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195. Memorandum of Conversation1

Moscow, July 2, 1974, 12:45-3:15 p.m.

PARTICIPANTS

Andrei A. Gromyko, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the USSR

Anatoliy F. Dobrynin, Soviet Ambassador to the USA

Georgiy M. Korniyenko, Member of the Collegium of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Chief of USA Division

Oleg Sokolov, Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Mr. Zaitsev, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (interpreter)

Oleg Krokhalev, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (interpreter)

Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, Secretary of State and Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs

Amb. Walter J. Stoessel, U.S. Ambassador to the USSR

Major General Brent Scowcroft, Deputy Assistant to the President for National
Security Affairs

Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Counselor to the Department of State

Arthur A. Hartman, Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs

William G. Hyland, Director, State Department, Bureau of Intelligence and

Research

Harold H. Saunders, NSC Senior Staff

Peter W. Rodman, NSC Staff

SUBJECTS

Test Ban; Environmental Warfare; Communiqué

Test Ban

Gromyko: If there are no objections, let us go underground.

Kissinger: Fine. How is your toothache?

Gromyko: Thank you very much. I needed an hour and a half to put aside for that. But with all these documents to sign, I can't. When we have finished, my war with the doctor will stop.

Let's turn to a starting date. We thought first we would start on the

1st of January [1976].

Kissinger: Impossible.

Gromyko: Impossible.

Kissinger: How about May 27, my birthday?

Gromyko: Let's try March 1 as a compromise.

Kissinger: Let us say April 15.

1 Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Kissinger Office Files, Box 77, Country Files-Europe-USSR, Memcons, Moscow Summit, June 27-July 3, 1974. Secret; Nodis. The meeting was held in St. Catherine's Hall of the Grand Kremlin Palace. Brackets are in the original.

Gromyko: That is a bad month.

Dobrynin: It is not a good time.

Kissinger: At the beginning of March you will find underground water is so deep that you can't do it. I was trying to help Morokhov. No, April 15 is the realistic figure we gave you.

Gromyko: I will give you one figure, and please don't try to presuade me. March 31. Try the peanuts there and agree.

Kissinger: Now that you are trying to bribe me.

Gromyko: 31st of March.

Korniyenko: Without the peanuts.

Kissinger: April 15 with peanuts.

Gromyko: Let's take this time our compromise solution.

Kissinger: All right.

Gromyko: The 31st of March. Let's go to the third article. [Draft text is at Tab A.]2

You have any reservations?

Kissinger: No.

Gromyko: Then we accept. "Underground nuclear explosions for peaceful purposes shall be governed by an agreement ...”

Kissinger: I want the record to be absolutely clear on this, on what position we will take with our Congress. We will strongly defend this treaty but we will also point out that we cannot deposit ratification until this is settled.

Gromyko: Each side will be responsible for its own actions. This is the responsibility of the Administration, how it defends. All right. Article Five. In that form as we already agreed, excluding the words "including consideration of reducing the levels," that we accept.

Kissinger: Within the context of what we discussed yesterday.3
Gromyko: Yes.

Kissinger: All right.

Gromyko: Now 3rd became 2nd. Is it recorded? The former 3rd becomes the 2nd paragraph.

Kissinger: The sixth article becomes paragraph three of the fifth

article.

Gromyko: We are speaking about Article Five.

Kissinger: These texts have already been compared. It is accepted.

2 A draft of the Treaty on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear Weapon Tests is attached but not printed. See Document 199.

See Document 193.

Gromyko: Tell me. Have you become [more] realistic than yesterday about joining of other countries to the agreement?

Kissinger: No.

Gromyko: It is a pity.

Kissinger: I am a slow student. I don't think you want to exchange geological data with the Chinese. So we are doing it out of friendship. Gromyko: The Chinese scared you.

Kissinger: Scared me? They have Senator Jackson there;* they are happy. I wish they would keep him.

Gromyko: How many millions did they bring to meet him?
Kissinger: I don't think they did.

Dobrynin: It was very quiet.

Gromyko: Thus, you are too sensitive as far as this good article is concerned.

Kissinger: We will put it in some other treaty. We will save it. How about the artificial heart machine?

Gromyko: We already signed it.5

All right. We are sorry, and I say that frankly. Just because you stress too much importance to that, to turn it into a barrier.

So the Sixth Article goes away.

