OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, April 7, 1982- The Michigan Daily .... ....................... . ... ........... A nuclear freeze: The time is now By Kent Redding Contrary to popular belief, President Reagan actually does believe that "more is better." Not, of course, in the size of government, or federal social programs, but in nuclear arms produc- tion. Although Reagan has called for a supposedly drastic reduction in Soviet and American nuclear arsenals, them reality of his policy calls for just the op- posite-more missiles. Unfortunately, the rationale behind Reagan's proposed massive build-up ignores some very basic issues. No per- suasive argument has been given for the national need for better and more powerful arms systems, and, more im- portantly, the president has rejected the growing public support for a nuclear arms production and deployment freeze. MAD. IT IS A fitting acronym for the American and Soviet policy of nuclear deterrence toward one another: mutual assured destruction. The current debate over the timing of a nuclear freeze concerns just that policy. The United States must deter a Soviet nuclear first-strike with the capability to respond with an equally destructive blow, so the policy states. Ronald Reagan is the first president to claim the United States does not have such a capability. "The Soviets' great edge is one in which they could absorb our retaliatory blow and hit us again" with nuclear bombs, he told the nation last week. Thus the president favors a Senate resolution, sponsored by Senators John Warner (R-Virginia) and Henry Jackson (D-Washington), that calls for a freeze in nuclear weapons deployment when the two superpowers reach nuclear equality. The resolution allows the administration to continue with its plans to build new strategic bombers, missiles, and submarines un- til the United States and the Soviet Union reach agreement on some form of parity. Inherent in Reagan's support of this proposal and his plan to increase the U.S. nuclear arsenal is the assumption that the United States lags far behind the Soviets in the nuclear race. IT IS NOT AT all clear that this assumption is correct. Military figures do not indicate such a clear-cut margin of U.S. inferiority. While the Soviets have the advantage in megatonnage (explosive power) and delivery vehicles, the United States has the edge in what many experts believe is the most important category: nuclear warheads, with roughly an American 9,000 to the Soviets 7,000. Even Secretary of State Alexander Haig claimed recently that American nuclear weapons are "more sophisticated and reliable and more technologically sound" than their Soviet counterparts. It is extremely difficult to conclude which side has a true .nuclear advan- tage. Because various methods of measurement alternately emphasize would perish and the infrastructure of any nation would collapse instantly. Medical facilities would be obliterated, transportation systems destroyed, and food and water contaminated. It might then be true that the living would envy the dead. Reagan refuses to veer, however, from the nuclear path. He has pointed out that an immediate halt in nuclear weapons production would not give the Soviets any incentive to reduce their arsenals when the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks begin later this year. Unfortunately, START negotiations, like their predecessors (SALT I and II), will probably take years to complete, while nuclear missiles pile up like so many junked cars. An immediate freeze then becomes attractive because it would halt deployment in its present phase, without the further loss of money and security. The Warner-Jackson proposal is no freeze at all, but a blank check for the Pentagon.-The Soviets are not likely to sit back and watch the Americans take more from the nuclear cookie jar-they will surely want more for themselves. HOWEVER, ONE positive aspect of Reagan's endorsement of the plan is its implication that public pressure does actually effect presidential policy. Thousands of people across the nation, including many here at the University, have refuted ."more is better" for "enough is enough," and it may have worked. Reagan has now responded,.' albeit half-heartedly, to that pressure. It must be recognized that it is dif- ficult for many Americans to suddenly change their minds on the nuclear arms race. We have been told for so many years that "the Russians are coming" that a tiny part of that fear, no matter how irrational, remains. But the United States cannot escape partial respon- sibility for the present arms race. The Soviet Union is looking for its own security as is the United States. American has led the nuclear arms race since the development of the atomic bomb. Now it is time to lead the quest for an end to that power - to wage peace instead of war. An im- mediate freeze will not solve all the world's problems, but neither will an America in shining nuclear armor. As Senator Ted Kennedy (D- Massachusetts) said, more bombs will serve only to "make Soviet rubble bounce from Moscow to Vladivostok." We need to try to solve the problems of the world, not create new ones. Millions throughout