-4- 20, No Soviet weapons tests series has been publicly announced by the No description of the 3oviet Government in advance of its occurrence, effects of tests useful to a program for the protection of civil populations has been made available by the Soviets. 21, The United states long-range monitoring program employs a variety of systems whichin the interest of national defense have not been described and being intelligence operations, should remain classified. 22. While the system of long-range detection or monitoring is believed to be as effective as it can be made in the present state of scientific knowledge, it cannot insure the detection of every test irrespective of size, location, or type and composition of the weapon tested, 23. <A determination as to size and nuclear character of detected weapons cannot be reached immediately upon detection, nor for several weeks and occasionally months thereafter, This is particularly true with respect to the larger, more complicated thermonuclear devices, 24, Our evaluation of nuclear weapons tests made by other countries has been dependent upon the calibration afforded by our own tests of weapons of known characteristics, IV. THE PROGRAM FOR THE PEACEFUL USE£3 Of ATOMIC ENERGYE3 (ATOMS-FOR-PEACE) AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THe INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY 25, When the Administration of President Eisenhower took office, it inherited a disarmament stalemate and an atomic arms race, both of which sternmed largely from the repeated rejections by the U352 of the Baruch proposals of 1946-47 for putting all atomic energy under international control, 26, As a result of the President's consideration of this problem, the idea for the Atoms-for-Peace program was evolved and presented to the world in the speech on December 8, 1953, which the President made to the General REPRODUCED AT THE DWIGHT, D. EISENHOWER LIBRARY he Assembly of the United Nations, This speech pictured the holocaust of an _ atomic war, the blessings of an atomic peace, and proposed an international agency to which the powers possessing atomic materials would begin and continue to make contributions of such materials for peaceful uses, -7, Worldwide acclaim of President cisenhower's proposal made it difficult tor the Soviets to succeed in their efforts to sabotage it as they had the .Paruch plan, _-8, During the protracted negotiations following the speech, the United itates took a number of affirmative steps without awaiting establishment of the Agency. (a) Upon recommendation of President Zisenhower, the Atomic Energy Act was rewritten by the Congress in 1954 in order ta permit international cooperation, as a result of which agreements have been entered into with 37 nations, providing for the exchange of information on the peaceful uses of atomic energy to build research reactors and power reactors, Scores of students from friendly countries have been trained in technical schools set up by the Atomic Energy Commission. In addition, we have presented Atomic Energy. libraries to 45 friendly nations, more

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