Kissinger: The third paragraph of the Sixth Article becomes the third paragraph of the fifth.

Gromyko: Right.

Kissinger: When do we sign it?

Gromyko: Tomorrow. It seems you have changed your view. Our thought would be today.

Kissinger: It is not a political decision. Our people thought it better for the press... We very rarely think about public relations in this Administration.

Gromyko: Now we are on the protocol. [Tab B]

Kissinger: Right.

Gromyko: We went a long way as far as concessions to the Americans on this.

Kissinger: We came a long way too. We gave up two paragraphs. But we need that paragraph (d). Gromyko: Already, I turned.

* Jackson arrived in Beijing on July 1 for a 6-day visit.

5 See Document 199.

6 A draft of the Protocol to the Treaty on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear Weapon Tests is attached but not printed.

Kissinger: You accept it?

Gromyko: I accept it. Right. Will the American side appreciate this gesture?

Kissinger: Yes. Quite seriously, we recognize you've made a big

concession.

Gromyko: We think you will be more understanding when we discuss the natural factors. Environmental factors.

Kissinger: I have already made a proposal. Your Ambassador rejected your proposal of yesterday.

Dobrynin: I said it was too weak.

Kissinger: Just to finish on the protocol: There are a number of brackets that follow.

Gromyko: Yes.

Kissinger: We don't have to review them all.

Gromyko: Tomorrow is the signing.

Kissinger: What time is it?

Gromyko: There is a reception at 1:00 p.m. and we shall arrange it so we sign it and the reception comes immediately afterward.

Kissinger: Good. We sign the treaty, the ABM agreement—we see where we are on environment—and the communiqué.

Gromyko: Right.

Kissinger: And the comprehensive SALT Agreement.

Korniyenko: And the two Geneva Protocols.

Kissinger: The SCC documents.

Gromyko: Yes.

Kissinger: We will announce that Kissinger and Gromyko will sign two secret agreements. With loopholes.

Gromyko: How many? Six?

Korniyenko: Six.

Gromyko: With environment, it will be six.

Kissinger: Including SALT?

Gromyko: You are in an extra good mood today. All right.

Environmental Warfare

Now, let's pass to the subject of environment.

Kissinger: I made the mistake of discussing with your Ambassador who, as always, was not correctly briefed.

Yesterday when we discussed the question of dealing with the dangers of use, there was some dispute about it. We will accept any reasonable interpretation. So we could accept that language that yesterday I withdrew. We will reserve our position for the conference. “Both

sides," this formula-"advocate the broadest possible measures to deal with the dangers of the use of environmental modification techniques for military purposes.'

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[He hands the text of Tab C to Gromyko. They translate to themselves and discuss in Russian.]

Gromyko: The Russian text—“to deal with." You are better experts in English, and we vice versa. In Russian we will say "with purpose of elimination."

Dobrynin: Or "doing away with."

Gromyko: This is the formulation. Does it give this, or does it give permission? Removal or permission.

Dobrynin: "Overcome the dangers."

Sonnenfeldt: "Overcome the dangers."

Kissinger: Then we will say the same thing.

Gromyko: It seems to us, though not very strong, "overcome" is a little bit more definite than "deal with."

Kissinger: I agree, but with the Russian equivalent.

Gromyko: "Ustranyenie"

Stoessel: That means to eliminate. "Udalyenie."

Dobrynin: "Ustranyenie" means removing the dangers.

Gromyko: We don't want to mislead you; neither do we want to mislead ourselves. If it gives the impression of permission, it is not our

intention.

Kissinger: If someone is deceived, it is better it be you than we. Let's be realistic. We understand your position; your position will be to eliminate. We can't yet state this in a document. Our position is we do not exclude it; you are free to discuss it, but we want a more flexible phrase. "Overcome the dangers" is all right. But we do not want to be told at the first meeting of the Conference that we have already agreed to elimination of it.

This will be well received in America. Therefore unless we are forced into it, if you don't give any explanation, we won't give any explanation.

We may have to give an internal explanation to our government, but not publicly. I don't think it will come up at a press conference, but if it does, I will say the meaning of "overcome" will be determined by negotiation.

Gromyko: I told you we won't give any explanation. We will use the word "ustranyenie." To make it stronger we would use the word "liquidate."

7 A draft of the joint statement on environmental warfare is attached but not printed. See Document 199.

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