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Freedom From War
The United States Program
for General and Complete
Disarmament in a Peaceful
World
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DEPARTMENT OF STATE PUBLICATION 7277
Disarmament Series 5
Released September 1961
Office of Public Services
BUREAU OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government
Printing Office, Washington 25, D.C. - Price 15 cents
INTRODUCTION
The revolutionary development of modern weapons within a
world divided by serious ideological differences has produced a
crisis in human history. In order to overcome the danger of
nuclear war now confronting mankind, the United States has
introduced at the Sixteenth General Assembly of the United
Nations a Program for General and Complete Disarmament in a
Peaceful World.
This new program provides for the progressive reduction of
the war-making capabilities of nations and the simultaneous
strengthening of international institutions to settle disputes
and maintain the peace. It sets forth a series of comprehensive
measures which can and should be taken in order to bring about a
world in which there will be freedom from war and security for
all states. It is based on three principles deemed essential to
the achievement of practical progress in the disarmament field:
First, there must be immediate disarmament action:
A strenuous and uninterrupted effort must be made toward the
goal of general and complete disarmament; at the same time, it
is important that specific measures be put into effect as soon
as possible.
Second, all disarmament obligations must be subject to
effective international controls:
The control organization must have the manpower, facilities,
and effectiveness to assure that limitations or reductions take
place as agreed. It must also be able to certify to all states
that retained forces and armaments do not exceed those permitted
at any stage of the disarmament process.
Third, adequate peace-keeping machinery must be established:
There is an inseparable relationship between the scaling down
of national armaments on the one hand and the building up of
international peace-keeping machinery and institutions on the
other. Nations are unlikely to shed their means of
self-protection in the absence of alternative ways to safeguard
their legitimate interests. This can only be achieved through
the progressive strengthening of international institutions
under the United Nations and by creating a United Nations Peace
Force to enforce the peace as the disarmament process proceeds.
--------
There follows a summary of the principal provisions of the
United States Program for General and Complete Disarmament
in a Peaceful World. The full text of the program is
contained in an appendix to this pamphlet.
FREEDOM FROM WAR
THE UNITED STATES PROGRAM
FOR GENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT
IN A PEACEFUL WORLD
SUMMARY
DISARMAMENT GOAL AND OBJECTIVES
The over-all goal of the United States is a free, secure, and
peaceful world of independent states adhering to common
standards of justice and international conduct and subjecting
the use of force to the rule of law; a world which has achieved
general and complete disarmament under effective international
control; and a world in which adjustment to change takes place
in accordance with the principles of the United Nations.
In order to make possible the achievement of that goal, the
program sets forth the following specific objectives toward
which nations should direct their efforts:
·
The disbanding of all national armed forces
and the prohibition of their reestablishment in any form
whatsoever other than those required to preserve
internal order and for contributions to a United Nations
Peace Force;
·
The elimination from national arsenals of
all armaments, including all weapons of mass destruction
and the means for their delivery, other than those
required for a United Nations Peace Force and for
maintaining internal order;
·
The institution of effective means for the
enforcement of international agreements, for the
settlement of disputes, and for the maintenance of peace
in accordance with the principles of the United Nations;
·
The establishment and effective operation of
an International Disarmament Organization within the
framework of the United Nations to insure compliance at
all times with all disarmament obligations.
TASK OF NEGOTIATING STATES
The negotiating states are called upon to develop the program
into a detailed plan for general and complete disarmament and to
continue their efforts without interruption until the whole
program has been achieved. To this end, they are to seek the
widest possible area of agreement at the earliest possible date.
At the same time, and without prejudice to progress on the
disarmament program, they are to seek agreement on those
immediate measures that would contribute to the common security
of nations and that could facilitate and form part of the total
program.
GOVERNING PRINCIPLES
The program sets forth a series of general principles to
guide the negotiating states in their work. These make clear
that:
·
As states relinquish their arms, the United
Nations must be progressively strengthened in order to
improve its capacity to assure international security
and the peaceful settlement of disputes;
·
Disarmament must proceed as rapidly as
possible, until it is completed, in stages containing
balanced, phased, and safeguarded measures;
·
Each measure and stage should be carried out
in an agreed period of time, with transition from one
stage to the next to take place as soon as all measures
in the preceding stage have been carried out and
verified and as soon as necessary arrangements for
verification of the next stage have been made;
·
Inspection and verification must establish
both that nations carry out scheduled limitations or
reductions and that they do not retain armed forces and
armaments in excess of those permitted at any stage of
the disarmament process; and
·
Disarmament must take place in a manner that
will not affect adversely the security of any state.
