MUE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Field Newaawvdkate. i9T r111 f l't Oman's war bears British stripe By FRED HALLIDAY WHILE THE FRENCH, Portuguese and Americans have all abandoned colonial wars, the bankrupt British are still involved in two major counter- insurgency operations. One is in Ireland. The other is in Oman-a sultanate the size of Colorado which sits at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, the world's most strategic waterway. British newspapers are now running ads for ex- British military pilots to serve three-year stints in the Omani air force, with generous tax-free starting pay and side benefits. Mercenaries are only the tip of the iceberg. For 11 years, rebel tribesmen in Dhofar province- organized under the leftist Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman (PFLOAG)-have been battling the stolidly pro-Western Omani government for indepen- dence. Theirs' is now the only revolutionary war direct- ly involving major outside powers anywhere in the world. As the annual June-September monsoon season ends, fighting has escalated in western Dhofar, near the border of radical socialist South Yemen. The guerrillas now reportedly possess hand-carried SAM ground-to-air missiles, and both Popular Front and government sources predict major clashes in the next few weeks. DHOFAR OFFERS AN ideal setting for counter- insurgency operations. The area is relatively small (10,000 square miles); its population, under 200,000, lives like the rest of Oman in 14th century conditions. (Oman in 1970 had an infant mortality rate of 75 per cent, three primary schools, one hospital, no press and five per cent literacy rate in a population of 750,000.) Guerrilla supply lines to South Yemen run through mountains less than 20 miles wide. Compared to Algeria, Vietnam, or Malaya, the fighting is simple. Yet the rebels have survived-and grown, though since 1973 they have faced government forces beefed up by several thousand Iranian soldiers and Iranian helicopter gunships, and coordinated by British military advisors. The Sultan's war today in fact bears an unmistakable British stamp. Officially the British admit to only 600 military personnel in Oman, but there are actually over 2,000 -irrcluding combat officers and pilots; training opera- tives and communications experts at the two RAF bases of Solala (in Dhofar) and Masirah. The elite branch is the 200-man Special Air Services (SAS), a counter-insurgency unit used in behind - the - line missions and for training local forces. IN THE WORDS of one British officer, Dhofar is "the last place in the world where an Englishman is still called sahib." British tactics in fact draw heavily on the lessons of previous British colonial wars. For ~ ,- "Officially the British admit to only 600 military personnel in Oman, but there are actually over 2,000 . . Dhofar is the last place in the world where an Englishman is still called sahib. British tactics in fact draw heavily on the lessons of previous British colonial wars." example, in Kenya the British relied on groups of deserters from nationalist and tribal forces, called "counter gangs," for intelligence gathering and combat operations. In Oman, the counter-gang policy has been developed by SAS training teams since 1970. Over 1,000 Dhofaris have been organized in tribal squads for counter- guerrilla actions. They are now particularly strong in eastern Dhofar, where, according to British reports, anarchy prevails as armed tribal groups monopolize power and operate protection rackets around desert wells. Thus, while the Popular Front has tried to eliminate tribal differences, the British have actively revived them. 'We regret that you were mugged. It's strictly against company policy now, you know.' Two other British tactics-first used in the Boer Wars but updated in the Malayan Emergency in the 1950's-are referred to as food control and population control. The terms mean starvation and forced re- settlement. WHILE AIRFORCE, NAVY and artillery detachments systematically bombard guerrilla-held areas, destroying animals, crops, wells and mountain paths, British construction workers have completed nine resettlement centers as part of this food and population control project. Dhofar's mountain population-where guer- rilla strength is greatest-faces two alternatives: death from shelling or starvation, or resettlement in govern- ment-controlled centers. Several thousand in recent months have fled to 'neighboring South Yemen, but most have been relocated in the nine centers, and others newly built around Dhofar's capital Solala. The centers are guarded by barbed wire fences and check points, which not only keep the inhabitants under control but prevent them from taking food out to the guerrillas. Air power is the government's key weapon against the rebels. Besides terrorizing' and attacking the liberated areas, it is used for intelligence gathering and to increase mobility of government forces. The sultan is now using helicopter-borne troops, backed by British and Iranian forces,, to launch an extensive offensive in northwest Dhofar. THERE IS NO sign that the British or Iranians are planning to cease their intervention. The Iranians, who want to be the arbiters of politics in the Persian Gulf, claim the British do not want the war to end because of the excellent miliary training offered by the Dhofar war. The British accuse the Iranians of relying too much