The American Committee for East–West Accord was informally organized in 1974, and chartered three years later, in 1977. Founding members included
George F. Kennan,
Stephen F. Cohen,
Jerome Wiesner, and
Theodore Hesburgh. The group, which was composed of businessmen, journalists, academics, and former elected officials, advanced the position that "common sense" should determine U.S. trade policy with the USSR, specifically, that the U.S. should avoid economic boycotts and sanctions against the Soviet Union as such measures rarely worked. Instead, it argued, expanding American-Soviet trade would help advance the cause of
détente. It also supported the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), increased scientific and cultural exchanges with the Soviet Union, and less confrontational rhetoric about the USSR. According to the committee, its underlying perspective was support for the "resolute abandonment of the stale slogans and reflexes of the Cold War ... and a determination not to be governed by the compulsions of military competition". One of the committee's earliest activities was production of the film
Survival ... or Suicide which presented a cinematic treatment of the effects
nuclear war would have on daily life. ==Reestablished organization (2015–present)==