OPINION Page 4 Sunday, March 8, 1981 The Michigan Daily ie m tgan t Man Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan MX and Sagebrush rebels : Vol. XCI, No. 127 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor. MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A Polish crack-down P OLISH AND Soviet officials, determined to quash em- barrassing labor insurgency in Poland, have begun to fiercly crack down on dissidents. Government authorities this week harrassed a number of Polish dissident leaders, detaining and indicting some for "anti-socialist" ac- tivities and slandering the state. At the same time, the Soviet Union announced it will conduct military maneuvers in Poland over the objec- tions of Polish leaders. Both of these developments follow a meeting in Moscow this week between Soviet and dPolish authorities that ended with a Iard-line declaration, indicating the Soviets firmly intend to wrap up the embarrassing Polish episode -soon. The Soviets apparently believe that dnce the Polish regime shows some firmness, by rounding up and trying "anti-socialist" dissidents, the unruly workers will end their folly. But the fact is that the workers and most dissidents are not "anti-socialist" at all, but only want a better lifestyle within the Socialist system. Further, the defiant workers and dissidents have already shown their resolve in standing firm before the Polish and Soviet regimes and will not likely be frightened back into line. Even if the Soviets succeed in quieting Polish dissent in the short tun through strong-arm, repressive tac- tics, the anger of the workers will smolder only to surface later in more insurgency. Soviet and Polish officials should realize that the only way to solve the embarrassing situation once and for all is to honestly examine the legitimate demands of the workers and work toward an equitable solution. SALT LAKE CITY-The release of the Air Force's environmental impact study late last year on the proposed MX mobile missile system has added another explosive weapon to the gathering anti-federal movement known as the Sagebrush Rebellion in the in- terior west. The report, predicting impacts on the region's water supply, air quality and vegetation if the $30 billion system is con- structed, is certain to help broaden the Sagebrush Rebellion beyond its normal focus on land issues and the federal Bureau of Land Management. The Defense and Energy Departments, which sponsor numerous atomic weapons projects in the region, are in- creasingly being lumped with the hated BLM. IN UTAH AND Nevada, particularly, op- position to the MX missile system has grown so intense that even strongly pro-Pentagon congressional delegations are balking at MX scenarios for their states. Meanwhile, a new citizen drive has gained significant strength in the past year, aimed at ending all underground nuclear bomb tests. The testing occurs in the Nevada desert at an average rate of once every three weeks, un- der auspices of the Departments of Energy and Defense. "It's just people working together," says lifelong Utah resident, Preston Truman of the de facto coalition, comprised primarily of rural and urban Mormons flexing political muslces in the heart of "Reagan country." The informal alliance includes environmen- tally-minded students active in the region, as well as national religious organizations and peace activists. TRUMAN, A MORMON who grew up in sourthern Utah downwind from atmospheric nuclear bomb tests, serves as state director of the Citizens' Call organization. It was set up in early 1980 to aid people in Utah, Nevada, and northern Arizona with health problems linked to fallout from the above ground atomic explosions which took place from 1951 to 1962 about 100 miles north of Las Vegas. Among the group's highest priorities is closure of the 1,350-square-mile Nevada Test Site. Citizens' Call volunteers have collected more than 6,000 signatures in recent months from mostly-rural residentsinhsurrounding areas, calling for a permanent halt to the un- derground nuclear explosions. "People want the federal government out," says Truman. "The land management issue~ was just the first thing to come along." REGIONAL OPPOSITION to the MX system and to underground nuclear testing is becoming almost as fiery as the land disputes LETTERS TO THE DAILY: By Norman Solomon of recent years. A mid-December Conference for a Comprehensive Test Ban in Salt Lake City drew representatives of several dozen constituencies, including devout Mormon housewives, disarmament lobbyists from Washington, test site workers, Indians, and ranchers. "The time to do something is now," Cecil Garland, a cattle rancher from western Utah, told the conference. "Everybody's flat up against the bomb." The opposition to atomic testing has been fueled by published medical reports of an in- creased leukemia rate among children in areas downwind from the test site, and by a congressional