Page 4-Sunday, February 3, 1980-The Michigan Daily A student defends need for draft registration I The remnants of an era gone by are being unrolled. The protest signs are being dusted off and the poster presses are running at full blast. More than ten years later, the pervasive in- fluence of Vietnam is being felt, not just at home, but in the shaping of America's foreigii policy. Yet, before there is a return to the violence and rioting of the Vietnam era, it is important to put the present situation in per- spective. President Carter's decision to re-activate the Selective Service was the only substantive op- tion open to him in a war of words, threats, and counter-threats. The Soviets certainly realize that our current armed forces are severely un- dermanned. This consequently undermines the United States' military strength, and as any government leader can tell you, a viable military is the key to national security. Curren- tly, it would take between 111 and 151 days to put any drafted soldier on the front lines. By re- instituting Selective Service, the U.S. can reduce this time lag, thus - increasing our' military strength. If the Soviets begin to take this threat seriousy, President Carter's action might just prove to be the one that prevented war. A FAVORITE argument of opponents of registration and the draft is one predicated on the age of. the legislators. Why, ask many oppon- ents, should middle-aged or elderly men have the right to send teenagers and young adults out to the battlefield to fight wars that the youth did not start? This argument bears little credence when one considers that most of our current lawmakers have themselves been drafted to serve our country. Furthermore, many of them\ have sons and possibly daughters who would be affected by a draft. Does the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan really present a clear and present danger to the security of the United . States? The opponents of the draft registration answer that it does not ,constitute such a danger. In fact, at this time neither the President nor any of his advisors believe that the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan is threatening to the U.S. in and of itself. By Joshua Aaronson However, the key to determining effective foreign policy, or indeed, any policy, is possession of the foresight to consider the long term ramifications of any action. These results no one can predict with certainty, but even a glance at the Soviet action raises some in- teresting questions. There is no doubt that the Soviets have placed chemical warfare-weaponry inside Afghanistan and are arming their men with the necessary'related equipment If their only pur- pose is to aid the government of that country, as they claim, why is this chemical weaponry necessary? Why the executions of tens of thousands of political prisoners? Why the deployment of so many troops? Certainly it is not merely coincidental that the Soviets are now only 300 miles from the sea port they so desperately desire. HISTORICALLY, AFGHANISTAN has been a buffer zone between the Soviet Union and the Indian sub-continent It is only in the last ten or so years that the country of Afghanistan has been a pro-Soviet regime. The Soviet's rationale for their move into Afghanistan is not wholly clear, but to be unprepared for further action would be naive on our part. Yet, even confronted with this information, the opponents remain steadfast. Should the Soviets take over the entire Persian Gulf, these opponents claim it is not a threat to our coun- try, and most importanly, to us as individuals. They claim that there are other ways to solve the world's problems without fighting. Indeed, there is no doubt that there are other methods, but history has consistently proven them to be ineffective. It is a sad but true fact that if.we as a people are to achieve higher moral goals, some of our more immediate aims must be sacrificed. Finally, the opponents of the draft will not let us forget Vietnam. There is an important and valuable lesson to be learped from Vietnam, but that lesson is not that every subsequent foreign crisis possibly requiring military inter- vention will be another Vietnam. This country must not get caught up in "Vietnam phobia." If one is going to stir up memories from that war, one should also stir up memories of World War II. Had the U.S. not been so hesitant to inter- vene and take Hitler's threat seriously, millions of lives might have been spared. Viet- nam is not an excuse for inaction. It is because of this phobia that our armed forces are so depleted, that our military is so under-equip- ped. Our foreign and military policy has suf- fered long enough under the cloud of previous mistakes. There is no better time than the present to correct this situation. FEW PEOPLE CONDONE war. In this coun- try, people are free to express their dissenting viewpoints on this or any other subject in an acceptable form. And, although we consider freedom of expression to be