on American Vietnam-style tactics, of using too much firepower and not enough ground fighting. Meanwhile the Sultan, offering pilots lucrative, three- year contracts, leaves no doubt he envisages a long term war, even with foreign assistance. Fred Halliway is a British free lance writer who speciaizes in the Mid East. Copyright PNS 1975. per pushers ing, the status quo is bound to be upset. A truly effective solution to the housing problem would require sterner measures than the mere addi- tion of a few housing inspectors or the construction of a few more units. To really solve the problem, individ- uals involved must be ready to compromise to a meaningful degree. If long-term improvement of the housing problem is to be realized, this premise must be fully accepted. THE CLAIM THAT the Fair Rental Practices Com mittee is biased in favor of the landlords, is not true. There are as many tenant activists as landlords, as well as a number of individuals who do not seem to cloarlv fall on either side of the issue. Whatever comes ot of this committee will repre- sent the work of representatives of all parts of the community, and should be respected as such. A final point: whatever does emerge from the Com- mittee can have no impact if it does not pass City Council. City Council will make the final decisions. The Committee for Fair Rental Practices should keep this in mind as they proceed with their work. The Fair Rental Practices Committee is holding mublic hearings, so if you would like to voice your opin- ions of the Ann Arbor housing situation, you should attend them. Hearings will be held at 7:30 p.m., Oct. 28, at the Community Center and at 3 p.m., Nov. 5, in East Quad. ± tw LM 40 § n ait. Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Rental group not just pa Friday, October 24, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M'i. 48104 Matlovich: Double standard THOUGH LEAVING THE door open to further court consideration of the case, Judge Gerhard Gesell's re- fusal to prevent the Air Force from discharging Sargeant Leanord Mat- lovich because of his homosexual pre-. ference was both a severe blow to the hopes of civil libertarians nation- wide and a reaffirmation of the dou- ble standard of justice affecting military personnel. For Matlovich, the decision prob- ably wasn't a surprising one. Since he dramatically revealed his sexual preference late last summer, and subsequently became the focus of much national attention, the Sar- geant has repeatedly expressed doubt that his military life could continue untrammelled. The discharge order officially went into effect yesterday - bringing a distinguished 12-year career record to an abrupt end. The Air Force has once again upheld their hallowed tradition of going "by the book" in this particu- lar case, something which Judge.Ge- sell himself called a tragedy of the case. Matlovich was merely caught up in the inertia of the insensitive military machine. And the tragedy is more than a personal one. The Matlovich case cuts deeply into the traditionally un- reasoning logic that has governed all of the military's personnel interac- tions. THE FACT IS that many of Matlo- vich's contemporaries knew he was homosexual and probably more than a few military officials knew it. TODAY'S STAFF: NEWS: Gordon Atcheson, Steve Hersh, Rob Meachum, Jim Nicoll, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Sorensen EDITORIAL PAGE: Mike Beckman, Steve Harvey, Paul Haskins, Jon Pansius ARTS PAGE: James Valk PHOTO TECHNICIAN: Scott Eccker Enjoy, enjoy IT'S HARD TO imagine a more inop- portune time for such temperate weather to visit Ann Arbor. Im- mersed in midterm exams and the opening phases of the infamous se- mester projects, most students are finding it difficult to spend an hour sunning on the Diag, much less take out time for a walk through the Arb. This is all because the Almighty Weathermaker deems it amusing to bless us with sunshine when most of us are tramped in the basement of It never affected his record, nor his performance. In times of both war and peace Sergeant Matl9vich ful- filled his duties without exception. Matlovich and his friends, more- over, have never made an effort to impose their sexual preference on others. They have their own bars, By KIM KELLER SINCE THE END of August, a little publicized, but potentially effective committee has been meeting. This is Mayor Wheeler's Blue Ribbon Committee on Fair Rental Practices. Set up amid cries that council members were not living up to their campaign pro- mises concerning the housing crisis; many people ex- pressed doubts that this committee could ever accom- plish anything. After all, hadn't there been a previous committee set up to study Rent Control, and hadn't that turned out to be a negative do-nothing committee? People also complained the Fair Rental Practices Committee was too large, 18 diverse individuals. How could a group of people that large get anything ac- complished? Finally people complained that the Com- mittee was biased, that it was weighed in favor of the housing industry. Though the committee and its purposes sparked considerable discussion when it was formed two months ago, there hasn't been sustained public interest in the issue since then. A number of points have to be mentioned. First of all, it is doubtful that this Committee will be a do nothing committee. It has been charged with the responsibility of not only analyzing the housing