250. Memorandum From the President’s Assistant for National Security
Affairs (Kissinger)
to President Nixon1
Washington, January 2, 1971.
SUBJECT
- Secretary Hardin’s Report
on His European Trip
Secretary Hardin has sent you an
abbreviated report on the United Kingdom and European Community portions
of his European trip (Tab A).
In speaking with the British and Community leaders, the Secretary
emphasized that the import barriers of the Community’s Common
Agricultural Policy are contributing significantly to protectionism in
the United States Congress. Recent Community agricultural policy moves
have all been in the wrong direction, instead of encouraging an
interdependence of trade that would sustain an open U.S. policy. We have
been chagrined by recent EC moves on
grain, citrus, and tobacco.
Grains are the most serious. A Community increase in its already high
grain import levies, which is a real possibility, would further damage
our exports; we would pay the price of an unsuccessful EC social program to increase Community farm
income levels. Germany, which is the most insistent on high grain
prices, claims that grain price reductions are politically
impossible.
The Secretary believes that we must use all U.S. Government resources to
reverse Germany on this question, even at the risk of interfering with
the UK-EC negotiations or of creating
difficulties for Brandt.
Otherwise, the Administration will have serious political problems in
Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and Missouri.
The Secretary did not believe his trip had the result he wished for a
number of reasons:
- —Authority in the Community is diffuse.
- —The Community is hypersensitive to criticism of its
institutions.
- —The British dare not use their weight with the
Community.
- —The Community argues that it cannot attempt fundamental
changes during its British negotiations.
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I agree that these are extremely serious issues. They will require us, at
some point, to make a tough tradeoff between our direct interests in the
EC and UK, on the one hand, and our
domestic political interests and interest in maintaining some base for a
generally free trade policy, on the other. This should undoubtedly be
one of the first issues to be tackled by the new International Economic
Policy Committee.2
Tab A
Washington, December 16,
1970.
Memorandum From Secretary of Agriculture Hardin to President Nixon3
SUBJECT
- Trip to European Community and United Kingdom
- 1.
-
Purpose. I went to Europe to talk with
European and U.K. leaders about the problems we are having
because of the highly restrictive policies of the E.C.’s Common
Agricultural Policy (CAP). We
pointed out that the unreasonable protectionist features of the
CAP have contributed to
protectionist thinking in the Congress, that some new
initiatives from the E.C. were needed and that all recent
actions had been in the wrong direction. On the latter issue we
pointed to:
- a.
- The new citrus preference arrangements with
Mediterranean areas (Spain, Israel, Morocco, and
Tunisia).
- b.
- A new “buying premium” for users of E.C.
tobacco.
- c.
-
Recent discussions about additional increases in
grain prices which will further reduce our trade
volume.
We emphasized that these programs are harmful to the
U.S. export position, and that our new farm law was
built on a premise of expanding exports.
- 2.
-
Difficulties. It is not easy to get
through to the Europeans on these points because:
- a.
- No one really speaks with authority for the EC. The Commission is an
executive body not directly disciplined by budget or
parliamentary
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control. Agricultural ministers of the member countries
make the agricultural decisions.
- b.
- The EC is unwilling to
accept any criticism of its means or instruments. Any
mention of the instruments of integration, such as the
CAP, is interpreted
as an attack on the system and the Commission itself. To
some extent, this is tactical rather than real.
- c.
- The U.K. continues to be timid with respect to its
application for membership. In most of Europe, we found
EC members willing
and eager to have the U.K. come in. Still, the U.K.
feels considerable lack of confidence, and is careful to
avoid any action that might be seen as serving U.S.
interests. It continues to fear another rebuff from the
EC.
- d.
- The CAP tries
unsuccessfully to be an economic solution to political
and social problems. The Europeans argue that change
cannot be attempted during negotiations with the U.K.—an
argument used in 1962 (when the CAP was harmonized) to our continuing
sorrow.
- 3.
-
Citrus and tobacco. We pushed hard the
arguments that the newly initiated citrus and tobacco policies
of the EC are harmful to U.S.
producers. We insisted that we would make full use of our rights
under the GATT, which we are
doing. The Europeans argued that the U.S. would not be seriously
hurt by their citrus and tobacco policies. They argued that
their decisions on these commodities were political and could be
justified in that way. Our response was that U.S. farmers should
not be made to pay for the EC’s
special political arrangements with certain areas and certain
countries.
4. Main Issues: Grains.
- a.
- Our argument: We contended that the Europeans’ effort to
settle economic and social problems through fixed high prices is
not working. We pointed out that high grain prices protected by
variable levies are slowing the natural growth of livestock and
poultry industries in Europe, keeping consumer prices high, and
inhibiting consumption. (EC grain
prices are about twice as high as those in the U.S.) We argued
that lower internal grain prices in the EC would be beneficial to Europeans and traditional
grain suppliers, including the U.S. Our exports to the EC of commodities subject to
variable levies and high internal prices are down 47% since
1966. Furthermore, the use of large export subsidies to push
surpluses created by artificially high prices into world trade,
is disruptive of normal trade.
- b.
- Germany is the key. When we raised the grain issue in other
countries, the finger was pointed at Germany. When we raised the
grain issue in Germany, the finger was pointed at Minister of
Agriculture Ertl. The Minister wants to raise grain prices in
the EC, not lower them. He
contends it is not politically possible to lower grain
prices.
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We urged that he deal with his political problems by using direct
payments.
5. Conclusions.
- a.
- We should continue to press strongly for a reduction in grain
prices in the European Community. This issue should not be
postponed.
- b.
- It appears to me that the only way possible to secure a grain
price reduction will be to use all of the resources of our
government to push the Germans into such an agreement. It is
true that in doing this we may be accused of interfering with
EC-U.K. negotiations. We also
may find that we are creating difficulties for the Brandt government. But if we
do not obtain a lower level of grain prices within the EC, and the UK, our Administration
will have serious political problems in such farm states as
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Missouri.
- c.
- We should avoid making any commitment to the U.K. at this time
with respect to the changes they wish to make in their
agricultural trade system because:
- (1)
- To do so would undercut efforts to achieve lower grain
prices in the European Community;
- (2)
- We do not yet know what arrangements the U.K. will
have with the Commonwealth countries under its probable
new status as an EC
member; and
- (3)
- There has not been time to analyze the likely effects
of these matters on U.S. agricultural experts.
- d.
- In closing, may I state a strong conviction, which I also
expressed abroad. The European Community is a strong,
flourishing economy and a major trading power. It has a
responsibility to help foster an expanding system of world trade
in the interest of all nations.