OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, January 10, 1981 The Michigan Daily Iraq: Hotbed of o litical upheaval All America was shocked to learn that during their imprisonment in Iran, the American hostages were tortured. The methods sounded gruesome and barbaric, but torture of plolitical prisoners is commonplace in the world. Indeed, the concept of equality of all peoples is not universally accepted. The Middle East is full of dictatorships whose leaders use torture and terror to maintain power. Iraq is a perfect example. . UNTIL ITS WAR with Iran, Iraq was, to most. Americans, simply one of those Arab oil coun- tries. Currently, more interest is being taken in this state built upon the foundation of ancient Mesopotamia. Iraq's leader Saddam Hussein has set himself up as a cult figure for his people. His picture reportedly adorns everything in Iraq from buildings to book jackets. He has shuffled and purged the Iraqi political system numerous times, making him- self Iraq's unquestioned boss. The Ba'ath is Iraq's only legal political par- ty,. and its ideology is the only approved ideology. The Ba'ath raises Arab nationalism above all else in importance. Its narrow, xenophobic chauvinism is frightingly reminiscent of fascist Italy and Germany. Iraqis are "encouraged" to join the party. Those who do not are held up from promotions in their jobs, are verbally and physically harassed by Ba'ath members, and are subject to the caprices of Iraq's powerful secret police. THE MOTTO OF the Ba'ath is "One Socialist-Arab Nation." For them the Middle East is the Arab homeland; the two terms being entirely synonymous. Yet, the Middle East is not strictly Arab domain. This fact is no more readily evident than in Iraq where Ba'athist ultra-nationalism and reality come crashing together. What is very poorly publicized about Iraq is that this Arab state is over 30 percent non- Arab. In this state of about 15 million people live about 4 million Kurds who are Muslim, but not Arab; and well over 1 million Assyrian- Chaldeans who are Christian, non-Arab and, in fact, pre-date the Arabs in Iraq by over 2,500 years. But how did such a large number of non- Arabs end up living inside an Arab state? We must look back about 60 years for the answer. AFTER WORLD WAR I, the victorious Allied powers had the unique opportunity to make the Middle East a region of freedom and democracy where all peoples would be free to control their own affairs in their ancestral lan- ds. The Kurds and Assyrian-Chaldeans had been promised autonomy for their support of the Allied cause. Ignoring these promises, and with the knowledge that the region was rich in oil, the British and French arbitrarily created states which bore no parallel to the demographic realities of the region, but which the colonial powers felt they could control. Iraq was one of these artifically created states. The British installed Faisal, a prince from the Arabian peninsula, to rule Iraq. (Faisal, in' cidentally, was the great uncle of the present king of Jordan.) All hopes of autonomy for the Kurds and Assyrian-Chaldeans were crushed. SINCE THAT TIME, it has been the policy of the Iraqi government to make "Arab Iraq" truly Arab; to suppress the national identity By David Holzel of Kurds, Assyrian-Chaldeans, Jews; and other large non-Arab groups. Their progress towards this goal has met with stiff resistance. The Kurds rebelled against their Arab masters for most of the period 1960-1975, aided by the Shah of Iran. Iraqi Kurdistan lies in the north of the country. This is also the area where most of the Assyrian-Chaldean people live. The Iraqi government, in its fights against the Kur- ds, bombed Christian villages also. Eyewitnesses tell stories of families being herded together and shot by Iraqi troops. Un-- der these severe conditions, many thousands of Assyrian-Chaldeans fled from their northern mountain villages to the cities of Iraq, and to safer havens outside Iraq. THE KURDISH rebellion collapsed in 1975 when the Shah and Saddam Hussein signed a treaty in Algiers. In return for withdra.wing support for the Kurds, the Shah was given the Shatt al-Arab waterway and three Persian Gulf islands. (Last September, Hussein reneged on the treaty and attacked Iran with the intent of regaining control of the waterway and the islands.) Sad to say, the flow of refugees didn't stop. Spokespersons of the Assyrian Universal Alliance, a worldwide body organized to protect the rights of the Assyrian-Chaldean people. say that about 3000 refugees are currently waiting in Athens and Rome for per- mission to enter the United