286. Memorandum From Stephen
Sestanovich of the National Security Council Staff to the
President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Poindexter)1
Washington,
July 24,
1986
SUBJECT
- “Berlin without Barriers”—US Initiative
The attached paper proposes a Western initiative on Berlin. Timed (if
possible) to the forthcoming 25th anniversary of the Wall, it sets out a
4-part plan for removal of barriers in the city by 1991. I believe this
would serve some important US
objectives. It adds an attractive non-arms control component to our
pre-summit diplomacy, and also demonstrates that the US is interested and relevant to problems
of inter-German relations (an issue that will help Kohl in seeking
re-election).
[Page 865]
The Allies obviously have to be on board to make this worth proposing,
but the first obstacle it faces may be the State Department. I am told
EUR has done a proposal of its
own,2 a much narrower idea
limited to improving the air-corridor regime (and likely to have much
less impact). Their response to an NSC
initiative might thus be a strong “not-invented-here.”
For this reason, the best approach to State may be by passing the concept
paper to the Secretary. In addition, I think it’s likely that Rick Burt
will raise the EUR initiative with the
Vice President during his day in Bonn, so I’d like to familiarize Don
Gregg with our ideas before he leaves. Ideally, the VP might get
Burt interested in this
broader approach; at a minimum, he would be prepared to react
skeptically to EUR’s too-narrow concept.
August 13 has some advantages as the unveiling date. If we can get
internal USG agreement on the approach,
there is still (barely) time for Allied consultations. Failing this, the
Quad anniversary (Sept. 3) may be more realistic. In either case, we
need to move ahead and get State’s views.
Rodman, Matlock, Cobb, Sommer and Dobriansky
concur.3
Recommendations
That you pass Shultz the attached paper as soon as possible.4
That you approve passing/briefing it to the VP’s staff.5
Attachment
Paper Prepared in the National Security Council6
Washington,
July 24,
1986
“Berlin Without Barriers:” Concept
Paper
I. Basic objectives.
To strengthen public awareness that Europe’s division is a vital
unresolved security issue, to bolster the legitimacy of the West’s
presence in Berlin, and to gain more influence over inter-German
relations.
[Page 866]
II. Background.
The 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall (August 13) and the 15th
anniversary of the Quadripartite Agreement (September 3) call for
official observance. Although there is interagency agreement on the
need for a Presidential statement on the Wall, this would lack the
impact of an initiative proposing a real change in
Berlin’s situation. The time is also ripe for a broad
initiative to counter the spreading German view that the Allied role
in Berlin is outdated. Such sentiments will probably gain strength
as next year’s 750th anniversary of the city draws nearer. Kohl hopes to use the celebrations
to political advantage and is interested in a Four-Power Berlin
meeting to mark the occasion.
To serve US interests in this
setting, any initiative should:
- •
- Protect Four-Power rights, while
also recognizing that a greater German role in settling
Berlin issues is required than in the past, both to get
Bonn’s backing and to interest the GDR;
- •
- Show that the Four-Power framework is
relevant to today’s German concerns, especially by
exploiting West German (including SPD) interest in closer inter-German contacts,
and in measures that ease conditions of life in the
East;
- •
- Reject post-war divisions (Berlin,
Germany, Europe) and make clear that these are
unfinished business to which the West must keep
returning.
Gorbachev’s calls for “new thinking” on security issues can be our
starting point. We have long feared that the Soviets can use Berlin
to pressure us. A good initiative can pressure them.
III. Outline of Initiative.
The President could propose adoption of a four-part plan to radically
improve Berlin’s situation by 1991:
- •
- First, agreement on immediate resumption of Four-Power talks on
Berlin, to carry forward the objectives of the
QA.7 To ease German
feelings that this excludes them, the FRG and GDR might be asked to host the
meetings. We should also consider a more formal role for
them, perhaps as co-chairmen of a consultative
mechanism that would monitor—but not
negotiate—the course of the Four-Power talks and
share in implementing agreements.
- •
- Second, the talks would address
proposals to reduce (not, at the
outset, eliminate) specific restrictions
on contacts between the two halves of the city.