problem, but of finding solutions to it. THE COMMITTEE has been divided into subcom- mittees, each with their particular task. One of these subcommittees is devoted entirely to solutions. Most of the individuals on this subcommittee think they have a good idea of what the-housing problem is about and are concentrating on creative ways of solving it. They have discussed ideas ranging from the renovation of abandoned houses to the establishment of rent control based on supply, to the issuance of long term mort- gages so that more tenants can afford to buy houses. It is doubtful that such a solution-oriented group will fail to come up with some feasible solutions. Although the committee is large, its size has not hampered it. Recent meetings have proved much more productive than the chaotic first few. Of course, real test as to whether the committee will be effec- tive or not will come when all the research now being done by the subcommittees is completed. Only then will its decision-making power come into play, and there are some extremely controversial decisions to be made. It will be very difficult (if not impossible) to create solutions to the housing problem that will not affect some party negatively. IF NOTHING IS done, the tenants will surely claim they've been had. If something like rent control is proposed, the landlords will claim their rights as free market operators have been compromised. And if some type of city aid is called for, Council will balk at the prosnect of an unbearable fiscal burden. When a committee is charged with a task as great as de- veloping a solution to so complex a problem as hous- their tried from They uals aside that own meeting-places. They have unsuccessfully to keep the case becoming a media madness. were just trying, as homosex- have tried nationally, to put the cloak of grief and shame society has chosen to blanket them in. The Air Force has said that homosexuality in their ranks creates morale problems, but there have never been any such complaints on Matlovich's base in Langley, Virginia. The discharge perhaps instead struck a vicious blow to the morale of other gay military men and women who have long wanted to lead an accept- ed public life. WILL THERE EVER be a time when public law can have any sway with the military? Are they to re- main forever, particularly in peace- time, an isolated entity? The mili- tary so often expresses a desire to see their men and women lead nor- mal lives in the community, but when will they help put this idea into practice? Editorial Staff GORDON ATCHESON CHERYL PILATE Co-Editors-in-Chief DAVID BLOMQUIST ................ Arts Editor BARBARA CORNELL .. Sunday Magazine Editor PAUL HASKINS..............Editorial Director JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY Sunday Magazine Editor SARA RIMER................ Executive Editor STEPHEN SELBST................City Editor JEFF SORENSON............. Managing Editor MARY LONG .......... Sunday Magazine Editor STAFF WRITERS: Susan Ades, Tom Allen, Glen Allerhand, Ellen Breslow, Mary Beth Dillon, Ted Evanoff, Jim Finklestein, Elaine Fletch- er, Stephen Hersh, Debra Hurwitz, Lois Josi- movich, Doc Kralik, Jay Levin, Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Rob Meachum, Robert Miller, Jim Nicoll, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Ristine, Tim Schick, Katherine Spelman, Steve Stojic, Jim Tobin, Bill Turque, Jim valk, David Wein- berg, Sue Wilhelm, David whiting, Margaret Yao. Photography Staff KEN FINK Chief Photographer STEVE KAGAN ..............Staff Photographer PAULINE LUBENS ..........Staff Photographer Sports Staff BRIANsDEMING Sports Editor MARCIA MERKER ........ Executive Editor i I ro2 t&) r~i* v TP , I 1k)XR hCC I CGM P-- IZDT AROVML )11kMITV w rTO t 120 1 MORE (1IiUi THe iHitr QED2 I N1MPR6 001SE beL To RIC5 I MR(fE Lo8E~m PtYeAN WI? i 6k7RHEAMOOW"f s usw ~~I~ teV 10 A MOW K WO' AM I W"WMWNIIA To The Daily: WE THE UNDERSIGNED members of the LSA Student Government wish to reply pub- licly to a letter printed by the Daily on Wednesday, October 22, 1975. We are members of different political organizations, and in some cases, members of no particular organization; approxi- Letters Faye, also a member of LSA- SG. Among the major points of disagreement are the following: The rejection of Mr, Faye's mo- tion was not "an inhumane ges- ture" nor a function of "the size of each member's heart" nor are we against "helping some kids with a crippling dis- ease." to The D ii.l was spent is this form. This year we have approximately $5,000 to go toward financial contributions to students on campus. This responsibility to- ward students' needs has in- creased considerably in a year when the University, S.G.C., and the Rackham Student Gov- ernment have significantly de- creased amounts of money avail- ties which serve the needs of students at the University, and secondly those which can not get funding elsewhere. O There are literally thou- sands of charitable organiza- zations worthy of support. How then might the LSA-SG deter- mine which of these many do- ing constructive work deserve our support? And what then administrative and organization- al support, it would have been forthcoming. Lastly, LSA Student Govern- ment members are not intimi- dated by roll call votes; when and if an important issue arises, and if five members request such a vote, a roll call is taken. It is in the interests of com- pleting our meetings in a rea-