PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: CENTRAL AMERICA WEDNESDAY MAY 9 1984

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
21
Document Creation Date: 
December 21, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 29, 2008
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 9, 1984
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0.pdf1.17 MB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 r ~~-197 +h3 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 r_ -CUTIVEI SE $. TARIA' aou ~+ s Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 ' THE W;-HITE H OUSE WASHINGTON Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 3648 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 -- 5 . (RR, et ai) 2-1 May 9, 1984 .te 9 a!9' U 9:00 a.m. PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: CENTRAL AMERICA WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1984 .My fellow Americans, last week I was in Beijing and Shanghai -- 3 weeks from now I will be preparing to leave for Dublin, Normandy, and the annual economic summit in London. I am pleased that our trip to China was a success. I had long. and thoughtful meetings with the Chinese leadership. Though our two countries- -are very different, we are building a strong relationship in a genuine spirit of cooperation, and that is good for the cause of peace. This was our second trip to Asia in the last 6 months. .It demonstrates our awareness of America's responsibility for leadership in the Pacific Basin -- an area of tremendous economic vitality. I believe our relations.with our Asian allies and friends have never been better. But that isn't what I want to talk to you about. I asked for this time to tell you of some basic decisions which are yours to make. I believe it is my constitutional responsibility to place these matters before you. They have to do with your national security and that security is the single most important function of the Federal Government. In that context, it is my duty to anticipate problems, warn of dangers, and act so as to keep harm away from our shores. Our diplomatic objectives will not be attained by goodwill and noble aspirations alone. In the last 15 years the growth of Soviet military power has meant a radical change in the nature of Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 believe, that we are; in imminent danger of nuclear war. We are Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 2 As long as we maintain the strategic balance and make it more stable by reducing the.level.of-such weapons on both sides, on,-the basic prudence of the Soviet leaders avoid that kind of challenge to us..-.They are presently* then we can count challenging. us with different kind of weapon, subversion the use. of-- =surrogate forces,... Cubans , ' for example.... We have it intensifying during the last 10 years as the Soviet Union and its surrogates moved to establish control over . Vietnam,:. Laos, Cambodia, Angola,.Ethiopia, South Yemen,, Afghanistan,- and .recently, closer to homein.Nicaragua and now El-Salvador. It is the.fate of.this region, Central-America, that I want to-talk to you about tonight. It is definitely not about plans to send American troops into combat.in Central America. The issue is our efforts to promote democracy and economic.- well-being in the face of Cuban and Nicaraguan aggression, aided .and abetted by the Soviet Union. Each year, the Soviet Union provides Cuba with $4.billion in assistance; and it sends tons of weapons to foment revolution in our hemisphere. The defense policy of the United States is based on a simple premise:. We do not start wars.. We will-never be the aggressor. We maintain our strength in order to deter and defend against aggression'-- to preserve freedom and peace. We help our friends Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 3 Central America is, a region of great importance to the United States. And it is so close -- San Salvador is closer to Houston than Houston is to Washington, D.C. Central America is America, it is at our doorstep. And it has become the stage for a .bold attempt by the Soviet Union, Cuba, and Nicaragua to install communise-by force throughout the hemisphere. When half of our shipping tonnage and imported oil passes through Caribbean shipping lanes, when two-thirds of all our foreign trade. passes through the Panama Canal and Caribbean waters, America's economy and well-being are at stake. Right now in El Salvador, Cuban-supported aggression has forced more than 400,000 men, women, and children to flee their homes. And in all of Central America, more than 800,000 have fled, many if not most living in unbelievable hardship. Concerns about hundreds of.thousands of refugees fleeing communist oppression to seek entry into our country are well-founded. What we see in El Salvador is an attempt to destabilize the entire region, ana eventually move chaos and anarchy toward the American border. If we do nothing or if we continue to provide too little help, our choice will-be a communist Central America with communist military bases on the North American mainland, and communist subversion spreading southward and northward. As the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America, chaired by Henry Kissinger, agreed, this communist subversion poses the' threat that 100 million people from Panama to the open border on our South could come under the control of pro-Soviet regimes. