Page 4 OPINION Thursday, February 5, 1981 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. XCI, No. 108 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Neutron bomb would ruin chance for arms control American support for Korea may backfire 0 T HE SABER-RATTLING at the Department of Defense continues to grow. This time the saber has taken the form of the neutron bomb, which Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein- berger said Tuesday may be added to the U.S. arsenal. Sadly, it comes as no surprise that the Reagan ad- ministration should consider resurrec- ting the horrifying neutron bomb. Ac- celerating the stockpiling of nuclear weaponry is consistent with Reagan's hard-line campaign rhetoric of military superiority. Yet, the re-development of the neutron bomb would represent two potential dangers. The most obvious of the two is that the senseless buildup of nuclear weapons would only increase the risk of their use. Such a growing glut of nuclear missiles and bombs would contribute to world tension, already at a dangerously high level. The second potential danger would have an even more certain detrimental effect on U.S. foreign relations. Reagan announced Monday that he Anti-Semitis would be willing to negotiate with the Soviet Union on the possibility of future further arms control. Yet, at the same time he insisted on an increased U.S. military presence in the sensitive Per- sian Gulf region. And now, Weinberger has discussed the possibility of bringing back the neutron bomb. The Soviets have clearly stated that both of these actions would endanger the future of any possible arms limitations negotiations. These moves would only be interpreted by the Soviets as direct U.S. threats to their security. If Reagan follows through on either or both of these courses of ac- tion, it will further erode already- shaky American-Soviet relations. If Reagan has any real commitment to arms control, he must realize that provocation and antagonism will destroy any chance of serious negotiations. If Reagan does not seek intelligent controls on the stockpiling of nuclear weaponry, he must be prepared to plunge America into a sen- seless race for nuclear arms and military dominance. a, neo-Nazis President Reagan's meeting in Washington with South Korean dictator Chu Doo Hwan Monday may seem inconsequential to Americans accustomed to visits by foreign leaders. But for Koreans - and Asians in general - the state visit this early in the new administration is regarded as an important harbinger of U.S. policy aims in the Far East, as well as clear affirmation of American sup- port for Chun's regime. Chun will use it in every possible way to shore up his unstable rule. The nation's carefully-controlled newspapers will feature the visit, headlining any favorable comments by Reagan or his aides on events in Korea. Commemorative postage stamps will even be issued. In short, the meeting offers a tremen- dous boost to a dictator desperately in search of legitimacy, and the prospect of an eventual disaster for U.S. foreign policy. SHORTLY AFTER THE assassination of President Park Chung Hee, on December 12, 1979, Chun mounted an army coup and shot his way into the Korean equivalent of the Pen- tagon. In so doing, he grossly violated American-Korean joint troop-command procedures, mobilizing troops supposedly defending South Korea from the North, sen- ding high generals fleeing to the protection of the American command, and causing what high U.S. officials referred to as a "crisis" in, Korean-American relations. Nevertheless, South Korea enjoyed a remarkable period of democratic par- ticipation through the early months of 1980. But it proved to be a brief experiment. Chun soon had himself appointed head of the draconian Korean Central Intelligence Agen- cy, touching off student demonstrations that engulfed Seoul in mid-May. Although martial law was declared and most leading politicians were arrested, the dissatisfaction spread. Citizens in the major southwestern city of Kwangju rebelled, seizing control of that city and many neighboring counties. Chun or- LETTERS TO THE DAILY: By Bruce Cumings dered paratroopers into the region - again in violation of joint command policies - to put down the rebellion with brute force. Soldiers, some of them allegedly on drugs, terrorized the city and slaughtered demonstrators, even to the point of mutilating college coeds and using flamethrowers. In the period since Kwangju, Chun has had himself appointed President, arrested thousands more, proscribed the activities of' some 900 leading politicians, and arranged kangaroo courts for dissidents including the popular former Presidential candidate, Kim Dae Jung. Kim was kidnapped from his exile in Japan in 1973 by Korean intelligence agen- ts, and subsequently sentenced to death last