President
John F. Kennedy
The
Berlin Crisis
July
25, 1961
Good
evening: - Seven weeks ago tonight I returned from Europe to report on my
meeting with Premier Khrushchev and the others. His grim warnings about the
future of the world, his aide memoire on Berlin, his subsequent speeches and
threats which he and his agents have launched, and the increase in the Soviet
military budget that he has announced, have all prompted a series of decisions
by the Administration and a series of consultations with the members of the
NATO organization. In Berlin, as you recall, he intends to bring to an end,
through a stroke of the pen, first our legal rights to be in West Berlinand
secondly our ability to make good on our commitment to the two million free people
of that city. That we cannot permit.
We are
clear about what must be done-and we intend to do it. I want to talk frankly
with you tonight about the first steps that we shall take. These actions will
require sacrifice on the part of many of our citizens. More will be required in
the future. They will require, from all of us, courage and perseverance in the
years to come. But if we and our allies act out of I strength and unity of
purpose - with calm determination and steady nerves - using restraint in our
words as well as our weapons - I am hopeful that both peace and freedom will be
sustained.
The
immediate threat to free men is in West Berlin. But that isolated outpost is
not an isolated problem. The threat is worldwide. Our effort must be equally wide
and strong, and not be obsessed by any single manufactured crisis. We face a
challenge in Berlin, but there is also a challenge in Southeast Asia, where the
borders are less guarded, the enemy harder to find, and the dangers of
communism less apparent to those who have so little. We face a challenge in our
own hemisphere, and indeed wherever else the freedom of human beings is at
stake.
Let me
remind you that the fortunes of war and diplomacy left the free people of West
Berlin, in 1945, 110 miles behind the Iron Curtain.
This
map makes very clear the problem that we face. The white is West Germany - the
East is the area controlled by the Soviet Union, and as you can see from the
chart, West Berlin is 110 miles within the area which the Soviets now dominate
- which is immediately controlled by the so-called East German regime.
We are
there as a result of our victory over Nazi Germany - and our basic rights to be
there, deriving from that victory, include both our presence in West Berlin and
the enjoyment of access across East Germany. These rights have been repeatedly
confirmed and recognized in special agreements with the Soviet Union. Berlin is
not a part of East Germany, but a separate territory under the control of the
allied powers. Thus our rights there are clear and deep-rooted. But in addition
to those rights is our commitment to sustain and defend, if need be - the
opportunity for more than two million people to determine their own future and
choose their own way of life.
II.
Thus,
our presence in West Berlin, and our access thereto, cannot be ended by any act
of the Soviet government. The NATO shield was long ago extended to cover West
Berlin - and we have given our word that an attack upon that city will be
regarded as an attack upon us all.
For
West Berlin - lying exposed 110 miles inside East Germany, surrounded by Soviet
troops and close to Soviet supply lines-has many roles. It is more than a
showcase of liberty, a symbol, an island of freedom in a Communist sea. It is
even more than a link with the Free World, a beacon of hope behind the Iron
Curtain, an escape hatch for refugees.
West
Berlin is all of that. But above all it has now become - as never before-the
great testing place of Western courage and will, a focal point where our solemn
commitments stretching back over the years since 1945, and Soviet ambitions now
meet in basic confrontation.
It
would be a mistake for others to look upon Berlin, because of its location, as
a tempting target. The United States is there; the United Kingdom and France
are there; the pledge of NATO is there - and the people of Berlin are there. It
is as secure, in that sense, as the rest of us - for we cannot separate its
safety from our own.
I hear
it said that West Berlin is militarily untenable. And so was Bastogne. And so,
in fact, was Stalingrad. Any dangerous spot is tenable if men - brave men -
will make it so.
We do
not want to fight-but we have fought before. And others in earlier times have
made the same dangerous mistake of assuming that the West was too selfish and
too soft and too divided to resist invasions of freedom in other lands. Those
who threaten to unleash the forces of war on a dispute over West Berlin should
recall the words of the ancient philosopher: "A man who causes fear cannot
be free from fear."
We
cannot and will not permit the Communists to drive us out of Berlin, either
gradually or by force. For the fulfillment of our pledge to that city is
essential to the morale and security of Western Germany, to the unity of
Western Europe, and to the faith of the entire Free World.
Soviet
strategy has long been aimed, not merely at Berlin, but at dividing and
neutralizing all of Europe, forcing us back on our own shores. We must meet our
oft-stated pledge to the free peoples of West Berlin - and maintain our rights
and their safety, even in the face of force - in order to maintain the
confidence of other free peoples in our word and our resolve. The strength of
the alliance on which our security depends is dependent in turn on our
willingness to meet our commitments to them.
