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He claimed that he was "aghast that weapons would be sold to the Iraqis in defiance of international agreements to cease arms sales to stem the tide of the war, and generally draw down the conflict," promising to launch investigations into how such a brazen breach of official policy could have been, though noting that he "hope[ s ] this investigation... will lead to the right truth coming out, and that hopefully such a truth is that charges of arms sales are an overextension of the truth by greedy and overzealous investigators seeking a shocking story more than the truth."President Reagan wrote:I was aware the resistance was receiving funds directly from third countries and from private efforts, and I endorsed those endeavors wholeheartedly; but - let me put this in capital lettters - I DID NOT KNOW ABOUT THE DIVERSION OF FUNDS. . . . Yet the buck does not stop with Admiral Poindexter, as he stated in his testimony; it stops with me.
He finished by reading off a joyous letter from a small Iraqi child sent to him, congratulating him on her father being able to come home, now that the war had been brought to a peaceful close.In the months ahead, I also hope to reach an agreement, a comprehensive and verifiable agreement, with the 'Soviet Union on reducing nuclear arms. We're making real progress on the global elimination of an entire class of nuclear weapons—the U.S. and Soviet intermediate-range, or INF, missiles. I first proposed this idea to the Soviets back in 1981. They weren't too keen on it and, in fact, walked out of the negotiations at one point. But we kept at it. Until recently, the Soviet Union had insisted on the right to retain some of its INF missiles. But in mid-July, General Secretary Gorbachev announced that he was prepared to drop this demand. That was welcome news, indeed.
We've come this far because in 1980 you gave me a mandate to rebuild our military. I've done that. And today we're seeing the results. The Soviets are now negotiating with us because we're negotiating from strength. This would be an historic agreement. Previous arms control agreements merely put a ceiling on weapons and even allowed for increases; this agreement would reduce the number of nuclear weapons. I am optimistic that we'll soon witness a first in world history—the sight of two countries actually destroying nuclear weapons in their arsenals. And imagine where that might lead.
We're also ready to move ahead on a START agreement that would cut intercontinental nuclear forces by 50 percent, thereby eliminating thousands of nuclear missiles. I urge the Soviets to move ahead with us. And I say to General Secretary Gorbachev, both our nations could begin a new relationship by signing comprehensive agreements to reduce nuclear and conventional weapons.
What we seek in our relationship with the Soviet Union is peace and stability. That is also what we seek in the Persian Gulf, and the Middle East more generally. And bringing stability to this troubled region remains one of the most important goals of my Presidency.
Wednesday January 28th, 2987 wrote:Reagan Takes the Embargo Head-On
President Reagan addressed Congress last night in the State of the Union, his first since the Iraq-Contra scandal broke. While his comments on the scandal were light, he did accept responsibility for the shipping of materials, although he stuck to his guns on the issue of weapons, saying directly, "The US promised the international community that we would cease arms sales to Iraq for the sake of peace, and the US does not break its word when it is working towards peace: For a lasting peace cannot be built upon falsehood, but only on the solid bedrock of truth and mutual understanding."
The President Speaks before Congress.
However, what took up more of the speech was his stance that "International independence requires domestic independence first, as a prerequisite." Blasting OPEC for using politics as "an excuse to interfere in the market and with the lives of everyday citizens around the globe" and to "cover their own inability to reach out and solve solutions diplomatically," he announced an effort to create greater independence for Americans and their transportation needs by encouraging a switchover to Natural Gas. "Many Americans know that this product is cleaner and safer than the oil we have to import from abroad, often under questionable circumstances and sometimes indirectly funding our enemies, but few realize the potential America has in gaining self-sufficiency through using our own Natural Resources that God has gifted this great land with."
He finished with express wishes for peace to come to the foreign lands, that once energy independence is achieved, the small business owners and entrepreneurs may make way in their own markets, and that they may make peace with their neighbors. He expressly called upon an end to violence on all sides of the current conflict in Palestine, saying "Anyone who funds any violent actor in the conflict going on in Israel right now has to ask themselves at night exactly what they are fighting for, whether it is peace or it is bloodshed, and what their ultimate goal really is: whether it is the liberation of a people as many would claim, or it is their extermination, as not many would admit." However, he did finish on a hopeful note, that he already has a table waiting for those who wish to end the conflict, and that he expects talks to begin sooner than others may hope, "even in the face of those who will despise such talks in their unrelenting pursuit of violent terror."