- OPINION Page 4 Friday, October 8, 1982 The Michigan 9i Media bias. and the crisis in Lebanon Is Israel being mistreated in the press? Has a distorted version of the events surrounding the Beirut massacre been cir- culated in America? Yes, charges Emanuel Zippori, Israel's consul general to the Midwest region of the United States. Zippori, who was 'in Ann Arbor recently to speak to local Jewish groups, spoke with Daily editor Andrew Chapman about Israel's role in the events in Beirut and the future of the Likud party. grounds for terrorists from everywhere as far away as South America and the Middle East to Asia and Europe. One of the great ironies is that there's no doubt about it that the person who attempted to assassinate the pope was trained in a PLO camp. Another aspect of our incursion into Lebanon was that we were able to free the Christians and also many of the Moslems of Lebanon from the terror regime that the PLO had installed in southern Lebanon. Again, it was much more than we had ever imagined. Daily: Do you think the press and the public reaction just to the invasion, not to what hap- pened in those two Beirut camps, was justified? Zipport: 'I think the media was very biased. I: think particularly the electronic media, but also the papers in many cases were very biased, particularly in the first weeks of the war. After these first weeks, when the true in- formation and figures came out, they were completely ignored-either ignored or buried on the inside pages of The New York Times. There was no doubt about it that the press, for various reasons, it's been analyzed by a num- ber of writers, was very, very prejudiced in the beginning of the war. Only later did the truth come out, when the people finally went there and saw how little damage there really was to some of these towns which supposedly had been destroyed by Israeli bombings. One of the problems is that the big lie technique is used, and grabs the headlines, because it is sensational. The retractions are buried. People have been getting away with this for years, and the PLO and their allies got away with it this time. The press fell into the trap. Daily: How about American Jewish com- munities? Zippori: The overwhelming majority of the American Jewish community supported Israel massacre, although again, we have to put it in a certain perspective. The only time that the world has seen fit to come out and denounce violently the massacres that have taken place in the Middle East, has been when Israel is somehow involved in the action. But when the PLO were slaughtering the Christians in Lebanon, everybody was quiet. And when the Christians were slaughtering the Palestinians everybody was quiet. And nobody was s houting when the Syrians were slaughtering their own people. But now when there is a possible im- plication that Israel might be somehow in- volved, then the whole world gets up in arms. Daily: Why is this? Zippori: I don't know. I think it's part of this process of blaming Israel for everything that goes wrong in the Middle East. I think that has partly to do with the fact that Israel itself was very indignant, that people in Israel were very worried by what happened, and protested, and demanded a full investigation. This perhaps touched off some of the feelings in the other parts of the world. I think that what happened there had nothing to do with Israel's operations in Lebanon. Daily: What about the strength of Prime Minister Begin in the Israeli government right now? A cabinet member has resigned. Zippori: The cabinet member who resigned was at odds with the prime minister over a number of matters for some time, and he felt that the cabinet should have backed an in- vestigation into the massacre sooner. I think his resignation was a little bit overdue. He's one man, and he doesn't seem to have too much support within his own party to go along with him. Daily: What about Begin's strength in the Knesset? Zippori: It hasn't changed. He still has a solid majority. Daily: And you don't think that's going to'be weakened at all? Zippori: I don't see anything at the moment on the horizon which will cause one or other' the factions to leave the Likud party. This can change, of course. On the one hanid I think there will be a sort of a wait and see sort of period until people see what the in- vestigating committee brings in. If, after all that is in, the commission comes out and says, we find that X, Y or Z are responsible for doi'ig this or that or the other, then obviously somewhere responsibility will have to be taken, either at the level of the army command, or at the political.level. But I don't see anything in the near futur that any of the parties are willing to shift ah leave the coalition. Unless the religious parties leave the coalition, there is no, even if some-'of the smaller parties do leave, there is "no possibility of anyone else forming a gover- nment. Daily: Labor? Zippori: No, they couldn't possibly form a government. Because nobody is going to form a government with the communists. There are 50 labor seats.'The Likud party certainly will h4 leave the .government. The communists are four seats. If the Likud party and the religious groups stay in then Mr. Begin has his majority. If the religious groups fake out, then the labor group has a possibility if they're willing to join with labor, which is a question. There are other issues in Israel besides the incursion of Lebanon, on which the labor party and the religious parties are far apart. But if they were to join together, then there could be an alter- native government. Dialogue is a weekly feature of the Opinion Page. Emanuel Zippori . Daily: Let's-start with Israel and Lebanon, and the invasion. Would you term it an in- vasion?, Zippori: No, I wouldn't term it an invasion, it was an incursion into Lebanon because we were not fighting the Lebanese. We went into Lebanon to fight the PLO. The PLO had established in southern Lebanon a quasi- independent state. They were threatening our security, they were threatening our people and our towns and villages in Northern Israel, and we went in to remove that threat from our nor- thern frontiers, and to destroy the military strength of the PLO. At the same time, we destroyed the base of international terrorism which the PLO had established in Lebanon. One of the things that we found was the extent to which the PLO camps in Lebanon were used as training throughout this period. There are always elements in the community who criticized- various stages of the fighting. But I think again, you have to realize that for a