
and why I'm convinced that the budget now before the Congress is
necessary, responsible, and deserving of your support. And I want to offer
hope for the future.
But first, let me say what the defense debate is not about. It is not
about spending arithmetic. I know that in the last few weeks you've been
bombarded with numbers and percentages. Some say we need only a 5-percent
increase in defense spending. The so- called alternate budget backed by
liberals in the House of Representatives would lower the figure to 2 to 3
percent, cutting our defense spending by $163 billion over the next 5
years. The trouble with all these numbers is that they tell us little
about t he kind of defense program America needs or the benefits and
security and freedom that our defense effort buys for us.
What seems to have been lost in all this debate is the simple truth of
how a defense budget is arrived at. It isn't done by deciding to spend a
certain number of dollars. Those loud voices that are occasionally heard
charging that the Government is tryin g to solve a security problem by
throwing money at it are nothing more than noise based on ignorance. We
start by considering what must be done to maintain peace and review all
the possible threats against our security. Then a strategy for
strengthening p eace and defending against those threats must be agreed
upon. And, finally, our defense establishment must be evaluated to see
what is necessary to protect against any or all of the potential threats.
The cost of achieving these ends is totaled up, and th e result is the
budget for national defense.
There is no logical way that you can say, let's spend x billion dollars
less. you can only say, which part of our defense measures do we believe
we can do without and still have security against all contingencies?
Anyone in the Congress who advocates a p ercentage or a specific dollar
cut in defense spending should be made to say what part of our defenses he
would eliminate and he should be candid enough to acknowledge that his
cuts mean cutting our commitments to allies or inviting greater risk or
both.
The defense policy of the United States is based on a simple premise:
The United States does not start fights. We will never be an aggressor. We
maintain our strength in order to deter and defend against aggression–to
preserve freedom and peace.
Since the dawn of the atomic age, we've sought to reduce the risk of
war by maintaining a strong deterrent and by seeking genuine arms control.
"Deterrence" means simply this: making sure any adversary who thinks about
attacking the United States, or our allies, or our vital interests,
concludes that the risks to him outweigh any potential gains. Once he
understands that, he won't attack. We maintain the peace through our
strength; weakness only invites aggression.
This strategy of deterrence has not changed. It still works. But what
it takes to maintain deterrence has changed. It took one kind of military
force to deter an attack when we had far more nuclear weapons than any
other power; it takes another kind now that the Soviets, for example, have
enough accurate and powerful nuclear weapons to destroy virtually all of
our missiles on the ground. Now, this is not to say that the Soviet Union
is planning to make war on us. Nor do I believe a war is inevitable–quit e
the contrary. But what must be recognized is that our security is based on
being prepared to meet all threats.
There was a time when we depended on coastal forts and artillery
batteries, because, with the weaponry of that day, any attack would have
had to come by sea. Well, this is a different world, and our defenses must
be based on recognition and awareness of the weaponry possessed by other
nations in the nuclear age.
We can't afford to believe that we will never be threatened. There have
been two world wars in my lifetime. We didn't start them and, indeed, did
everything we could to avoid being drawn into them. But we were
ill-prepared for both. Had we been better pr epared, peace might have been
preserved.
For 20 years the Soviet Union has been accumulating enormous military
might. They didn't stop when their forces exceeded all requirements of a
legitimate defensive capability. And they haven't stopped now. During the
past decade and a half, the Soviets h ave built up a massive arsenal of
new strategic nuclear weapons–weapons that can strike directly at the
United States.
As an example, the United States introduced its last new
intercontinental ballistic missile, the Minute Man III, in 1969, and we're
now dismantling our even older Titan missiles. But what has the Soviet
Union done in these intervening years? Well, since 1969 the Soviet Union
has built five new classes of ICBM's, and upgraded these eight times As a
result, their missiles are much more powerful and accurate than they were
several years ago, and they continue to develop more, while ours are
increasingly obs olete.