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 ------ pare Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 if we come to our senses too late, when our vital interests are even more -directly threatened, and after a lack of American support causes our friends to lose the ability to defend themselves, then the risks to our security and our way of life will be infinitely greater. .But there is a way to avoid these risks, recommended by the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America. It.requires long-term American support-for democratic *development, economic and security assistance, and strong-willed diplomacy. There. have been a number of high level bilateral meetings with the Nicaraguan government where we have presented specific proposals for peace. I.have appointed two special Ambassadors who have made more than ten trips to the region in pursuit of peace during the last year. And we continue to support the -objectives of the regional countries working through what is called the Contadora process. We can and must help Central America. It's in our national interest to do so, and, morally, it's the only right thing to do. But, helping means doing enough -- enough to protect our security and enough to protect the lives of our neighbors so that they may ,live in peace and democracy without the threat of communist aggression and subversion. This has been the policy of our Administration for more than 3 years. But making this choice requires a commitment from all of us, our Administration, the American people, and the Congress. So far, we have not yet made that commitment. We have provided just enough aid to avoid outright disaster, but not enough to resolve Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 the crisis, so, El 'Salvador is being left to slowly bleed to death. Part of the problem, I suspect, is.not that Central America isn't?important, but that some people think.our Administration may. be.,, exaggerating the threat we face. let me put that issue to rest. Well, if that's true, I want.to.tell"You a few things tonight about the real .nature of the Sandinista regime in Nicaragua. The Sandinistas?who rule Nicaragua are communists-whose relationship and'ties to'Fidel Castro of.Cuba go back a quarter of a century. A number of the Sandinista commanders were trained in terrorist camps supported by Cuba, the Soviet bloc, and the PLO. It is important to note that. Cuba, the Sandinistas, the Salvadoran communist guerrillas, and the PLO have all worked- together for many years. And in 1978, the-Sandinistas joined. the .PLO in a "declaration of war" against Israel. The Cuban-backed Sandinistas made a major-attempt to topple the Somoza regime in.Nicaragua in the fall of 1978. They failed. They were then called to Havana,'where Castro cynically instructed them in the ways of successful communist insurrection.. He told them to tell the world they were fighting for political democracy, not communism. But most important, he instructed them to form -a broad alliance with the genuinely democratic opposition to the Somoza regime.' Castro explained this would deceive Western public opinion, confuse potential critics and make it difficult for Western democracies to oppose the Nicaraguan rrevolution without .:c;ausing.'gr:eat d.i:s.sent?.=at home. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 have to confess he.fboled a lot of people herein our own country -- or don'sty;ou remember when he was referred to in The Sandini=s;t.'a.!a, listened and learned. They returned to Nicaragua and promised to establish. democracy.. ._ The Organization f. American States .?;n June 23, 1979, passed a resolution stating that-, the- solution for:, peace in Nicaragua required that Somoza` leave and .that, free' ;elections be held as OAS. in writing-:that they would do these things. Somoza left, and the Sandinistas came, to power. This was a negotiated settlement .based on power sharing between communists and genuine democrats like the one some have proposed for El Salvador today. Because of these promises, our previous administration and other Western governments tried, in a hopeful way, to encourage Sandinista government that. would guarantee peace., freedom and justice. The. Sandinistas then promised the success. some time to realize what was actually taking place; that almost from the' '.moment the Sandinistas and their cadre of 50 Cuban covert _advi!sors took power in.,Managua in. July of. 1979,.. the internal :repress!on of democratic groups, tradeunions, and press and freedom ofr.assembly became virtually. nonexistent. There. was an outright refusal to hold genuine elections coupled, civic groups began. 'Right to dissent was denied. Freedom of the with the continuai.p;romise to do so. Their latest promise is for' elections by.Novembe!r 1984. In the meantime, there has been an Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Page 7 attempt to wipe out an entire culture, the Miskito Indians,. thousands of whom have been slaughtered or herded into detention camps, where they have been starved and abused. Their villages, churches and crops were burned. The Sandinistas engaged in anti-Semitism against the Jewish ?.commwnity. And they persecuted the Catholic church and publicly humiliated -individual priests. When Pope John' Paul . II. visited Nicaragua last year, the Sandinistas organized public demonstrations, hurling' insults at him and his message of peace. On Good Friday, some 100,000 Catholic faithfuls staged a demonstration of defiance. You may be hearing about that demonstration for the first time. It wasn't widely reported. ,And Nicaraguan Bishop Pablo Antonio Vega recently said, "We are living with a totalitarian ideology that no one wants in th.g_" country." The Sandinista rule is a communist Reign of Terror. Many of those who fought alongside the Sandinistas saw their revolution betrayed; they were denied power in the new gcvernment, some were imprisoned, others exiled. Thousands who fought with the Sandinistas have taken up arms against them and are now called the Contras. They are freedom-fighters. What the Sandinistas have done to Nicaragua is a tragedy. But we Americans must understand and come to grips with the fact that the Sandinistas are not content to brutalize their own land. They seek to export their terror to every other country in the region. