THE WEEKLY J TIA Vol. LAXVNo. 15 April 11, 1960 NEWSMAGAZINE NATIONAL AFFAIRS -THE NATION picion between the two nations was un- important—could not gain any really decisive advantage even if it did cheat. In the sessions that hanimered out the decision to accept the Soviet moratorium proposal, Air Force Secretary James Douglas. sitting in for traveling Defense Secretary Thomas Gates. made it clear that the Pentagon. to a surprising extent. guarded test-ban treaty. For one thing, the Russians may really not want any agreement at all. may be dangling concessions to prolong the talks and thus achieve their original aim of getting the U.S. to halt nuclear tests without any agreement on inspection. On this. the U.S. might get a better reading at the sum- caught a glint of something that hinted at chance for an inspection agreement out- Eisenhower and Premier Khrushchev resolve the basic conflicts on inspection and control measures at the summit. it will still take the test-ban negotiators months to work out the details. After a treaty is signed. it will take two yeats or more to set up a functioning detection system. As the U.S. learned after the armistice in Korea. reaching a truce Toward Disarmament? During the long. tortuous nuclear-testban wrangle between the U.S. and Russia. it often seemed that neither side really expected a test ban. that the wall of susbreachable. But two weeks azo. the world * Russian willingness to negotiate. At the i U.S.-British-Soviet test-ban conference in ‘Geneva. Russian Delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin made what seemed to be a significant Concession. weighed the risks and costs of a test ban. Central Intelligence Agency Chicf Allen Dulles reported that the CIA had no evidence that Russia had ever shown any interest in testing to develop tactical nuclear weapons. Any break in Russia’s wall In a departure from Russia's longtime insistencé that a nuclear ‘est ban must start with a flat ban on all tests. detect- of suspicion and secrecy. he added. would be to the U.S.’s interests. Atomic Energy Commission Chairman John McCone, arguing that the U.S. needs underground able or not. Tsarapkin agreed to accept the U.S.'s distinction between 1) detect- if an adequate detection system is worked out, and 2) smaller underground tests. Through the Haze. At the President's Camp David mountain retreat in Mary- Merely the Beginning. The President's stacles still Iving in the way of a safe- " —_ SSSe, a — _—— = — ae inspection system, dnd agree to a “cuordi- nated research program” for improving detection techniques. . Even before Macmillan’s plane left London, the Administration had decidedin its own councils to accent) Tsarapkin’s Moratorium proposal in che interest of getting a test-ban treaty that might: possitly tead to progress on disarmament. Cutting through the haze of passion that has often obscured the facts on both sides of the Ces¢-han debate, Ghe Administration had areived ac the conclusion that 11a test-ban treaty would be well worth while if it made possible eventual progress toward controlled disarmament; and 2) Russie would) probably not risk) trying to cheat an ivspected test ban. and—most : . - ‘ : ~ : . ; eed _———— coneeaenemeenal 2 * demreremnnn mam tae we a a ‘ ? + - \ ; ogee ow 2 _ land last week. Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and President Eisenhower discussed the Soviet proposal oves the course of two days. agreed on a joint statement accepting a “voluntary moraterium™ on below-threshold tests—provided that Russia enter into a treaty banning detectable tests under an adequate vigilance is just beginning. Perhaps a greater danger than the risk of undetected underground testing is the risk thai the U.S. would be lulled into relaxation by © the mere existence of an agreement. moratorium decision lett plenty of ob- them (see box next page). Said Tsarap- Britain agree to a “voluntary” moratorium on subthreshold tests while experts work out better decection techniques. tive. the problem of constant patrol and found himsell almost afone in the Administration’s top councils, and at the end the President ruled against him. which the U.S. is not willing to include in the treaty ban because at present there is no known practical way of detecting detection—provided that the U.S. and with Communists can be merely the be- ginning of harassments and frustrations. And even if the detection systemis efiec- tests to develop tactical nuclear weapons. able tests. which the U.S. is willing to ban kin: Russia will agree to a treaty banning only tests above the threshold of mit in mid-May. But even if President had come around to a conviction that the a oma ; t co » A et a . { 1 - ” , ' of 1 j . - . : : ate one 4 Mates . q . ‘ tw 4 : he on. ios ~ “4 va ee cee. — ite Shi i 4 t { 5 => 5 ' ‘‘ S. . i : we, : i : , i j ] mS ’ oo cn . . a . i. j _o¢ ‘ } e : . Law. ree am et acta Ct deel aclDentns hE aaaDeetssalted, daeDERN i . an ton see Se . £ . “ : a ! } 1 : , a = : vas Macmicean & Ecsenicower at Came Davin My 7 { ° ems nn § EdwardClark—-Liss Cutting through the haze that has obscured the facts.

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