DRAFT NSSD 11-82

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CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8
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RIPPUB
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S
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16
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December 22, 2016
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September 2, 2010
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13
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Publication Date: 
September 9, 1982
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MEMO
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 c - - .. .. C. .7 F."O J.1 J_ V C I R7-574611 1 September 9, 1982 SECRET/SENSITIVE Interagency Group No. 30 TO :OVP NsC" ACDA USDA .CIA Commerce Defense JCS Treasury UNA USIA Mr. Donald P. Gregg - Mr. Michael 0. Wheeler Mr. Joseph Presel Mr. Raymond Lett Mrs. Helen Ro ins COL John Stanford MAJ Dennis Stanley Mr. David Pickford Amb. Harvey Feldman Ms. Teresa Collins SUBJECT: Draft NSSD 11-82 In response to tasking assigned by Interagency Group No. 30 on August 27, the attached State draft, with Defense inputs, addresses topics 4 & 5 of NSSD 11-82. In accordance with instructions contained in NSSD 11-82, addressees should handle this material on a strict need-to-know basis. There will a meeting of the IG chaired by Assistant Secretary Designate Richard Burt at 3:00 p.m., September 14 in Room 6226, Department of. State. The meeting will consider the draft submissions by State/Defense and CIA and consider next steps in the policy review process. Yu- Ill rBy-elf -; 1. State Draft SECRET/SENSITIVE Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 II. Meeting the Soviet Challenge The Soviet propensity for challenging the West and running risks to undermine U.S. interests requires a sustained Western response if. Soviet ambitions are to be frustrated. It is also clear that the necessary firm and measured long-term Western response to -th Soviet challenge requires that the United States exercise.-. -y its capacity for leadership. This demands a comprehensive, long-term U.S. effort to induce Soviet restraint by shaping the-environment in which Soviet policy decisions are made. A. Shapin the Soviet Environment (1) The Military Balance Foremost i. shaping the military environment Moscow faces is the US-Soviet Military balance.. The U.S. must modernize its military forces so that several goals are achieved:. --Soviet 1'a.ders must perceive that the U.S. is determined never to accept a second-place or deteriorating strategic posture. Doubts about the military. capabilities of U.S. strategic nuclear deterrent forces, or about the U.S. will to use them if necessary, mush never exist; --Soviet. calculations of possible nuclear war outcomes, under any contingenck, must always result in outcomes so unfavorable to the USSR that here would be no incentive for the Soviet leaders to initiate a uclear attack; --Leaders Ind the publics in all states must be able to observe that tli.s indicator of U.S. strength remains at a position of parity or'b4t.ter. They will then understand that U.S. capacity for pursuing the broader-US-Soviet competition shall not be encumbered by 4irect Soviet coercion of the U.S.; --The-futu e of U.S. military.strength must. also.appear to. friend and foe Ias strong: technological advances must be exploited, research and development vigorously pursued, and sensible follow-on programs undertaken so that the viability of U.S. deterrent policy is not placed in question. In Europe, the Soviet leadership must be faced with a rein- vigorated NATO focused on three primary tasks: strengthening of conventional. forces, modernization of intermediate-range nuclear forces, and- improved mobility and sustainability for U.S. units assigned rapidldeployment and other reinforcing missions to the NATO area and Southwest Asia. Worldwide, U.S. general-purpose forces must be ready to move quickly from peacetime'to wartime roles, and -muse. beflexible to affect Soviet calculations in a wide range of contingencies. SECRET Declassify on: OADR Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02: CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -2- The US-Soviet military balance is also a critical determinant shaping Third world perceptions of the'relative positions and influence of of the two major powers. Moscow must know with certainty that, in addition to the obvious priority of North American defense, Eurasian and other areas of vital interest to the U.S. will be defended against Soviet attacks or threats. But it must know also that areas less critical to U.S. interests cannot be attacked or'_threatened without serious risk of U.S. military .support and: _.of potential confrontation in that or_.some other..area. O Cooperation with Our Allies: One of the central propositions of U.S. foreign policy through- out the post-waf period. has been that an effective response to the Soviet challenge requires close partnership among the industrial democracies. A~ the same time, there will-continue to be inevitable tensions between our unwillingness to give the allies a veto over our Soviet