Expresses its hope that all the European Governments and Parliaments concerned will adopt the following principles and aims as being those of their foreign policy :
a to preserve and develop the institutions and the objectives of the European Communities according to the letter and the spirit of the Treaties of Rome and of Paris ;
b to reaffirm that the European institutions are open to the accession or association of all those member States of the Council of Europe which are willing to accede to them or become associated with them under the terms of the Treaties, and that no application presented by Members of the Council of Europe may be rejected for reasons other than those foreseen in the Treaties themselves ;
c to neglect no initiative that would facilitate the accession of the United Kingdom and other member States of the Council of Europe to the European Communities before 1966 ;
d to increase the responsibilities of Europe in the formulation and direction of Atlantic policy in all its aspects by means of the development of common European political institutions and not by means of autonomous national action ;
e to study the implications of Atlantic partnership in close contact with the United States and Canada, in order to reconsider the responsibilities of the peoples on both sides of the Atlantic ;
f to welcome the Moscow test ban treaty and to take every opportunity of seeking the conclusion of further arrangements with the Soviet Union without prejudicing the re-establishment of German unity ;