Word: interrelationships
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...three sets of talks -- INF, the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, and a new negotiation on defense and space, focusing on the Strategic Defense Initiative, or Star Wars. But the Soviets insisted, and Shultz agreed, that the three sets of issues would eventually have to be resolved "in their interrelationship." The Soviets said at the time that this phrase meant hard- and-fast "linkage": there could be no separate deal on INF or START without American concessions on Star Wars. The Americans pressed from the outset for an INF deal that did not require concessions on Star Wars...
...Everything I have observed in Washington leads me to the conclusion that the interrelationship between the press and the government has become very close. Newsmen do not like to feel that they are a part of the governmental process. I respect that view and I hold to it, but if you widen the lens, you inevitably come to the conclusion that the interrelationship is close," he says...
Without such an agreement it will not be possible to reach an agreement on the limitation and reduction of nuclear weapons either. The interrelationship between defensive and offensive arms is so obvious as to require no proof. Thus, if the present U.S. position on space weapons is its last word, the Geneva negotiations will lose all sense...
...that the communique released by Shultz and Gromyko after their January meeting in Geneva said, "The sides agree that the subject of the negotiations will be a complex of questions concerning space and nuclear arms --both strategic and intermediate-range--with all these questions considered and resolved in their interrelationship." The Soviets maintain that the prospect of Star Wars has transformed the debate about the future of the strategic relationship and that it now dominates the agenda for arms ! control. On that much, at least, Kampelman and Karpov can agree. So can Ronald Reagan...
...week that unless the U.S. was willing to bargain seriously on space weapons, arms-control negotiations would be "blown up." Weinberger said that he flatly "ruled out" giving up Star Wars. Yet Secretary of State George Shultz was more flexible, agreeing that it "makes sense" to look at the "interrelationship" of offensive and defensive weapons...