III.
So long
as the Communists insist that they are preparing to end by themselves
unilaterally our rights in West Berlin and our commitments to its people, we
must be prepared to defend those rights and those commitments. We will at all
times be ready to talk, if talk will help. But we must also be ready to resist
with force, if force is used upon us. Either alone would fail. Together, they
can serve the cause of freedom and peace.
The new
preparations that we shall make to defend the peace are part of the long-term
build-up in our strength which has been underway since January. They are based
on our needs to meet a world-wide threat, on a basis which stretches far beyond
the present Berlin crisis. Our primary purpose is neither propaganda nor
provocation - but preparation.
A first
need is to hasten progress toward the military goals which the North Atlantic
allies have set for themselves. In Europe today nothing less will suvice. We
will put even greater resources into fulfilling those goals, and we look to our
allies to do the same.
The
supplementary defense build-ups that I asked from the Congress in March and May
have already started moving us toward these and our other defense goals. They
included an increase in the size of the Marine Corps, improved readiness of our
reserves, expansion of our air and sea lift, and stepped-up procurement of
needed weapons, ammunition, and other items. To insure a continuing
invulnerable capacity to deter or destroy any aggressor, they provided for the
strengthening of our missile power and for putting 50 percent of our B52 and
B-47 bombers on a ground alert which would send them on their way with 15 minutes'
warning.
These
measures must be speeded up, and still others must now be taken. We must have
sea and air lift capable of moving our forces quickly and in large numbers to
any part of the world.
But
even more importantly, we need the capability of placing in any critical area
at the appropriate time a force which, combined with those of our allies, is
large enough to make clear our determination and our ability to defend our
rights at all costs - and to meet all levels of aggressor pressure with whatever
levels of force are required. We intend to have a wider choice than humiliation
or all - out nuclear action.
While
it is unwise at this time either to call up or send abroad excessive numbers of
these troops before they are needed, let me make it clear that I intend to
take, as time goes on, whatever steps are necessary to make certain that such
forces can be deployed at the appropriate time without lessening our ability to
meet our commitments elsewhere.
Thus,
in the days and months ahead, I shall not hesitate to ask the Congress for
additional measures, or exercise any of the executive powers that I possess to
meet this threat to peace. Everything essential to the security of freedom must
be done; and if that should require more men, or more taxes, or more controls,
or other new powers, l shall not hesitate to ask them. The measures pro posed
today will be constantly studied, and altered as necessary. But while we will
not let panic shape our policy, neither will we permit timidity to direct our program.
Accordingly, I am now taking the following steps:
(1) I
am tomorrow requesting the Congress for the current fiscal year an additional
$3,247,000,000 of appropriations for the Armed Forces.
(2) To
fill out our present Army Divisions, and to make more men available for prompt
deployment, l am requesting an increase in the Army's total authorized strength
from 875,000 to approximately 1 million men.
(3) I
am requesting an increase of 29,000 and 63,000 men respectively in the active
duty strength of the Navy and the Air Force.
(4) To
fulfill these manpower needs, l am ordering that our draft calls be doubled and
tripled in the coming months; I am asking the Congress for authority to order
to active duty certain ready reserve units and individual reservists, and to
extend tours of duty; and, under that authority, I am planning to order to
active duty a number of air transport squadrons and Air National Guard tactical
air squadrons, to give us the airlift capacity and protection that we need.
Other reserve forces will be called up when needed.
(5)
Many ships and planes once headed for retirement are to be retained or
reactivated, increasing our airpower tactically and our sealift, airlift, and
anti-submarine warfare capability. In addition, our strategic air power will be
increased by delaying the deactivation of B-47 bombers.
(6)
Finally, some $1.8 billion - about half of the total sum - is needed for the
procurement of nonnuclear weapons, ammunition and equipment.
The
details on all these requests will be presented to the Congress tomorrow.
Subsequent steps will be taken to suit subsequent needs. Comparable efforts for
the common defense are being discussed with our NATO allies. For their
commitment and interest are as precise as our own.
And let
me add that I am well aware of the fact that many American families will bear
the burden of these requests. Studies or careers will be interrupted; husbands
and sons will be called away; incomes in some cases will be reduced. But these
are burdens which must be borne if freedom is to be defendedAmericans have
willingly borne them before-and they will not flinch from the task now.
IV.
We have
another sober responsibility. To recognize the possibilities of nuclear war in
the missile age, without our citizens knowing what they should do and where
they should go if bombs begin to fall, would be a failure of responsibility. In
May, I pledged a new start on Civil Defense. Last week, I assigned, on the
recommendation of the Civil Defense Director, basic responsibility for this
program to the Secretary of Defense, to make certain it is administered and
coordinated with our continental defense efforts at the highest civilian level.