report last August which con- ceded that federal evidence of radiation dangers "was not only disregarded but ac- tually suppressed." "I FEEL THAT we were used more or less as guinea pigs," says Martha Laird, whose young son died of leukemia while living in Nevada during the atmospheric tests. "To this day, they (federal health officials) have never checked anyone in my family or anyone that I know of from the fallout of these bom- bs." A new Citizens' Call brochure, presently receiving wide distribution in communities downwind from the Nevada nuclear testing grounds, cites recent federal government admissions that more than 40 underground nuclear bomb blasts have vented radiation off the test site. In Utah, where the Mormon Church wields enormous power, there are indications that Church officials support the upsurge of op- position to underground atomic testing and MX construction in the region. Tickets to a mid-December fund-raising benefit, titled "Ax the MX," were widely advertised as being available at a chain of church-owned stores. And, routinely, the state's many Mormon-owned media institutions broadcast and publish favorable depictions of the growing organized efforts against the MX and underground tests. ON A RECENT Citizens' Call speaking tour in the neighboring state of Idaho, which like Utah is heavily Mormon. Preston Truman caused a stir as he publicly urged those with traditional religious values totake a harder look at Pentagon nuclear programs. "I don't understand why the conservatives getting so upset about abortions have been slow to realize that the federal nuclear weapons programs are, the biggest baby-killers around," Truman says. Elsewhere in the Rocky Mountain region, foes of a major federal nuclear weapons facility claimed a victory last fall when Colorado Governor Richard Lamm went on record opposing any expansion or moders- nizing of the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons. plant. He suggested that Rocky Flats be moved to a more remote location. Located about 20 miles northwest of Denver, the plant is operated by Rockwell International Cor- poration for the federal government, making.,, plutonium "triggers" for nuclear warheads. In trying to sell its nuclear scenarios in the west, the Defense Department has sometimes committed glaring cultural miscalculations. In approaching communities most directly affected by MX construction, for example, the military used public relations approaches more appropriate for college campuses than for small Mormon towns. When a female general toured southern Utah to speak at town forums recently, her low-cut blouse elicited as much outrage as her verbal ad- vocacy of the highly unpopular MX system. Despite the conservative, law-abiding traditions here, some opponents of the MX have reportedly resorted to wanton rearrangement of survey stakes for the con- struction projects in Utah. And residents of the spacious terrain hint of more severe measures to sabotage MX construction if it progresses much further. STATE GOVERNMENT officials are now showing a willingness to convey inhospitable messages to the Department of Defense through administrative actions. In Novem- ber, .the Utah State Land Board fined the U.S. Air Force $30,000 for "trespassing" on state property while doing survey work for the MX. Indeed, opposition to the MX is now so widespread as to qualify as a regional "apple pie" issue for politicians. Nevada Sen. Paul Laxalt and Utah Senators Orrin Hatch and Jake Garn-all strong Reagan conser- vatives-will find it hard to support the new administration if it goes forward with the current Air Force proposals. Already, there are indications from congressional and Defense Department insiders that an alter- nate MX system may be forced on the ad- ministration. President Reagan himself has questioned the present MX proposal and has consistently tried to side with the Sagebrush Rebels. k Reagan and South Korea T HE UNITED STATES needs the support of the people of the nations it establishes friendly relations with - not just their totalitarian dic- tAtors. Advancements made through the Carter Administration's human rights policy in Africa and South America clearly indicate the need for suppor from these nations. The Reagan Administration, lwever, has taken little interest in supporting human rights of any sort. A prime example of this occured during South Korean President Chun Doo 4wan's recent visit to the United States. Chun, who strong-armed his way to near absolute power in South Korea last year following the assassination of President Park Chung Hee, has main- tained his political momentum by im- prisoning his political opponents, in- cluding dissident Kim Dae Jung. Although the Carter Administration cooled relations with South Korea following Chun's repressive actions, several incidents were interpreted by the South Korean press as indications of Washington's support. One was an interview given last August by Gen. John Wickham, the commander of the 40,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea, to the Associated Press and The Los Angeles Times. Wickham said the United States would support the Chun presidency if he came to power "legitimately." The state-dominated South Korean press immediately heralded the statement as a U.S. endorsement. Consequently, a great deal of am- bivalence surrounded U.S.