White House Press Release, Message from President Harry S. Truman to the United States Senate
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HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
June 11, 1946
CONFIDENTIAL: To be held in STRICT CONFIDENCE and no portion,
synopsis or intimation to be given out or published until the
READING of the President's Message has begun in the Senate.
Extreme care must therefore be exercised to avoid premature
publication.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
TO THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES:
In the autumn of 1944, at the invitation of the United States, an
International Civil Aviation Conference was held in Chicago. The main
purpose and chief result of this Conference was the preparation of an
important treaty, the International Convention on Civil Aviation. On
March 12, 1945, President Roosevelt referred this Convention to the
Senate, with a request for consideration and ratification. It has now
become a matter of urgency to this nation, and to many other nations,
that the Senate act upon the Convention.
The Convention has two major elements: (1) It restates-and codi-
fies the accepted principles of international law pertaining to air
navigation; (2) it provides for the establishment of an International
Civil Aviation Organization.
The parts of the Convention dealing with the principles of
international air law are self-explanatory, and I feel sure that the
Senate will recognize the value of the codification.
Similarly, I believe the proposed International Civil Aviation
Organization will recommend itself to the Senate. The most important
task of this Organization, under the terms of the Convention, will
be the promotion of safety of life in the air. In this connection,
it will develop international standards for airworthiness of aircraft,
for competence of aviation personnel, and for operating practices
and facilities on the international air routes. The Organization
will also study the economic problems of international air transport;
and in certain instances it may be used as an instrument through which
such international aviation facilities and services as airports, radio
aids, and weather information could be internationally financed.
The Organization will come into existence on a permanent basis
when the Convention has been ratified by 26 Governments. It will have
its headquarters in Montreal, Canada. Meanwhile, as is accepted prac-
tice in such undertakings, and in accordance with an Interim Agreement,
the Organization has been temporarily established on a provisional basis.
The Provisional Organization is concerned with the same activities
which will engage the permanent Organization, but it lacks full powers
and its life is limited. It is increasingly apparent that the establish-
ment of the permanent Organization cannot be indefinitely delayed without
damage to interests vital to this and other countries. As matters stand,
the safety regulations can ot be finished or made fully effective, and the
economic activities remain merely exploratory. Meanwhile, as international
air traffic rapidly expands, individual nations and airlines are developing
their own regulations and operating practices. The guidance and authority
of an actively functioning international Organization is urgently needed
to assure the uniform standards required for safety, efficiency, and
economy.
The Convention makes no attempt to cover controversial questions of
commercial aviation rights. It leaves these questions to be settled by
other international agreements, which are entirely independent of the
Convention, and which provide for the reciprocal exchange of commerical
air transport rights. Under authority vested in me, I have actively
undertaken to consummate such agreements, in order to assure the most
favorable development of international civil aviation. Naturally,
agreements of this nature to which the United States is a party are con-
sistent with the requirements of the Civil Aeronautics Act, are valid
under its terms, and fully protect the public interest. Under these
agreements, before foreign air carrier permits are issued by the United
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