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- <text id=93HT0607>
- <title>
- 1983: An Interview With President Reagan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1983 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 2, 1984
- MEN OF THE YEAR
- An Interview with President Reagan
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>"There is less of a danger today than there was a few years ago"
- </p>
- <p> The morning's bulletin from Vienna reported another chill of
- silence in the diminishing dialogue between the U.S. and the
- Soviet Union. Negotiations on reducing conventional forces had
- gone into recess with the Warsaw Pact nations refusing to set
- a date for resumption of the talks. But that afternoon in the
- Oval Office Ronald Reagan's mood was sanguine, his bearing
- confident, as he discussed Soviet-American relations with three
- visitors from TIME. Editor in Chief Henry Grunwald, Managing
- Editor Ray Cave and White House Correspondent Laurence I.
- Barrett. The President was pleased to concentrate on that
- subject, he said with a smile, because "there are a great many
- misperceptions out there about the situation now. As a matter
- of fact, if you correct the misperceptions, you'll have an
- exclusive scoop." Highlights of the interview:
- </p>
- <p> Q. After three years of experience with the Soviets, have you
- encountered anything that was different from your expectations?
- </p>
- <p> A. No. I came here determined to attempt to bring about a
- reduction in arms, an end to the arms race. Well, it really
- hadn't been an arms race. There had only been a buildup on one
- side. I also wanted to see if we couldn't get the world on a
- practical road to peace. And I am still dedicated to that. I
- think that, contrary to some of the cries of despair out there,
- the world situation is better than it was when we came here.
- </p>
- <p> There is one new development that I have worried about for some
- time. That is the extent, lately, to which military leaders in
- the Soviet Union are, apparently without any coaching or being
- briefed by the civilian part of government--at least there is
- no evidence of that--taking it upon themselves to make
- statements, and rather bellicose statements. There has not, in
- the past been evidence of top military leaders going public with
- attacks on the U.S. and seeming to enunciate policy on their
- own. We have to be aware of this and pay a little attention to
- this, to see if they have become a power on their own.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Have you formed any image in your own mind of your
- counterparts over there? Does it help to try to think of them
- as human beings with strengths and failings?
- </p>
- <p> A. Really, you deal with them as human beings. But you are
- aware that, certainly they are ideologues dedicated to the
- philosophy that brought them into power. As a matter of fact,
- we have had some reports from people in other countries that
- Soviet leaders seem to feel that they can communicate better
- with us because we are more consistent.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Better than with Jimmy Carter?
- </p>
- <p> A. Well, I won't use any other names. But previously they
- didn't know, really, what the policy of America was and what we
- were doing. This has been related to us, as I say, by third
- parties. At least they know where we stand.
- </p>
- <p> Q. It has been suggested, on the basis of a statement issued
- in Mr. Andropov's name, that they have given up on you, decided
- they cannot deal with you.
- </p>
- <p> A. Maybe they are thinking of getting involved in an American
- election as they did in German. I would hope, with the same
- lack of success.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But you do not feel it has become impossible to do business
- with them?
- </p>
- <p> A. No, I do not, because they have to look realistically at the
- alternative. It was summed up in a cartoon that I love to
- cite. When Brezhnev was portrayed as saying to a Soviet general,
- "I liked the arms race better when we were the only ones in
- it." They have to know that we are not going back to our window
- of vulnerability that existed before we did our military
- refurbishing. They have to know that whatever they do is going
- to dictate our course in that regard. And they also have to
- know that industrially they cannot compete.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Can you tell us anything about your correspondence with
- Andropov?
- </p>
- <p> A. We have channels open. This, again, is part of the
- misperception out there--that, somehow we are incommunicado, we
- are not speaking to each other. We have been in communication
- with them, and intend to continue. [Reagan at this point
- recalled his first letter to Brezhnev, written in April 1981,
- while convalescing from the assassination attempt.] I wrote
- that letter to Brezhnev in longhand, and it was sent to him in
- longhand. I said to him that I have long believed that his
- people and our people wanted the same things: That those
- people out there on the street, in their homes, want to raise
- their families in peace. They want to educate their children.
- I said that only governments seem to cause wars; wars do not
- come from people. Now, whether he read that letter or not, I
- don't know, and will never have any way of knowing. After quite
- a long delay, the answer that came to me was not handwritten,
- nor was i personal. It was the usual rhetoric that is publicly
- exchanged between our two countries.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Would you send the same kind of letter to Mr. Andropov?
- </p>
- <p> A. We have tried to get this kind of correspondence, but it
- has been difficult. I understand the situation with the new
- regime coming in after the death of Brezhnev.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But you do not feel such a letter would be appropriate at
- this time?
- </p>
- <p> A. I feel a little hard put because of the lack of information
- and knowledge that we have about where he stands. It isn't
- like dealing with Brezhnev after years in the Kremlin. You knew
- where he was and felt you knew how to reach him. But we do
- have contacts, we can get our views there and solicit theirs.
- We have discussed specific issued between our two countries and
- have had some results from them.
- </p>
- <p> Q. When you say "where he stands," you mean the Soviet
- hierarchy?
- </p>
- <p> A. Yes, in the hierarchy.
- </p>
- <p> Q. In other words, you are not absolutely sure that he has yet
- totally taken control?
- </p>
- <p> A. I had a few months' advance warning to get a government
- organized, so I know what some of those problems are.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You have based your nuclear negotiating strategy on the
- conviction that once Moscow was persuaded that deployment of
- the Pershing II and cruise missiles in Europe would go ahead,
- and the Soviets would then bargain seriously. Now those
- conditions have been met. Yet the Soviets are not negotiating
- seriously. How do you propose to deal with that?
