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only arms race. Even little wars
are dangerous in a nuclear world.
The long labor of peace is an
undertaking for all nations --
and in this effort none of us can
remain unaligned. To this goal
none can be uncommitted.
The reduction of global
tension must not be an excuse for
the narrow pursuit of self-interest.
If the Soviet Union and the United
States, with all their global inter-
ests and clashing commitments of
ideology, and with nuclear weapons
still a imed at each other, can find
areas of common interest and
agreement, then surely other
Document source description
This file contains materials collected by the office of President John F. Kennedy's secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, concerning President Kennedy's address to the 18th General Assembly of the United Nations. In his speech the President discusses the recently signed treaty banning atmospheric nuclear weapons tests (later known as the Partial Test Ban Treaty or Limited Test Ban Treaty), remarking that peace may be attainable when two nations with incompatible ideologies negotiate with each other. The President famously asks, "Space offers no problems of sovereignty…Why, therefore, should man's first flight to the moon be a matter of national competition?" President Kennedy also explains that the task of maintaining peace and decreasing global tension must be shared by all nations. He proposes ways for the United Nations to increase and improve their efforts in developing countries, specifically focusing on health, human rights, agriculture, communication, and the environment. Materials in this folder include drafts by Special Assistant to the President and speechwriter Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., a press copy, and a reading copy of the speech with handwritten notations by the President, in addition to memoranda from Schlesinger and Adlai Stevenson, Ambassador to the United Nations.
Page data
- Page
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- Source index
- 0
- Type
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- Media ID
- d982efae79285e28
- Size
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Document data
- ID
- 193905
- Core
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- Type
- document
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"ocrText": "- 9 -\nonly arms race. Even little wars\nare dangerous in a nuclear world.\nThe long labor of peace is an\nundertaking for all nations --\nand in this effort none of us can\nremain unaligned. To this goal\nnone can be uncommitted.\nThe reduction of global\ntension must not be an excuse for\nthe narrow pursuit of self-interest.\nIf the Soviet Union and the United\nStates, with all their global inter-\nests and clashing commitments of\nideology, and with nuclear weapons\nstill a imed at each other, can find\nareas of common interest and\nagreement, then surely other"
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