Page 4-Friday, February 29, 1980--The Michigan Daily Myths abundant about Israel, PLO, and Arafat After a recent fact-finding tour of Israel and Southern Lebanon, Professor Frederick Jameson of Yale University accepted an in- vitation of the University of Michigan English Department to address a Viewpoint audience last Tuesday night on the results of his trip. Jameson, a professor of French, respected literary critic, and author of Political Uncon- scious, expressed his commitment to Marxist ideals in his attempt to apply Marxist social theory to Israel. Though his attempts to relate classical theories of class conflict to Israeli society as a 'formula for revolution may have iad their flaws, his discussion of his trip was profoundly noteworthy. He conveyed much im- portant information during his poorly publicized lecture on the problems of the Mid- dIe East that have been blatantly omitted by the American press. The relentless bombing of South Lebanon by Israel has been so grossly overlooked by the American press that it has been called "the most under-publicized war in recent times." This situation, along with the unreported moderation of PLO doctrine, has been greatly ignored by the American press, which has cultivated a distorted view of the political realities of the Middle East. LIKE OTHER RECENT visitors to South Lebanon, Jameson paints a depressing picture of the Lebanese countryside that has been ravaged by Israeli shelling since April. Schools And refugee camps have been targeted with an- ti-personnel weapons, the use of which violates the conditions of American defense contracts. Israel has used cluster-bombs, scatter-bombs, and other such firepower for purely offensive purposes. In talks with American officials in Lebanon, Jameson learned of their distress in knowing that American weapons are used for these pur- poses. The Americar displeasure was ar- ticulated when he said that these officials find the situation analogous to the "search and destroy" policies of the U.S. in Vietnam. 2 Though Israel claims that military outposts are the targets of this campaign, there is much (evidence to the contrary. Among the refugee camps hit, Rashadiyya has been most brutally yictimized by the Israeli policy of "pre- emptive" strikes, as opposed to the former policy of specific reprisals. Jameson says that. Rashadiyya has been hit only when filled to its capacity of 30,000. When the camp has been vir- tually empty because of the regular exodus af- ter shelling, it has been left alone. Thus, the strikes are less indiscriminate than we have been led to believe. WHILE WE CAN fairly assume that there are some military personnel in the camps, it must be pointed out that from April to August, the daily shelling resulted in only one reported military casualty for the Palestine Liberation By H. Scott Prosterman security is the expressed motive behind these attacks. Jameson offers that Israel is seeking to create a no-man's land in South Lebanon; the desolation would then discourage human habitation and create an added buffer to the north. Another motive mentioned was the Israeli intention of turning the Lebanese people against the PLO by causing them to feel the Israeli retaliation, and thereby manipulate the Lebanese government into ousting the PLO from its domain. While the former motive has been successful, the second has backfired, tur- ning the Lebanese people not against the PLO, but against Israel and the U.S. (a tacit sponsor of this campaign, however unknowing). There exists another glaring fallacy in the notion that these attacks are aimed at military outposts. In his conversation with Yassir Arafat, Jameson learned from the PLO spokesman that: "We promised the Lebanese government not to launch any attacks from Lebanon ... as a pre-condition for having cam- ps out here. Israel.knows this, and is attacking the Lebanese people to try to turn them against us .. ." While many American readers find it easy to discuss Arafat's statements because of his radical and uncompromising image, it should be pointed out that this agreement has been verified by both the Lebanese Prime Minister and a U.N. Ambassador. THE UNCOMPROMISING image of Arafat and the PLO is another fallacious myth per- petuated by the American press. While the PLO is mentioned by the American media only when a terrorist attack is carried out on Israeli civilians, it fails to mention that the PLO.fun- ctions extensively as a social service organization. Along with its most important function as a refugee relief center, the PLO is also a source for education, child care, medical care, and other welfare functions. Likewise, the official PLO policy toward Israel has been equally misrepresented. We learn from Jameson that Arafat no longer speaks of the mission to "liquidate the Zionist presence in Israel." After bitter internal debate, the PLO has acquiesced to the "Two- State solution" in the West Bank and Gaza and has stated its willingness to establish its state "on any terrorities evacuated by Israel." Critics of the PLO will point out that it has yet to officially recognize the legitimacy of Israel. These critics, however, overlook the poor sense displayed by Israel in using its carrots and sticks to achieve policy aims. Israel has given the PLO no reason to think it has anything to gains by recognizing Israel's legitimacy. It has offered no inducements for peace and has shown the Palestinian people only a brutal and imperialistic side of Zionism. On the subject of recognition, Arafat was quoted Yassir Arafat Menachem Begin Organization (PLO), while the civilian population suffered many deaths and injuries. When he had the opportunity to question Israeli officials about a Sunday raid in which civilian passengers were gunned down at Israeli road- blocks on a Lebanese costal road, Jameson was told, "if they were killed in their cars, they must have been Palestinian militants." It would serve us well to examine the objec- tives