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Part IV. THE ATLANTIC COMMUNITY AND WESTERN
EUROPE
A. The Atlantic Community-Efforts To Achieve an Equitable
Sharing of the Burden of Common Defense (NATO) and of
the Resources of Economic Development (OECD)
B. European Regional Organizations-Attempts To Reconcile
the Trading Policies of the European Economic Community
(EEC, the "Inner Six") and the European Free Trade
Association (EFTA, the "Outer Seven")
C. The Intergovernmental Committee for European Migration
D. The Problems of Germany and Berlin
E. Relations With Certain Countries of the Area
466-548
466-508
508-532
532-533
533
533-548
533-534
534-536
536-540
541-542
542-543
A. Efforts To Improve Soviet-United States Understanding-
Preparations for the Kennedy-Khrushchev Meeting at
Vienna
559-573
B. Efforts To Improve Soviet-United States Understanding the
Kennedy-Khrushchev Meeting at Vienna.
574-583
C. The Aftermath of the Kennedy-Khrushchev Meeting at
Vienna-United States-Soviet Confrontation on the Issues
of Germany and Berlin.
584-670
PART VII. THE NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST.
671-701
A. The Central Treaty Organization (CENTO).
B. The Palestine Refugee Problem.
673-675
675-682
C. Observance of the Arab-Israel General Armistice Agreements
of 1949.
683-686
D. The United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF)
686-691
E. Activities Under the American (Eisenhower) Doctrine for
the Middle East.
691
F. Relations With and Concerning Certain Countries of the
Area..
D. The Union of South Africa, and South-West Africa
E. Status and Pending Independence of the Trust Territories
and Other Dependencies in Africa.
898
899-926
926-935
PART IX. THE FAR EAST, SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA .
937-1058
A. The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)
B. Consultations Under the ANZUS Treaty
938-943
943
C. The Colombo Plan
D. Relations With Certain Countries and Concerning Certain
Problems of the Area
944-1057
E. Status and Pending Independence of Trust Territories of the
Western Pacific. .
1057-1058
The Washington Phase of United States-Soviet Bilateral
Discussions on General Disarmament (June 19-30, 1961). 1074-1079
The Moscow Phase of United States-Soviet Bilateral
Discussions on General Disarmament (July 17-29, 1961). 1079–1083
The New York Phase of United States-Soviet Bilateral
Discussions on General Disarmament (September 6-19,
1961)
United Nations General Assembly Consideration of
General Disarmament (September 20-December 20,
1083-1091
D. The Problem of Preventing the Wider Dissemination of
Nuclear Weapons and of Creating Atom-Free Zones
E. The Problem of Guaranteeing the Exploration and Use of
Outer Space for Peaceful Purposes.
PART X. DISARMAMENT EFFORTS AND THE PEACEFUL
USES OF ATOMIC ENERGY-Continued
C. The Problem of Effecting a Cessation of Nuclear Weapon
Tests and of Preventing a Harmful Increase in Levels of
Radioactivity.
1118-1184
1184-1190
1190-1205
F. International, Regional, and Bilateral Cooperation in the
Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy.
1205-1217
A. Measures Taken To Redress the United States Unfavorable
International Balance of Payments Situation
1218-1233
C. Export Controls and Policy.
B. Measures Taken To Liberalize International Trade
D. The "Food for Peace" and Agricultural Trade Development
and Assistance (Public Law 480) Programs .
PART XII. THE FOREIGN ASSISTANCE AND RELATED
AID PROGRAMS
CATIONAL
PART XIII. THE INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION, EDU-
EXCHANGE, AND CULTURAL
LIST OF DOCUMENTS
PART I. PRINCIPLES AND OBJECTIVES OF
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
The State of the Union: Annual Message of the President
(Eisenhower) to the Congress, Transmitted January 12, 1961.
1. The Federal Budget for Fiscal Year 1962: Message From the
President (Eisenhower) to the Congress, Transmitted Janu-
ary 16, 1961-Selected Tables
2. "This Evening I Come to You With a Message of Leavetaking
and Farewell": Address by the President (Eisenhower) to the
Nation, January 17, 1961
...
