NSDD 257 Guidance to the United States Delegation for Negotiations with Western Europe, Japan, and Canada on the Space Station
Images (6)
Document
| id |
id
6879836
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 6CUNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
Guidance
1. Maintain the initiative in the negotiations and seek to
focus discussions on U.S. draft texts consistent with policy
guidance.
2. Seek mutually beneficial agreements on participation in
the detailed design, development, operation, and utilization of
the civil Space Station by friends and allies of the U.S., specifi-
cally Western Europe, Japan, and Canada.
3. Ensure consistency throughout the agreement with the
following definitions: The U.S. has a Space Station program which
will produce the core U.S. Space Station. The international
participants each have programs to produce hardware elements which
will add to the capabilities of the core U.S. Space Station.
Together, the core U.S. Space Station and the international
hardware elements will be referred to as "the Space Station
Complex. The term partners in resulting international agreements
will refer to the Republic of Austria, the Kingdom of Belgium, the
Government of Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark, the French Republic,
the Federal Republic of Germany, the Republic of Ireland, the
Italian Republic, the Government of Japan, the Kingdom of the
Netherlands, the Kingdom of Norway, the Kingdom of Spain, the
Kingdom of Sweden, the Swiss Confederation, the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and the United States of
America. Collectively, the agreements will define the relation-
ship between and among, and the respective obligations of, the
partners.
4. Ensure that the framework for international participation
in the Space Station program demonstrates the benefits of working
with the U.S. in space, so that cooperation with our friends and
allies will continue in the future and these countries will
associate their programs with ours.
5. Ensure that any international participation strengthens
the ability of the United States to operate a Space Station with
enhanced capabilities in the mid-1990s for U.S. users, including
government, scientific, and commercial users.
6. Ensure that any foreign participants recognize and agree
that the United States may use the U.S. elements of the Space
Station and the Canadian-provided Mobile Servicing Center for
national security purposes, consistent with U.S. Law and U.S.
international obligations, without their consent or necessarily
their review.
7. Ensure that the U.S. scientific community and U.S.
private sector entities will have appropriate opportunities to use
U.S. elements of the Space Station and the U.S. share of other
elements, within the U.S. allocation of utilization resources.
$
"INCLASSIFIED
CONFIDENTIAL
Relations
belongs_to