States. The stories of these refugees, and the thousands who have reached America, show that oppression by the Ba'ath and forced Arabization of non-Arabs continues in Iraq today. ARABS ARE BEING settled in the north on lands where Kurds and Assyrian-Chaldeans have predominated for centuries. Christian parochial schools which taught the language and culture of the Assyrian-Chaldeans were nationalized. Arabs then were sent to register in these schools so they would form a majority which, by Iraqi law, would mean that Arab language and culture would predominate. Oppression, torture. and terror continue. The Amnesty International report on Iraq outlines the various human rights violations committed on a day-to-day basis in Iraq, including: * widespread arrests * routine inadequacy of political trials * routine and systematic torture 'of political detainees " death penalty used for political reasons * prisoners held incommunicado " no right of defense " no right of appeal " confessions obtained under torture. THE BILLIONS of dollars Iraq has earned from its oil has allowed Saddam Hussein to turn his state into a military power. Money is no object when it comes to supporting causes that are worthwhile to Hussein and the Ba'athist ideology he espouses. Reportedly, $500 million goes to the P.L.O. annually to aid that group in its program of genocide. One wonders why, with all this money to spend, Palestinians are still languishing in refugee camps, and haven't been settled properly, as have all the other vic- tims of the massive post-World War II world population shifts. France, in her endless search for oil, has sold Iraq all the ingredients necessary to construct a nuclear arsenal. Saddam Hussein recently admitted that nuclear ability is on the way. The instability of this region (conflicts bet- ween Iraq and Iran, Syria and Iraq, Syria and JordaA) and. the almost unbelievable im- maturity of these nations' foreign policy decisions (eg., the monumental destruction of Iraqi and Iranian oil production facilities by each others military at the start of their war) shows that an indiscriminate use of an Iraqi bomb is a virtual certainty. In conclusion,;Iraq is a police-state dictator- ship whose government espouses an inflexible ultra-nationalistic ideology that seeks to sup- press and destroy the culture, language, and legitimate national aspirations of the sizeable minorities within its borders. Iraq has succeeded in the almost total emigration of its 135,000 Jews, and now it is pressuring the much larger community of Assyrian-Chaldean Christians to either forget their heritage, or leave the country. After breaking relations with the United States in 1968, Iraq has been armed by the Soviets and the French, and has consistently attacked American foreign policy, and America's peace initiatives in the Middle East. David Hozel is a recent University graduate with a degree in Radio, Television, and Film Production. 0 0 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCI, No. 112 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Feiffer O)Hmimt-Ol t Ocfl~~h'eceP~~1 1 AJ THE 1s t& SI f'J MEVfS Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board (,c U GUQA NAVE A ''rATe7 6 p~r&fjiT GOV 'UME JT. MY TVi6Y AN'L 6)VEN M6INT . AI.Y A CIA 6OVEWi~ae~r I-E Avoiding MSU's mistake M ICHIGAN STATE University, attempting to grapple with a budget crunch even more severe than that facing the University, has resor- ted to a cost-cutting procedure that will probably have a devastating effect on the future of that institution. MSU President M. Cecil, Mackey has suc- ceeded in declaring a state of financial crisis at the university, a move that will give him much greater - some say excessive - freedom to deal with the fiscal dilemma. The declaration, of crisis, pushed through the MSU Board of Trustees over the fierce objections of several faculty groups, will allow Mackey to lay off tenured professors and enjoy greater power in decisions to cutback and completely eliminate University staff, programs and departments. Although this will certainly expand Mackey's ability to cut costs fast, MSU will likely pay a-high price in the long run for its speed in; addressing the crisis in the short run. As faculty members have wisely pointed out, Mackey's declaration may well deeply damage MSU's ability to maintain its academic quality in the future. Prospective professors may join the faculty of other universities where tenure truly ensures job security. MSU may also find it more difficult to attract students and to secure federal research grants. It could take decades, the professors argue, for MSU to regain the confiden- ce of the academic comrunity. It is reassuring that University of- ficials here have not similarly over- reacted to our own fiscal crisis. Gran- ted, the financial crunch here is not as severe as MSU's, but even MSU's crisis does not warrant the sort of response that will likely cause serious, long-term damage to the university. Officials here have wisely ap- proached the budget-cutting process with caution and have made an effort - if not ideal - to include the input and accommodate the concerns of faculty members. We must learn from Mackey's mistakes and move to fur- ther include the participation of faculty members and students. 