Page 4-Friday, September 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily Castro: The leading voice of a militant alliance Yi This week's meeting of third world leaders in Havana has been criticized as nothing more° than an exercise in rhetorical masturbation for conference host and coordinator, Fidel Castro. And the final document to emerge - a lodge-podge declaration of anti-im- perialism, anti-capitalism, and anti- Americanism - has been called proof in itself, by the conflicting passages of its own text, that the alliance is too racked by regionalism and internal in- cohesion to pose any united threat to the West. But what the conference actually ac- complished was less important than the clear signal conveyed to the West in general, and the United States specifically - that the little guys are sick of being pushed around, and that. under Castro's mesmorizing rhetoric, the soicalled non-aligned nations may be ready to put aside parochiamism, if ,.only temporarily, to exert a new militancy. HOW SUCCESSFUL the movement is -will be put to the test early, when the -United Nations General Assembly con- -venes for its regular session in October. The U.N, has come to be called among ,many U.S. diplomats a soapbox for :third world nations, but usually the ani- ,American haranguing lacked any theme' or consistency, and the novement was split by regional con- flicts and internal discontent. There was never any one leader, which Castro would like to be, to marshall the "non- .aligned" to push forward a consise plat- form of political and economic specifics. These disputes were highlighted at :the Havana conference - the OPEC ,nations versus the non-OPECS on the issue of world oil prices; those nations, sled by Castro, who advocated a pro- 'oviet view of non-alignment versus (hose nations, led by Yugoslav President Tito, who pressed for a more iteral interpretation of the conferen- ce's precept, plus the tired old disputes ibetween Egypt and the Arab bloc in the ,Middle East, and Cambodia and Viet- nam in the southeast. Castro has been accused of taking advantage of his post as conference director to ramrod through his own political views.sBut what Castro did do was assure the West that, as director of the alliance, he will not hesitate to use that position to supercede the bickering of the individual members to push for specifics beyond the vague declaration. Exactly what those spceifics will be only Castro himself knows, but based on the Cuban's remarks before the con- ference,'the Carter administration has good reason for alarm. IN SNORT, despite Castro's assuran- ces that Cuba would not "benefit in the least from being at the leadership of the movement in the coming years," the Cuban leader must take some ironic delight in the fact that after years of suffering hostility from the United States, he is now in a position to ex- tract his sweet revenge. And in Washington, some ad- ministration diplomats are no doubt kicking themselves silly at the realization that they blew the oppor- tunity to cultivate better relations with Castro long before, and now missing a much-needed "in" with the third world. But by practicing the politics of cold war in dealing with Cuba, and by repeatedly ignoring Castro's overtures to establish better relations, the Carter By Keith Richburg administration may find all of its suc- cesses in the third world undermined by the one third world leader it ignored. For Castro, the leadership of the con- ference culminates an evolution in his own political legitimacy. Having aban- doned his original idea of "exporting" revolution through Latin America - following a series of leftist failures in the 1960s and the overthrow of leftist governments in Bolivia and Chile - the Cuban president turned his sights to a new region, Africa, to help left-leaning revolutionary movements. forced to keep a low profile in the Neto government. Now Castro seems more interested in furthering his position as symbolic leader and unifier of the disunited third world than in exporting his revolution either in Latin American or in Africa. With President Tito, the last surviving founder of the 18-year-old alliance, now approaching retirement age, the leadership mantle was there for Castro's taking. For the Carter administration, the Cuban situation represents a classic more or less than an instrument of Soviet foreign policy, and Castro as the Kremlin's only puppet in this hemisphere. 4 The election of Jimmy Carter in 1976 Braised fresh hopes for those who realized the ridiculousness in not recognizing Castro's government. These "liberals," who included such as George McGovern among their ranks, argued that Castro was obviously in power to stay, and that Cuba had aban- doned its idea of exporting revolution. Instead of supplying arms and troops to revolutionary groups, as the recent ex- perience in Nicaragua showed, Castro was now content to limit his support to advice, encouragement, and propagan- daND CASTRO HIMSELF showed genuine good faith efforts to appear to liberalize his policy towards dissent, in hopes of encouraging the Carter gover- nment to end the trade and diplomatic embargo. But in practicing the old cold war policies of confrontation, the ad- ministration decided to make the removal of Cuban troops in Africa its condition of recognition. Carter even publicly accused Castro of involvement in the May 1977 raid by Katangan rebels into Zaire's mineral-rich Shava provin- ce, while all along Castro had tried to stop the rebel invasion. 