DISARMAMENT STAGES
The program provides for progressive disarmament steps to
take place in three stages and for the simultaneous
strengthening of international institutions.
FIRST STAGE
The first stage contains measures which would significantly
reduce the capabilities of nations to wage aggressive war.
Implementation of this stage would mean that:
·
The nuclear threat would be reduced:
All states would have adhered to a treaty effectively
prohibiting the testing of nuclear weapons.
The production of fissionable materials for use in
weapons would be stopped and quantities of such
materials from past production would be converted to
non-weapons uses.
States owning nuclear weapons would not relinquish
control of such weapons to any nation not owning them
and would not transmit to any such nation information or
material necessary for their manufacture.
States not owning nuclear weapons would not
manufacture them or attempt to obtain control of such
weapons belonging to other states.
A Commission of Experts would be established to
report on the feasibility and means for the verified
reduction and eventual elimination of nuclear weapons
stockpiles.
·
Strategic delivery vehicles would be
reduced:
Strategic nuclear weapons delivery vehicles of
specified categories and weapons designed to counter
such vehicles would be reduced to agreed levels by
equitable and balanced steps; their production would be
discontinued or limited; their testing would be limited
or halted.
·
Arms and armed forces would be reduced:
The armed forces of the United States and the Soviet
Union would be limited to 2.1 million men each (with
appropriate levels not exceeding that amount for other
militarily significant states); levels of armaments
would be correspondingly reduced and their production
would be limited.
An Experts Commission would be established to examine
and report on the feasibility and means of accomplishing
verifiable reduction and eventual elimination of all
chemical, biological and radiological weapons.
·
Peaceful use of outer space would be
promoted:
The placing in orbit or stationing in outer space of
weapons capable of producing mass destruction would be
prohibited.
States would give advance notification of space
vehicle and missile launchings.
·
U.N. peace-keeping powers would be
strengthened:
Measures would be taken to develop and strengthen
United Nations arrangements for arbitration, for the
development of international law, and for the
establishment in Stage II of a permanent U.N. Peace
Force.
·
An International Disarmament Organization
would be established for effective verification of the
disarmament program:
Its functions would be expanded progressively as
disarmament proceeds.
It would certify to all states that agreed reductions
have taken place and that retained forces and armaments
do not exceed permitted levels.
It would determine the transition from one stage to
the next.
·
States would be committed to other
measures to reduce international tension and to protect
against the chance of war by accident, miscalculation,
or surprise attack:
States would be committed to refrain from the threat
or use of any type of armed force contrary to the
principles of the U.N. Charter and to refrain from
indirect aggression and subversion against any country.
A U.N. peace observation group would be available to
investigate any situation which might constitute a
threat to or breach of the peace.
States would be committed to give advance notice of
major military movements which might cause alarm;
observation posts would be established to report on
concentrations and movements of military forces.
SECOND STAGE
The second stage contains a series of measures which would
bring within sight a world in which there would be freedom from
war. Implementation of all measures in the second stage would
mean:
·
Further substantial reductions in the armed
forces, armaments, and military establishments of
states, including strategic nuclear weapons delivery
vehicles and countering weapons;
·
Further development of methods for the
peaceful settlement of disputes under the United
Nations;
·
Establishment of a permanent international
peace force within the United Nations;
·
Depending on the findings of an Experts
Commission, a halt in the production of chemical,
bacteriological and radiological weapons and a reduction
of existing stocks or their conversion to peaceful uses;
·
On the basis of the findings of an Experts
Commission, a reduction of stocks of nuclear weapons;
·
The dismantling or the conversion to
peaceful uses of certain military bases and facilities
wherever located; and
·
The strengthening and enlargement of the
International Disarmament Organization to enable it to
verify the steps taken in Stage II and to determine the
transition to Stage III.
THIRD STAGE
During the third stage of the program, the states of the
world, building on the experience and confidence gained in
successfully implementing the measures of the first two stages,
would take final steps toward the goal of a world in which:
·
States would retain only those forces,
non-nuclear armaments, and establishments required for
the purpose of maintaining internal order; they would
also support and provide agreed manpower for a U.N.
Peace Force.
·
The U.N. Peace Force, equipped with agreed
types and quantities of armaments, would be fully
functioning.