one of those inalienable rights granted to all individuals, maniy countries do not share this consideration. The stark fact of the matter is that these inalienable rights are rights that were won through war. The way we live today is a direct result of the wars that were fought so diligen- tly by our founding fathers. Those wars enable us to protest, and to express our own opinions, even if they are in disagreement with those of the government. However, dissention is one thing, and defec- tion is quite another:It seems that most of those people who oppose registration and the draft are the people who will jump in their cars and head for the nearest border when called upon to serve their country. These people will leave the U.S. offering the most moral of reasons for their flight, without considering the immorality of their own actions. It is necessary, then, when protesting the draft, or registration, or even a war, to put the issues in perspective. Personal considerations should be removed to the side. War is enough to scare even the most callous of nen, yet one must consider the morality of the alternative. Joshua Aaronson is an LSA freshman planning to major in business. Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM ABOUT 200 PROTESTORS marched from Community High School to the Federal Building last Thursday to protest the registration and the draft. Many Americans believe that these students are refusing to fulfill an obligation they owe their country by resisting President Carter's call for a renewed Selective Service program. -A .1 hTe Sidjirgant BaIl Nitt CYears of Editorial Freedot Vol. XC, No. 102 dews Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Olympic iboycottna drive, world into partisan, crisis Afghan rebels in Pakistan stilt hope to conquer Soviet army .i .i HE FATE of the Moscow Olympics TL' appears to be sealed. President Carter has strongly worded his support of a boycott; theCongress has followed his lead; and the American people, ac- cording to polls, also believe the United States' athletes should stay home. Unless the Soviet Union withdraws its military forces from Afhanistan-an event that seems about as likely as Michigan winning a Rose Bowl game-our runners, gymnasts, and swimmers will be visiting some other country this August, or perhaps, none at all. China and Japan have supported the boycott, as have several western European and South American nations. The president has even sent Muhammad Ali to Africa to rally sup- port for the move. But the rush toward this Cold War, tactic is no less deplorable than it was before it became internationally popular. The international alliance the U.S. is building will not bring world peace. It will have no effect on Soviet expansion, as supporters of the boycott would have us believe. It will serve only to hasten the polarization of the com- munity of nations into two large, angry, and dangerously hostile camps. Any Third World nation that has no in- terest in choosing sides (and thus destroying relations with one or the other of the superpowers) will not be able to avoid making a decision. If it elects to go to the Games, even if the motive is the noble one to preserve the cooperation the Olympics demand, the U.S. government will peg the nation as "one of them." Similarly, any non- aligned nation that tries to stay in favor with the West by boycotting will find itself in hot water with the Russians. Yet the U.S. presses on, testing the Soviets with a move that will no doubt inspire a retaliatory, and perhaps sterner, move by the Soviets. Maybe 'Americans then will decide that the escalation has gone far enough. If the Olympic boycott goes through, as it almost certainly will, the best then can be hoped is that the U.S. does not extend its jingoistic fervor to other areas of foreign policy. Perhaps, if the president comes back to his senses, the situation will be reparable by way of acts of genuinely good faith. PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN - Fear, confusion, anger-the emotions are almost palpable in the cold, brittle, thin air of this Pakistani city near the Afghan border, the headquarters of the Islamic National Front of Afghanistan. The Afghan refugees who have streamed over the high mountain passes and spilled into a dozen refugee centers in Pakistan are angry at everyone: at the Russians for invading their coun- try; at Americans, whom they believe will do nothing effective against the Russians; even at Muslim leaders like Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Chief Yasir Arafat and the Ayatollah Khomeini, who have failedto denounce the Russian invasion. BUT MOSTLY THERE is in- tense hatred of the Russians, and' it is not isolated in the refugee camps. In the city of Quetta, capital of Pakistani Baluchistan, I sat, on a bus with two young Hazaras, Shi'ite descendants of the Mongolian soldiers of Genghis Khan who had settled years ago in the center of Afghanistan. Theirgrandfather, they said, had fled to Pakistan 