Benefical Alliance? WSU enters educational agreement with Damascus University, despite Syria's links to terrorism. DIANA LIEBERMAN StaffWriter/Copy Editor D goal is "to develop long-term educational and research programs." The document continues, "Both institutions intend to seek support from both public and private sources to accelerate the growth of this important collaboration. r. Irvin D. Reid, president of Wayne State University, is fully aware that Syria is one of the countries on the U.S. State Department's list of sponsors of terrorism. He knows there's a movement brewing among U.S. WSUs Arab Ties legislators to hold the Middle Eastern country Dr. Reid met with officials from Damascus accountable for harboring deadly terrorist groups, University Jan. 4-7 after attending the Eighth stockpiling weapons of mass destruction, smuggling International Conference on Energy and the Iraqi oil and occupying parts of Lebanon. The Syrian Environment in Cairo. A bienni- Accountability Act was defeated by al conference begun by WSU the 106th Congress but is about to and the Egyptian government 17 be resurrected for the 107th. years ago, it involved representa- Still, on Jan. 6, Dr. Reid and Hani tives from the U.S. Environ- Mourtada, rector of Damascus mental Protection Agency, University in Syria, signed a "memo- General Motors Egypt and randum of understanding" to "enter Egyptian governmental and edu- into a mutually beneficial alliance to cational bodies as well as faculty, conduct education and training in students and administrators from academic collaborative programs." WSU. The agreement, posted immediate- After the conference, Dr. Reid ly on the Internet by Syria's official and other WSU officials headed news agency, will initially center on for Damascus. medical education, including visits by The Syrian-WSU link began officials of the WSU school of nurs- At the Conference on Energy and in June 2001, when Dr. Reid ing to the Syrian ministry of health Environment in Cairo, Dr. Irvin was invited to Syria by Dr. Wael and Damascus University next D. Reid is greeted by Egyptian offi- Saker, a professor of pathology in September. cials Dr. Hassan Younis, minister WSU's medical school, to give In a Jan. 13 interview, Dr. Reid of electricity and energy, and Dr. the keynote address at the 18th quoted Chinese philosopher Sun Mufid Shihab, minister of higher International Medical Tzu (circa 500 B.C.E.), who said, education and scientific research. Conference of the National "Keep your friends close and your Arab-American Medical enemies closer." Association, an American group "If it should come to a conflict," with many Detroit-area members. The medical asso- Dr. Reid said, "would we not be better off if we had ciation funded Dr. Reid's participation. a relationship with them?" "Since then, we had developed a plan for four of Dr. Reid said the Syrian agreement is similar to their nursing faculty to come to Wayne State to look many agreements between WSU and universities at how nursing education is done in the United throughout the world, in countries including Israel, States," Dr. Reid said. Brazil, Egypt, Jordan, Cuba and China. According to the Jan. 6 agreement, deans of WSU works with the Technion-Israel Institute of WSU's nursing and medical schools will visit the Technology in Haifa on genome research, he said, and Syrian ministry of health and Damascus University is sponsoring a visiting professor from Ben-Gurion in September 2003. Also in the planning stages is a University of the Negev. In Brazil, the Detroit-based visit by a delegation of WSU professors to the uni- university and New York University have a federal versity for a symposium on scientific research. grant to bring United States standards of medical research to universities in Santa Caterina and Minas Gereas. There's an anthropology program with La Jewish Reaction Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico and several Support for the agreement by members of the exchanges with China's Fudan and Shanxi universities. Detroit Jewish community — many of whom are "We're getting Wayne State involved with the graduates of and contributors to WSU — was var- world," said Dr. Reid, who came to the 31,000-stu- ied. dent university in November 1997. "Unlike university systems in democratic coun- The agreement with Damascus University, a state- run institution founded in 1903, is still in its earliest tries, under a totalitarian regime such as Syria, state- run universities are but one extension of the central stages, he said, calling it an "umbrella agreement." In the words of the memorandum, the agreement's government," said Marc Weinbaum of Bloomfield 1/17 2003 16 Township, a graduate of WSU's law school. Weinbaum referred to Syria as "at best ... a tacit ally of a country we will likely be at war with — supplying Iraq with weapons that may be used against us, and illegally selling over $1 billion worth of Iraqi oil per year outside the United Nations' sanctions. "At worst," he said, "they are complicit in the worst form of state-sponsored terrorism — terrorism which has cost a great number of American lives. "However well-intentioned President Reid's undertaking may be, it.does not change the fact that by entering into this agreement he has added yet a further plate in the armor legitimizing [the Syrian government]." U.S. District Judge Avern Cohn, a principal bene- factor of the WSU law school and co-founder of the university's Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies, said he found "absolutely nothing wrong with Wayne State having a relationship with Damascus University." "It's unfortunate that the university and President Reid let the announcement [about the agreement] come from the Middle East instead of from their offices. "The fact is that Damascus University is one of the most prestigious universities in the Middle East," Judge Cohn said. "It has the largest, oldest medical school in the region. A number of its gradu- ates are on the Wayne State faculty." The area of health services is one in which Jews and Muslims cooperate, even in Israel, he said. "While the Syrian government and the Israelis are at serious odds — at a time of great tension — you have to separate that from purely educational rela- tionships," Judge Cohn said. "Life is not as simple as some of the responses [to the agreement] indicate." Richard Bernstein, newly elected to the WSU board of governors, pointed out that it's not just Israel that is "at odds" with Syria. The U.S. State Department has verified that Syria has facilitated weapons shipments from Iran to Hezbollah, a terrorist group responsible for murder- ing more than 300 Americans, Bernstein said. "Signing the agreement shows a lack of real under- standing of what the real world faces." Spreading Knowledge Dr. Dallas Kenny, WSU associate vice president for academic affairs and head of the university's World Bridge partnership program and other global pro- gramming, pointed out that "the United States maintains many diplomatic and other cultural and educational relationships with and within countries that it deems dictatorships and worse." "Opinions vary as to the best way to build rela- tionships between institutions of higher learning around the world," Dr. Kenny said, "but unless there is a travel ban or other official restriction, the