·
The manufacture of armaments would be
prohibited except for those of agreed types and
quantities to be used by the U.N. Peace Force and those
required to maintain internal order. All other armaments
would be destroyed or converted to peaceful purposes.
·
The peace-keeping capabilities of the United
Nations would be sufficiently strong and the obligations
of all states under such arrangements sufficiently
far-reaching as to assure peace and the just settlement
of differences in a disarmed world.
Appendix
DECLARATION ON DISARMAMENT
THE UNITED STATES PROGRAM
FOR GENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT
IN A PEACEFUL WORLD
The Nations of the world,
Conscious of the crisis in human history produced by the
revolutionary development of modern weapons within a world
divided by serious ideological differences;
Determined to save present and succeeding generations
from the scourge of war and the dangers and burdens of the arms
race and to create conditions in which all peoples can strive
freely and peacefully to fulfill their basic aspirations;
Declare their goal to be: A free, secure, and peaceful
world of independent states adhering to common standards of
justice and international conduct and subjecting the use of
force to the rule of law; a world where adjustment to change
takes place in accordance with the principles of the United
Nations; a world where there shall be a permanent state of
general and complete disarmament under effective international
control and where the resources of nations shall be devoted to
man's material, cultural, and spiritual advance;
Set forth as the objectives of a program of general and
complete disarmament in a peaceful world:
(a) The disbanding of all national armed forces and the
prohibition of their reestablishment in any form whatsoever
other than those required to preserve internal order and for
contributions to a United Nations Peace Force;
(b) The elimination from national arsenals of all armaments,
including all weapons of mass destruction and the means for
their delivery, other than those required for a United Nations
Peace Force and for maintaining internal order;
(c) The establishment and effective operation of an
International Disarmament Organization within the framework of
the United Nations to ensure compliance at all times with all
disarmament obligations;
(d) The institution of effective means for the enforcement of
international agreements, for the settlement of disputes, and
for the maintenance of peace in accordance with the principles
of the United Nations.
Call on the negotiating states:
(a) To develop the outline program set forth below into an
agreed plan for general and complete disarmament and to continue
their efforts without interruption until the whole program has
been achieved;
(b) To this end to seek to attain the widest possible area of
agreement at the earliest possible date;
(c) Also to seek --- without prejudice to progress on the
disarmament program --- agreement on those immediate measures
that would contribute to the common security of nations and that
could facilitate and form a part of that program.
Affirm that disarmament negotiations should be guided by
the following principles:
(a) Disarmament shall take place as rapidly as possible until it
is completed in stages containing balanced, phased and
safeguarded measures, with each measure and stage to be carried
out in an agreed period of time.
(b) Compliance with all disarmament obligations shall be
effectively verified from their entry into force. Verification
arrangements shall be instituted progressively and in such a
manner as to verify not only that agreed limitations or
reductions take place but also that retained armed forces and
armaments do not exceed agreed levels at any stage.
(c) Disarmament shall take place in a manner that will not
affect adversely the security of any state, whether or not a
party to an international agreement or treaty.
(d) As states relinquish their arms, the United Nations shall be
progressively strengthened in order to improve its capacity to
assure international security and the peaceful settlement of
differences as well as to facilitate the development of
international cooperation in common tasks for the benefit of
mankind.
(e) Transition from one stage of disarmament to the next shall
take place as soon as all the measures in the preceding stage
have been carried out and effective verification is continuing
and as soon as the arrangements that have been agreed to be
necessary for the next stage have been instituted.
Agree upon the following outline program for achieving
general and complete disarmament:
STAGE I
A. To Establish an International Disarmament Organization:
(a) An International Disarmament Organization (IDO) shall be
established within the framework of the United Nations upon
entry into force of the agreement. Its functions shall be
expanded progressively as required for the effective
verification of the disarmament program.
(b) The IDO shall have: (1) a General Conference of all the
parties; (2) a Commission consisting of representatives of all
the major powers as permanent members and certain other states
on a rotating basis; and (3) an Administrator who will
administer the Organization subject to the direction of the
Commission and who will have the authority, staff, and finances
adequate to assure effective impartial implementation of the
functions of the Organization.
(c) The IDO shall: (1) ensure compliance with the obligations
undertaken by verifying the execution of measures agreed upon;
(2) assist the states in developing the details of agreed
further verification and disarmament measures; (3) provide for
the establishment of such bodies as may be necessary for working
out the details of further measures provided for in the program
and for such other expert study groups as may be required to
give continuous study to the problems of disarmament; (4)
receive reports on the progress of disarmament and verification
arrangements and determine the transition from one stage to the
next.