Europe and North America want nuclear freeze now-not ten years.from now. The administration should heed their calls. President Reagan recently said that a freeze is not good enough-he is correct. But it is a beginning. Redding is an Opinion Page staff writer. President Reagan stands with his nominees for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. From left to right are Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, Army General John Vessey, Reagan, Admiral James Watkins, and General Charles Gabriel. megatonnage, or the number of warheads, or any multitude of factors such superiority distinctions become blurred at best. At any rate, many experts-such as Jerome Weisner, technology advisor to three presidents, and George Kennan, former ambassador to the Soviet Union-argue that absolute equality is a moot point. Any first use of nuclear weapons will escalate to - large-scale war from which no country could recover for decades, let alone win. The president himself admits that "everybody would be a loser if there is a nuclear war." YET THE PRESIDENT insists the Soviet's could "absorb" a U.S. nuclear retaliation. How does one absorb a nuclear bomb? It almost sounds as if the Russians could just hold on to their chairs, grit their teeth, and afterwards conquer America. The comment points out the difficulty in imagining an actual full-scale nuclear war. Regardless of any civil defense preparation, millions ----------------- I Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Weasel 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. XCII, No. 148 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board The troubled Falklands HEY GUPPY You GoT AN SPARE PEANUTS IN ThAT BAG? rt~( F. LEAVE ME ALONE. THEY'RE MY PEANUTS, I PAID FOR TEEM. HEY GUYS OC TUSA NOSE OVER HERE _ r PoESO WANNA SNARE. TAE WEALTH 1 SHAMETE WEATH S NB A R E T 1E4 EA LT4 By Robert Lence AW, HE orrANY ALREADY 'CASHEWS. AT MO5r I# OP'EM. Tege~? 0 0 T ALL SEEMED like an outdated scenario from an old war movie. A large force invades a small, obscure island to reclaim a colony, while the irate mother country sends out its fleet. The world watches with ~fascination, mean while, cheering on the heroes, booing the losers,and waiting.for the real fighting to start. But Argentina's invasion of the Falkland Islands and Britain's naval response was all too true. Argentina's takeover of the Falklands seems strangely out of place in an age more accustomed to using diplomatic chan- nels or even covert military action. While countries often threaten and posture, they rarely- move in the troops. Did Agentina have a valid cause for making such an rash move? The coun- try does have a legitirate grievance over ownership of the islands. Britain seized the Falkland Islands in 1833 and Argentina now wants to reclaim what it feels it rightfully should possess. But currently Argentina is taking the wrong steps, for all the wrong reasons, to address this problem. Argentina's decision to act so for- eefully seems little more than a litical ploy - an effective device to detract attention from its numerous internal problems. Suddently Argen- tinians are feeling proud of their coun- try's might; and while they are feeling so patriotic, little time will be left to dwell upon the country's crumbling economy, its inflation rate (the highest: in the world), its plentiful human rights violations, or its lack of free elections. Argentina's six-year-old military junta knows well how to em- Ploy its tools to take the focus off its inequities. Nonetheless, the Argentinians have further tarnished their case with their abhorrent behavior toward the native Falklanders. Although the island is a colony, it is questionable whether its inhabitants actually seek liberation. Some 97 percent of the population speaks English and has English roots; these ties to Britain will be difficult to break. The invaders have instituted severe martial law, apparently in order to turn the islanders into faithful Argen- tinians overnight. Imprisonment for up to two months is mandatory for inconsiderate behavior toward the military, or disrespectful acts to Argentinian patriotic symbols. Since Argentina has behaved so irrationally, the burden of restoring some sanity to the situation now rests on Britain's shoulders. The invasion has admittedly rocked Britain. It for- ced the resignation of Lord Carrington, the nation's Foreign Minister and it even threatens to topple Prime Minister Thatcher's government. Britain, however, must put this patriotic aggressiveness on the back- burner and work through rational diplomatic channels. Although Britain is reeling with shock, war psychology is not an appropriate answer. The Falklands cannot be won back suc- cessfully through military force without breaking the British gover- nment and perhaps provoking an even larger conflict. In our unstable world it may no longer be possible to gain greater glory or right wrongs through military ex- ploits. As shown with the Falkland Islands incident, a military response can only shake governments, obscure political problems, and violate the rights of civilians. The Argentinians and the British both have erred by put- ting faith in