of the offensive Israeli policy. National as saying, "I have a card to play. Should I play it now, when I can hope for nothing in return, or later when-it might be more suitable?" PERHAPS THE MOST serious obstacle to American understanding of the Middle East is themistaken association of anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. Many Jews vocally dissociate themselves from the Zionist movement. We must remember that political Zionism began late in the 19th century as a European. phenomenon, in part as a reaction to centuries I i Ninety Years of Vol. XC, No. 124 Edited and managed by stude Beaten at th HEN THE BOSSES of the Michi- v gan Democratic party got together last year and decided to nominate delegates to the national convention through closed caucuses rather than the usual open primary, their intentions were clearly less than honorable. The idea was to make it possible for the party regulars to determine who the state party's choice would be at the July convention. The workings of their plan were very simple: Many fewer people tend to vote in caucuses than in a primary, since voters must register as party members months before the actual voting (the Michigan deadline was last Thursday, eight full weeks before the April 26 voting date). Ultimately, the majority of the votes would probably go not to the favorite of the general populace, but to that of the party bigwigs. All they would need to do, they thought, would be to carefully herd those of the voters who had ex- pressed support for the "right" can- didate to the polls, while supporters of 'Ediorial Free(do ns News Phone: 764-0552 nts at the University of Michigan eir own game the "wrong" candidate sat impotently at home. It was extremely gratifying, then, to see a wrench thrown into the political heavyweights' plans by an organization of the state's poor, as reported by various news sources yesterday. ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, has been quietly registering low- income people in the party ever since the caucus plan was announced. A mountain of 2600 party membership applications was turned in on Tuesday alone. As it turns out, ACORN's multitudes, will have considerable influence on the outcome of several of the caucus votes in Detroit and Grand Rapids. The most heartening thing about the clever politicking by the action group is not the heavy representation it will guarantee the poor, but that this year may be the last time the Powers That Be try railroading their presidential choice into power. Congratulations to ACORN, .and nuts to the bigwigs in Lansing. The United States can no longer afford a lackadaisical approach toward energy consumption and conservation. Our heavy reliance on non-renewable energy resour- ces results in inflated prices and ever-worsening environmental damage, as the resources are depleted. International, political, and economic affairs are drastically affected by dependence on foreign oil. As vividly demon- strated by the Iranian crisis, the U.isvulnerable to the political whims of the oil "exporting coun- tries. Each dollar sent abroad adds to economic woes at home. Our relations with allies are strained by the competition for scarce oil. THE FEAR OF running low on oil prevents the U.S. from taking rational action in response to political events in oil-rich areas of the world. The American reac- tion to the invasion of Afghanistan demonstrates the energy situation's impact on both our foreign policy and domestic affairs. i Each newly found barrel of oil exacts a higher cost on society's limited resources. Proven reser- ves of natural gas in 1977 were below those of 1953 and were 27 per cent below the peak reserves of 290 trillion cubic feet in 1967,, according to a publication by a corsortium of the American Gas Association, the American Petroleum Institute, and the Canadian Petroleum Institute. Even a rapid flow of funds into a synthetic fuels industry will not significantly add to the energy supply. Production and processing of these alternatives, concentrated in the dry western states, would divert water from human and agricultural needs. THE EXTRACTION and burning of coal, our most abundant fossil fuel, exacts a high environmental N ew e nerg;su c s~ u,, be discovere of persecution of Jews and the internal political fragmentation attributed to their presence. Jewish settlers of Palestine, up through the early 20th century, explicity dissociated them-* selves from the Zionist movement as a bastar- dization of their religious ideals. The impact of the Holocaust on the conscience of the world led to the creation of the Jewish state less than three years after World War IL. Arafat, we are told, has expressed his awareness of the.distinction between Zionism and Judaism, as well as the historical com- plexities of Zionism and the struggle to create a Jewish homeland. Most Palestinians, though, do not understand these complexities and can. not be expected to, given their exposure to only the most brutal aspects of the movement that has made them a nation of refugees. Therefore, they equate Zionism with imperialism and racism. Israel, in turn, along with the vast majority of American Jews, equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. They fail to see, as Jameson points out, that "the Palestinian movement painfully re-duplicates the essential dynamics of the Zionist movement in the beginning.." We are reminded that Menachem Begin wa first known as an uncompromising terrorist for the Zionist movement, but is now heralded as a distinguished statesman. While a surprising number of Israeli Jews have expressed their sympathy for the Palestinian cause, American Jews fail to see the tragically common elements of the Zionist movement with the Palestinian cause: that they were both catalyzed by excessive op- pression and brutality in an attempt to destroy a national identity and disperse a race oo people. In this context, I would dare to say that