policy, and our need for allied support in making our policy work. More effective procedures for consultation with our allies can contribute to the building of consensus-and cushion the impact of i.ntra-alliance disagreements. However, we must recognize that, on occasion, we may be forced to act to protect our vital interests without allied support and even in the face of allied opposition. Our allies have been slow to support in concrete ways our overall approach to East-West relations. In part because of the intensive program of consultation we have undertaken, allied governments have expressed rhetorical support for our assessment of the Soviet military challenge, our rearmament program, and our. negotiating positions in START and INF. Less progress has been made in obtaini g allied action-in the vital areas of upgrading conventional defense and-in planning for joint military action to protect vital Western interests in the developing world, particu- larly the Persian Gulf. With INF deployments scheduled to begin in 193, West European governments will come under increasing domestic pressure to press us for progress in START and INF. In the likely absence of an acceptable INF agreement with.Moscow, we. may-noed during 1983 to subordinate some other policy initiatives with our allies to the overriding objective of obtaining allied action to move forward on INF deployments. Alithough it will be more difficult to achieve adurable consensus with our allies on East-West economic issues, we must seek to do so. The current intra-alliance dispute over exports for the pipeline underscores European (and Japanese) unwillingness to support a stI~ategy which they see as aimed at undermining the detente of the 1970s. Nonetheless, we must continue to persevere in this painful process of reeducating our.-European partners. At the sc SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90BO1013R000300490013-8 SECRET -3- to t mode supp e possibility of improved relations with the USSR if Moscow ates its b havior will be important to obtaining allied rt. 3) Third World Cooperation s in the 1970s, the cutting edge of the Soviet challenge to vita U.S._Lmterests in this decade is likely to be in the Third World. Thus,.-we-must continue our efforts to. rebuild the credi- bility of. our commitment to resist Soviet. encroachment on our interests and.. those of our allies and friends and to support effectively-those Third World states that are willing to resist Soviet pressures. We must where possible erode the advances of Soviet influenc in the developing world. made during the 1970s. capa. Thin mili sale: arou: assi; and tary suppi to di brin4 -Thiri dipl the prom expl disp stat prox reci deve priv free whil mode U.S. that free the prog iven the continued improvement of Moscow's force projection ilities and the Soviet emphasis on arms aid to pro-Soviet World clients,- any effective U.S. response must involve a ary dimension. U.S. security assistance and foreign military play an important role in shaping the security environment d the periphery of the USSR and beyond Eurasia. But security tance will not be enough unless we make clear to the Soviets o our friends that the U.S. is prepared to use its own mili- forces where necessary to protect vital U.S. interests and rt endangered friends and allies. Above all, we must be able - monstrate the capability and the will for timely action to U.S. resoirces to bear in response to fast-moving events in World tro6ble spots. n effective U.S. policy in the Third World must also involve matic initiatives (e.g.,.the President's Mid-East proposal, aribbean Basin Initiative, and the Namibia initiative) to te the resolution of regional crises vulnerable to Soviet itation. The U.S. should counter, and if possible weaken or ace, Soviet aid relationships, particularly those involving s that host a Soviet military presence or act as Soviet es. This of course requires corresponding changes in the. ient states international policies. The U.S. must also op an appropriate mixture of economic assistance programs and to sector initiatives to demonstrate the relevance of the economies to the economic problems of the developing world, exposing the bankruptcy of the Soviet economic and.. political In this connection, we must develop the means to extend support to individuals and movements in the developing world share our commitment.to political democracy and individual om. We have forsaken much of the competition by not having inds of long-term political cadre and organization building ams which the Soviets conduct. . Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -4- Possibly the greatest obstacle we face in carrying out this appr ach in the developing world is the problem of obtaining adequate budgetary resources. As in the case of our rearmament program, pressures for budgetary restraint are certain to generate call for reduction of the resources devoted to meeting the Soviet .chal enge in the developing world. These pressures must be .resi ted if we are to be able to meet our commitments and secure our ital _i.n-terests.