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 8 I ask you to listen closely to the following quotation: The revolutionary process of Central America is a single process, the triumphs of one are the triumphs of the other .?. Guatemala will have its hour. Honduras its, Costa Rica, too, will have its hour of glory. The first note was heard in Nicaragua." That was the statement of Cayetano Carpio, who was.a leader of the-Nicaraguan and Cuban-backed guerrillas in El Salvador. Shortly after taking power, the Sandinistas -- in partnership with Cuba. and the Soviet Union -- began supporting aggression against El Salvador, Honduras, Costa Rica, and Guatemala. They opened training camps for guerrillas from El Salvador so they could return to their country and attack its government. Those camps still operate. Nicaragua is still-the headquarters for communist guerrilla movements. And Nicaraguan agents and diplomats have been caught in Costa Rica'and Honduras supervising attacks carried out by communist terrorists. The role that Cuba has long performed for the Soviet Union is now also being played by the Sandinistas. They have become Cuba's Cubans. Weapons, supplies, and funds are shipped from the Soviet bloc to Cuba, from Cuba to Nicaragua, from Nicaragua to the Salvadoran guerrillas. These facts were confirmed last year by the House Select Committee on Intelligence. The Sandinista regime has been waging war against its neighbors since August of 1979. This has included military raids into Honduras and Costa Rica which still continue today. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Page 9 nd they're getting a great deal of help from their friends. There were 165 Cuban -personnel in Nicaragua in 1979. Today that force has grown to 10,000. And we're being criticized for having 55 military trainers in El Salvador. Manpower support is also coming from other parts of the terror network: the PLO has sent men aid so has Libya's dictator Quadaffi. Last year communist countries proyided over $400 million in new military assistance, including tanks, artillery, rocket launchers, and the construction'of military bases and support facilities. Just last week a Soviet ship was unloading heavy-duty military trucks in Nicaragua's Corinto harbor. Another Soviet ship is on its way with more trucks and 155 Soviet jeeps. Nicaragua.'s own military forces have grown enormously. Since 1979, their trained forces increased from 10,000 to over 100,000. Why does Nicaragua need all this power? Why did this country of only 2.8 million people build the largest military force in the history of Central America? They claim the buildup is the result of the anti-Sandinista forces. But that is a lie. The Sandinista military buildup began 2-1/2 years before the anti-Sandinista freedom-fighters had taken up arms. They claim the buildup is because they are threatened by their neighbors. That, too, is a lie. Nicaragua's next door neighbor, Costa Rica, doesn't even have an army. Another neighbor, Honduras, has armed forces of only 16,000, which we are now helping to train for defense of their own borders. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 .Page s!J. cynical lie.of.all. The truth.is anniversary, in July 1980, that spread. beyond.their own borders. When the Sandinistas were .fighting the Somoza regime, the ,policy was: hands off. We did not attempt. to ',.aggressidn.... That. is` the most they announced.at.their first their revolution was going to United States 3. more economic assistance.-in the first 18 months of its life than any other country. But in:January 1981, having concluded that the Sandinistas were arming the Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Salvadoran guerrillas, the Carter Administration.-Sent military aid to E1 Salvador. As soon as I took office,. we attempted to show friendship to the Sandinistas and provided economic aid to Nicaragua. But it did no good. They kept on exporting terrorism. The.words of. their official party anthem describe us,.the United-States, as .the enemy of all mankind. So much for our.. sincere but unrealistic hopes that if only we'd try harder,.to'b;e friends, Nicaragua would 'flourish in the glow of our friendship and install liberty and freedom. for their In-1958,1 .FidelCastro'pledged that, once his revolution had triumphed, he would start a ,much longer and bigger war -- a war -.The truth-is: They haven't. people. The United States did everything to'show its a:im the.-buildup is in. response to American the-Sandinistas, its friendliness, its. become friends.-:The Carter Administration Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 11 against the Americans. That war, Castro said, "will be my-true destiny." For 26 years, during Republican and Democratic administrations, Castro has kept to his own path of revolutionary violence. Today, Cuba even provides safe passage for drug traffickers who poison our children. In return, of course, he gets 'hard cash to buy more weapons of war. We are in_the amidst of what President John F. Kennedy called "a long twilight struggle" to defend freedom in the world. He understood the problem of Central America. He understood Castro. And he understood the long-term goals of the Soviet Union in this region. Twenty-three years ago, President Kennedy warned against the threat of communist penetration in our hemisphere. He said, "I want it clearly understood that this Government will not hegitate in meeting its primary obligations which are to the security of our Nation." And the House and Senate supported him, overwhelmingly, by passing a law calling on the United States to prevent Cuba from extending its aggressive or subversive activities to any part of this hemisphere. Were John Kennedy alive today, I think he would be appalled by the gullibility of some who invoke his name. I have told you that Cuba's and Nicaragua's prime target is .El Salvador. And I want to talk to you about that country because there is a lot of misunderstanding about it. El Salvador, too, had a revolution several years ago, and is now struggling valiantly to achieve a workable democracy, and, at the same time, to achieve a stable economic system and to redress Approved For Release 2008/08729: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 12 historical injustices. 