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 <A
HREF="http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/19991213_xex_the_40year_g.sh
tml">The 40-year gun grab</A>
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/19991213_xex_the_40year_g.shtml

The 40-year gun grab
'60s disarmament plan
still going strong, say U.N. critics

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

By Stephan Archer
and Sarah Foster
© 1999 WorldNetDaily.com

For nearly 40 years, a few groups on the political right have sounded the
alarm over a seemingly absurd scenario -- that gun control legislation was
actually a key part of a plan for total national disarmament and the eventual
replacement of United States troops by a United Nations army as part of the
law enforcement arm of a one-world government.
The idea that such an improbable plan could exist, if only on paper -- or
even more improbable, that people were working behind the scenes to implement
it - has always been dismissed by the mainstream media and government
officials as a paranoid, right-wing delusion.

So where exactly does the truth lie in this decades-old controversy - the
cause of great alarm for some, and for others, an occasion to heap ridicule
and contempt?

At the center of this issue is a 20-page State Department pamphlet published
in 1961, titled "Freedom From War: The United States Program for General and
Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful World" - Department of State Publication
7277. The program outlined was presented by President Kennedy to the U.N.
General Assembly on Sept. 25, 1961, and offered "specific objectives toward
which nations should direct their efforts." These included:

* The disbanding of all national armed forces and the prohibition of their
re-establishment in any form whatsoever other than those required to preserve
internal order and for contributions to a United Nations Peace Force.

* The elimination from national arsenals of all armaments, including all
weapons of mass destruction and the means for their delivery, other than
those required for a United Nations Peace Force and for maintaining order.

The disarmament process would take place in three stages:

* Stage I: Measures that would "significantly reduce" the capabilities of
nations to wage war.

An International Disarmament Organization would be created within the United
Nations; an inspection infrastructure would be established with observation
posts set up at ports, highways, airbases and railway centers to monitor
troop movements and other military activities; and -- most important --
States would develop arrangements for establishment of a U.N. Peace Force and
U.N. peace observation groups would be "staffed with a standing cadre of
observers who could be dispatched to investigate any situation which might
constitute a threat to or breach of the peace."

"A Commission of Experts would be established to report on the feasibility
and means for the verified reduction and eventual elimination of nuclear
weapons stockpiles."

"Arms and armed forces would be reduced: The armed forces of the United
States and the Soviet Union would be limited to 2.1 million men."

* Stage II: Further reductions in the armed forces, armaments, and military
establishments of states would be made, including strategic nuclear weapons
delivery vehicles and countering weapons; a permanent international peace
force would be established within the United Nations;

"The dismantling or conversion to peaceful uses of certain military bases and
facilities wherever located" would continue;

The International Disarmament Organization would be strengthened and enlarged
to enable it to verify the steps taken in Stage II and to determine the
transition to Stage III.

* Stage III: "During the third stage, the states of the world ... would take
final steps toward the goal of a world in which:

"States would retain only those forces, non-nuclear armaments, and
establishments required for the purpose of maintaining order; they would also
provide support and provide agreed manpower for a U.N. PeaceForce.

"The manufacturing of armaments would be prohibited except for those agreed
types and quantities to be used by the U.N. Peace Force and those required to
maintain internal order. All other armaments would be destroyed or converted
to peaceful purposes.

"The peace-keeping capabilities of the United Nations would be sufficiently
strong and the obligations of all states under such arrangements sufficiently
far-reaching as to assure peace and the just settlement of differences in a
disarmed world."

Shortly after his address, President Kennedy signed Public Law 87-297 (H.R.
9118) that created the United States Arms Control Agency, a separate
organization operating outside the jurisdiction of any department and charged
with overseeing the disarmament agenda.According to the statute creating the
agency, the terms "arms control" and "disarmament" mean "the identification,
verification, inspection, limitation, control, reduction, or elimination, of
armed forces and armaments of all kinds under international agreement to
establish an effective system of international control.... "

On April 18, 1962, the new Arms Control and Disarmament Agency carried the
ideas in Freedom From War another step -- offering a draft of a treaty
entitled, "Blueprint for the Peace Race: Outline of Basic Provisions of a
Treaty on General and Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful World," which
reiterated the provisions of "Freedom from War." When word of Document 7277
got around, the State Department was deluged with requests, and after the
supply was quickly depleted, the U.S. Government Printing Office didn't print
any more copies. In response to the demand, the ultraconservative John Birch
Society took on the task of keeping the nation supplied with facsimile copies
-- exact replicas of the original, right down to its bright blue cover. The
document is also on the State Department's website in the archives section.

"This document is one of the most revolutionary and subversive proposals ever
put foreword by any government official," wrote William Jasper, senior editor
of the Birch Society's magazine, The New American, in the Nov. 22 edition.
"Incredibly, the program originally introduced in this document became -- and
remains - official U.S. policy."

Jasper adds, "And since no provision is made for an exemption of arms owned
by private citizens (and since the U.N, itself is hardly sympathetic to
private gun ownership), it is reasonable to assume that private arms are
intended for destruction under the term."

Tom Mason, a Portland, Ore. Attorney who lobbies for the National Rifle
Association in the international arena, corroborates at least part of
Jasper's contention - that gun control is connected to the disarmament
movement.

"In the United Nations, the movement against guns started in 1995 with two
almost simultaneous efforts," said Mason. "To this day it remains a
two-pronged approach -- a dynamic between two centers of action: one centered
in Vienna, one in New York City."

Vienna is home to the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice --
which approaches gun control as part of an effort against international
crime.