-, 4) Tbe-Soviet Empire (Eastern Europe, Cuba, Third World Alliances). As noted ablve,.there are a number of important vulnerabilities and weaknesses within the Soviet empire which the U.S. should seek to a acerbate and exploit. This will involve differentiated poli ies, e.g. $ngola is different from Poland, Cuba is different from Vietnam. We will need a different mix of tools for each. The pros ects for change may be greater on the extremities of Soviet powe (Soviet alliances in the developing world) than closer to the enter of the Soviet empire (Eastern Europe) -.- though the latt r obviously offers potential as well. astern Europe: Although the Polish crackdown cut short a pro- cess of peaceful change, the continuing instability in that country is certain to have far-reaching repercussions throughout Eastern Euro e. In addition, the deteriorating economic position of East Euro can countries and the possible long-term drying up of Western reso rces flowing to the region will force them to face some diffcult choices: greater dependence on the Soviets and relative stag ation; or reforms to generate a renewal of Western resources. he primary U.S. objective in Eastern Europe is to loosen Mosc w's hold on the region. We can advance this objective by care ully discriminating in favor of countries-that show relative inde endence from the USSR in their foreign policy, or show a Brea er degree Hof internal liberalization. This policy of diff rentiation in Eastern Europe is the subject of NSSD 5-82. Afghanistan: Possibly the. most important single vulnerability in tie Soviet Empire is Afghanistan, where Moscow's imperial reach has ogged Soviet forces down in a stalemated struggle to suppress the fghan resistance. A withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghani- stan followed by a real exercise of self-determinat,ion.by the Afgh n people would encourage other democratic and nationalist forc s within the Soviet Empire and increase the likelihood that othe .Third..World countries would resist Soviet pressures. Thus, our bjective:sihould be to keep maximum pressure on Moscow for with rawal and to ensure that the Soviets' political and other cost remain high while the occupation continues.: Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -5- Cuba: The challenge to U.S. interests represented by Moscow's alliance with Cuba requires an effective U.S. response. The Soviet-Cuban challenge has three critical dimensions (as well as numerous otherlproblems): -- Soviet deliveries of advanced weapons to Havana: The flow of advanced_Sotiet weapons to Cuba has accelerated so as to repre- sent a growitng threat to the security of other Latin American countries and, in the case of potentially nuclear-capable systems, the U.S. itself. We must be prepared to take strong counter- measures to offset the political/military impact of these deliveries. -- Soviet-supported Cuban destabilizing activities in Central America: The U.S. response must involve bilateral economic and military assistance to friendly governments in the region, as well as multilatera] initiatives to deal with the political, economic, and social sources of instability. We should retain the option of direct action against Cuba, while making clear our willingness seriously to address Cuba's concerns if Havana is willing. to reduce its dependence on and cooperation with the Soviet Union. We should also take steps to prevent or neutralize the impact of transfers of advanced Soviet weapons to Nicaragua. -- Soviet-Cuban interventionism in Southern Africa: We should counter and reduce Soviet and Cuban influence by strengthening our own relations sith friendly African states, and by energetic leadership of he diplomatic effort to bring about a Cuban with- drawal from Angola in the context of a Namibia settlement and appropriate extiernal guarantees of Angola's security. Soviet Third World Alliances: Our policy should seek to weaken and, where possible, undermine the existing links between the Soviet Union and its Third World allies and clients. In implementing this policy, we will need to take into account the unique circumstances which influence the degree of cohesion between the Soviet Union and each of its Third World allies. In some cases, these ties are so strong as to make the Third World state a virtual proxy or surrogate of the Soviet Union. We should be prepared to work with our allies and Third World friends to neutralize the activities of these Soviet proxies. In other cases, ties between the Soviet Union and a Third world client may be tenuous or subject to strains which a nuanced U.S.-policy can exploit to move the Third World state away from the Soviet orbit. Our policy should be flexible enough to take advantage of these opportunities.I Finally, we should seek.where possible and prudent to encourage democratic movements and forces to bring about political change inside these countries. SECRET. