OPINION Wednesday, October 28, 1981 The Michigan Doily Diplomacy -not arms-for stable Mideast By Robert Levine It has become increasingly apparent that the Reagan administratio 's Mideast policy is a three-ball juggling act involving (1) ap- peasement of Saudi Arabia's dignity in ex- change for doubtful strategic advantages, (2) support for Israel based on tradition and possible military advantages, and (3) a fixation on the "Soviet threat" to the Middle East. This perceived danger of Soviet expan- sionism provides the rationalization behind "strategic consensus," the U.S. program in- tent on combining the forces of Saudi Arabia, Israel, the Gulf States, and Jordan to deter Soviet invasion. As part Qf this policy, Reagan has promised to ensure the stability of partici- pating governments such as Saudi Arabia. THE MAIN EFFECTOR of these policies is military equipment. Armaments are being pumped at an unprecedeited rateinto poten- tially unstable or belligerent countries, in- cluding, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Sudan. On top of 'this, the administration is not troubling with diplomacy. to help resolve inter- nal foci of instability, such as the unanswered problems of Palestinian groups. The end result of these U.S. policies is to increase instability in the Middle East by provoking an arms race and negligently dismissing internal problems. One cornerstone of the strategic consensus policy is the administration's wish to arm Saudi Arabia with advanced equipment, in- cluding the five AWACS which are described by U.S. Senator John Glenn as "the world's most sophisticated ..: flying electronic equip- ment." THE CONTROVERSY over this sale proposal, which also includes the sale of extra F-15 fuel pods, bomb racks, advanced Sidewin- der missiles, and ground radar, began im- mediately With its announcement and will come to a climax this afternoon when the full Senate decides whether to veto the ad- ministration's request. Those against the sale believe that, while the official purpose of the sale is to detect and defend against a Soviet invasion, the equip- ment is more likely to be used in a war against Israel, where the AWACS could survey Israeli .territory from the Saudi border or even win air superiority in Arab countries bordering Israel. Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak expressed concern that the Saudis would share infor- mation with Arab countries at war with Israel. Contrary to the assertions of the Reagan ad- ministration, such tse of technology would do little to stabilize the area. THERE ARE ALSO fears that the secrets of AWACS technology would be risked if sold to the Saudis. All sources admit that there is no absolute guarantee against a radical political upheaval in Saudi Arabia. Opponents of the sale are aware of the glaring similarities to Iran, which ordered seven AWACS planes for its national defenses before the Shah's gover- nment was toppled. This concern prompted President Reagan to announce that "the U.S. would not allow Saudi Arabia to fall into the hands of any internal or external force threatening to cut off oil supplies for the West." This assurance, however, can not alleviate fears of Saudi instability because the ad- ministration probably does not have the ability to back up such a promise without direct inter- vention in Saudi affairs. Proponents of 'the sale have resorted to negative arguments that defeat of the AWACS. sale would destroy Saudi Arabia's confidence in its relations with the United States. But such arguments only underscore the weakness of the administration position, particularly because there is no mention of decreasing external security threats; Saudi-controlled AWACS would substitute for four American-controlled AWACS already patrolling the Saudi peninsula, ANOTHER FACET of the strategic consen- sus policy involves a program of enhanced military cooperation with Israel. This enhan- ced military cooperation, however, is also dependent on the approval of the AWACS sale. Like the AWACS deal, the program is designed to counter Soviet influence in the Middle East, but-also like the AWACS dal-it is potentially destabilizing to the area. The program might inlcude Israeli facilities for basing and maintaining American planes and ships, joint naval maneuvers, stockpiling of U.S. al-ms and medical supplies in Israel for use by American troops, and the possibility of a joint U.S.