Moscow Victory Was in Words to People: Reagan
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WASHINGTON — President Reagan said today his greatest victory at the Moscow summit came not in superpower negotiations but in the “words of faith, words of freedom, words of truth” that he gave to the Soviet people.
“It made me feel humble. That’s the only way you could feel. It made me think that visiting Moscow on behalf of the American people was one of the highest privileges of my life,” Reagan said in another upbeat summation of his talks last week with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev.
Looking somewhat rested after a quiet weekend at the White House, Reagan made his remarks to the World Gas Conference, attended by delegations from 45 nations, including the Soviet Union.
Soviet Delegation Greeted
Noting “how much things have changed” because of the friendly outcome of the five-day summit, Reagan began his speech by greeting the Soviet delegation to the conference.
The President said he left Moscow with an “impression of change, an impression of new possibilities, of new hope” stemming from Gorbachev’s economic and social reforms.
Reagan said he was encouraged by his talks with Gorbachev on arms control, regional and bilateral matters and human rights and by his meetings with Soviet dissidents, refuseniks and Russian Orthodox monks.
He recalled one published report about an elderly woman who had witnessed the President’s stroll through a Moscow street and was quoted as saying, “I like it that he says, ‘God bless you.’
“There perhaps lies the greatest significance of what took place in Moscow last week--not that Ronald Reagan spoke there.
‘Free People Everywhere’
“I was only giving voice to the abiding beliefs of the American people, indeed of free people everywhere.
“No, it was that the words that were spoken were words of faith, words of freedom, words of truth. Unarmed truth is irresistible.”
Since the end of the May 29-June 2 summit, Reagan has portrayed his sessions with Gorbachev as a turning point in East-West affairs.
On Saturday, Reagan said his Kremlin talks sowed the “seeds of freedom and greater trust” that he hopes will lead to increased liberty.
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