Images (5)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
6879611
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 5SECRET
SYSTEM II
THE WHITE HOUSE
90003
SECRET
WASHINGTON
September 21, 1981
NATIONAL SECURITY DECISION
DIRECTIVE NUMBER 10
THE FUTURE POLITICAL STATUS OF MICRONESIA
The United States has administered the Trust Territory of the
Pacific Islands, generally referred to as Micronesia, since
1947 under a strategic Trusteeship Agreement with the United
Nations Security Council. The United States has broad and
continuing interests in Micronesia which derive primarily
from our strategic defense requirements and treaty commitments;
from international considerations, including our philosophical
commitment to the right of self-determination and our equiva-
lent Trusteeship Agreement obligation; and from agency-specific
interests and requirements.
The United States has developed self-government in the Trust
Territory in accordance with its Trusteeship obligation. Palau,
the Marshall Islands and the Federated States of Micronesia
(FSM) each has an elected constitutional government. Negoti-
ations for a new political status for the Trust Territory have
been in progress since 1969 and have been concluded with respect
to a fourth component of the Trust Territory, the Northern
Mariana Islands, which approved in 1975 a "covenant to Establish
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Political
Union with the United States (P.L. 94-241, March 24, 1976) . (U)
Since 1970, leaders of Palau, the Marshall Islands and the FSM
have consistently advocated a different but still close political
relationship with the United States known as free association.
This unprecedented political status would ensure the continuation
of our vital security and defense rights in Micronesia and, at
the same time, recognize the competency of the governments of
Palau, the Marshall Islands and the FSM in internal and foreign
affairs. This foreign affairs competency is qualified, however,
by consultation provisions and a bar against foreign affairs
initiatives which the United States unilaterally determines are
inconsistent with its security interests. tst
This political status is defined in a Compact of Free Association
which was initialed by negotiators for the United States and the
three Micronesian governments in 1980. The Compact cannot be
signed now because only five of the sixteen subsidiary agreements
DECLASSIFIED
SECRET
Review Aug 17, 1987
NLRR F05 043 # 4236
BY CA
DOTE 11/8/07
SFCRET
Relations
belongs_to