B. To Reduce Armed Forces and Armaments:
(a) Force levels shall be limited to 2.1 million each for the
U.S. and U.S.S.R. and to appropriate levels not exceeding 2.1
million each for all other militarily significant states.
Reductions to the agreed levels will proceed by equitable,
proportionate, and verified steps.
(b) Levels of armaments of prescribed types shall be reduced by
equitable and balanced steps. The reductions shall be
accomplished by transfers of armaments to depots supervised by
the IDO. When, at specified periods during the Stage I reduction
process, the states party to the agreement have agreed that the
armaments and armed forces are at prescribed levels, the
armaments in depots shall be destroyed or converted to peaceful
uses.
(c) The production of agreed types of armaments shall be
limited.
(d) A Chemical, Biological, Radiological (CBR) Experts
Commission shall be established within the IDO for the purpose
of examining and reporting on the feasibility and means for
accomplishing the verifiable reduction and eventual elimination
of CBR weapons stockpiles and the halting of their production.
C. To Contain and Reduce the Nuclear Threat:
(a) States that have not acceded to a treaty effectively
prohibiting the testing of nuclear weapons shall do so.
(b) The production of fissionable materials for use in weapons
shall be stopped.
(c) Upon the cessation of production of fissionable materials
for use in weapons, agreed initial quantities of fissionable
materials from past production shall be transferred to
non-weapons purposes.
(d) Any fissionable materials transferred between countries for
peaceful uses of nuclear energy shall be subject to appropriate
safeguards to be developed in agreement with the IAEA.
(e) States owning nuclear weapons shall not relinquish control
of such weapons to any nation not owning them and shall not
transmit to any such nation information or material necessary
for their manufacture. States not owning nuclear weapons shall
not manufacture such weapons, attempt to obtain control of such
weapons belonging to other states, or seek or receive
information or materials necessary for their manufacture.
(f) A Nuclear Experts Commission consisting of representatives
of the nuclear states shall be established within the IDO for
the purpose of examining and reporting on the feasibility and
means for accomplishing the verified reduction and eventual
elimination of nuclear weapons stockpiles.
D. To Reduce Strategic Nuclear Weapons Delivery Vehicles:
(a) Strategic nuclear weapons delivery vehicles in specified
categories and agreed types of weapons designed to counter such
vehicles shall be reduced to agreed levels by equitable and
balanced steps. The reduction shall be accomplished in each step
by transfers to depots supervised by the IDO of vehicles that
are in excess of levels agreed upon for each step. At specified
periods during the Stage I reduction process, the vehicles that
have been placed under supervision of the IDO shall be destroyed
or converted to peaceful uses.
(b) Production of agreed categories of strategic nuclear weapons
delivery vehicles and agreed types of weapons designed to
counter such vehicles shall be discontinued or limited.
(c) Testing of agreed categories of strategic nuclear weapons
delivery vehicles and agreed types of weapons designed to
counter such vehicles shall be limited or halted.
E. To Promote the Peaceful Use of Outer Space:
(a) The placing into orbit or stationing in outer space of
weapons capable c,f producing mass destruction shall be
prohibited.
(b) States shall give advance notification to participating
states and to the IDO of launchings of space vehicles and
missiles, together with the track of the vehicle.
F. To Reduce the Risks of War by Accident, Miscalculation,
and Surprise Attack:
(a) States shall give advance notification to the participating
states and to the IDO of major military movements and maneuvers,
on a scale as may be agreed, which might give rise to
misinterpretation or cause alarm and induce countermeasures. The
notification shall include the geographic areas to be used and
the nature, scale and time span of the event.
(b) There shall be established observation posts at such
locations as major ports, railway centers, motor highways, and
air bases to report on concentrations and movements of military
forces.
(c) There shall also be established such additional inspection
arrangements to reduce the danger of surprise attack as may be
agreed.
(d) An international commission shall be established immediately
within the IDO to examine and make recommendations on the
possibility of further measures to reduce the risks of nuclear
war by accident, miscalculation, or failure of communication.
G. To Keep the Peace:
(a) States shall reaffirm their obligations under the U.N.
Charter to refrain from the threat or use of any type of armed
force--including nuclear, conventional, or CBR--contrary to the
principles of the U.N. Charter.
(b) States shall agree to refrain from indirect aggression and
subversion against any country.