'For Castro, the leadership of the conference culminates an evolution in his own political legitimacy.' BUT THE CUBANS soon found their presence on the African continent un- wanted there by many of the nations of the Organization of African Unity, who saw Cuban troops on African soil as merely an extension of the same im- perialism they were fighting against. And even in Angola, where the Cubans were most successful, they were still case of an opportunity lost. After the initial cold war anti-communist rhetoric and the missile crisis fervor of the 1960s began to fade, the Nixon-Kissinger administration came to power with their demented geopolitical view of all the world as a U.S. vs. U.S.S.SR. superpower confron- tation. Cuba was viewed as nothing In the words of one outgoing United States diplomat, the Cuban troops in Angola are actually somewhat of "a stabilizing force" for a country that is still fighting Western-backed guerillds. Cuban troops and advisors are alto helping the Angolan government in the monumental task of reconstruction af- ter the years of devastation which followed independence from Portugal. That tasks included completing railroad links, building schools ahd hospitals, and constructing now housing units. And, perhaps most im- portant for Angola's economy, the Cuban troops are protecting Gulf Oil's refineries in Cabinda against attack from the UNITA guerillas. a So Castro's overtures were ignored3 and, in fact, the administration seemed to be going out of its way to antagonize one of Latin America's most enduring, and to some - aspiring socialist gover- nments - popular leaders. The flap over Soviet troops on the island, all while the U.S. maintains a naval base at Guantanamo, is another case In point. So Castro's scathing attack on the United States during his opening speech to the conference can be called expec- ted, and not wholely undeserved, coming from a leader whom thiscoun- try has kicked around since 1959. Coming from Fidel Castro, dictator of Cuba, the lambasting could have been dismissed 4as more anti-imperialist demogoguing from another bearded revolutionary. But coming from Fidel Castro, leader of the 95-countries of the conference of non-aligned nations, the attacks are something to worry about. The U.S. doesn't have Fidel Castro, to kick around anymore, and whether the other nations of the alliance are able to put aside their bickering long enough to follow him is the one question that will no doubt be worrying U.S. diplomats and policymakers for some time to come. Keith Richburg is Co-Director o the Daily's Editorial Page. THE MANY FACES OF FIDEL: From an exporter or revoltion in the 1960s, to a new focus in Africa in the 1970s, Cuba's revolutionary leader has finally evolved to a position of leadership among the fracticious nations of the third world. Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom CXXX, No. 8 News Phone: 7 Edited and managed by sudents at the University of Michigan Vol. LX 764-0552 Standby registration is no solution T HE UNITED STATES has been at peace for six years. It has not been a quiet peace, though, as Americans now fight the wars of inflation, energy and unemployment, and the "crisis of confidence." But it has been peace, and that is an accomplishment. And,-as usually happens in the initial period following' a major war - especially an unpopular one - the public mood in this country since 1973 has become more and more isolationist. Spreading through the nation - hitting even traditional con- servative areas - that isolationism has inflicted the ranks of the military. Thus, there has been a heavy decline in the numbers of the all-volunteer ar- my. It has suffered serious morale problems, convincing many conser- vative lawmakers on Capitol Hill to press for reviving Selective Service registration of all 18-year-olds for possible military service. Fortunately, however, enough members of the House voted Wed- nesday to defeat that motion, instead calling for the president to study and report to Congress whether registration should be resumed. If the motion had been approved, Selective Service registration of all males who become 18 years old after next Dec. 31 would have resumed Jan. 1, 1981. In rejecting the motion, the House also ignored the advice of its own Armed Services Committee. The movement to begin registration unc nr~hoct +ar1 h m y mher of the These same legislators remind others that registration does not mean the same thing as a regular draft, that it is only necessary to speed up the draft process once the president calls for it. But with the overwhelming power of nuclear weapons making the possibility of conventional clashes almost non-existent, registration is not necessary. The United States and its allies in NATO already possess a powerful conventional force in Europe, and any further increases wwould only be a challenge to the Soviet Union. Passing the registration bill would have just made the chance of a nation- wide draft that much closer, and it would not have solved the problems of an all-volunteer army. Furthermore, the Soviets have recently expressed an interest in beginning talks on troop reduction of conventional forces in Europe. those talks are very important, perhaps even more crucial than the Strategic Arms' Limitation Treaty, for the decline in conventional forces on both sides could go a long way toward reducing ten- sions in that area. A U.S. troop increase - or even a new registration 'plan - at this time may prove to sabotage those delicate talks. To improve the all-volunteer army, the government must make that option more attractive. An improved job- training program for soldiers that would prepare them for new career E 1 :, Excerpts from non-aligned nations meeting in Cuba Southern Africa The conference endorsed the right of the TefloherasAmrofaePalestine Liberation Organization and of the The following is a summary of the The conference welcomed the Iranian Arab states to reject and oppose any solution events at this week's conference of non- Government's decision to suspend its oil sales or settlement detrimental to the inalienable aligned nations in Havana, Cuba. to South Africa. It also noted with great ap- national rights of the Palestinian people and preciation the recent