year. But Japanese and world-wide condem- nation of the act forced the Korean gover- nment to reduce the sentence to life im- prisonment. THROUGHOUT THESE fifteen months of crisis, the Carter administration tolerated Chun's brutality and eventually supported his accession to total power. President Reagan's charge that Carter held our allies to unduly high standards was decidedly not the case in Korea, and Secretary of State Alexander Haig's assertion that human rights will be further downplayed in U.S. foreign policy bodes ill for Korean-American relations. In fact, those Koreans resisting Chun are not primarily leftists, but rather democrats, Christians, and educated intellectuals who have long looked to the U.S. for support. In the past fifteen months, many of them have em- braced a bitter anti-Americanism unseen here for decades. The exiled Korean press also is more critical of the U.S. than at any ttime in recent memory. AMERICAN POLICY-MAKERS must un- derstand that South Korea, in the teeth of a harsh depression, could go the way or Iran, alienating America's natural allies as well as its critics. Moreover, tension on the peninsula has heightened alarmingly. Chun's visit will coincide with a combined military exercise, "Team Spirit '81", in which some 161,000 American and Korean troops will participate, including 34,000 American soldiers flown in from bases outside Korea. North Korea war- ned last month that this gigantic exercise could bring events "to the brink of war." All of these pressures are building at a time when the South Korean economy is degenerating, with inflation in 1980 at 44 per- cent, negative growth for the first time in fif- teen years, and a trade deficit of $6 billion - one fifth of GNP. The rice harvest in 1980 fell by some 30 per- cent. A recent, secret study of the Korean economy by the World Bank leaked to the Wall Street Journal, predicted more political disorder in 1981, little chance for quick economic revival, and advised only short-term lending by banks. Several large companies have-already defaulted on loans, and the financial condition seems committed to a policy which will risk political stability, economic recovery, and the peace of the peninsula on the future of an unpopular dic- tator. Furthermore, that Korea policy is part and parcel of a general American policy toward Asia seemingly designed to reverse the ad- vances of the 1970s, bringing a renewed coolness toward Peking along with warmth for Taiwan. And it matches a general global policy of support for tottering dictatorships. In the 1950s such policies could serve American interests because the U.S. strad- dled and dominated the globe. In the 1980s they may spell disaster. Bruce Cumings, an expert on Korea at the University of Washington, wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. 01 need powerful opposition A two NEG-NAZI group in Germany has threatened Jews at random unless West to kill their demands are met. The group-the Rudolf Hess Restitution Comman- do-has demanded $7 million for a fund to free Hess, Hitler's right-hand-man in World War II now serving a life prison sentence. Moves such as these by neo-Nazi groups are growing increasingly evident in 1981. Even though it is con- fined to a very small group, this blatant anti-Semitism is indeed very frightening. The thought of it proliferating in modern-day Europe is devastating, to say the least. But threats like those made by the group and occurances like the bombing of a Synagogue in Paris last year, suggest that anti-Semitism is alive and well in western Europe. As frightening as these isolated in- eidents are the way in which people react to them could be even more terrifying. In order to check this kind of growing anti-Semitism, people must actively oppose it. Passivity will not work here; that was clearly evident in pre-war Germany. The test for the German people will be in how they react to these neo-Nazis. If they report the actions of fascist groups and actively oppose them the deplorable acts can e held {o a minimum. If they quietly sit back and turn the other way, anti-Semitism will fester and spread throughout the nation. The temptation to use one group for a scape goat as the economy sags must also be avoided. Certainly the Rudolf Hess group's recent threats are despicable. All must work diligently to thwart such factions, and ensure that history does not repeat itself. Daily pompous, biased, and pro- 'U' 1~ - To the Daily: Well, Mark Parrent's parting editorial in the Feb. 1 issue really was the last straw. We're can- celing our subscription, a little embarrassed that we were misguided enough to have one in the first place. We do appreciate the former editor-in-chief's upfrontness in stating that the Daily is not a student newspaper. That fact had started to sink in, but we were