"Half the action is in Vienna, where the focus is on crime prevention," said
Mason. "The other is in New York and the Department of Disarmament Affairs at
the United Nations headquarters."

David Patterson, deputy historian at the State Department, downplayed the
possible significance of Freedom From War and the Blueprint for the Peace
Race -- identifying them as "part of the propaganda war."

"It's a recurring issue which conservative groups would put forward as an
example of how we were willing to capitulate to the Soviet Union during the
Cold War -- disarm unilaterally," Patterson said. "Of course, none of this
was true, but it's still going the rounds of right-wing publications. We get
these calls."

Asked about the draft treaty Blueprint for the Peace Race, Patterson
answered, "It was submitted to the U.N. and Kennedy had talked about it in
more general terms in his speech to the U.N. General Assembly in 1961. So it
was a blueprint. It was an outline of what the United States was prepared to
do if we could come to an agreement with the other parties, particularly the
Soviet Union, on the issue of general and complete disarmament."

"Of course," he continued, "It was pie in the sky, because there wereso many
conditions put on the proposal that the Soviet Union would never accept it.
And if they had accepted it they would have had to open up their society and
be prepared to have all kinds of comprehensive inspections, which at the time
they were totally unprepared to do."

"It [the proposal] met a quick death -- nothing happened," said Patterson,
who added that as far as he knew it was never implemented.

"I think that it's far-fetched to say that the current efforts at gun control
in the United Nations go back to 1961. Unless you can show some kind of
linkage over the past almost 40 years between those two issues [gun control
and disarmament] it would be hard to demonstrate."

William Nary, who was with the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency from 1963
until his retirement in 1994 and historian for the agency for 20 years,
described the proposal as "visionary" and said it had "not technically" been
withdrawn. Total disarmament, he said, meant "exactly what the plan says:
Only the police and armed forces would have arms."

"But I know we were never going after hunters or sportsmen - despite what the
plan says," he added.

"It was advocated in part because the Russians had proposed it. They had
proposed a plan calling for general and complete disarmament - but radical
disarmament," Nary said. "It seems to me it [the proposal] was idealistic and
visionary, and I don't know who would have expected that we would achieve it.
But it was a bit of a plan, and many of those measures have been adopted.
Specifically, test ban agreements, reductions in manpower of the armed
forces, controls on the transfer of armaments -- treaties like SALT I and II
and START -- control of nuclear weapons systems and large conventional
forces."

Asked whether, under the plan, a private citizen would be allowed to own a
gun, Nary recalled: "That issue came up, and I know that our leadership made
it clear to the Congress that we were not trying to disarm private citizens
in that sense -- not just the precise wording of the plan. I know that our
leadership testified to the Congress that we weren't about to completely do
in the National Rifle Association. That wasn't part of the design -- at least
we interpreted it as not to include disarming the citizens or hunters."
Natalie Goldring is director of the newly-established Program on General
Disarmament at the University of Maryland, a founder of the International
Action Network on Small Arms, and director of the Security and Disarmament
Program at the National Center for Economics and Security Alternatives, a
non-governmental organization. This last, she says, is useful when she wishes
"to take off my academic hat" and work on issues through IANSA as a
representative of a non-governmental organization. WorldNetDaily documented
recently how such groups are lobbying hard at the United Nations - and being
heard - in their efforts to bring about international gun control.

Goldring is familiar with Kennedy's Blueprint for the Peace Race and Freedom
from War proposals, and told WorldNetDaily how far the proposals had come
toward being implemented.

According to Goldring, the term "general disarmament," as used in U.N.
circles and by non-governmental groups, does indeed encompass smallarms -
including rifles, shotguns and handguns.

"The idea is that we're opening the discussion," she said, explaining the
current emphasis at the United Nations on disarmament and its focus on light
weapons and small arms -- which she sees as a revival of interest, rather
than a completely new issue.

"There hasn't been any public discussion on this in 35 years -- the last
hearings were in the 1960s," she explained. "I think that during the Kennedy
administration you had a lot of actual research being done on broader
disarmament programs. Some of that was purely political in nature and wasn't
very practical even then -- and it was a fairly idealistic time. But a lot of
the principles that were enunciated are still relevant today."

"People talked about three stages of disarmament a lot in the early '60s, but
in the decades since then we've done much of Stage One, bits of Stage Two,
and maybe a little bit of Stage Three," she said. For example, "We've got a
non-proliferation treaty. We more or less have a comprehensive test ban.
We've got a treaty banning national missile defense. Since that time we've
had a significant buildup of strategic weapons, but we've also had a
dismantling and a destruction of a great number of nuclear weapons. So a lot
of things have happened that are on the positive side of the measure."

Other parts of the program required by Stage II in the plan have also been
realized, Goldring said, notably the dismantling of certain military bases,
the reduction of military forces and the buildup of the U.N. peace-keeping
forces -- though as she sees it, the balance between U.S. military
infrastructure and force levels is "completely skewed."

Addressing the issue of base closures, "We need to do more," she said.
Specifically, "at least one and probably several more rounds of base
closures. They're still implementing the last round of base closures, but if
they don't keep going, you'll have a very inefficient set-up, because a
disproportionate percent of the defense budget will go towards facilities and
infrastructure."

"That's happening now," she continued, "But we're getting the annual Army
whining about how they don't have enough people. They're telling Congress the
units aren't ready to go to war -- and it turns out that many of the people
in those units are currently on peacekeeping missions -- it's not as though
they've left the military."

"So there has been a reduction in military forces -- but not to my mind as
much as needs to," Goldring said.





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