action taken by Nigeria the liberation of all the occupied Arab oofThe sixth conference of heads o state o againist Bitish Petroleum, whose oil. con- territories, and to foil them through all government appeals to all peoples of the cessions in Nigeria were nationalized for possible means, including the use of force. world to participate in efforts to free the British violation of the oil embargo against The heads of state or government affirmed world from war, the policy of force, blocs and the racist regime in Rhodesia and its pledge their commitment, in concert with all peace- bloc politics, military bases, pacts and inter- to divert oil from the North Sea oilfields. loving states and forces, to the adoption of all locking alliandes, the policy of domination The conference reiterated that Rhodesia . steps, within the United Nations and in par- and hegemony, inequalities and oppression, was still a British colony, illegally governed ticular in the Security Council, to confront the injustice and poverty and to create a new or- by a clique of racists and traitors. It continuing challenge by Israel. These der based on peaceful coexistence, mutual requested all states to continue to refrain measures should include the application of all cooperation and friendship, an order in which from any kind of recognition of the racist and the necessary sanctions against Israel as well each people may determine its own future, at- illegal Muzorewa puppet regime in accordan- as mandatory and total embargo and its ex- tain its political sovereignty and promote its ce with the United Nations Security Council clusion from the international community. It own free economic and social development decision and the relevant resolutions of the is essential also to study the political, without interference, pressures or threats of O.A.U. diplomatic and economic measures to be any kind. The conference expressed great concern taken against countries which support the This struggle for total emanicpation over the steps taken by the British Gover- Zionist regime. received an historical impetus from the nment and by certain elements in the United emergence of newly liberated countries States Government and Congress with a view Human Rights which have opted for an independent political to recognizing the illegal regime of Southern The conference condemned the massive development and have resolutely rejected Rhodesia and unilaterally lifting the san- and systematic violation of the most elemen- polarization on bloc bases, bloc politics, ctions imposed on Rhodesia by the United tary rights of millions upon millions of human military pacts or military alliances, as well Nations. beings who live- under colonial or racist as policies tending to divide the world'into The conference also declared that the im- domination or who are suffering from the spheres of influence or impose any other form perialist powers-particularly the United consequences of underdevelopment and of domination. States, Great Britain, France, the Federal economic and social exploitation. The heads of state and/or government con- Republic of Germany, Japan, Belgium, Italy, The conference cautioned against the ex- sidered the following to be the essential objec- Canada, Australia and Israel-cannot escape ploitation of human rights issues by the great tives of the nonaligned movement: blame for the existence and maintenance of powers as a political instrument in the con- Preservation of the national independence, racist oppression and the criminal policy of frontation of social systems and for purposes sovereignty, territorial integrity and security apartheid, because of their political, of interference in the internal affairs of of nonaligned countries and elimination of diplomatic, economic, military, nuclear and sovereign states. foreign interference and intervention in the other forms of collaboration with the Pretoria The conference deeply deplored the ex- internal and external affairs of states and the regime to deny the South African people their ploitation of the right of individuals to leave use of the threat of force and strengthening of legitimate aspirations. their country for political purposes, such as nonalignment as an independent nonbloc fac- the implementation of the Zionist program of tor and the further spread of nonalignment in Middle East uprooting Jewish communities from the coun- the world and elimination of colonialism, The conference reaffirmed that the tries of their origin in order to resettle them in neocolonialism and racism, including situation in the Middle East continues to pose Israel and in the Jewish colonies being Zionism, and support to national liberation a serious threat to world peace and security illegally established in the occutpied movements struggling against colonial and due to the increasing possibility of a new war Palestinian and other Arab territories. alien domination and foreign occupation; elimination of imperialistic and hegemonistic policies and all other forms of expansion and foreign domination. The sixth conference reaffirmed that the quintessence of the policy of non-alignment, in accordance with its original principles and essential character, involves the struggle against imperialism, colonialism, neocolonialism, apartheid, racism, including Zionism, and all forms of foreign aggression, occupation, domination, interference or hegemony, as well as against great power and bloc politics. A .A as a result of Israel's determination to pursue its policy of aggressiorexpansionism and colonial settlement in the occupied territories with the support of the United States. This article was taken from the New York Times. K EDITORIAL STAFF Sue W arner. .................................. .................. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard Berke, Julie Rovner .................................... MANAGING EDITORS