large part of the American Jewish community, their only real source for information is the daily local newspaper or the local television station. But I think the press played up the voices of dissiden- ts. If a city or a town had 20 rabbis, and 18 of them supported Israel, and two were critical, the only ones who were quoted in the press were the two that were critical. Daily: A lot of blame has been put on Israel for the massacre. How do you feel about that? Zippori: I think everybody in Israel was deeply shocked, grieved, and enraged about the massacre. There is no doubt that there is just indignation of the whole world about this -_-, Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman Vol. XCIlI, No. 26 420 Maynara St. Ann Arbor, M' 48109 3 Editorials represento'njority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board NU"Rt 74S1 AUTO DS MAND OTNER 'UNE,S"E% BUT I SEE O DNERO A 9EPRE~) 4 S&FEUAD TO PREVENT cRSps Nii /-. w « Y A well-ti T'S ONE OF the great ironies of the renewal of the Cold War that-at: the same time the U.S. government is so vehemently condemning the Soviet Union-less and less emphasis is being placed on actually studying its greatest potential adversary. Some have suggested, in fact, that American studies of the Soviet Union have dropped to their lowest level sin- ce the late 40s, when the first American centers for Soviet studies were foun- ded. Into this mess has stepped W. Averell Harriman, former governor of New York and ambassador to the Soviet Union, with a gift of $1 million to Columbia University. The gift has been made with the stipulation that it be used by Columbia's prestigious i. med gift Russian Institute. The gift will encourage study of a nation which is important not just because of its role as an adversary, but because of its rich and diverse culture. The Harriman gift, of course, is just a drop in the bucket compared to the total needs of American universities for funds. Many academic areas, such as Russian studies, don't attract the hordes of students interested in the highest possible starting salaries. Yet these same studies are' crucial to the nation, and deserve generous support. It's often the case that ignorance breeds troubles. The Harriman gift will help breed knowledge and under- standing in a field which can easily use both. 0, Freeze movement a hot idea "RIGHT REI ( r-s - - r vi By Tripp Amdur One year ago few people had ever heard of the proposal for a nuclear weapons freeze. Even, fewer understood its im- plications. Today there are dozens of national organizations actively supporting the Freeze and literally thousands of local Freeze organizations nationwide. The three-quarters of a million people who crowded into New York's Central Park last June represent only the outer crust of a massive popular movement more encompassing than any since the Vietnam war. But unlike the strong partisan- ship which typified the anti-war movement, today's dispute over nuclear weapons cannot be characterized as a struggle bet- ween the left and the right, or the young and the old. Advocates of a nuclear weapons freeze range from neo-Marxists to ex- supporters of Barry Goldwater. Today's movement is not viewed as a cry for revolution, but as an appeal for change. George Kennan, the renowned Soviet expert whose famous 1946 article helped usher in the Cold War, is today advocating an im- mediate, across-the-board reduc- tion of 50 percent of the present nuclear arsenals in both the United States and the Soviet Union. Kennan is not alone. A great many of the most knowledgeable and respected leaders in gover- nment, acadermia, politics, and even the military are calling for an immediate halt to this suicidal spiral. At a broader level the likely passage of Proposition E this November will add Michigan to the growing list of states, cities, and vilages across the country whose entire populations have demanded an end to this ever- escalating nuclear madness. But meanwhile, how does President Reagan react to this massive appeal pouring 'forth from virtually every quadrant of American society? Still engrossed by the myths of old Westerns, the president con- tinues to play the role of the mythical wagonmaster protec- ting his flock from marauding Commanches. Standing in the footsteps of Joe McCarthy and with his head stuck firmly in the sand, Reagan declared last Mon- day that supporters of the nuclear freeze are being manipulated by outside forces who "wish to see the weakening of America." Reagan and those members of Congress who are supporting his massive military build-up are living in a dangerous and paralyzing cocoon of parahoia which bears little relatioin to reality and which threatens pur future existence as individuals and as a nation. Fortunately, America is a democracy and ultimately ,our leaders must reflect the will cf its citizens. But for democracy to work as it should, people must be both informed enough to dee their opinions and active to i sure their implementation. 3 Once informed, becoming 'ac- tive" can be as simple as talking about the issue with friends, wearing a button, and finally casting a ballot for the freeze. It seems people take democracy for granted too often. It doesn't take much to translate opinions and values into polidy- but it does take something. Amdur is an LSA senior. He is a member of Students for a Nuclear Weapons Freeze. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: The Dark Ages come to the Diag 0 To the Daily: I happened upon the knights of the old Round Table the other day while walking across the Diag. They did what many superan- nuated groups do when they're out for a new start: They renamed their band the Society for Creative Anachronisms and went on international tour. "And what is that which you carry?" "A lance, you thick-witted dolt!" Sir Gawain's body had become rigid and he began flailing his lance. Perceiving his mild agitation, I took a step back. "It seems unnecessary to wear such adequate protection when using a lance to do honor to who used chivalry to veil violen- ce, the knights of the Society for Creative Anachronisms have used "re-enactments" of Medieval combat (with padded sabers) to veil their baser ten- dencies toward destructiveness. ' The misnamed "Dark Ages" was actually a time of artistic and musical accomplishment. Religions were shaped, new trade routes opened, and regional languages developed. While, the Society may have other interests, it is unfortunate that its wars are the most prominently displayed. Perhaps they are not so anachronistic after all. -Robert Levine October* I -