Page 4-Saturday, December 1, 1979--The Michigan Daily I Race for The White House GlieArdtgt Bl Ninety Years o f Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 71 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed ,by students at the University of Michigan _ _ Ii ~AGLAD VOU A SKIPAT QL*SiE11,MIW. V PFW-- ." Pass the SALT, please . . . N AN UNPRECEDENTED display of ignorance and total disregard for the facts, the Senate's Armed Services committee has recommended that the Senate not ratify SALT II. The panel is calling the strategic arms treaty "un- fair, unverifiable, and not in the ,national security interests of the United States." In fact, it is that ill-advised recom- mendation, not the treaty, which is un- fair, .unverifiable, and not in the national security interests of the United States. The recommendation is unfair partly because most of the members of Ar- med Services are hardliners who made their opposition to SALT public even before the opening of the hearings. The. treaty was not debated in an impartial forum to ascertain the facts, but rather the hearings turned into a soap-box for its demogogic hardline members to bemoan America's impotence in the world and to press for a massive in- fusion of defense funds. The members of the- Armed Services Committee were less concerned with hearing the merits of the treaty than with finding selected facts to reinforce their own predetermined positions. The charge that the treaty cannot be verified in an unverifiable charge, based on rhetoric with no foundation in fact. The administration has obtained assurances from the Soviets, backed up by satellite technology and reinfor- ced by our own monitoring stations from Anarctica to Istanbul. The ad- ministration experts in the Defense department, the state department, and* the White House have testified as to their satisfaction with SALT II's verifiability, and those who have raised the non-issue of potential Soviet cheating include an ex- astronaut, an ex-Secretary of state, and an arrmy general who was fired for not knowing when to shut up. Clearly, if those who will be charged with responsibility for implementing SALT are satisfied with its verifiability, the peanut gallery should not have the authoritative final word.onthe subject. Lastly, the Armed Services Committee Report is not in the "national security in- terest of the United States." Even the administration admits that the treaty is flawed and far from- perfect, but this country is better off with SALT than without it. The treaty is not an isolated pact which, in itself, should be expected to limit strategic arms and deplete missile arsenals. Rather, SALT is a process, and this pact is a part of that continuing process which lays the foun- dation for future negotiations while keeping the growth of nuclear stockpiles incheck. Now, with the Iranian crisis entering its second month, the attention of the government is turned towards the tur- bulent Persian Gulf, forcing the delay of the SALT debate until next year. And when the ,treaty is taken up after the Christmas recess, 1980 politics will replace logic and reason in the most im- portant debate in the Senate of this Car- ter presidency. If the treaty had any chance of passing in the circus at- mosphere of presidential election-year politics, this Armed Services Committee recommmendation obliviated the possibility. This decision will go down in history as one of the darkest days in America's 204 years of independent government, ranking right up there alongside the Tonkin Gulf resolution as an embarrassing display of congressional ignorance. Candidates now must WASHINGTON WINDOW face the realities WASHINGTON - Suitably, itl is now cold reality time for the Republicans and Democrats who announced their aspirations for the presidency with such high hopes and giddy hoopla in the warmer months of the pre- election year. For the ten men at last count who seek the GOP nomination, it should now be clear that there are going to be obstacles ranging from difficult to immense for every one of them. Each may en- tertain fantasies about preem- ptive victories in New Hampshire or Iowa or some other state, but they also must realize that what is ahead is more likely a slugging match than a one punch knockout. FOR RONALD REAGAN, who is assigned the front runner's role on the basis of his standing in the polls, it should be clear that being the favorite is not going to make him the candidate. Other By Arnold Sawislak Republicans are out to stop him and they will not confine.them- selves to issue disagreements in trying to do so. Yes, they will suggest or declare that he is too old to be president. For John Connally, it must have dawned by now that sheer energy and decisiveness is not going to be enough to win the nomination. Even if the other candidates are sticks, the con- trast alone will not win the day. He is going to have to sell himself as a man of dignity and Republican principle; his op- ponents will be suggesting other- wise. George Bush must see that he cannot hide too long behind the mists of anonymity. He pulled off a major upset in the Maine GOP straw poll, finished respectably in the Florida mock ballot and if more of the same happens before the delegate season begins will have to leave his safe refuge among the also rans and become a target among the leaders. HOWARD BAKER already has seen that being Senate Republican Leader doesn't buy much in the presidential contest, especially the organizing time he lost while attending congressional duties. le is going to have to win something big quickly to merit a place in the top echelon of the candidate list. There are fewer Democrats, but the reality is just as numbing. For President Carter, it is the chilling recognition that he may never get a chance to defend his record in the November election; that his hard-won building of political connections across the country may be summarily swept away by the mere entry of a Ken- nedy. For Sen. Kennedy, the flip side of Carter's coin. After the straw vote in Florida, it must be ob- vious to Kennedy that Carter is going to fight every step of the way and that he is not without either friends or political skills. Kennedy is young enough to run again another year but if he puts the family mystique on the line and fails, is another try possible? Gov. Brown? The reality has been clear for some time: politicians in other parts of the country don't take him seriously. Of course., he can change that. All he has to do is beat, convincingly and early, the incumbent president and the last of the Ken- nedy Brothers. Arnold Sawislak's Washington Window column has been appearing quite frequently on this page. Spacey Jane By Tom Stevens able fittOt"'gan D atlli (OMEON, REALLY WNY ARE WEc WOO@ 180 AAPI4?/ r -7 - 60 THE PIZZA WONTr ( i CoI-V- EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner......................... .....EDITOR-IN-CHIEF -Richard Berke,. Julie Rovner.........MANAGING EDITORS Michael Arkush, Keith Richburg..... EDITORIAL DIRECTORS Brian Blanchard.......................UNIVERSITY EDITOR Judy Rakowsky.................................CITY EDITOR Shelley Wolson...................... PERSONNEL DIRECTOR AAy Saltzman..........................FEATURES EDITOR Leodard Bernstein..................SPECIAL PROJECTS R.J. Smith, Eric Zorn.......................... 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