JOINT
STATEMENT OF AGREED PRINCIPLES
FOR
DISARMAMENT NEGOTIATIONS
20th
September 1961
The United
States and the USSR have agreed to recommend the following principles as the
basis for future multilateral negotiations on disarmament and to call upon
other states to cooperate in reaching early agreement on general and complete
disarmament in a peaceful world in accordance with these principles:
SECURE
DISARMAMENT AND PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES... WAR NO LONGER.
The goal of
negotiations is to achieve agreement on a programme which will ensure:
That
disarmament is general and complete and war is no longer an instrument for
settling international problems, and
That such
disarmament is accompanied by the establishment of reliable procedures for the
peaceful settlement of disputes and effective arrangements for the maintenance
of peace in accordance with the principles of the Charter of the United
Nations.
RETENTION
OF NON-NUCLEAR FORCES FOR DOMESTIC ORDER AND A UN PEACE FORCE
The
programme for general and complete disarmament shall ensure that States have at
their disposal only such non-nuclear armaments, forces, facilities, and
establishments as are agreed to be necessary to maintain internal order and
protect the personal security of citizens; and that States shall support and
provide manpower for a United Nations peace force.
ALL
MILITARY FORCES, BASES, STOCKPILES, WEAPONS, AND EXPENSES TO BE ENDED
To this
end, the programme for general and complete disarmament shall contain the
necessary provisions, with respect to the military establishment of every
nation for:
The
disbanding of armed forces, the dismantling of military establishments,
including bases, the cessation of the production of armaments as well as their
liquidation or conversion to peaceful uses;
The
elimination of all stockpiles of nuclear, chemical, bacteriological, and other
weapons of mass destruction, and the cessation of the production of such
weapons;
The
elimination of all means of delivery of weapons of mass destruction;
The
abolition of organizations and institutions designed to organize the military
efforts of States, the cessation of military training, and the closing of all
military training institutions; and
The
discontinuance of military expenditures.
IMPLEMENTATION
BY TIMED STAGES WITH COMPLIANCE AND VERIFICATION AGREED TO AT EVERY STAGE
The
disarmament programme should be implemented in an agreed sequence, by stages,
until it is completed, with each measure and stage carried out within specified
time-limits. Transition to a subsequent stage in the process of disarmament
should take place upon a review of the implementation measures included in the
preceding stage and upon a decision that all such measures have been
implemented and verified and that any additional verification arrangements
required for measures in the next stage are, when appropriate, ready to
operate.
EQUITABLE
BALANCE AT EVERY STAGE SO NO ADVANTAGE TO ANYONE AND SECURITY FOR ALL
All
measures of general and complete disarmament should be balanced so that at no
stage of the implementation of the treaty could any State or group of States
gain military advantage and that security is ensured equally for all
STRICT
CONTROL TO MAKE SURE OF COMPLIANCE BY ALL PARTIES AND CREATION OF AN
INTERNATIONAL DISARMAMENT ORGANIZATION WITH INSPECTORS HAVING UNRESTRICTED
ACCESS EVERYWHERE WITHOUT VETO FOR FULL VERIFICATION
All
disarmament measures should be implemented from beginning to end under such
strict and effective international control as would provide firm assurance that
all parties are honoring their obligations. During and after the implementation
of general and complete disarmament, the most thorough control should be
exercised, the nature and extent of each control depending on the requirements
for verification of the disarmament measures being carried out in each stage.
To implement control over and inspection of disarmament, an international
disarmament organization including all parties to the agreement should be
created within the framework of the United Nations. This international
disarmament organization and its inspectors should be assured unrestricted
access without veto to all places, as necessary for the purpose of effective
verification.
DISARMAMENT
PROCESS MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY MEASURES TO MAINTAIN PEACE AND SECURITY AND A
UNITED NATIONS PEACE FORCE STRONG ENOUGH TO DETER OR SUPPRESS ANY THREAT OR USE
OF ARMS IN VIOLATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS CHARTER
Progress in
disarmament should be accompanied by measures to strengthen institutions for
maintaining peace and the settlement of international disputes by peaceful
means. During and after the implementation of the programme of general and
complete disarmament, there should be taken, in accordance with the principles
of the United Nations Charter, the necessary measures to maintain international
peace and security, including obligations of States to place at the disposal of
the United Nations agreed manpower necessary for an international peace force
to be equipped with agreed types of armaments. Arrangements for the use of this
force should ensure that the United Nations can effectively deter or suppress
and threat or use of arms in violation of the purposes and principles of the
United Nations.