-Israeli land maneuvers. Such an extensive U.S. military plan would encourage acceleration of a Mideast arms race' with the U.S.S.R. This would only set the stage for a Soviet invasion-and thus negates the sup- posed intention of the U.S. strategic consensus of preventing a Soviet invasion. STOCKPILING United States arms in Israel, even though earmarked for use by U.S. troops, might be detrimental to a comprehen- sive peace settlement in the Mideast. It would be an unfortunate U.S. model for Israel to emulate in its conflict with the Palestinians: that military confrontation is more legitimate than negotiation in solving problems with ad- versaries. Such a signal would underline the Reagan administration's attempts to find an easy "military peace" over a difficult, permanent solution to problems of Middle East instability. The main sticking point to be resolved first is the place of the Palestinians in the Middle East. The failure of the Reagan administration to reestablish Egyptian-Israeli negotiations on the Palestinian question was a mistake paid for, in part, by the assassination of Anwar Sadat. In fact, much of the discontent recently manifested in Egypt is directly attributable to the Egyptian president's inability to make real progress in the Palestinean negotiations. REAGAN'S LACK OF encouragement for the talks, which finally restarted after 16 mon- ths hiatus, has concerned participants; they believe little will be accomplished because the U.S. is sending ambassadors rather than a high level special envoy. Without greater U.S. participation, the talks will likely break down again, since neither Egyptian nor Israeli negotiators have changed their positions. President Reagan has shown a lack of foresight by at once sending vast amounts of arms to the Middle East while neglecting-or rejecting-attempts to solve the area's internal problems. The stability of the Middle East can- not be guaranteed by force: stability of the area depends on the internal stability of each individual country. If the U.S.S.R. staged an invasion of the Mid- dle East, as Reagan envisions, would not this be the most vulnerable time for explosions of internal instability? COULD THE United States stop an invasion of the Middle Eastif there were a simultaneous Palestinian insurrection in Israel and surroun- ding countries, or if disgruntled Saudis took the opportunity to topple their leaders? Undoub- tedly no. Reagan should concentrate on diplomacy to guarantee the internal stability of the Middle East. Perhaps what he learns from successful negotiating could then be applied, to direct negotiations with the U.S.S.R. to secure per- manent peace for the Middle East. Levine is a third-year Inteflex student. a 0 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Ufer watches from Vol. XCII, No. 42 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Developing University ties- THERE WAS good news for the University and its faculty Mon- day. The administration announced it had received a $1.2 million grant from a private foundation to establish and endow a faculty chair. The money couldn't have come at a better time I for the University. As dwindling state subsidies become the rule rather than the exception, it's en- couraging to receive a large con- tribution from private supporters. But before University ad- ministrators take a bow, they should realize how lucky they really are. Sin- ce June, the University has been without a permanent vice president for university relations and develop- ment-the person whose job it is to woo public support for the University. Last spring, then-Vice President for University Relations Michael Radock announced he would leave his post in June. Since that time, the University has been without a permanent suc- cessor for Radock and it may be quite some time before one will be found. True, a person has been appointed to the post on an interim basis. But the University relations post is one that requires nurturing a strong relation- ship with the public; prolonging the absence of a permanent administrator in this position will only widen the gap between the University and the many organizations and individuals who con- tribute to this institution. It takes time to develop personal relationships with potential benefactors-time the University doesn't have. Now more than ever, the University needs the support of thy private sector. University administrators should recognize the need and find a qualified person-soon-to fill the position of vice president for university relations and development. By Christopher Potter It's 25 years ago. High above the November tumult at Ohio State's giant horseshoe stadium, a lone voice roars out from a small radio booth, shouting fierce fealto to the hated opponent from the nor- th. "There's five minutes to play, and Michigan clings to a one-touchdown lead, fourth down and two Ohio State on the Wolverine 5-yard line, and listen to the voice of football here at Columbus. Eleven hundred hardy Michigan souls hold their collective breath-will the Wolverines hold? 87,600 maniacal Ohio partisans scream out their hopes-will the Buckeyes score?" Ohio's quarterback rolls out, lunges to the Michigan 3. First down Ohio, or Michigan's ball? It's a matter of inches either way. The crowd hushes. The officials bring out the chains for a measurement. The voice from the radio filters the -tension back to Ann Arbor: "They're bringing out the yardstick... They're placing it down ... If you hear 87,000 people let out a titanic roar, you'll know Ohio State made it; if you hear nothing but dead silence, you'll know the Michigan line held." An almost imperceptible, interminable pause. Then, bellowing from the radio with the spiritual fervor of justice served: "He held! He held! The center of that Mkhigan line, God bless his Maize and Blue heart! I don't know who he was, but ten other men along with him. And Michigan takes over at the crusial make-or- break turning point of this fantastic football game ... . DENVER-News trickles in slowly here amidst Rocky Mountain High. Out-of-state radio stations rarely breach the mountains, and cable TV languishes in the theoretical stage.. You swiftly realize a local gridiron paradise it ain't. Colorado's three big-time teams rank among the worst in college football, and fry as you might, you just can't work up .. .