glad to have it from the man himself. So you're "looking for stories that are of interest to [your] readers"? Perhaps we were mistaken but we had assumed the majority of your readers to be students. We think your claim to be responsible to your readership is a lie. What about Parrent's ad- monition to us readers that we "must understand that the Daily is an organization that seeks to publish campus, national, and in- ternational news without bias and without a feeling of obligation to any special group?" Seems to Cease wage To the Daily: Once upon a time people were paid for the work they did. When they worked,.they got paid; when they didn't work, they didn't get paid. If they worked harder and produced more, or if they produced better goods, they got paid more. If they produced less, they received less (or got fired). That was the American Way. Today the reasons people give for wanting pay raises are ludicrous. They think that the longer they've worked for so-and- so, the more he or she should pay them. These neonle feel that the ring a bit false when half the front page was devoted to football throughout the fall season. And it seems ominously two-faced when copious space on the op/ed page is repeatedly given to Moonie/CARP member Art Humbert at the expense of other points of view. So you publish "balanced features"? What this really means, if we can judge from the past year, is that you have a strict policy against covering minority events and campus labor and a strict pro-University stand. You have consistently refused to publish stories on Chicano or Black activities on campus (not surprising, given the composition of the Daily staff). You have almost as con- sistently refused to cover ac- tivities of unions, organizing committees, and labor support groups (e.g. GEO, OCC, and FLOC Support). And the Univer- sity administration always comes out shining, through labor disputes, program cutbacks, and in creases the U.A.W., have done much good for everyone overall. But what Daniel Berger (Daily, January 31) and the unions and all people everywhere have to realize is that these continuous standard- of-living increases cannot con- tinue. The world doesn't work this way. We are running out of oil and we have no visible means of replacing the massive quan- tities of energy we use except (and not even then) at the cost of the environment. But we need our environment (that is, an en- vironment in good condition) to Distinctions on co-ops : Q 1 f wasteful spending. (The Univer- sity doesn't need to subsidize the Daily.) Your self-importance is em- barrassing. We've never seen a paper so filled with trivia and at the same time so pompous. El Salvador is becoming another Vietnam, and from the Daily scarcely a word - instead you run photographs of dog-bite vic- tims. Your quest for unbiased news is doomed. There is no such thing. The news you choose to run, the I words you use, the order of the paragraphs - all of it manipulates public opinion. So. the question is, what ideology are you supporting? We've figured that out (and we suspect you have too). Give us our money back, we can put it to more progressive use. -Richard Lewis James Liebman Lisa Palmer Robert Rice Katherine Yih February 2 To the Daily: I realize that the probability that anybody actually read your derogatory article on co-ops (Daily, February 1) is decidedly low. However, in the interests of journalistic purity-a goal I know the Daily strives to maintain-I feel compelled to correct your suggestion that all co-opers are communists. In actuality people who live in communes are com- mune-ists and people who sub- scribe to the teachings of Marx, Lenin and the Peking Daily are communists.. We 3 of course are neither. We are cooperatists. Please do not confuse us with commune-ists or communists. Moreover, our per term charges are not $200. $200 would seem entirely excessive, con- sidering that all we eat is millet seed. After all, $200 buys a lot of millet seed. Of course, there are- costs other than just food. We must pay for seasonings for the bats'that we catch, and, on non- veggie days, eat. Another expen- sive item is The Michigan Daily to which we subscribe. We do af- ter all'have a lot of bat cages to line. -Bart Casad February 3 P Victim photo disgusting To the Daily: I would like to register my disgust over your publication of the photograph of Tom Reed (Daily, Jan. 31). With all the pictures you can choose from each day, it is dif- ficult to understand why you chose to prominently display this iniure~d hnu Tc is he eantin o9 sationalized) account from Associated Press? To publish such a picture without further explanation is a disservice. If you believed it was a newsworthy picture, why do we have so little information? Are all Alaskan malamutes vicious? Was the dog provoked or sick? P.".' "A Ad