STATES
SHOULD SEEK WIDEST AGREEMENT AT EARLIEST DATE WHILE CONTINUING TO SEEK MORE
LIMITED AGREEMENTS WHICH WILL FACILITATE AND FORM PART OF THE OVERALL PROGRAM
FOR SECURED GENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT IN A PEACEFUL WORLD
States
participating in the negotiations should seek to achieve and implement the
widest possible agreement at the earliest possible date. Efforts should
continue without interruption until agreement upon the total programme has been
achieved, and efforts to ensure early agreement on and implementation of
measures of disarmament should be undertaken without prejudicing progress on
agreement on the total programme and in such a way that these measures would
facilitate and form part of that programme.
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On
September 20, 1961, in the city of Belgrade, the United States and the Soviet Union
signed the McCloy-Zorin Accords. This remarkable agreement, which calls for
“War No Longer”, set guidelines for not only nuclear disarmament, but complete
and general disarmament of all nations of the world. Should the political will
be found to achieve it, the ideas contained in these Accords can still be used
to reach this goal.
Valerian
Alexandrovich Zorin (Russian: Валериан Александрович Зорин; 1 January 1902 - 14
January 1986) was a Soviet diplomat best remembered for his famous
confrontation with Adlai Stevenson on 25 October 1962, during the Cuban Missile
Crisis.
Zorin was
born in Novocherkassk. After joining the Soviet Communist Party in 1922, Zorin
held a managerial position in a Moscow City Committee and the Central Committee
of the Komsomol until 1932. In 1935, he graduated from the Communist Institute
of Education (Высший коммунистический институт просвещения). In 1935-1941,
Zorin worked on numerous Party assignments and as a teacher. In 1941-1944, he
was employed at the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. In 1945-1947,
Zorin was the Soviet ambassador to Czechoslovakia. In 1948, he helped organize
the Czechoslovak coup d'état. In 1947-1955 and again in 1956-1965, he was
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union. At the same time, he
held other positions, including that of the permanent Soviet representative at
the UN Security Council in 1952-1953. In 1955-1956, Zorin was the first Soviet
ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany. In 1956-1965, he again
represented the Soviet Union at the UN Security Council, which led to his
famous confrontation with Adlai Stevenson on 25 October 1962, during the Cuban
Missile Crisis.
Following
the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, Zorin released a controversial
statement on the potential causes of the president's murder, dismissing beliefs
that Kennedy had been killed by a leftist fanatic, Lee Harvey Oswald, and
instead speculated that it might have been a result of Kennedy's progressive
views concerning civil rights and the "scum" of the American South.
In
1965-1971, Zorin served as the Soviet ambassador to France. In 1971, he became
an ambassador on special missions at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Soviet Union. At the 22nd and 23rd Congress of the CPSU in 1961 and 1966, Zorin
was elected to the Central Committee of the CPSU.
John Jay McCloy (March
31, 1895 – March 11, 1989) was an American lawyer,
diplomat, banker, and a presidential advisor. He served as Assistant Secretary of War during World
War II under Henry
Stimson, helping deal with issues such as German sabotage, political
tensions in the North Africa Campaign, and opposing the atomic bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. After the war, he served as the president of
the World Bank, U.S. High Commissioner for Germany,
chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations, a member
of the Warren Commission, and a prominent United States
adviser to all presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Ronald
Reagan.
Ending war
with Japan
McCloy
tried to convince President Truman that an invasion
of Japan was
not sensible. By mid-1945, the Japanese emperor began looking for ways to
unwind the war, going as far as asking the Soviet Union to broker a peace
between the United States and Japan. Through Magic intercepts, McCloy had known
that the emperor was prepared to surrender if assurances to preserve the
Japanese monarchy were given. As such, he advised Truman to offer terms of
surrender that offered such a guarantee bundled with the implied threat of
using the atomic bomb against Japan.[20] He argued that by doing so, it would enable the
United States to claim a moral high ground, in the event that a bombing would
be needed to thwart a Japanese mainland invasion. While traveling by boat to
the Potsdam Conference, Secretary of State James
Byrnes convinced
Truman to ignore McCloy's advice. Eventually, Truman ordered the atomic bombs
to be dropped as soon as they were ready.
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