'But El Salvador's yearning for democracy has.been thwarted by Cuban-trained and armed guerrillas, leading a campaign of violence against people, and destruction; of bridges, roads, power stations,. trucks, buses, and other vital elements of their economy. Destroying this infrastructure has brought more unemployment and poverty to the people of - El Salvador. Some argue that El Salvador has only two political extremes -- the communist left and the radical right -- that we must choose between them. That is just not true. Democratic political parties range from the democratic left, to center, to .conservative. Trade unions, religious organizations, civic groups, and business associations are numerous and flourishing. There is a small, violent right-wing as opposed to democracy as are the guerrillas, but they are not part of the government, and we have consistently opposed both extremes, and so has the government of El Salvador. Land reform is moving forward. Since March 1980, the program has benefitted more than 550,000 peasants, or about a quarter of the rural population. But many can't farm their land; they will be killed by the guerrillas if they do. The people of Central America want democracy and freedom. They want and hope for a better future. Costa-Rica is a well-established and healthy democracy. Honduras made a peaceful transition to democracy in 1982. And in Guatemala, political parties and trade unions are functioning. An election is Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page ~NN~VVG..l J1 I.GIGGJG LVV\J, VV/L.J VIf CI.VI VVIVIVVVVVI.VV 1~JVV 1 / VV'.JI scheduled for July there, with a real prospect that that country. can return to full constitutional government in 1985. In fact, 26 of 33 Latin American countries-are democracies or striving to become democracies.. But they are vulnerable. .By aiding.thecgmmunist guerrillas in E1.Salvador, Nicaragua's unelected.governmentis trying to overthrow the :duly-elected government of a. neighboring country. Like. Nicaragua, the. .`gover?iment of El Salvador-was born of revolution, but unlike Nicaragua it has held 3 elections, the most recent a presidential election last Sunday. It has made great progress toward democracy..' in this last election, 80 percent of the people of El Salvador braved communist threats and guerrilla. violence to vote for pea.ce.in freedom. Let me give one more example of the difference between-the, two countries El-Salvador and Nicaragua. The government of-- El.Salvador has offered amnesty to the guerrillas and asked them to participate in th;e elections and democratic processes. The guerrillas. refused, they want to shoot their way into power and establish totalitarian rule. By contrast, the freedom-fighters, the Contras in Nicaragua have offered to lay 'down their weapons and take part in democratic elections!; but there the communist Sandinista .government has refused. That's why. the. United States must support both the elected government of El SalVador'and the thousands of Nicaraguans resisting a totalitarian takeover: of their homeland. We are trying to prevent the Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Page 14 shipping of arms by the Nicaraguan government to the guerrillas in El Salvador. If the communists can start war against the people of El Salvador, then El Salvador and its friends are surely justified in defending themselves by blocking the flow of arms. If the Soviet Union can-aid and abet subversion in our hemisphere, then the United States has a legal, right and a moral duty to help resist it. This is not only in our strategic interest; it is morally right. It would be profoundly immoral. to let peace-loving friends depending on our help be overwhelmed by brute force if we have any capacity to prevent it. If our political process pulls together, Soviet- and. Cuban-supported aggression can be defeated. On this, the centennial anniversary of President Harry Truman's birth, it is fitting to recall his words spoken_to a joint session of the Congress in a similar situation: "The free peoples of the world look to.us.fort support in maintaining their freedoms. If we falter . we may endanger the peace of the world, and we shall surely endanger the welfare of this Nation." The speech was.given in 1947. The problem then was 2 years of Soviet-supported indirect aggression against Greece. The communists were close to victory. President Truman called on the Congress to provide decisive aid to the Greek Government. The Republican minority rallied behind President Truman's call. Democratic forces succeeded and Greece became a parliamentary democracy. Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 15 .seen Communist sa bve saon Is :r~Dt an irreversible tide. We!ve it'rolled backJin Venezuela,. the Dominican.' Republic, and most.recently, in Grenada. And where rights and peace are more .secure.. the job done. April. 