The same thing has happened in other areas. Over the same period, the
Soviet Union built 4 new classes of submarine-launched ballistic missiles
and over 60 new missile submarines. We built 2 new types of submarine
missiles and actually withdrew 10 submar ines from strategic missions. The
Soviet Union built over 200 new Backfire bombers, and their brand new
Blackjack bomber is now under development. We haven't built a new
long-range bomber since our B-52's were deployed about a quarter of a
century ago, an d we've already retired several hundred of those because
of old age. Indeed, despite what many people think, our strategic forces
only cost about 15 percent of the defense budget.
Another example of what's happened: in 1978 the Soviets had 600
intermediaterange nuclear missiles based on land and were beginning to add
the SS-20–a new, highly accurate, mobile missile with 3 warheads. We had
none. Since then the Soviets have strength ened their lead. By the end of
1979, when Soviet leader Brezhnev declared "a balance now exists," the
Soviets had over 800 warheads. We still had none. A year ago this month,
Mr. Brezhnev pledged a moratorium, or freeze, on SS-20 deployment. But by
last A ugust, their 800 warheads had become more than 1,200. We still had
none. Some freeze. At this time Soviet Defense Minister Ustinov announced
"approximate parity of forces continues to exist." But the Soviets are
still adding an average of 3 new warheads a week, and now have 1,300.
These warheads can reach their targets in a matter of a few minutes. We
still have none. So far, it seems that the Soviet definition of parity is
a box score of 1,300 to nothing, in their favor.
So, together with our NATO allies, we decided in 1979 to deploy new
weapons, beginning this year, as a deterrent to their SS-20ss and as an
incentive to the Soviet Union to meet us in serious arms control
negotiations. We will begin thait deployment late this year. At the same
time, however, we're willing to cancel our program if the Soviets will
dismantle theirs. This is what we've called a zero-zero plan. The Soviets
are now at the negotiating table–and I think it's fair to say that without
our plann ed deployments, they wouldn't be there.
Now let's consider conventional forces. Since 1974 the United States
has produced 3,050 tactical combat aircraft. By contrast, the Soviet Union
has produced twice as many. When we look at attack submarines, the United
States has produced 27 while the Sov iet Union has produced 61. For
armored vehicles, including tanks, we have produced 11,200. The Soviet
Union has produced 54,000–nearly 5 to 1 in their favor. Finally, with
artillery, we've produced 950 artillery and rocket launchers while the
Soviets have produced more than 13,000–a staggering 14-to-1 ratio.
There was a time when we were able to offset superior Soviet numbers
with higher quality, but today they are building weapons as sophisticated
and modern as our own.
As the Soviets have Increased their military power, they've been
emboldened to extend that power. They're spreading their military
influence in ways that can directly challenge our vital interests and
those of our allies.
The following aerial photographs, most of them secret until now,
illustrate this point in a crucial area very close to home: Central
America and the Caribbean Basin. They're not dramatic photographs. But I
think they help give you a better understanding of what I'm talking about.
This Soviet intelligence collection facility, less than a hundred miles
from our coast, is the largest of its kind in the world. The acres and
acres of antennae fields and intelligence monitors are targeted on key
U.S. military installations and sensitiv e activities. The installation in
Lourdes, Cuba, is manned by 1,500 Soviet technicians. And the satellite
ground station allows instant communications with Moscow. This 28
square-mile facility has grown by more than 60 percent in size and
capability durin g the past decade.
In western Cuba, we see this military airfield and it complement of
modern, Soviet-built Mig-23 aircraft. The Soviet Union uses this Cuban
airfield for its own long-range reconnaissance missions. And earlier this
month, two modern Soviet antisubmarine wa rfare aircraft began operating
from it. During the past 2 years, the level of Soviet arms exports to Cuba
can only be compared to the levels reached during the Cuban missile crisis
20 years ago.
This third photo, which is the only one in this series that has been
previously made public, shows Soviet military hardware that has made its
way to Central America. This airfield with its Ml-8 helicopters,
anti-aircraft guns, and protected fighter sites is one of a number of
military facilities in Nicaragua which has received Soviet equipment
funneled through Cuba, and reflects the massive military buildup going on
in that country.