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -6- (5) China The continuing Sino-Soviet rift -- motivated by racial enmity, ideological competition and security concerns -- provides the U.S. with some leverage over Soviet international behavior. However, our ability to capitalize on these potential strategic advantages depends upon. the durability of the Sino-American rapprochement. Given the. -Soviets' strategic interest in undermining Sino-American relations, and particularly in preventing U.S. arms assistance to China, we. can expect that Moscow will seek to disrupt our rela- tions with.Beijing. We will have to remain alert to such Soviet maneuvers and be prepared to counter them with initiatives of our own. Equally, we will need to manage carefully our relations with Beijing to avoid giving Moscow any exploitable opportunities. B. Bilateral Relationships It will be important to develop policies which give us maximum leverage over Soviet internal policies. Even though we recognize the limits of our capabilities to influence Soviet domestic trends and developments, the U.S., especially when working together with our allies, does have some capability to influence Soviet resource allocation through a variety of policy initiatives, such as our own defense spending and East-West trade policies. Through our radio broadcasting and other informational programs directed toward the Soviet Union, we may be able to accelerate the already advanced erosion of the regime's credibility with its own people, thus weakening the ideological basis for Soviet external expansionism. We also can offer private. and other forms of assistance to forces seeking to promote democratic change. We can publicly and through quiet diplomacy seek to advance the cause of individual human rights in the Soviet Union. Despite the post-Afghanistan, post-Poland attenuation of US-Soviet bilateral ties, there remain sectors of the bilateral relationship that are important to Moscow and thus to any effort to induce moderation of Soviet conduct. (1) Arms Control Arms control negotiations, pursued soberly and without illu- sions, are an important part of our overall national.. security policy. We should be willing to enter into arms-control negotia- tions when they serve our national security objectives. At the same time,. we must make clear to the allies as well as-to the USSR that our ability to reach satisfactory results will inevitably be influenced by the international situation and the overall state of US-Soviet relations. However,'we'should be under no illusions that ongoing arms control negotiations will give us leverage sufficient to produce Soviet.restraint on other international issues. SECRET' Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -7- U.S. arms control proposals should be consistent with necessary force modernization plans and should seek to achieve balanced, sig- nificant, and verifiable reductions to equal levels of comparable armaments. The START, INF, and MBFR proposals we have tabled meet these criteria and would, if accepted by the Soviets, help ensure the survivability of our nuclear deterrent and thus enhance U.S. national security. The fact that START and INF negotiations have begun has--for the present somewhat reduced public pressure on us and on Allied Governments for early arms control agreements with Moscow. .Ia the absence of progress in START and INF, however, we should expect that pressure to grow again. (2) 'Economic Policy U.S. policy on economic relations with the USSR must be seen in a strategic context. At a minimum, we must ensure that US- Soviet economic relationships do not facilitate the buildup of Soviet military power. We must also bear in mind that U.S. controls on the critical elements of trade can also influence Soviet prospects for hard-currency earnings, and raise the cost of maintaining their present rate of defense spending. We need, to develop policies which use the leverage inherent in U.S.. and Western economic strength to modify Soviet. behavior over time. Thus, our economic policies should provide negative and, where appropriate, positive incentives for more responsible Soviet behavior, while avoiding any subsidies of Soviet economic develop- ment. Although unilateral steps may be necessary for certain strategic or political imperatives, agreement with the Allies on the fundamental ground rules of trade will be essential if we are to take advantage of Soviet economic weaknesses. There are, however, real limits to Western leverage on. the Soviet economy. The Soviet system is still basically autarchic, and the USSR can substantially protect itself against foreign economic pressure. The difficulty of organizing effective multi- lateral restrictions on trade with the USSR. is illustrated by our experience with the grain trade. Given the enormous Soviet difficulties in agriculture and the growing Soviet dependence on grain imports, suspension of grain trade by all Western and Third World suppliers would be a potentially important source of leverage over Soviet behavior. However, it proved impossible.to organize effective, sustained multilateral restrictions on international grain trade with the Soviet Union during the'period of the post-Afghanistan grain embargo.' This permitted the Soviets to shift their grain purchases from-the U.S. to other suppliers,.thus minimizing the impact of the grain embargo. 