Friday, June 5, 1901 11 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS The Reagan Administration's Policies on Human Rights By VICTOR BIENSTOCK Vice President George Bush, who is considered one of the more credible ex- positors of the policies of the Reagan Administration, de- livered the commencement address at the University of [ 'Virginia and pledged that 1 the Administration "will work to effect changes to help improve human rights, but we're going to do it quietly. We will not be selective in our indigna- ion." Bush undoubtedly what he said about a no ective policy, but he was either fed the wrong line by the White House staff and the State Depart- ment or he was heralding a thange in Administration policy of which all other signs and portents are still missing. There have been no indi- 4.ations that the Reagan Administration has moved a single inch from its policy of condemning the violation of human rights by Com- munist "totalitarian" re- gimes while soft-pedalling criticism of "authoritarian" rightwing dictatorships. It has mounted a rapid-fire battery against the ruthless violation of human and civil rights by the Soviet Union but has remained strangely silent about the torture cham- bers and the disappear- ance of men and women under the Argentine mili- tary regime. Washington has given us no signs that attempts have been made in Buenos Aires and elsewhere to "exert our influence in the area of z human rights by quiet diplomacy and persua- sion" as the vice president promised. • , 'Results are what count, not rhetorical confronta- tion," he asserted, but, re- grettably, there have been no results to count and no evidence even that the Ad- ministration has employed quiet diplomacy in the cause of human rights. We do not know that it has made any serious attempts to improve conditions in the Argentine, for example, where the military regime's brutal assault on human - and . civil rights is heavily tinged by anti-Semitism, and we have seen no relaxa- • tion of the terrorism im- posed on the people of El Salvador by the rightwing national guard. In fact, there have been no indications of any change ir he Administration's a. ,ciation of the nature of the human rights issue since the pre-election cam- paign rhetoric assailing President Carter for meddl- • ing in the-internal affairs of other countries. The Administration's human rights stance was crystallized with President Reagan's nomination for the post of assistant secre- tary of state for human rights and humanitarian af- fairs of Ernest W. Lefever, a man who has repeatedly stated that the rights of men and women in other coun- tries are no concern of ours — except, of course, in Communist countries — and who argued two years ago that Congress should repeal all laws establishing a "human rights standard or condition" to govern our relations with other coun- tries. In making observance of human rights a crite- rion for aid and special relations with other countries, the Congress said its purpose was to promote increased ob- servance of inter- nationally-recognized human rights by all coun- tries." Lefever told a Se- nate committee that he had "goofed" in calling for repeal of the law but he stood firm in his objec- tions to a frontal attack on human rights viola- tions by "friendly" coun- tries or those it was in our interest to court. He assured the committee that he would not play "a Sir Galahad role going around the world on personal mis- sions." This was an obvious thrust at Patt M. Dorian, who held the human rights job in the Carter Adminis- tration and went to Buenos Aires to fight, on the spot, for release of political pris- oners, to Bangladesh, Pakistan and other places where she also succeeded in winning freedom for pris- oners. Jacobo Timerman, the Argentine Jewish editor, credited Dorian's tactics with securing his release and that of thousands of political prisoners around the world. Lefever is the head of an obscure think tank, the financing of which has been under some question. His appearance before the Se- nate Foreign Relations Committee and the tes- timony given the committee by a procession of witnesses resulted in leading Republi- can senators advising the White House to withdraw the Lefever nomination. But President Reagan is standing by his choice. The President wants his nominee," said a White House spokesman. "He is entitled to a phi- losophically-compatible appointment in his Ad- ministration." Mr. Re- agan, consequently, could not be more closely idnetified with the policy of winking at human rights violations by coun- tries we consider allies or are courting, like Argen- tina, to which the Ad- ministration wants to send arms and equip- ment. For a few hours one spring day, it seemed that Mr. Reagan had indeed changed his stance on human rights. That was when the President's Com- mittee on the Holocaust met at the White House. Mr. Re- agan, obviously moved by what he had heard and seen, denounced violence, ter- rorism and religious perse- cution. Unless the human rights issues were on the negotiat- ing table, he exclaimed, "the United States does not belong at that table." His shocked staff quickly con- ferred and assured news- men that Reagan had not proclaimed a new policy but had merely reaffirmed "a basic and long-standing tenet of U.S. foreign policy." It is to be hoped that Mr. Reagan does not go along with Lefever in his snide al- legations that all the or po- sition to his appointment is Communist-inspired or, at least, Marxist. There is a disturbing, Nixonian ten- dency, already evident in this Administration, to smear critics and opponents — as witness the recent at- tack on the American Civil Liberties Union by Ed Meese, Reagan's chief of staff. Given the White House frame of mind, if Mr. Re- agan follows the course of expediency and with- draws the Lefever nomi- nation, or if he stands by Lefever and the Senate rejects him, the new nominee will almost cer- tainly be out of the same mold as Lefever and hold pretty much the same views. The strategy of the Ad- ministration is to appoint to enforce laws with which it is in disagreement, men who are personally opposed to them. It might well be that quiet diplomacy may work under conditions where public ex- coriation would fail. But one cannot use pressure on a re- gime in secret to force it to restore human and civil rights while its head, the man responsible for the re- pression, is being received at the White House with full pomp and panoply. Mr. Reagan's embrace of the Argentine dictator- president Gen. Roberto Viola would effectively offset any quiet diplomacy we may be practicing in Bueno Aires. To rely exclusively on quiet diplomacy is to deny the victims of per- secution and repression the knowledge that they have not been aban- doned and do not stand alone. The worst feeling, wrote Edward Kutznet- sov, a Soviet Jew who fi- nally managed to gain freedom, was "to be alone and forgotten." And he explained, "the prisoner, refusnik or dissident who feels moral support is a completely different per- son." Jacobo Timerman, the survivor of the Argentine torutre chamber, bears him out in this. Timerman was an in- terested spectator at the Lefever hearing although he declined to testify, but he responded to reporters' questions, one of which was what he thought of silent diplomacy. "After our ex- periences in Nazi Ger- many," he replied, "we shouldn't be silent any more. Silent diplomacy is si- lence. Quiet diplomacy is surrender." Timerman is suspicious of governmental advocacy of human rights, fearing their abandonment for "reasons of state." Soon after his release in 1979, he sounded the warn- ing that "today, aggression against humanity is wide- spread" and said "fighters for human rights should ad- just themselves to this new situation. What has been a feeling of solidarity should now be transformed into an ideology." And writing long before Bible Project JERUSALEM (JNI) — A Lubavitch rabbi has launched a campaign to allow all Jewish children, both in Israel and the Dias- pora, to write a Bible. Each child will be able to draw one letter of the sacred writ- ings on a scroll which will be kept in Jerusalem. Hold no man responsible for what he says in his grief. Mr. Reagan's egregious nomination of Ernest Lefever, Chairman Don Bonker of the House Foreign Affairs subcommit- tee on international organ- izations, which embraces human rights issues, noted that as the new President, "Mr. Reagan is among the few in history privileged to promote justice through human rights." The unanswered question is: will he take that oppor- tunity? 'Electronic Cash REGISTERS Auto Tax — Auto Change $249 99 with totals 288.88 ad 342-7802 DREISBACH BUICK Inc. 15 Minutes North of Tel-Twelve Mall 2225 Dixie Hwy. 338-6900 GRAND OPENING SALE ELI "MISTER HAT" APT Has joined their staff as new and used car sales consultant. He invites his friends & customers to come in and see the Super Deals On Our New 1981 Buicks & One Owner Quality Used Cars When Only The Best is Enough Welcome to the Alexander Home. 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