Primary Source

President Reagan Discusses Soviet Violations of Arms Control Agreements with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher

Annotation

Ronald Reagan began his presidency in 1981 confident that the policy of détente with the Soviet Union—initiated by Richard Nixon in May 1972 and terminated in January 1980 by Jimmy Carter as a response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan—was misguided. During his first three years in office, Reagan substituted a confrontational approach. Nations of Western Europe, however, maintained détente with the Soviet Union and clashed with the Reagan administration over arms control negotiations, the placing of intermediate-range missiles in Europe, and Reagan’s proposed Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). In January 1984, at the start of his reelection campaign, Reagan announced that he was ready to negotiate a new détente from a position of military strength, having “halted America’s decline,” a shift that eventually led the next year to Reagan’s decision to meet the new Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev. In March 1985, the US and the Soviet Union entered into Nuclear and Space Talks with the stated purpose of “preventing an arms race in space,” but the talks stalled in October after the US insisted on an interpretation of the ABM Treaty of 1972 that would allow SDI testing in space. Western European countries in NATO disagreed with the new interpretation. In the following letter, written some three weeks before Reagan’s first summit meeting with Gorbachev, Reagan called for help from his closest ally in Europe, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, to present a unified Western diplomatic front against the Soviets.

Text

28 October 1985

Dear Margaret:

We have discussed many times my deep concern over Soviet violations of arms control agreements. As
you know, the US Government has conducted several extensive studies, and concluded that the Soviet
Union has violated its legal obligation or political commitment with respect to the SALT II Agreement,
the ABM Treaty, the Limited Test Ban Treaty, the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, the Geneva
Protocol on Chemical Weapons, and the Helsinki Final Act. In addition, the Soviets have likely violated
the provisions of the Threshold Test Ban Treaty

We have shared our findings and the evidence for them with the British Government in both NATO and
bilateral talks, including extensive meetings between our experts and yours.

As we approach the November meetings with Mr. Gorbachev, it is more than ever for the West to make
clear to the Soviet Union that violations and actions inconsistent with arms control commitments are
unacceptable, not just to the US but to other Western nations as well. The Nuclear Planning Group
Ministerial, which will be held October 29 and 30 in Brussels, is an ideal time for NATO to state publicly
its concern over Soviet violations, and I sincerely hope your government will support us in including such
language in the communiqué.

The US and its NATO Allies have a shared interest in supporting the arms control process. The Soviet
pattern of noncompliance raises fundamental concerns about the integrity of the arms control process,
concerns that—if not corrected—undercut the viability of arms control as an instrument to assist in
ensuring a secure and stable future world. A strong Allied consensus on concern over Soviet violations
will strengthen our efforts both in seeking corrective actions from the Soviet Union and in seeking
effective verification procedures for future agreements. The success of such efforts will improve the
prospects for the Nuclear and Space Talks.

Ron

Source: Ronald Reagan to Margaret Thatcher, 28 October 1985, Margaret Thatcher Foundation, Archive,
http://www.margaretthatcher.org, Thatcher Foundation (accessed September 20, 2006).

Credits

Ronald Reagan to Margaret Thatcher, 28 October 1985, Margaret Thatcher Foundation, Archive, Thatcher Foundation (accessed September 20, 2006).

How to Cite This Source

"President Reagan Discusses Soviet Violations of Arms Control Agreements with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher," in World History Commons, https://worldhistorycommons.org/president-reagan-discusses-soviet-violations-arms-control-agreements-prime-minister-margaret [accessed December 25, 2024]