'Other major grain suppliers remain unwilling-to contemplate restrictions on-.grain exports to the USSR, thus-. unilateral. restrictions by the U.S. would impose costs SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET on U.S. farmers without giving us additional leverage over Soviet behavior. Under these circumstances, U.S. grain sales should be permitted to proceed, while still subject to overall foreign policy control. While recognizing the problems and difficulties inherent in developing a unified Western approach to economic relations with Moscow, we---should nonetheless seek a consensus including the following basic elements: 1. Credits. The key objective is agreement on common restrictions on official credits and guarantees to the USSR and establishment of a mechanism to monitor official credits and guarantees. 2. Technology Transfer. The policy should include a unified. and strengthened. position on military-related high technology and equipment containing that technology. 3. Energy. The objectives here are twofold: a) to reach consensus on the need to minimize Western dependence on Soviet energy supplies; and b) to enhance Western leverage in this key sector by agreement on the equipment and technology to be made available to the USSR. 4. Foreign Policy Controls. There must be allied consensus that foreign policy, i.e. non-strategic, controls on trade with the Soviets may be imposed, primarily in crises, in support of clear objectives and with criteria for removal of the controls. 5. Differentiation. The traditional approach of treating each of the East European countries as distinct entities on the basis of their own policies will be maintained. This offers the best opportunity to encourage pluralism and independence in East European countries. (3) Official Dialogue We can expect the Soviets to continue to press us-for a return to a US-Soviet agenda centered on arms control. We must continue to resist this tactic and insist that Moscow address the full range of our concerns about their international behavior if' our relations are to improve. US-Soviet diplomatic contacts on regional issues can serve our interests if they are used to keep pressure on Moscow for responsible behavior and to drive home that we will act to ensure that the costs of irresponsibility are high. We can also. use such contacts to make clear. that the way to pragmatic solutions of regional problems is open if Moscow is willing seriously to' address'our concerns.. At the same time, such contacts must be, SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -9- handled with care to avoid offering the Soviet Union a role in regional questions which it would not otherwise secure. A continuing dialogue with the Soviets at the level of Foreign Minister is essential, both to facilitate necessary diplomatic communication with the Soviet leadership and to maintain allied understand-ing. and support for our approach to East-West relations- Secretary Haig met with Gromyko on three occasions between September 1981 and June 1982, and this pattern of frequent Ministerial-level contacts should be maintained in the future. We can expect that the question of a possible US-Soviet summit will continue to be raised by the Soviets, our allies, and impor- tant segments of domestic opinion. Every American President since Franklin Roosevelt has met with his Soviet counterpart. In some cases, U.S. Presidents have.attended summits for the purpose of establishing personal contact with their counterparts (e.g. Kennedy in Vienna) or in the vague expectation that an improvement in US- Soviet relations would flow from the summit (e.g. Johnson at Glasboro). In other cases,'allied pressures for East-West dialogue at the Head'of State level have played a major role in the Presi- dential decision to meet at:the summit (e.g. Eisenhower at Geneva and Paris). The approach to summitry which prevailed throughout the 1970s held that American Presidents should not meet with their Soviet counterparts until there were concrete US-Soviet agreements ready to serve as the centerpeice'of the summit. However, these summits did not always produce durable improvements in US-Soviet relations, and sometimes complicated management of US-Soviet relations by generating expectations that could not be realized. In any summit between President Reagan and his Soviet counter- part we would want to ensure that concrete, positive results were achievable. We would also need to ensure that any summit were timed to achieve.the maximum possible positive impact in terms of U.S. interests. ' .(4) Assertion of Values The U.S. relationship with the Soviet Union must have an'ideo- logical content which asserts the superiority of Western values of freed-om, individual dignity, and political democracy over the repressive and authoritarian character of Soviet society. We need to create a sense that history is' moving in the direction of forces which support-free elections, free enterprise, a free press, and free trade unions. We need specific programs to support this offensive.. Among the instruments which we should'employ are: SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 r Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90BO1013R000300490013-8 SECRET -10- --Increased U.S...informational efforts directed at the Soviet Union,._particularly VOA and RFE/RL; --A systematic and energetic U.S. effort to counter Soviet disinformation and "active measures" campaigns directed at U.S. Interests; --A positive