NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY


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  b. Peace and security against external aggression.
  c. ,Social advancement, economic progress and human welfare, under
governments responsive to popular aspirations.
  d. Effective international relationships to serve these ends.
  Identity of interest among the nations and peoples of the free world
will not be meaningful as an abstraction but only as revealed in the
daily life of groups and individuals. It must be regarded as an in-
vigorating and heartening factor in their efforts to achieve freedom,
opportunity and security.
  These shared interests provide a psychological basis both for con-
structive collaboration among peoples and nations and for creating
and maintaining resistance to Soviet Communism.
  3. The Development of Psychological Resistance. The develop-
ment and maintenance of psychological resistance to the design of the
Kremlin calls for continuous and highly detailed exposure of the
ways in which Soviet Communism threatens the interest shared by
other peoples and nations. These may be revealed in the contradiction
between the deeds and the words of the Kremlin, between the ideals
proclaimed abroad and the conditions of poverty, oppression and
terror prevailing within the Soviet Union and its satellites and be-
tween the professions of peace and the facts of massive armed force
and of imperial aggression. By concrete example of what Soviet Com-
munism has done within its orbit and intends to do wherever its agents
seize authority, the myth can be destroyed that it stands for national
freedom, international peace, social progress, economic development
and human betterment.
  Exposure of the nature, the intentions and the capabilities of the
Soviet Union is part of a program to induce peoples and nations out-
side its sphere:
  a. To face lip to the fact that Soviet Communism is the implacable
enemy of all free nations and peoples and of their common aspirations.
  b. To participate in effective actions to deter or, if necessary to repel
direct or indirect aggression by the Soviet Union and its satellites.
  c. To sacrifice leisure and comforts in order to resist Soviet
Communism.
  d. To maintain efficient governments, stable economies and the
disciplines required to support resistance to Soviet Communism.
  e. To prevent the infiltration of agents of Soviet Communism into
the armed forces, the government, labor unions, educational institu-
tions, press and radio and other key organizations and to bring about
the elimination of those already in such positions.
  f. To cooperate with other nations and peoples in a spirit of accom-
modation for mutually desired ends.
  g. To carry on these actions for as long as necessary to frustrate the
design of the Kremlin.


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