1.983, ;z eddres:sed- a joint session of, the. Congress and asked for bipartisan'cooperation on behalf of our policies to protect liberty the appointment.of a;blue-ribbon, bipartisan: commission to chart a long-term course.for_democracy, economic improvement, and peace in Central America. I appointed twelve distinguished Americans and democracy in Central America. Shortly after that speech, the late Democratic Senator Henry. Jackson encouraged from both political parties to the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America, chaired by Henry Kissinger. The Bipartisan Commission rendered an important service to all Americans -- all i,of us from pole to pole in this. Western .Hemisphere. Last Ja;riuary, the Commission presented positive recommendations -to support democratic development, improve living conditions, and bring the long-sought dream cor.peace to-this troubled region so close to home.,-, recommendations reinforce the spirit of our Administration's policies that help to our neighbors should be primarily economic and humanitarian, but must also include sufficient military aid. In February I submitted a comprehensive legislative proposal to. the Congress which would implement the Commission's recommendations. .And since this report presented a bipartisan Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 democracy-flourishes, human The tide of the future can. be is the will and resources to get Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Page 16 am.hop:eful that the Congress will take prompt action. This pr.pposAl'calls for an increased commitment of resources .beginning. immediately and extending regularly over the next. 5 years.. The program is a balanced combination of support. democracy,-`.eco:noinic development,' diplomacy, security measures, with '70. pe=cent of the. dollars to be used for economic. and social deweiopment.' This program tar' get the job done. The-- National.. Bipartisan Commission on Central America. has 'done its work.. Our Administration has done its work.. We_now await.action by the Congress.' Meanwhile, evidence mounts of Cuban intentions resources, the communists. will. likely succeed. double its support to the Salvadoran guerrillas and bring down. that newly-elected government in the fall. Unless we provide the Le.t's remember., the Soviet bloc gave Cuba and Nicaragua $4.9 billion in assistance last year, while the United States provided all its friends throughout Central America with only a... fraction of-thatamount. The simple questions are: Mill we support freedom in this hemisphere or-not? Will we defend our vital interests in this hemisphere or not? Will we stop.the spread-of communism in this hemisphere. or not? Will we act while there's still time? There are those in this country who would yield to the temptation to do nothing. They are the New Isolationists, very., much like the isolationists of the Tate 1930's, who-knew what was happening in Europe but chose not to face the terrible challenge history had given them. They preferred a policy of wishful thinking that if they only gave up one more country, allowed just Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886R001900170007-0 Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page 17 one more international transgression, then surely, sooner or later, 'the aggressor's appetite would be -satisfied. Well, they didn't stop the aggressors they emboldened them. They didn't .prevent war -- they assured it. Legislation is now before the Congress that will carry out the recommendations. of the National Bipartisan Commission. Requests for interim appropriations to give the freedom fighters in Nicaragua, and the soldiers fighting for their country in El Salvador, 'the tools they need also await action by the House of Representatives. For the last.4 years, only half of the military aid requested for El Salvador has been provided -- even though total aid for El Salvador is only 3 percent of our world-wide assistance. I am asking the Congress to provide the funds I requested for fiscal year 1984 and.also to enact the entire National Bipartisan Commission Plan for democracy, economic development, and peace in Central America. As I talk to you tonight, there are young Salvadoran soldiers in the field facing the terrorists and guerrillas in El Salvador with the clips in their rifles the only ammunition they have. The lack of evacuation helicopters for the wounded and the lack of medical supplies if they are evacuated has resulted in one out of three of the wounded dying. This is no way to support friends -- particularly when supporting them is supporting ourselves. Last week, as we returned across the vast Pacific to Alaska, I could not help:being.:struck again by how blessed has been our Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 - Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0 Page. 18 -has troubled the world. But clearly, our world is shrinking. land For 200 yearsj, the oceans have protected us from much that economic vitality, and our precious way of life. cannot pretend otherwise if we wish to protect our freedom, our the. Administration, you as-citizens,-- and your Represen.tat!ives in the Congress. The people of Central America can succeed ji:f we provide the assistance I have. proposed. We"Americans shouldtbbe proud of what we are trying to do in Thank.you, God bless you, and good night.. here in the Americas;: South, Central, or North. Let us show the world that we want no hostile, communist colonies and economic growth, while preserving peace so close to home. 'can do in'Central-Am'erica -- to support democracy, human rights, Central America, and!.proud of what, together with our friends, we Approved For Release 2008/08/29: CIA-RDP86M00886RO01900170007-0