+n"-- i. . - GAN dHIG n Act '1/ ' I f \ -0 e I 9' t ,5Q 1 Valhalla . broadcast. There was no middle ground when it came to Ufer and aesthetic tastes: He was an anomaly roaring.out in the blue, a take-me-or-leave-me media anarchist, thumbing his nose at the laid-back age of cool. His final years were not his best. Fame came lat'e but swif- tly: a state-wide radio network, Rose and Orange Bowl broad- casts for NBC, a growing national eminence born out of notoriety and love. One began to detect a studied frenzy creeping into his play-by-play, as though he realized he was now a celebrity and therefore obligated to play his eccentricities to the hilt. The near-falsetto hysterics, the raucous bleeping of his "General Patton" horn at each Michigan touchdown somehow seemed a cheapening, self-mocking distor- tion of the ebullient innocence of earlier years. OF COURSE by this time he was living under a death senten- ce. Stricken with cancer, he labored for four seasons and into a fifth under the dark, incessant knowledge that an undertone of panic, it was understandable, surely forgivable. Through it all, the voice itself never weakened-it remained an in- strument of pulsating, driven wonderment. Only this year when-his body a withered ghost of its robust me into a former self-he attempted once le as no again to narrate thefortunes of er could. the team he loved, did the in- theatrical strument begin to falter: It soun- ng a Can- ded hurt, , betrayed, hear- ,hich, in tbreakingly weary. Yet he was )lved into surely doing what he loved f almost most-cajoling, beseeching, e was a nudging his Wolverines into that and when end zone just one more time. our own. And now he is gone. You sit the -man thinking, reliving, and you k back to realize how your own painful Stadium ascent into adulthood would have our tran- been a measurably bleaker trip his play- without Bob Ufer's unseen but n't live passionately heard presence. st half a YOU TRY TO seek dome com- ou would fort out of your very real grief. ! Turn it You recall that Ufer often basked' ny others in the notion, only half-fanciful, eave him that former coaching immortal Fielding Yost was forever "wat- distanced ching down on his Maize and Blue pus co-op from football's Valhalla." zens of a Hopefully, the old coach now has n almost a partner in vigilance. estion of Go Blue. Awr T E ,cetrGAht+W - - _. - - - --,,.- - - -- ._ mesmerizing voice cheering on the Maize and Blue in tones so fevered and consuming that you knew the only thing you wanted to be in life was a sports announ- cer. Somehow the dream got lost, but not the voice. Ufer and Michigan: Insepera.b'le soulmates. A lovematch that spanned across five decades of emotion. Even as the man grew old, the voice never did. You lived vicariously through him for years, scoring touchdown after touchdown right at his side. The imagining was made easy. Bob Ufer was, unequivocably, the great dramatist of sports an- nouncers. A quiet," conservative insurance man 354 days of the year, he would on eleven fall Saturdays metamorphose magically into a gleeful raving orator for the Maize and Blue. IN AN ERA where chie taste dictates that play-by-play men maintain an austere impersonal distance from the events they describe, Ufer stood foursquare for unabashed emotion. In an age of studied broadcaster neutrality, he was the most unabashed of Homers, cheering when his Meeeeeechigan team triumphed, weeping when it lost, bellowing foul when they were perchance cheated by an official's in- discretion. One listened and believed that evil surely did exist in the world, and there was Ufer toU.nn.ic i Ufer could hold a gan unified dramatic who: other commentator ev His delivery was richly C yet never phony, evokin dide-like optimism w moments of defeat, ev tragic recitations of Greek dimensions. He sweet, sad symphonist,f he wept his tears were y ONE EITHER loved or hated him. You thin the games at Michigan when. you'd turn on y sistor radio to listen to by-play-you couldn without it-and at lea dozen folks around y protest: "No, not Ufer off!" And at least as ma would counter: "No, 1 on!" You recall a now-d November in a camp house, when the deniz jam-packed TV room rioted over the qu whether to listen to AB mentary on the Mich State game, or to Ufe BC's com- igan-Ohio er's radio w Potter is a former Daily Opinion Page Editor. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Witt 's nervy-and good To the Daily: I have been reading the Daily for 20 years. and I think Howard I hope Witt writes a piece on pretentious letterwriters like Mr. 10&nn"_ n"$,UsiUYU vivt a A& , E k7 -' 'r 'c,