181. Memorandum From the Special Assistant to the President and White House Chief Speechwriter (Dolan) to Multiple Addressees1

SUBJECT

  • Soviet-American Relations Speech

The upcoming Soviet-American relations speech2 is a good opportunity to stress the President’s moderation in international matters and his record on peace initiatives. The speech, however, will lose its impact [Page 749] if it is seen as a divergence from the President’s unequivocal candor about the Soviet Union and its international activities.

If there is even a hint in the press guidance that the President is trying to backtrack on his former position—something I am certain the President would never want said—it will set off a long debate and the President will ultimately be forced to step in. I don’t think there is any doubt about where he will come down on the question. But this will only lead to stories about the President’s reaffirmation of his view of the Soviet Union as an evil empire and it seems to me that for tactical purposes this is exactly the point he does not want to have to emphasize at the moment.

Second, It should also be borne in mind that the President’s defense and national security policies have been successful because they have developed behind them a wide political consensus. This consensus, which was voiced in the 1980 elections and has gathered momentum in the subsequent years, is due in large part to the President’s realism about the Soviet Union—something the American people felt was desperately lacking in the national leadership for a couple of decades. The President’s policy has been entirely coherent: he has stressed that Western statesmen have a moral obligation to speak candidly about the Soviet Union and its intentions—for our own sake, for the sake of those who suffer under Soviet rule, for the sake of realistic negotiations with the Soviets. If the President is perceived as suddenly backtracking, it will damage the perception of policy coherence the public finds so reassuring.

I make these recommendations:

a)
That the press guidance be very clear in this matter. The President adheres to his long-held view of the Soviet Union, indeed that he feels America’s foreign policy must have a moral center i.e. speaking out about the nature of Soviet rule and the human suffering it causes. (The President has reaffirmed as recently as the People Magazine interview his belief in the “evil empire.”3 In TIME Magazine as well, he seems to be saying it is not necessary to emphasize a point already made and implicitly understood.)4
b)
I would suggest the following insert in the speech: [Page 750]

“Candor about the Soviet Union and its international activities, far from hindering the peace process, actually enhances it. History has shown that when the Soviets realize that their counterparts in negotiations have no illusions about the true nature of their system and its ultimate intentions that they settle down to the hard business of serious negotiations. As I have said before, while the democracies have their own serious injustices to deal with, this should not prevent us from making the crucial moral distinctions between a system which attempts to deal with its problems forthrightly and a system that justifies wrongdoing done in the name of the state. Our willingness to speak out about injustice is at the heart of our foreign policy, indeed forms its moral center. To fail to enunciate the differences between totalitarian and democratic systems of government would be to forsake this moral high ground. Equally as important, it would persuade the Soviets we are once again in the grip of self-delusion. This would only tempt them to exploit negotiations rather than work towards results beneficial to both sides.

  1. Source: Reagan Library, WHORM: Subject File, Speeches (SP), SP 833 Soviet/U.S. Relations, White House, Washington, DC, 01/16/1984 200000–204999. No classification marking. Sent to McFarlane, Gergen, Darman, Elliot, and Myer. In his memoir, Shultz indicated that during a December 17, 1983, meeting, the President stated that “he wanted to make a major Soviet speech and include in it his readiness to get rid of nuclear weapons.” The Department provided Reagan with a draft version by December 19, Shultz wrote, and the President “decided to give it in early January as the first part of a one-two message, with the second part being my speech at the CDE conference in Stockholm.” Shultz noted: “Our speeches would lay the groundwork for my meeting with Gromyko,” scheduled for January 18, 1984. (Shultz, Turmoil and Triumph, pp. 376, 465) Additional documentation regarding the drafting of the address is in Foreign Relations, 1981–1988, vol. IV, Soviet Union, January 1983–March 1985, as is documentation regarding Shultz’s meeting with Gromyko. For the text of Shultz’s January 17, 1984, statement before the CDE in Stockholm, see Department of State Bulletin, March 1984, pp. 34–36.
  2. See Document 182.
  3. On December 6, 1983, Garry Clifford and Patricia Ryan interviewed the President for People Magazine. When asked if he had “any second thoughts about calling the Soviet Union an evil empire,” the President responded: “No. I think that it was high time that we got some realism and got people thinking that for too long we have kind of viewed them as just a mirror image of ourselves, and that maybe we could appeal to their good nature. And we’ve gone through the experience in a number of years past of saying, well, if we cancel weapons systems, if we unilaterally disarm, maybe they’ll see that we’re nice people, too, and they’ll disarm. Well, they didn’t. They just kept on increasing.” (Public Papers: Reagan, 1983, Book II, p. 1714)
  4. Presumable reference to George J. Church, “Men of the Year: Ronald Reagan and Yuri Andropov: They are the focus of evil in the modern world,” TIME, January 2, 1984.