On the small island of Grenada, at the southern end of the Caribbean
chain, the Cubans, with Soviet financing and backing, are in the process
of building an airfield with a 10,000-foot runway. Grenada doesn't even
have an air force. Who is it intended fo r? The Caribbean is a very
important passageway for our international commerce and military lines of
communication. More than half of all American oil imports now pass through
the Caribbean. The rapid buildup of Grenada's military potential is
unrelated t o any conceivable threat to this island country of under
110,000 people and totally at odds with the pattern of other eastern
Caribbean States, most of which are unarmed.
The Soviet-Cuban militarization of Grenada, in short, can only be seen
as power projection into the region. And it is in this important economic
and strategic area that we're trying to help the Governments of El
Salvador, Costa Rica, Honduras, and others in their struggles for
democracy against guerrillas supported through Cuba and Nicaragua.
These pictures only tell a small part of the story. I wish I could show
you more without compromising our most sensitive intelligence sources and
methods. But the Soviet Union is also supporting Cuban military forces in
Angola and Ethiopia. They have bas es in Ethiopia and South Yemen, near
the Persian Gulf oil fields- They've taken over the port that we built at
Carn Ranh Bay in Vietnam. And now for the first time in history, the
Soviet Navy is a force to be reckoned with in the South Pacific.
Some people may still ask: Would the Soviets ever use their formidable
military power? Well, again, can we afford to believe they won't? There is
Afghanistan. And in Poland, the Soviets denied the will of the people and
in so doing demonstrated to the wo rld how their military power could also
be used to intimidate.
The final fact is that the Soviet Union is acquiring what can only be
considered an offensive military force. They have continued to build far
more intercontinental ballistic missiles than they could possibly need
simply to deter an attack. Their convent ional forces are trained and
equipped not so much to defend against an attack as they are to permit
sudden, surprise offensives of their own.
Our NATO allies have assumed a great defense burden, including the
military draft in most countries. We're working with them and our other
friends around the world to do more. Our defensive strategy means we need
military forces that can move very quickl y, forces that are trained and
ready to respond to any emergency.
Every item in our defense program–our ships, our tanks, our planes, our
funds for training and spare parts–is intended for one all-important
purpose: to keep the peace. Unfortunately, a decade of neglecting our
military forces had called into question ou r ability to do that.
When I took office in January 1981, I was appalled by what I found:
American planes that couldn't fly and American ships that couldn't sail
for lack of spare parts and trained personnel and insufficient fuel and
ammunition for essential training. The ine vitable result of all this was
poor morale in our Armed Forces, difficulty in recruiting the brightest
young Americans to wear the uniform, and difficulty in convincing our most
experienced military personnel to stay on.
There was a real question then about how well we could meet a crisis.
And it was obvious that we had to begin a major modernization program to
ensure we could deter aggression and preserve the peace in are the years
ahead.
We had to move immediately to improve the basic readiness and staying
power of our conventional forces, so they could meet–and therefore help
deter–a crisis. We had to make up for lost years of investment by moving
forward with a long-term plan to prepar e our forces to counter the
military capabilities our adversaries were developing for the future.
I know that all of you want peace, and so do I. I know too that many of
you seriously believe that a nuclear freeze would further the cause of
peace. But a freeze now would make us less, not more, secure and would
raise, not reduce, the risks of war. It would be largely unverifiable and
would seriously undercut our negotiations on arms reduction. It would
reward the Soviets for their massive military buildup while preventing us
from modernizing our aging and increasingly vulnerable forces. With their
pr esent margin of superiority, why should they agree to arms reductions
knowing that we were prohibited from catching up?
Believe me, it wasn't pleasant for someone who had come to Washington
deterrmined to reduce government spending, but we had to move forward with
the task of repairing our defenses or we would lose our ability to deter
conflict now and in the future. We h ad to demonstrate to any adversary
that aggression could not succeed, and that the only real solution was
substantial, equitable, and effectively verifiable arms reduction–the kind
we're working for right now in Geneva.