This part of the agenda might include: more transit points,
inter-sector labor hiring, open waterways, cooperative
social services, cross-sector (including religious
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and vocational)
schooling etc. The Powers would aim to reach agreement on at
least some of the issues within the first year—i.e., before
next summer’s anniversary events. They would also set
further (more ambitious) milestones at annual
intervals.
- •
- Third, the talks would also seek
agreement on measures that affect the
city’s relation to the outside, including to the
rest of Germany. These could include, e.g., the air-corridor
regime, presence of FRG
ministries in West Berlin, removal of Berlin
industrial-production constraints, even the current rapid
influx of immigrants, etc. As with inter-sector issues, we
would aim at some tangible results by next summer. In
preparing the agenda, the two toughest issues will be
whether to accept as an inducement to the East any
discussion of 1) the GDR’s claim that East Berlin is its
capital, and 2) the Four-Power military presence in
Berlin.
- •
- Fourth, the Powers would commit
themselves to reach within 5 years the goal of a “Berlin without barriers” between
sectors (more neutral phrasing than “tear down the
wall”).
IV. Pro’s.
The advantages of such a programmatic proposal are:
- •
- It would make Western statements on the division of Europe
concrete (instead of—as usual—airy,
vague and indefinite.) Attention to progress in one
city, rather than the whole continent, would demonstrate
practicality.
- •
- It would contribute to a key US objective in the
summit8
run-up—keeping the focus not only on
military issues but on Soviet conduct that creates problems
for us and our allies. Gorbachev’s recent reiteration of the
Brezhnev Doctrine can be an opportunity for us. (We would
invoke Weizsaecker:
“Experience teaches that it is not disarmament that points
the way to peace, but rather that peaceful relations open
the door to disarmament.”)
- •
- The initiative can achieve an
anti-Soviet purpose without much anti-Soviet
rhetoric (which might seem inconsistent with summit
preparations). It can put the Soviets on the spot by joining
an ultimate goal that they will want to reject with
intermediate measures that seem unarguably reasonable and
attractive.
- •
- It reasserts our position that the
city remains under continuing Four-Power
responsibility, but answers the SPD theme that we should
ignore the wall in hopes of making it “porous.” It
identifies the real issues on which progress is needed,
rather
[Page 868]
than the
peripheral ones on which the Soviets and GDR have been willing to allow
movement since 1971.
V. Con’s.
The initiative’s drawbacks include the following:
- •
- Some would call it insincere,
designed to be rejected.
- •
- The West Germans might fear it would harm relations with both the Soviets and the GDR. Genscher might
also hate to spring this proposal after his Moscow trip,
amid signs that Gorbachev’s policy toward Bonn is warming
up.
- •
- We risk a Soviet response that picks and
chooses among our specific proposals while ignoring
the ultimate purpose. SPD
circles might see such a response as positive. They might
also regard a negative response as proof that the Four-Power framework can do nothing but
perpetuate East-West confrontation. In this way,
German leftists would seek an argument for ending the
Western military presence altogether.
Compared to the burden the proposal places on the Soviets, these
disadvantages seem manageable. Significant Allied opposition would,
of course, make it counterproductive to go forward. Even if the plan
were acceptable to Allied governments, Kohl would weigh domestic consequences, and might
want to gain SPD
support in advance.
VI. Timetable.
Given the complex history of these issues, very little time remains
to prepare an initiative by August 13. We could allow one week at
most to gain intra-USG agreement on
the concept; one week to sound out the British, French, and Germans;
one week to finish the proposal and statement.
This may not be an absolutely impossible schedule, but it is
exceptionally tight. If it cannot be met, we should consider whether
the President’s August 13 statement,9 could foreshadow an
initiative to come. He would gain greater attention for the
occasion by saying that the Allies had agreed to formulate an
initiative for a city without barriers.
Subsequent dates for presenting the initiative itself include the Quad anniversary (which would have the
advantage of underscoring the Four-Power framework we wish to
preserve) and the President’s UNGA speech (certainly an
appropriate forum and, because closer to the summit, more useful for
affecting pre-summit atmosphere and jockeying).