3. "Now the Trumpet Summons Us Again . . . To Bear the Burden
of a Long Twilight Struggle . . . Against the Common Ene-
mies of Man-Tyranny, Poverty, Disease, and War Itself":
Inaugural Address of the President (Kennedy), January 20,
1961
4. The State of the Union: Message Read by the President (Ken-
nedy) Before a Joint Session of the Congress, January 30,
5. The Formulation of Foreign Policy: Informal Remarks Made by
the Secretary of State (Rusk) Before Policymaking Officers of
the Department of State, February 20, 1961
"The World Is Moving Rapidly Toward a Historic Watershed
Which May Determine the Shape of Human Society for Gen-
erations and Even Centuries To Come": Address by the Under
Secretary of State (Bowles) Before the Fifty-ninth Annual
Convention of the National Farmers Union, Washington,
March 14, 1961
1
1-3
3-7
7-10
10-22
22-28
28
The Revised Federal Nondefense Budget for Fiscal Year 1962:
Special Message From the President (Kennedy) to the Con-
gress, Transmitted March 24, 1961
* The Revised Federal Defense Budget for Fiscal Year 1962: Spe-
cial Message From the President (Kennedy) to the Congress,
Transmitted March 28, 1961 .
6. Urgent National Needs: Special Message Read by the Presi-
dent (Kennedy) Before a Joint Session of the Congress, May
25, 1961 (Excerpts)
7. "Now Let Us Examine More Precisely What Is Required of Us":
Address by the Under Secretary of State (Bowles) Before the
Annual Convention of the American Booksellers Association,
Washington, June 12, 1961 (Excerpt)
"This Is a Time of National Maturity and Understanding and
Willingness To Face Issues as They Are, Not as We Would
Like Them To Be": Address by the President (Kennedy) at
the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, October 12,
28-37
37-46
47
Unnumbered titles marked with an asterisk indicate that the text of the docu- ment is not printed in this compilation; a source for the text is provided.
(IX)
8. "We Have No Alternative But To Deal With the World as It
Is and To Address Ourselves to the Problems That Actually
Confront Us": Address by the Under Secretary of State
(Bowles) at a Regional Foreign Policy Briefing Conference,
Kansas City, Missouri, October 26, 1961 (Excerpt)
"There Is No Way To Maintain the Frontiers of Freedom With-
out Cost and Commitment and Risk": Remarks by the Presi-
dent (Kennedy) at the Veterans Day Ceremony, Arlington
National Cemetery, November 11, 1961
9. Diplomacy and Defense-A Test of National Maturity: Ad-
dress by the President (Kennedy) at Centennial Exercises,
the University of Washington, Seattle, November 16, 1961
(Excerpt).
10. "We Are Taking Our Part in the Shaping of History" : Address
by the Secretary of State (Rusk) Before the American His-
torical Association, Washington, December 30, 1961
[See also doc. 41.]
PART II. THE UNITED NATIONS, SPECIALIZED AGEN-
CIES, AND DEVELOPMENTS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
A. United States Participation in the United Nations
11. "Our Country's Pride Should Be That We Stood by the United
Nations, the Meetinghouse of the Family of Man, in Its Time
of Hardest Trial": Address by the U.S. Representative at the
U.N. (Stevenson) Before the San Francisco Chapter of the
American Association for the United Nations, October 24,
(Excerpts)
12. United States Participation in the United Nations During 1961:
Letter From the President (Kennedy) to the Congress Trans-
mitting the Sixteenth Annual Report on U.S. Participation in
the U.N., August 2, 1962
B. Review and Improvement of the United Nations Machinery
13. The Use of Extraparliamentary Consultations as a Device for
Improving and Strengthening the Work of the United Nations:
Replies Made by the Secretary of State (Rusk) to Questions
Asked at a News Conference, the University of California,
Berkeley, March 20, 1961 (Excerpts) . . .
14. The Role and Future of the United Nations Organization: Intro-
duction to the Annual Report of the U.N. Secretary-General
(Hammarskjold) on the Work of the U.N. Organization During
the Period June 16, 1960-June 15, 1961, Submitted August 17,
1961 (Excerpt) .
.
15. The United States Position on the Question of Review of the
United Nations Charter: Statement Made by the U.S. Repre-
sentative (Plimpton) in the Committee on Arrangements for a
Conference for the Purpose of Reviewing the Charter, Sep-
tember 14, 1961 .
16. "We Favour a Prompt Solution of the Question Concerning the
Leadership of the United Nations Secretariat, on a Basis Re-
flecting the Real Situation That Obtains in the World Today":
Address by the Soviet Foreign Minister (Gromyko) Before the
U.N. General Assembly, September 26, 1961 (Excerpt)
17. Appointment of an Acting Secretary-General of the United Na-
tions: Resolution 1640 (XVI), Adopted by the U.N. General
Assembly, November 3, 1961 .