Tomorrow, I am requesting of the Congress new funds for the following immediate
objectives: to identify and mark space in existing structurespublic and
privatethat could be used for fall-out shelters in case of attack; to stock
those shelters with food, water, first-aid kits and other minimum essentials
for survival; to increase their capacity; to improve our air-raid warning and
fallout detection systems, including a new household warning system which is
now under development; and to take other measures that will be effective at an
early date to save millions of lives if needed. In the event of an attack, the
lives of those families which are not hit in a nuclear blast and fire can still
be saved-if they can be warned to take shelter and if that shelter is
available. We owe that kind of insurance to our families-and to our country. In
contrast to our friends in Europe, the need for this kind of protection is new
to our shores. But the time to start is now. In the coming months, I hope to
let every citizen know what steps he can take without delay to protect his
family in case of attack. I know that you will want to do no less.
V.
The
addition of $207 million in Civil Defense appropriations brings our total new
defense budget requests to $3.454 billion, and a total of $47.5 billion for the
year.
This is
an increase in the defense budget of $6 billion since January, and has resulted
in official estimates of a budget deficit of over $5 billion. The Secretary of
the Treasury and other economic advisers assure me, however, that our economy
has the capacity to bear this new request.
We are
recovering strongly from this year's recession. The increase in this last
quarter of our year of our total national output was greater than that for any
postwar period of initial recovery. And yet, wholesale prices are actually
lower than they were during the recession, and consumer prices are only 1/4 of
1% higher than they were last October. In fact, this last quarter was the first
in eight years in which our production has increased without an increase in the
overall-price index. And for the first time since the fall of 1959, our gold
position has improved and the dollar is more respected abroad. These gains, it
should be stressed, are being accomplished with Budget deficits far smaller
than those of the 1958 recession.
This
improved business outlook means improved revenues; and I intend to submit to
the Congress in January a budget for the next fiscal year which will be
strictly in balance. Nevertheless, should an increase in taxes be
needed-because of events in the next few months-to achieve that balance, or
because of subsequent defense rises, those increased taxes will be requested in
January.
Meanwhile,
to help make certain that the current deficit is held to a safe level, we must
keep down all expenditures not thoroughly justified in budget requests. The
luxury of our current postoMce deficit must be ended. Costs in military
procurement will be closely scrutinized-and in this effort I welcome the
cooperation of the Congress. The tax loopholes I have specified-on expense
accounts, overseas income, dividends, interest, cooperatives and others-must be
closed.
I
realize that no public revenue measure is welcomed by everyone. But I am certain
that every American wants to pay his fair share, and not leave the burden of
defending freedom entirely to those who bear arms. For we have mortgaged our
very future on this defense-and we cannot fail to meet our responsibilities.
But I
must emphasize again that the choice is not merely between resistance and
retreat, between atomic holocaust and surrender. Our peace-time military
posture is traditionally defensive; but our diplomatic posture need not be. Our
response to the Berlin crisis will not be merely military or negative. It will
be more than merely standing firm. For we do not intend to leave it to others
to choose and monopolize the forum and the framework of discussion. We do not
intend to abandon our duty to mankind to seek a peaceful solution.
As
signers of the UN Charter, we shall always be prepared to discuss international
problems with any and all nations that are willing to talk-and listen-with
reason. If they have proposals-not demands-we shall hear them. If they seek
genuine understanding-not concessions of our rights-we shall meet with them. We
have previously indicated our readiness to remove any actual irritants in West
Berlin, but the freedom of that city is not negotiable. We cannot negotiate
with those who say "What's mine is mine and what's yours is
negotiable." But we are willing to consider any arrangement or treaty in
Germany consistent with the maintenance of peace and freedom, and with the
legitimate security interests of all nations.
We
recognize the Soviet Union's historical concern about their security in Central
and Eastern Europe, after a series of ravaging invasions, and we believe
arrangements can be worked out which will help to meet those concerns, and make
it possible for both security and freedom to exist in this troubled area.
For it
is not the freedom of West Berlin which is "abnormal" in Germany
today, but the situation in that entire divided country. If anyone doubts the
legality of our rights in Berlin, we are ready to have it submitted to
international adjudication. If anyone doubts the extent to which our presence
is desired by the people of West Berlin, compared to East German feelings about
their regime, we are ready to have that question submitted to a free vote in
Berlin and, if possible, among all the German people. And let us hear at that
time from the two and one-half million refugees who have fled the Communist
regime in East Germany-voting for Western-type freedom with their feet.