military solutions. Now the outcome rests on Britain. The British have the diplomatic know- how and the past experience to put aside their fervor for winning back land - and soothing wounded pride - and help calm the heated atmosphere of the beleaguered islands. , Voting for a Nestle By Ten Beckman An important proposal appearing on the Michigan Student Assembly ballot today will ask University students to support the inter- national boycott of Nestle products. The boycott has been in effect since 1977; this year, however, the Nestle Corporation has shown the first signs of complying with boycott demands. A vote of support for the boycott would definitely help in an important final push to force Nestle into compliance with specific boycott demands. These demands address the guidelines for marketing infant bottle formula in Third World countries established by the World Health Organization. The WHO guidelines outline unethical marketing techniques that should not be employed - the very same techniques that often have been common in Nestle promotions. In 1981, an overwhelming majority of Western countries approved the WHO guidelines. The Nestle boycott hopes to pressure the corporation into following these rules. WHY IS IT necessary for an apolitical group like WHO to set infant formula guidelines? The reason lies in the deceptive manner Nestle uses to promote its infant for- mula. In the majority of Nestle's mass media advertising, healthy, chubby, Western- looking babies are prominently displayed. Such advertising appeals to the mother's sen- se of pride in giving her child the best possible care. Since it appears that the most moder- nized Western countries use infant formula, Third World mothers surmise that is must be the best possible feeding method. Nestle has often implied that bottle feeding is healthier than breast feeding, a fact refuted by a majority of physicians. The use of infant for- mula in lieu of breast feeding is, in fact, very dangerous in Third World countries, with their problems concerning sanitation, plum- bing, overcrowding, and cleanliness. Another Nestle promotion found unethical by WHO is the use of saleswomen dressed as "milk nurses" to distribute free samples of formula. These free samples last long enough for women to stop lactating-producing milk-forcing them to become "hooked" to the formula. The formula is unneeded and ex- pensive for most families, who must spend an average of 58 percent of total income on for- mula itself. When money becomes scarce mothers try to dilute the formula-to make it last as long as possible. If the formula is then mixed with impure water from unsanitary living con- ditions a lethal formula results, full of basteria and with little nutritional value. Such formula causes malnutrition and infection to run rampant in children throughout these countries. THE BOYCOTT has attempted to force Nestle to conform to the WHO guidelines for- bidding these marketing practices. And it ap- pears that the pressure may be:starting to work. The Nestle Corporation made a boycott, statement several weeks ago announcing that they would now follow the actual WHO guidelines. They have made nebulous promises in the past, claiming they would abide by the spirit of the guidelines. The Infant Formula Action Coalition plans, however, to continue its boycott until Nestle meets with the International Nestle Boycott Committee to work out specific details of a settlement. With a strong show of support; Nestle may be pressured into negotiating concrete terms for following WHO guidelines. A positive vote on Proposal B, dealing with.. support of the boycott, is very important. A strong show of student support for a boycott would help the Public Interest Research Group in Iichigan in its effort to have the University declare a Nestle-free campus. This would mean alternative products would be sold in all Vniversty-affiliated stores-(A policy already in effect in the dorms). PIRGIM plans to approach the Regents later this month with its Nestle-free campaign if there is positive student support. A vote on Proposal B that supports making Michigan a Nestle-free university would cer- tainly be noted, and would perhaps add the last amount of pressure necessary to make Nestle comply with the WHO marketing guidelines. Beckman, an LSA cophomore, is a member of PIRGIM's Nestle Boycott Task Force. 0 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: 0 Curious reasoning for gun control To the Daily: While I applaud your concern over the problem of criminal misuse of firearms, I find the reasoning of your editorial (Daily. April 1) curious and your cidents, the total is less than 0.56 percent. This hardly indicates mass waves of firearms hysteria on the point of their owners. Infringing upon the Second Amendment rights of the honest then the precedent will have been set, even for the Daily. "Excuse me, Mr. Witt, we will have to have a peek into your files. The First Amendment? Sorry, we scrapned that back in the 1980s. For some reason this seems to be an attitude held in little favor. To tell someone "Look, we know you have problems, but that was no reason to go up on the roof. You'll have to pay the price now" Ami