| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1981 - 216 pages
...that this program will have no near-term conflicts with either of those documents. Accordingly, it is consistent with our stated policy that, while our...undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union does likewise. However, I would like to comment further on certain arms control implications because... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1981 - 252 pages
...with either of documents. Accordingly, it is consistent with our stated policy that, while our 1ALT review is underway, we will take no actions which will undercut existing 3 Agreements so long as the Soviet Union does likewise. However, I would like to 3=- ximment further... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1983 - 88 pages
...that this program will have no near-term conflicts with either of these documents. Accordingly, it is consistent with our stated policy that while our...undercut existing agreements, so long as the Soviet Union does likewise. Yesterday, Gen. Bennie Davis, commander in chief of the Strategic Air Command, testified... | |
| Notburga K. Calvo-Goller, Michael A. Calvo - 1987 - 464 pages
...existing SALT Agreements... While we are reviewing our SALT policy we will take no action that would undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union exercises the same restraint."978 On May 3, 1981, White House Counselor, Edwin Meese, 3d, stated, during a television... | |
| Keith L. Shimko - 1991 - 294 pages
...a very different signal: "While we are reviewing our SALT policy, we will take no action that would undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union exercises the same restraint" (Talbott 1985, 225). This became the administration's policy, apparently without any decision by the... | |
| Kerry M. Kartchner - 366 pages
...compliance policy, stating that "While we are reviewing our SALT policy, we will take no action that would undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union exercises the same restraint."14 Criticisms of SALT II were more than just campaign rhetoric, or the manifestation of... | |
| Raymond L. Garthoff - 2000 - 862 pages
...March 3, 1981, stating, "While we are reviewing our SALT policy, we will take no action that would undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union exercises the same restraint." The statement explicitly disavowed a casual statement by Secretary of the Navy John Lehman earlier... | |
| William P. Snyder - 1997 - 437 pages
...Accordingly, the State Department had already announced on 4 March 1981, "We will take no action that would undercut existing agreements so long as the Soviet Union exercises the same restraint." 31 Despite imposition of martial law in Poland in December 1981, LR1NF negotiations continued because,... | |
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