the Jews have forgotten an important lesson of the Holocaust: No race of people can assert its supremacy over another and oppress it as a manifestation of its own ideals. After growing up in a Jewish family that has many survivors of the Holocaust, I feel qualified to make such a judgment. H. Scott Prosterman is a graduate stu- dent in the Center for Near Eastern studies creasingly attractive. The two types of solar heating-passive and active-are economically feasible in more private homes today, especially when supported with federal and state tax credits available for solar energy. Thousands of small hydro- electric dams, abandoned when electricity from fossil fuels became much less expensive, have an electrical generating capactyt equal to 50 of the largest nuclea po~er plants. incentives Photovoltaic cels' hold great can be en- promise to produce economically 'e in three competitive electricity directly from the sun. Winds, too, can be sekeeping: harnessed to produce electricity n practices on both commerical and private tenance and levels. would yield ENERGY FROMorganic mat- f waste: ter (biomass) is available in ned produc many forms. Methane can be ob- er can con- tagnedifrom bacterial action on amounts of organic waste, such as human aom produc- sewage, spoiled crops, and n be used to seaweed. The process of refining done on the crude oil from Euphorbia Lathvris, ). A great a desert plant, costs $40 a barrel, realized if about ,the same as the price o industrial crude oil on the world spot applied to market. Wood is widely used as a tricity. It is source of heat and has potential per cent of for greated use. Alcohol, distilled sumption is from grain, can be added to gas t. Recycling (gasohol) toraise the octane and recover up stretch supplies. he original Any energy strategy that is to innovation: take future generations into con- canobetimn: sideration must emphasize con esigning of servation and renewable resour ces. .Recent technical and ts. economic evidence clearly points will only the way. As soon as this nation in of our non- adopts. a policy of charging the nces. -Philip true costs of consumption to those ice hiof- who deplete limited resources, Lence, the of- real progress along this path will he American be made. dvancement timately the to the use of The Public Interest Resear es." Rather these alter- ch Group in Michigan esnow and, in (PIRGIM) addresses a number feasible on of consumer and student con- grounds. As cerns in its weekly column on es dwindle, this page. This article was nental and written by PIRGIM members rise, these will be in- Paul Grekin and Jim Edelson. cost on the delicate ecosystem. Car- bon dioxide, the main product of coal combustion, has profound ef- fects on the world climate. It raises the average global tem- perature and leads to the shrinking of arable lands and the melting of the polar ice caps. Nuclear power is an alternative we cannot afford. The econom- ic requirements of this capital- intensive energy source have become too great for utilities and rate-payers to bear. Further, John Holdren, physicist at the University of California, lists the following environmental problems of nuclear power, in or- der of decreasing danger: inter- national proliferation of nuclear weapons, misuse of nuclear materials by subnational groups, accidents and sabotage at nuclear facilities, and routine radioactive emissions and ex- posures in the nuclear fuel cycle. The present patterns of energy consumption are less than 50 per cent efficient. Eighty per cent of this waste could be recovered without altering our standard of living. Conservation, when viewed as an alternative energy source, is cheaper, more readily available, and less environmen- tally destructive than conven- tional sources. By reducing or eliminating our dependence on foreign oil, conservation can strengthen our national security and boost the economy. r In Energy Future: Report of the Energy Project at the Har- vard Business School, Daniel Yergin proposes a detailed con- servation plan. In the transpor- tation sector, regulation of automobile mileage should be in- creased beyond the current plan- ned 1985 standard of an average of 27.5 mpg. Bus and car-pool use should be stimulated. THROUGH TAX and loans, industry( couraged to conserv areas: 1) Improved hou Small investments in such as furnace maini lighting adjustments v big savings. 2) Recovery o Cogeneration. Combi tion of heat and pow serve considerablea energy. Waste heat fri tion of electricity can heat buildings (this is University campus potential would be steam generated in processes were also the production of elec estimated that 20 p national energy con industrial waste heal of waste products can to 93 per cent of 1 energy investment. 3) Technical i Energy efficiencies proved by the red processes and produc CONSERVATION postpone the depletio renewable resour Abelson, editor of Scb ficial publication of ti association for the A of Science, says, "U1 country must adaptt renewable resourc than being exotic; natives are available many instances, are purely economic g conventional suppli causing environm economic costs to renewable sources LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Relation To the Daily: Feb. 22 I thank the Michigan Daily for the coverage you gave to last Thursday's discussion concer- ning engineers and the draft (Daily, Feb. 22), but I feel it is necessary to offer two additional C.. ...- of engineers to share this knowledge with the missioned directl student population. ves, and thus My second point concerns freedom to live w engineers in the army. You wants; and pursu reported that engineers in the aspirations. Agai army perform tasks very dif- ferent from civilian engineers. H ub draft clarified ly into the resert reporting our discussion. retains total -Kenneth R. Close where he (or she) Cpt., US Army e civilian career Assist. Prof. of Militar in, thank you for Science bard was misquoted y U I