Thanks to your strong support, and bipartisan support from the
Congress, we began to turn things around. Already, we're seeing some very
encouraging results. Quality recruitment and retention are up
dramatically–more high school graduates are choosing mi litary careers,
and more experienced career personnel are choosing to stay. our men and
women in uniform at last are getting the tools and training they need to
do their jobs.
Ask around today, especially among our young people, and I think you
will find a whole new attitude toward serving their country This reflects
more than just better pay, equipment, and leadership. You the American
people have sent a signal to these young people that it is once again an
honor to wear the uniform. That's not something you measure in a budget,
but it's a very real part of our nation's strength.
It'll take us longer to build the kind of equipment we need to keep
peace in the future, but we've made a good start.
We haven't built a new long-range bomber for 21 years. Now we're
building the B-1. We hadn't launched one new strategic submarine for 17
years. Now we're building one Trident submarine a year. our land-based
missiles are increasingly threatened by the ma ny huge, new Soviet ICBM's.
We're determining how to solve that problem. At the same time, we're
working in the START and INF negotiations with the goal of achieving deep
reductions in the strategic and intermediate nuclear arsenals of both
sides.
We have also begun the long-needed modernization of our conventional
forces. The Army is getting its first new tank in 20 years. The Air Force
is modernizing. We're rebuilding our Navy, which shrank from about a
thousand ships in the late 1960's to 453 d uring the 1970's. Our nation
needs a superior navy to support our military forces and vital interests
overseas. We're now on the road to achieving a 600-ship navy and
increasing the amphibious capabilities of our marines, who are now serving
the cause of peace in Lebanon. And we're building a real capability to
assist our friends in the vitally important Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf
region
This adds up to a major effort, and it isn't cheap. It comes at a time
when there are many other pressures on our budget and when the American
people have already had to make major sacrifices during the recession. But
we must not be misled by those who w ould make defense once again the
scapegoat of the Federal budget.
The fact is that in the past few decades we have seen a dramatic shift
in how we spend the taxpayer's dollar. Back in 1955, payments to
individuals took up only about 20 percent of the Federal budget. For
nearly three decades, these payments steadily inc reased and, this year,
will account for 49 percent of the budget. By contrast, in 1955 defense
took up more than half of the Federal budget. By 1980 this spending had
fallen to a low of 23 percent. Even with the increase that I am requesting
this year, de fense will still amount to only 28 percent of the budget.
The calls for cutting back the defense budget come in nice, simple
arithmetic. They're the same kind of talk that led the democracies to
neglect their defenses in the 1930's and invited the tragedy of World War
II. We must not let that grim chapter of hi story repeat itself through
apathy or neglect.
This is why I'm speaking to you tonight to urge you to tell your
Senators and Congressmen that you know we must continue to restore our
military strength. If we stop in midstream, we will send a signal of
decline, of lessened will, to friends and advers aries alike. Free people
must voluntarily through open debate and democratic means, meet the
challenge that totalitarians pose by compulsion. It's up to us, in our
time, to choose and choose wisely between the hard but necessary task of
preserving peace a nd freedom and the temptation to ignore our duty and
blindly hope for the best while the enemies of freedom grow stronger day
by day.
The solution is well within our grasp. But to reach it, there is simply
no alternative but to continue this year, in this budget, to provide the
resources we need to preserve the peace and guarantee our freedom.
Now, thus far tonight I've shared with you my thoughts on the problems
of national security we must face together. My predecessors in the Oval
Office have appeared before you on other occasions to describe the threat
posed by Soviet power and have propos ed steps to address that threat. But
since the advent of nuclear weapons, those steps have been increasingly
directed toward deterrence of aggression through the promise of
retaliation.
This approach to stability through offensive threat has worked. We and
our allies have succeeded in preventing nuclear war for more than three
decades. In recent months, however, my advisers, including in particular
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have unders cored the necessity to break out of
a future that relies solely on offensive retaliation for our security.