-South Korean relations during the last mon- ths of the Carter Administration. ,However, Reagan's invitation to Chun to visit the United States so early in his term indicates the full support of the Seoul strongman from the U.S. gover- nment. By inviting Chun, Reagan all but ignored the South Korean dictator's notorious human rights record. He has shown no sign of attempting to per- suade Chun to ease his policy. Reagan did exact clemency for Kim as a price for Chun's visit, but no other mention of human rights was made public. In fact, Reagan tried very hard to keep the human rights issue from sur- facing during Chun's visit. For instan- ce, the State Department asked Congress to delay publication of a human rights report that was highly critical of Chun's regime. Chun's open violations of human rights should not be so easily accepted by the United States. The rights of the- individual must be kept in mind in ad- dition to security considerations. Norman Solomon, a wrote this article for the vice. freelance writer, Pacific News Ser- Council candidate thanks supporters. To the Daily: As an unsuccessful candidate in the recent First Ward Democratic primary election, I learned there are many people who share my view of Ann Ar- bor's problems and priorities. I would like to thank all those who supported my campaign with their hard work and with their votes. Lowell Peterson deserves congratulations for his high- minded campaign and for his vic- tory. I support his candidacy in the general election and, urge my supporters to do the same. He has proven to me that he will be an ef- fective councilmember if elected. I would also like to thank The Michigan Daily for the news coverage of the primary election and for deciding to make endor- sements of individual candidates. Although the Daily endorsed my opponent, I was impressed with your courtesy and thoroughness. Despite my defeat at the polls, the campaign was an enjoyable experience in which I learned d lot about our city. -Clinton L. Smith March 6 Reagan : " Winning one for the*Gipper r F t. d J' h °u V To the Daily: Recent popular analysis of world politics suggest that the Third World must be incom- prehensibly naive and/or ignorant not to join us in roundly condemning the blatantly sinister and power-crezed machinations of the Soviets. How can they fail to appreciate the world of dif- ference between, for example, Soviet actions in Afghanistan and U.S. statements on the same? However, from outside the United States this analysis begins to fall apart because what we believe of ourselves separates us from our behavior. First, U.S. effort toward a suitable geopolitical climate for western megabusiness (stable governments controlled by a few long-standing friends, cheap prices on natural resources, alochthonous American control of decision-making) interests few globally average humans (a six- teen year-old, poor, and very hungry youth whose only hope lies in radical politics). Second, for anyone who could conceive differing in op in ion with the superpowers U.S. intrusion, from disregard of local desires to outright aggression, isn't easily distinguishable from its Soviet counterparts. I challenge anyone to think of a significant difference between Brezhnev's intervention in Afghanistan and President because we want to go in. We promise we will never fire the fir- st nuclear shot (excepting Hiroshima, of course). But, as of last year, our missiles are being retargeted from accepted "mutual assured destruction" targets, like cities, onto Soviet military targets, including missile silos. (What, pray tell, is the advantage of blowing to smithereens an empty missile silo?). The United -States is deluded about its global beneficence. A myth of the sixties was the huge European World War II debts that we were writing off, when in fact everyone was paid up on schedule and Germany was even ahead. A comparable modern myth is the unparalleled munificence of U.S. foreign aid. Much of it is given as loans, most of it never leaves the country, being equivalent to trade credits from which we greatly benefit, and altogether we give less of it relative to the gross national product than almost any other industrialized country. What little favorable reputation President Carter, Cyrus Vance, Andrew Young, and Warren Christopher earned for us by returning the Panama Canal, by calling attention to human rights, and by showing some awareness of African needs is abniit tn h gandnred by an 0. 0 00 - 0 A S, '. A.e r z j+, y ;. 1 i ®R Ad