The
world is not deceived by the Communist attempt to label Berlin as a hot-bed of
war. There is peace in Berlin today. The source of world trouble and tension is
Moscow, not Berlin. And if war begins, it will have begun in Moscow and not
Berlin.
For the
choice of peace or war is largely theirs, not ours. It is the Soviets who have
stirred up this crisis. It is they who are trying to force a change. It is they
who have opposed free elections. It is they who have rejected an all-German
peace treaty, and the rulings of international law. And as Americans know from
our history on our own old frontier, gun battles are caused by outlaws, and not
by officers of the peace.
In
short, while we are ready to defend our interests, we shall also be ready to
search for peace-in quiet exploratory talksin formal or informal meetings. We
do not want military considerations to dominate the thinking of either East or
West.
And Mr.
Khrushchev may find that his invitation to other nations to join in a
meaningless treaty may lead to their inviting him to join in the community of
peaceful men, in abandoning the use of force, and in respecting the sanctity of
agreements.
VII.
While
all of these efforts go on, we must not be diverted from our total
responsibilities, from other dangers, from other tasks. If new threats in
Berlin or elsewhere should cause us to weaken our program of assistance to the
developing nations who are also under heavy pressure from the same source, or
to halt our efforts for realistic disarmament, or to disrupt or slow down our
economy, or to neglect the education of our children, then those threats will
surely be the most successful and least costly maneuver in Communist history.
For we can afford all these efforts, and more-but we cannot afford not to meet
this challenge. And the challenge is not to us alone. It is a challenge to
every nation which asserts its sovereignty under a system of liberty. It is a
challenge to all those who want a world of free choice. It is a special
challenge to the Atlantic Community-the heartland of human freedom.
We in
the West must move together in building military strength. We must consult one
another more closely than ever before. We must together design our proposals
for peace, and labor together as they are pressed at the conference table.
And
together we must share the burdens and the risks of this effort.
The
Atlantic Community, as we know it, has been built in response to challenge: the
challenge of European chaos in 1947, of the Berlin blockade in 1948, the
challenge of Communist aggression in Korea in 1950. Now, standing strong and
prosperous, after an unprecedented decade of progress, the Atlantic Community
will not forget either its history or the principles which gave it meaning.
The
solemn vow each of us gave to West Berlin in time of peace will not be broken
in time of danger. If to we do not meet our commitments to Berlin, where will
ti we later stand? If we are not true to our word there, all that we have
achieved in collective security, which relies on these words, will mean
nothing. And if there is one path above all others to war, it is the path of
weakness and disunity.
Today,
the endangered frontier of freedom runs z through divided Berlin. We want it to
remain a frontier < of peace. This is the hope of every citizen of the
Atlantic Community; every citizen of Eastern Europe; and, I am confident, every
citizen of the Soviet Union. For I cannot believe that the Russian peoplewho
bravely suffered enormous losses in the Second World Warwould now wish to see
the peace upset once more in Germany. The Soviet government alone can convert
Berlin's frontier of peace into a pretext for war.
The
steps I have indicated tonight are aimed at avoiding that war. To sum it all
up: we seek peacebut we shall not surrender. That is the central meaning of
this crisis, and the meaning of your government's policy.
With
your help, and the help of other free men, this crisis can be surmounted.
Freedom can prevail and peace can endure.
I would
like to close with a personal word. When I ran for the Presidency of the United
States, I knew that this country faced serious challenges, but I could not
realize-nor could any man realize who does not bear the burdens of this
office-how heavy and constant would be those burdens.
Three
times in my life-time our country and Europe have been involved in major wars.
In each case serious misjudgments were made on both sides of the intentions of
others, which brought about great devastation.
Now, in
the thermonuclear age, any misjudgment On either side about the intentions of
the other could rain more devastation in several hours than has been wrought in
all the wars of human history.
Therefore
I, as President and CommanderinChief, and all of us as Americans, are moving
through serious days. I shall bear this responsibility under our Constitution
for the next three and onehalf years, but I am sure that we all, regardless of
our occupations, will do our very best for our country, and for our cause. For
all of us want to see our children grow up in a country at peace, and in a
world where freedom endures.
I know
that sometimes we get impatient, we wish for some immediate action that would
end our perils. But I must tell you that there is no quick and easy solution.
The Communists control over a billion people, and they recognize that if we
should Alter, their success would be imminent.
We must
look to long days ahead, which if we are courageous and persevering can bring
us what we all desire.
In
these days and weeks I ask for your help, and your advice. I ask for your
suggestions, when you think we could do better.
All of
us, I know, love our country, and we shall all do our best to serve it. In
meeting my responsibilities in these coming months as President, I need your
good will, and your support-and above all, your prayers.
Thank
you, and good night.