Over the course of these discussions, I've become more and more deeply
convinced that the human spirit must be capable of rising above dealing
with other nations and human beings by threatening their existence.
Feeling this way, I believe we must thoroug hly examine every opportunity
for reducing tensions and for introducing greater stability into the
strategic calculus on both sides.
One of the most important contributions we can make is, of course, to
lower the level of all arms, and particularly nuclear arms. We're engaged
right now in several negotiations with the Soviet Union to bring about a
mutual reduction of weapons. I will r eport to you a week from tomorrow my
thoughts on that score. But let me just say, I'm totally committed to this
course.
If the Soviet Union will join with us in our effort to achieve major
arms reduction we will have succeeded in stabilizing the nuclear balance.
Nevertheless, it will still be necessary to rely on the specter of
retaliation, on mutual threat. And that's a sad commentary on the human
condition. Wouldn't it be better to save lives than to avenge them? Are we
not capable of demonstrating our peaceful intentions by applying all our
abilities and our ingenuity to achieving a truly lasting stability? I
think we are. Indeed, we must.
After careful consultation with my advisers, including the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, I believe there is a way. Let me share with you a vision of the
future which offers hope. It is that we embark on a program to counter the
awesome Soviet missile threat wit h measures that are defensive. Let us
turn to the very strengths in technology that spawned our great industrial
base and that have given us the quality of life we enjoy today.
What if free people could live secure in the knowledge that their
security did not rest upon the threat of instant U.S. retaliation to deter
a Soviet attack, that we could intercept and destroy strategic ballistic
missiles before they reached our own soi l or that of our allies?
I know this is a formidable, technical task, one that may not be
accomplished before the end of this century. Yet, current technology has
attained a level of sophistication where it's reasonable for us to begin
this effort. It will take years, probably d ecades of effort on many
fronts. There will be failures and setbacks, just as there will be
successes and breakthroughs. And as we proceed, we must remain constant in
preserving the nuclear deterrent and maintaining a solid capability for
flexible respons e. But isn't it worth every investment necessary to free
the world from the threat of nuclear war? We know it is.
In the meantime, we will continue to pursue real reductions in nuclear
arms, negotiating from a position of strength that can be ensured only by
modernizing our strategic forces. At the same time, we must take steps to
reduce the risk of a conventional m ilitary conflict escalating to nuclear
war by improving our nonnuclear capabilities.
America does possess now the technologies to attain very significant
improvements in the effectiveness of our conventional, nonnuclear forces.
Proceeding boldly with these new technologies, we can significantly reduce
any incentive that the Soviet Union may have to threaten attack against
the United States or its allies.
As we pursue our goal of defensive technologies, we recognize that our
allies rely upon our strategic offensive power to deter attacks against
them. Their vital interests and ours are inextricably linked. Their safety
and ours are one. And no change in t echnology can or will alter that
reality. We must and shall continue to honor our commitments.
I clearly recognize that defensive systems have limitations and raise
certain problems and ambiguities. If paired with offensive systems, they
can be viewed as fostering an aggressive policy, and no one wants that.
But with these considerations firmly in mind, I call upon the scientific
community in our country, those who gave us nuclear weapons, to turn their
great talents now to the cause of mankind and world peace, to give us the
means of rendering these nuclear weapons impotent and obsolete.
Tonight, consistent with our obligations of the ABM treaty and
recognizing the need for closer consultation with our allies, I'm taking
an important first step. I am directing a comprehensive and intensive
effort to define a long-term research and develo pment program to begin to
achieve our ultimate goal of eliminating the threat posed by strategic
nuclear missiles. This could pave the way for arms control measures to
eliminate the weapons themselves. We seek neither military superiority nor
political ad vantage. Our only purpose–one all people share–is to search
for ways to reduce the danger of nuclear war.
My fellow Americans, tonight we're launching an effort which holds the
promise of changing the course of human history. There will be risks, and
results take time. But I believe we can do it. As we cross this threshold,
I ask for your prayers and your su pport.
Thank you, good night, and God bless you.
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