and assertive effort to support democratic elements in both communist and non-communist countries, taking into account the special requirements and vulnerabilities of democratic forces seeking to survive in a hostile environment. The role of US-Soviet cultural, scientific, and other coopera- tive exchanges should be seen in light of our intention to maintain a:strong ideological component in our relations with Moscow. We should not further dismantle the framework of cooperative exchanges which remains from the 1970s unless new incidents of Soviet irresponsibility require us further to attenuate the US-Soviet bilateral relationship. We should look at ways exchanges can be used to further our ideological offensive. III. Priorities in the U.S. Approach: Maximizing our Restraining Leverage over Soviet Behavior The interrelated tasks of rebuilding American capacity for world leadership and constraining and, over time, reducing Soviet international influence cannot be accomplished quickly. We face a critical transition period over the next five years, and our success in managing US-Soviet relations during this period may well determine whether we are able to attain our long-term objectives. Despite the long-term vulnerabilities of the Soviet system, we can expect that Soviet military power will continue to grow throughout the 1980s. Moreover, the Soviet Union will have every incentive to prevent us from reversing the trends of the last decade which have shifted the world power balance in Moscow's favor. Thus, the coming 5-10 years will be a period of consider- able uncertainty in which the Soviets will test our resolve. These. uncertainties, moreover, will be exacerbated by the fact that the Soviet Union will be engaged in the. unpredictable process of political succession to Brezhnev. As noted above, we cannot predict with confidence what policies the various succession contenders-will espouse. Consequently, we should not seek to adjust our policies to the Soviet internal conflict, but rather try to create incentives (positive and negative) for any new leadership to adopt policies less detrimental to U.S. interests. Our posture should be one of a willingness to deal,-on the basis of the policy approach we have taken.since the beginning. of the Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90BO1013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -11- Administration, with whichever leadership group emerges. We would underscore that we remain ready for improved US-Soviet relations if the Soviet Union makes significant -changes in policies of concern to us; the burden for any further deterioration' in relations would fall squarely on Moscow. We shouldibe under no illusion about the extent of our capa- bilities--to.-restrain the Soviet Union while American strength is being rebuzlt.i Throughout the coming decade, our rearmament program will be subject to the uncertainties of the budget process and the U..S.. domestic debate on national security. In addition, our reassertion of leadership with our allies, while necessary for the long-termirevitalization of our alliances, is certain to create periodic- intea!-alliance disputes that may provide the Soviets with opportunities for wedge driving. Our effort to reconstruct the credibility ofj U.S.. commitments in the Third World will also depend upon our ability to sustain over time commitments of resources, despite budgetlary stringencies. As noted above, these constraints on our capacity to shape the Soviet international environment will be accompanied by real limits on our capacity to use the US-Soviet bilateral relaationship as leverage to restrain Soviet behavior. The existing and projected gap between our finite resources and the level of capabilities needed to constrain Soviet inter- national behavior makes it essential that we: 1) establish firm priorities for the use of limited U.S. resources where they will have the greatest restraining impact on the Soviet Union; and 2) mobilize the resources of our European and Asian allies and our Thi rd World f lends who a e willing to join with us in containing t1ie expansion of Soviet Power. (1) U.S. !Priorities Underlyingli the full range of U.S. and Western policies must be aistrong military, capable of acting across the entire spectrum of potential conflicts and guided by a well conceived political and military strategy. The heart of U.S. military'strategy is to'deter attack by the USSR and its allies against the U.S., our allies, or other important countries, and to defeat such an attack should deterrence fail. Achieving this strategic aim largely rests, as in the past, on a strong U.S. capability for unilateral military action. Strategic nuclear forces remain an important element of that capability, but the importance of other force's'-- nuclear and conventional - has risen in the current era of strategic nuclear parity. Although uinilateral U.S. efforts must lead the way in rebuild- ing Western military strength to counter the Soviet threat, the protection of Western interests will require increased U.S.. coop- eration with allied and other states and greater utilization of SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -12- their resources. U.S. military