- </p>
- <p> A. Isn't it possible that they had embarked on a kind of
- negotiating procedure that did not result in negotiating
- directly with us but was trying to bring some weakening of the
- NATO alliance in order to prevent the deployment of the
- intermediate-range weapons that NATO had asked us for in 1979?
- Now, I offered what I think was a very reasonable and
- common-sense proposal: the one way to prevent the deployment was
- if they would destroy their weapons and we'd have zero-zero, no
- intermediate-range weapons in the European theater.
- </p>
- <p> This they rejected out of hand, and so I said, "All right. If
- they are unwilling to go that far, then we will make a proposal
- for a reduction to fair and equal amounts on both sides and let
- them come in and negotiate. What is number that they would be
- agreeable to?" And, so far, they have still kept to their
- program: "No, we must stop the [NATO] deployment." In other
- words, they bought our zero-zero proposal--50% of it. Zero for
- us. And they had over 1,000 warheads already targeted on
- Western Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Now they have left the negotiations. I have to believe that
- once those missiles of ours are put in place and they wee that
- we have the will to go forward with this--that they have not
- been able to separate the alliance--then, I think, they will
- return to the table. And we are waiting for any proposals that
- they want to make.
- </p>
- <p> Q. So you believe the original negotiating strategy is still
- sound?
- </p>
- <p> A. Yes.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You think it will lead to a reasonable deal--when? In the
- next year or so?
- </p>
- <p> A. I don't know what the time period will be. But I do know
- this: When we came here--you asked about surprises--we were
- all surprised. We thought we knew something during the campaign
- of the situation, but we were still surprised to find how
- desperate the U.S. position was militarily. But we have been
- very successful in what we have done. And I think this is what
- brought the Soviets to the table in the first place. For the
- first time in years they have seen that the American people
- have the will to provide a deterrent force.
- </p>
- <p> Q. In dealing with the Soviets, have you found the European
- allies a help or a hindrance?
- </p>
- <p> A. They have been very much a help. This is evident in the
- INF deployment. They have held up under all this propaganda,
- all these demonstrations. The alliance is stronger and better
- than it has ever been.
- </p>
- <p> Q. When you made the remark containing the phrase "focus of
- evil," which certainly nettled the Soviets, did you feel that
- it was appropriate? Would you make it again?
- </p>
- <p> A. No, I would not say things like that again, even after some
- of the things that have been done recently.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Is that because they now know your thinking on that and so
- it is a case of "message delivered," or because you think it was
- a mistake that only got their paranoia up?
- </p>
- <p> A. They really had to know and understand how we felt, what
- our views were and why we thought it necessary to build up our
- military defenses. In addition to their aggressive policy of
- wanting to spread their doctrine throughout the world, there is
- a great fear on their part that they must be constantly on
- guard and defensive. This was characteristic of Russia before
- it was Communist, a suspicion of neighbors. Maybe it goes back
- to Napoleon's march on Moscow, maybe it goes back to other
- things of that kind.
- </p>
- <p> I would like to convince the Soviets that no one in the world
- has aggressive intentions toward them. Certainly we don't. And
- we have proof over 50 years that we don't. Did we do anything
- when we were the only power with nuclear weapons? Did we
- threaten the world? Did we say to everyone, "Lay down your
- arms"? Now I would like to make them see that it is to their
- best interest to join us in reducing arms. What more of an
- international super power they could be if it was not just in
- the military that they were super, but if they could joint the
- family of nations as trading partners, working together, as all
- of us are, for the improvement of their own people's standard
- of living. I don't know whether that is possible for them to
- see, but I think is it worth a try.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Speaking of their joining the "family of nations," do you
- think they have any useful role to play jointly with us in the
- Middle East?
- </p>
- <p> A. Well, right now they are in the Middle East in one place,
- and that is where there is trouble. That has been a tactic of
- theirs: they do not necessarily start the trouble, but they
- get in and stir the pot. They could be helpful if they would
- use their influence to persuade Syria to withdraw from Lebanon
- and let the Lebanese regain control of their country.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You have said that a summit meeting needs an agenda, and
- that it should not be embarked upon unless a result is visible.
- But as concerns continue to rise about the strain between the
- U.S. and the Soviets, is there any form of summitry that could
- be less formalized?
- </p>
- <p> A. I have never thought of it so much as being formalized.
- But when one of these things takes place, we know from the past,
- the hopes of people worldwide are brought to a high level. And
- then if there is nothing accomplished except that you have had
- a meeting, and neither one of you has anything to say when you
- leave that meeting, there is a letdown. The letdown, the
- disappointment--I just don't think that is healthy or good.
- But you mentioned all the "strain." I have to say that I think
- there is less of a risk and less of a danger today than there
- was a few years ago. I think that the world is a safer and
- further removed from a possible war than it was several years
- ago.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Would you tell us why?
- </p>
- <p> A. Because there was more risk of someone gambling if it did
- not look as if we could retaliate in any extremely damaging way.
- I think the Soviets now understand that we have the will power
- to preserve a deterrent, so there is logic in our talking. If
- both of us would say, "Hey, we have heard the scientists talk
- about how the world itself could be destroyed. As long as we
- maintain things so that neither side is able to start a war with
- the other, why don't we reduce our arsenals?" and if we start
- down that road of reducing, for heaven's sake, why don't we rid
- the world of these weapons? Why do we keep them? Here's a
- world today whose principal armaments would wipe out civilians
- in the tens and hundreds of millions. Let's get back to being
- civilized.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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