80 years ago in the time of Ab- durrahman Khan, the harsh ruler who unified Afghanistan. "Give us rifles and we shall return to fight, for the motherland," declared one of the brothers. When I remarked that their family had lived here for 80 years, and that they had never even seen Afghanistan. it could hardly be considered their "motherland," they replied: Never mind, we are all Muslims. It is all the same. SUCH SENTIMENTS prevail in Quetta. The Baluchis have even put aside their perennial quarrel with the Pakistan central government in Islamabad over their demand for greater autonomy, and funds for the, development of Baluchi-language textbooks. All local con' emns have been overshadowed by the momentous events in Afghanistan, where it is believed that Muslim brothers are being enslaved by foreign infidels. By Richard Frye among many of the populace here. Equally real is the sentiment for some sort of Pan-Islamic union,, ranging in conception' from an idealistic United States of Islam to a narrower union of Iran and Pakistan to save their common neighbor, Afghanistan. If the idea lacks support among the bureaucrats of Tehran and Islamabad, it is nonetheless real among the refugees. One hers such proposals from all sides: the Afghan refugees, the Baluchis, 'The Afghan refugees who have streamed over the high mountain passes and spilled into, a dozen # refugees centers in Pakistan are angry at Everyone: at the Russians for invading their country; at. Americans, whom they believe will do nothing ef- fective against the Russians; even at Muslim leaders like PLO chief Yasir Arafat and the Ayatollah Khomeini, who have failed to denounce the Russian invasion.' their headquarters here cannot agree among themselves as what form of governn ent shodL exist in Afghanistan.But they are firmly united on the one major point: it should not be a Russian government, nor a Russian pup- pet. And there is also despair and pessimism, especially among the refugees who plan to cross back into Afghanistan to fight the Russian's or the Russian-directed Afghan army. They lack the mos elemental equipment. One of t 3 great needs, they say, is for simple walkie-talkips so that bands of guerrillas can keep in contact with each other and in- form groups which are in danger of encirclement. They say they need mine detectors in order to keep frontier passes open. They seek support from anywhere, though few expect to get it from the United Stat Reports that the Soviet regin' installed in Kabul had asked for help from Angola, Ethiopia, Cuba, and Palestine caused con- sternation in one camp. "Arafat must be contacted to deny this," said one. "There must be solidarity in the ranks of Mtalim leaders for us." Rumors abound of heroism and the dangerous plight of the refugees. But little isverifiabl The rumors and the scheme blanket this land like the snow, and change with each passing storm. Just several days ago, armed Pakistanis stopped a British tourist bus at the nearby Bolan Pass, which leads to the plains of the Indus River. The armed men boarded the bus and asked if any Russians were among the travellers; if so, the Russians would be killed on sight, they said. The frightened English, whose ancestors once fought and died near here for the greater glory of the empire, were allowed to pass unmolested. The fear that the *hussians will reach the frontier at Chaman and then invade Pakistan is real the Pakistanis. TOWARDS IRAN, there is an ambivalent feeling: exhilaration over the revolution, but distrust of Khomeini which tempers people's enthusiasm. Rumors of the ill treatment of Baluchis in Zahidan by Khomeini's followers have roused many against the Ayatollah. In the bazaar of Quet- ta, p Ayat ther Of disa fere "fre )hotos and pictures of the late Richard Frye is a professor tollah Taleghani abound, but- at Harvard's Near Eastern e is not one of Khomeini. Language Center and is the f course there are author of several books on greements, too. The four dif- nt groups of Afghan Persia. He wrote this piece for edom fighters" who have the Pacific News Service. U.N. GENERAL ASSEMBLY OVERWHELMINGLY APPROVES RESOLUTION CALLING FOR THE SOVIETS~TO LEAVE AFGHANISTA. Peanut diplomacy in action " EANUT DIPLOMACY" seems to be the Carter adminsitra- hion's latest contribution to the historial lexicon. All a dictator has to do to get support from Carter is label any economic aid as "peanuts." It looks like Peanut Diplomacy is going to work for Pakistani President Mohammad Zia ul-Haq, who several weeks ago whined and complained that the IT C n-ffpr of 'J2nmI illinn in nivl to But now, the Carter administration has decided to give Zia not only peanuts, but also peanut butter, jelly and Wonder Bread. Carter has sent a high-level delegation to Zia to tell him that the $400 million is part of a larger international aid effort and the first step in a long-term American comit- ment to Pakistan. How unfortunate that a perceived r_ _ . 1... 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