strategy must be better integrated with national strategies of allies and friends, and U.S. defense programs must consider allied arrangements in the planning stage. U.S. military strategy for successfully contending with peace- time, crisis, and wartime contingencies involving the USSR on a global basis is detailed in NSSD 1-82. This military strategy must be combined with a political strategy focused on the following objectives: -- Creating a long-term western consensus for dealing with the Soviet-Union. This will require that the U.S. exercise strong leadership in developing policies to deal with the multi- faceted Soviet threat to Western interests. It will also require that the U.S. take allied concerns into account. In this connection, and in addition to pushing the allies to spend more on defense, we must attach a high priority to a serious effort to negotiate arms control agreements consistent with our military strategy, our force modernization plans, and our overall approach to arms control. We must also develop, together with our allies, a unified Western approach to East-West economic-relations consistent with the U.S. policy outlined in this study. -- Effective opposition to Moscow's efforts to consolidate its position in Afghanistan. This will require that we continue efforts to promote Soviet withdrawal in the context of a nego- tiated settlement of the conflict. At the same time, we should keep pressure on Moscow for withdrawal and ensure that Soviet costs on the ground remain high. -- Maintenance of international pressure on Moscow to permit a relaxation of the current repression in Poland and a longer term increase in diversity and independence throughout Eastern Europe. This will require that we continue to impose costs on the Soviet Union for its behavior in Poland. It will also require that we maintain a U.S. policy of differentiation among East European countries. -- Building and sustaining a major ideological political offensive which, together with other efforts, will be designed to bring about change inside the Soviet Union itself. This must be a long-term program, given the nature of the Soviet system. -- Maintenance of our strategic relationship with China, thus minimizing opportunities for .a Sino-Soviet rapprochement. -- Neutralization and reduction of the threat to U.S. national security interests posed by the Soviet-Cuban relationship. SECRET Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8 SECRET -13- This will require that we use a variety of instruments, including diplomatic efforts such as the Contact Group Namibia/ Angola initiative. U.S. security and economic assistance in Latin America will-also be essential. However, we must retain the option of direct use of U.S. military forces to protect vital U.S. security interests against threats which may arise from the Soviet-Cuban connection. (2) Cooperation with our Allies As noted throughout this paper, we must cooperate with our allies to restrain Soviet expansionism. Only the U.S. can diirectly counterbalance Soviet power, but our allies can often more effectively intervene in regions of historic interest to maintain peace, limit opportunities for Soviet opportunism, and oppose Soviet surrogate activity. While rejecting a unilateralist approach, we cannot permit our approach to US-Soviet relations to reflect only the lowest common denominator of allied consensus. The challenge we face from the Soviet Union requires U.S. leadership which will inevitably lead to periodic disagreements in an alliance of free nations, such as NATO. This is an enduring dilemma which has confronted American Administrations throughout the postwar period. It cannot be finally resolved, but it must be managed effectively if we are to maintain the unity of purpose among free nations on which U.S. security depends. IV. Articulating Our Approach: Sustaining Public and Congressional Support The policy outlined above is a strategy for the long haul. We should have no illusions that it will yield a rapid breakthrough in our relations with the Soviet Union. In the absence of dramatic near-term victories in our effort to moderate Soviet behavior, pressure is likely to mount for change in our policy. We can expect appeals from important segments of domestic opinion for a more "normal' US-Soviet relationship. This is inevitable given the historic American intolerance of ambiguity and complexity in foreign affairs. Moscow may believe that if pressure from allies and publics does not drive this Administration back to Soviet- style peaceful coexistence and detente, the USSR can hunker down and concentrate on neutralizing the Reagan foreign policy until a new, more pliable U.S. Administration emerges. We must therefore demonstrate that the American people will support the policy we have outlined. This will require that we avoid generating unrealizable expectations for near-term progress in US-Soviet relations. At the same time, we must demonstrate credibly that our policy is not.a blueprint for an:open-ended, sterile confrontation with Moscow, but a -serious - search for a stable and constructive long-term basis for US-Soviet relations. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90B01013R000300490013-8