Tuesday, May 22, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine, Tuesday, May 22, 973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine 'CONTROLLED' HOLOCAUST Nixon's nuclear strategy By JOHN HALL they will be hard to grasp for a advance of technology, that cap- Some military chiefs believe, WASHINGTON (UPI) - Is the generation of Americans that ability is within the Pentagon's however, that Nixon's theories on 30-minute nuclear war an ob- has been raised to adulthood in grasp. The accuracy of U.S. mul- nuclear war are wide enough to solete concept? the age of overkill. tiple, independently targeted re- encompass the capability to strike Nuclear planners formerly U.S. officials are vague about entry vehicles (MIRV) - now in retaliation at an enemy's came up with one grim scenario how a limited nuclear exchange being placed in the nose cones of missile silos, with the aim of pre- for Armageddon: The blinding could start. One possibility is an the Minutemen - is measured in venting further damage to t h e flash obliterating the cities of accidental launch. Another is feet. United States. country A, followed by retaliation that the Soviets - driven by This creates a whole new set Lt. Gen. Otto J. Glasser, the in kind to country B - with the some crisis such as the Middle of problems - the main one be- Air Force deputy chief of staff time elapsed equal to the half East or Berlin - might be tempt- ing that the enemy might become for research and development, hour from launch pad to explos- ed to send a volley of their nuc- convinced of an American capa- says "the ability to limit dam- ,AT WAS IT - the balance Aericapci S9s missis. oi a bility to launch a disarming first age can well e seen as a form THTWSI h aac mrcncte u ..msie strike, of additional deterrence and as of terror, stark and simple. Hor- silos, with the aim of disarm- a means to further discourage rible as it was to contemplate, it ing the country and then forc- NIXON'S foreign policy mes- the other side from nuclear has worked, till now. No nuclear ing terms. sage pledged no "drastic change brinkmanship." weapons have been fired in an- BUT IN the world of strategic in our nuclear programs" a n d ger since 1945 and Hiroshima-Na- gamesmanship, the scenario is said U.S. forces "are not de- AND IKLE, in his Foreign A- gaski. not so important. ast security si ..fre aentd- ADILi i oeg f But technology and man's irre- against all contingencies. It is a signed to provide a capability for fairsarticle, says the potential pressible need to find new ways chessboard world where men a disarming first strike." missiles and current choices in weapons effects could enable both sides to avoid the killing of vast Y ~millions and yet to inflict as- stire destruction on military, in- .. dustrial and transportation as - sets- the sinewes and muscles of the regime initiating war. WALLABEE ...mak es r;1 Concrete feel like grass MEN'S Sand or brown suede bblack, brown or white calf .. $30.00 Boot style: sand or brown suede . $32.00 WOMEN'S Ssnd or brewnsusede, brown or white callf . $28.0a Boot style, sand or brown sorde $29.00 if you see news happen call 76-DAILY QjNQY I4NeER is finally here! True seafood lovers celebrate this occasion with adowneast feast DINNERNIGHTLY. INCLUDINGSUNDAYS 401 DEPTISit, Ass ARsis 769-VON2R NDED 7W... ... to defend himself seem to be converging on a new theory of nuclear warfare as infinite in its sophistication as the type of wea- pons which could be developed to fight it. The dominant hues running through the Nixon administra- tion's strategic policies today form a picture of gradual, drawn- out and even "controlled" nuc- lear warfare. IN HIS foreign policy message May 3, President Nixon drew this picture more clearly than he has in the past. "An aggressor, in the unlikely event of nuclear war, might choose to employ nuclear weap- ons selectively and in limited numbers for limited objectives," Nixon said. "No President should ever be in the position where his only option in meeting such aggression is an all-out nuclear response." Furthermore, the President be- lieves, the inability to respond with flexibility to a nuclear at- tack "could tempt an aggressor to use nuclear weapons in a lim- ited way in a crisis. If the Unit- ed States has the ability to use its forces in a controlled way, the likelihood of nuclear re- sponse would be more credible, thereby making deterrence more effective and the initial use of nuclear weapons by an opponent less likely" THE CONCEPT is not new. Nix- on frequently has referred toxthe need for a flexible response to a nuclear attack - something short of committing the entire U.S. nuclear arsenal, But the words " controlled" and "limited" in association with atomic warfare are new - and have-nightmares about waking up to confront an enemy saying, "Stick 'em up, I've got you cov- ered" or words to that effect. Fred Charles Ikle, the Califor- nia sociologist chosen by Nixon to be his new arms control chief, says if the United States is willing to credit an enemy with being irrational enough to strike at U.S. cities, it also must give the enemy credit for being ir- rational enough to attempt to dis- arm the United States. "In countries that tolerate a dictatorship, a leader might al- ways rise to the top who deems it a virtue, perhaps part of his revolutionary creed, to live dan- gnrotislv," tkle wrote in "Fore- ign Affairs." HOW DO YOU go about pro- tecting against - or respond- ing to - a maniac who might decide a knockout punch against Minuteman missiles is the right thing to do in a crisis? U.S. land-based Safeguard anti- ballistic missiles are being fixed - under a new process called the command data buffer sys- tem - so that they can be in- stantly retargeted by ancomput- er. In the past, the missile silos had to be physically entered and their guidance systems redirected by hand. This means that whatever pro- portion of its missiles the Unit- ed States fires in retaliation could, on short notice, be aimed at military targets such as air- fields and weapons. TO AIM them at enemy mis- sile silos themselves is not now possible, the Pentagon says. U.S. missiles do not have the re- quired combination of accuracy and payload to knock out hard- ened missile silos. But, with the HAIRSTYLING As You Like It! NEW TRENDS FOR 1973 TRIMS-SHAGS AND RAZOR CUTS ---2 SHOPS-- 611 E. UNIVERSITY 615 E. LIBERTY Dascola Barbers MAST'S SHOES 619 E. Liberty WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU WANT! * Quality typewriter ribbons * Quality typewriter repair * Eaton's Bond paper * Panasonic desk lamps * Fisher and Bic pens 0 Flairs and markers * CANON and OLYMPIA calculators * SCM portable typewriters OFFICESUPPLY HOUSE 613 E. William 665-3763 BANK AMERICARD WELCOME