1~ / 4. vL .. t$V ALOI ) 0 4 TAW A 0 S Stay tuned for '52 Questions' Well, it's been three weeks since the hostages were released, but you sure wouldn't know it from reading newspapers or watching television. As faras the media are concerned, it's still open season on hostage reaction stories, hostage family stories, and hostage new-car-has-been-waiting-444-days-to-be-dri- ven stories. i called up a major network executive the other day to voice my complaints about media exploitation of the whole hostage situation. A 1 Witticisms By Howard Witt let a good thing drop just like that, do you? We got 444 nights of special news programs out of this hostage crisis before the damn towelheads released 'em. Let me tell you, we pulled in a lot of advertising bucks on those specials. The Iranians may be done with this thing, but we're not." "SO YOU'RE GOING to continue the late- night specials every night now that the hostages are back?" I asked in disbelief. "We're sure going to try," the chief programmer boasted. "and if they don't work, we've got a few other plans in our sty of ideas." "Don't you mean 'stable of ideas'?" I corrected. '-"Whatever. Anyway, this day-counting fad has really caught on. So, we're prepared to try out a few other series. Like 'Day 74,681: America, An Experiment in Democracy.' Or 'Day 723,106: The World Anno Domini.' "You could count practically anything and make a TV show out of it," I observed with some disdain. "Hey, kid, you want a job?" the chief programmer laughed. "Did I tell you about the hostage game shows?" I WAS SHOCKED. "You're going to have hostage game shows?" I gasped. "Why, of course! How does '52 Questions' grab you?" he asked eagerly. "I really don't think ... " "And we'll have soap operas," he interrup- ted. "We'll have 'All My Hostages' and 'As the Embassy Burns.' And then," he was star- ting to giggle, "we'll have the sitcoms. We've "THIS ALL SOUNDS pretty crass," I blur- ted. "These unfortunate Americans have suffered for 444 days; their families have en- dured untold agonies; there may yet be seriousupsychological problems that surface. And you people-the media-will not let them alone!" I- was really getting warmed up. "Every time a hostage stoops to tie his shoe, you get on the air with a special bulletin! Every time a hostage tries to whisper something to a loved one, you shove a microphone in his face! I'm surprised you didn't show the hostages' first sex acts with their spouses after 444 long, lonely nights." "Oh," the chief programmer piped up..,. "Didn't you see our TV special, '52 Minutes in Bed With a Hostage and HisWife'?" I was thoroughly disgusted. "You people are sick," I hissed. "Next you're going to tell me how perfect it is that there were 52 hostages so you can put on 52 weeks of specials." "That's a great idea!" the chief program- mer jumped. He was starting to think. "Why, yes ... . and we can use that 53rd hostage, Richard Queen, for. . . for. . . a Christmas special!" I slammed down the receiver. Howard Witt is a Daily staff writer. His column appears every Tuesday. already got Suzanne Somers lined up to play an Iranian militant student in '52's Com- pany'..." 64 "Hello, is this the Chief Programmer?" I asked. "It sure is," the chief programmer replied. "Quick, now, what day will it be on Friday?" he shot back abruptly. I DIDN'T REALLY know what he was talking about. "Uh. . . Friday?" I asked meekly. "No, silly, it will be Day 25: America Not Held Hostage! Haven't you been counting?" "Well, no, I haven't. Why do you have to count the days since the hostages were released?" I queried. "Now, look, you don't think we're going to al LETTERS TO THE DAILY: A plea for Peterson for City Council To the Daily: On Monday, February 16, the for City Council for the First Ward of Ann Arbor. Mr. Peterson Perry Bullard during 1980. He works in Ann Arbor and has all the interests of the First Ward. On Monday, February 16, vonte for Lowevll Petersn. ad