(c) States shall use all appropriate processes for the peaceful
settlement of disputes and shall seek within the United Nations
further arrangements for the peaceful settlement of
international disputes and for the codification and progressive
development of international law.
(d) States shall develop arrangements in Stage I for the
establishment in Stage II of a U.N. Peace Force.
(e) A U.N. peace observation group shall be staffed with a
standing cadre of observers who could be dispatched to
investigate any situation which might constitute a threat to or
breach of the peace.
STAGE II
A. International Disarmament Organization:
The powers and responsibilities of the IDO shall be
progressively enlarged in order to give it the capabilities to
verify the measures undertaken in Stage II.
B. To Further Reduce Armed Forces and Armaments:
(a) Levels of forces for the U.S., U.S.S.R., and other
militarily significant states shall be further reduced by
substantial amounts to agreed levels in equitable and balanced
steps.
(b) Levels of armaments of prescribed types shall be further
reduced by equitable and balanced steps. The reduction shall be
accomplished by transfers of armaments to depots supervised by
the IDO. When, at specified periods during the Stage II
reduction process, the parties have agreed that the armaments
and armed forces are at prescribed levels, the armaments in
depots shall be destroyed or converted to peaceful uses.
(c) There shall be further agreed restrictions on the production
of armaments.
(d) Agreed military bases and facilities wherever they are
located shall be dismantled or converted to peaceful uses.
(e) Depending upon the findings of the Experts Commission on CBR
weapons, the production of CBR weapons shall be halted, existing
stocks progressively reduced, and the resulting excess
quantities destroyed or converted to peaceful uses.
C. To Further Reduce the Nuclear Threat:
Stocks of nuclear weapons shall be progressively reduced to the
minimum levels which can be agreed upon as a result of the
findings of the Nuclear Experts Commission; the resulting excess
of fissionable material shall be transferred to peaceful
purposes.
D. To Further Reduce Strategic Nuclear Weapons Delivery
Vehicles:
Further reductions in the stocks of strategic nuclear weapons
delivery vehicles and agreed types of weapons designed to
counter such vehicles shall be carried out in accordance with
the procedure outlined in Stage I.
E. To Keep the Peace:
During Stage II, states shall develop further the peace-keeping
processes of the United Nations, to the end that the United
Nations can effectively in Stage III deter or suppress any
threat or use of force in violation of the purposes and
principles of the United Nations:
(a) States shall agree upon strengthening the structure,
authority, and operation of the United Nations so as to assure
that the United Nations will be able effectively to protect
states against threats to or breaches of the peace.
(b) The U.N. Peace Force shall be established and progressively
strengthened.
(c) States shall also agree upon further improvements and
developments in rules of international conduct and in processes
for peaceful settlement of disputes and differences.
STAGE III
By the time Stage II has been completed, the confidence
produced through a verified disarmament program, the acceptance
of rules of peaceful international behavior, and the development
of strengthened international peace-keeping processes within the
framework of the U.N. should have reached a point where the
states of the world can move forward to Stage III. In Stage III
progressive controlled disarmament and continuously developing
principles and procedures of international law would proceed to
a point where no state would have the military power to
challenge the progressively strengthened U.N. Peace Force and
all international disputes would be settled according to the
agreed principles of international conduct.
The progressive steps to be taken during the final phase of the
disarmament program would be directed toward the attainment of a
world in which:
(a) States would retain only those forces, non-nuclear
armaments, and establishments required for the purpose of
maintaining internal order; they would also support and provide
agreed manpower for a U.N Peace Force.
(b) The U.N. Peace Force, equipped with agreed types and
quantities of armaments, would be fully functioning.
(c) The manufacture of armaments would be prohibited except for
those of agreed types and quantities to be used by the U.N.
Peace Force and those required to maintain internal order. All
other armaments would be destroyed or converted to peaceful
purposes.
(d) The peace-keeping capabilities of the United Nations would
be sufficiently strong and the obligations of all states under
such arrangements sufficiently far-reaching as to assure peace
and the just settlement of differences in a disarmed world.
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1961 O 609147
[end of document]
PASTOR JOES' NOTE.....WE HAVE FOUND THAT THIS IS HARD TO
FIND IN THE GOVERNMENT WEBSITE. PASTOR JOE HAS A COPY OF THIS
BOOKLET AND FEEL FREE TO COPY THIS WEBPAGE AND SAVE IT FOR
POSTERITY.