4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, November 11, 1983 .,; First strike option can't The Michigan Daily defend Europe 4 By John Marshall Lee Fourth in a series Any argument in favor of a declaration by the United States that this country will not be the first to use nuclear arms in any future hostilities will invariably meet with the respon- se:, "But can Europe be defended without nuclear weapons?" Another question, though, should come first: Can Europe be defended with nuclear weapons? The answer, of course, is "No." Europe can be destroyed with nuclear arms; it cannot be defended with them. If nuclear weapons are used, on whatever scale initially and by whichever side there is a prohibitively high Euromiussile Debate probability of catastrophic destruction of the involved nations and their allies, including the United States. That destruction would occur immediately if nuclear firing began in the form of large-scale general attacks. If, as is more -probable, nuclear operations began with limited, regional, or tactical strikes, the ultimate destruction would occur with the almost certain process of escalation. THE LEVEL OF destruction would be a new phenomenon, enormously beyond the ex- perience of past wars. The dead would be num- bered in the hundreds of millions. The physical destruction would obliterate the fabrics and cultures of thestargeted nations. The survivors - probably, as they say, envying the dead - would be reduced to a primitive existence in a poisoned land. It would be an unimaginable catastrophe, altogether unprecedented in human history. Averell Harriman wrote recen- tly, "A conflict waged with nuclear weapons would be nothing less than the act of nations gone mad. For those who see it as anything less, I reserve but scorn for their lack of com- mon sense, and pity for their departure from common humanity that binds us on a fragile planet." To turn to nuclear weapons to shore up a failing conventional defense, in a word, would be suicidal, a monstrous and irrational act. Yet, just such U.S.-initiated firing of nuclear weapons is today the accepted strategy and declaratory policy of the United States and NATO. We have been leaning on this nuclear crutch for a generation. It is deeply embedded in the concepts, training, organization, and hardware of U.S. and Allied forces, and in the governmental super-structure controlling those forces. But it cannot, it must not be used. In the words of Field Marshal Lord Carver, this current strategy is "either a bluff or a suicide pact." In the long run, the bluff of nuclear deterren- ce cannot hold. It is true enough that both sides are very conscious of the appalling consequen- ces of nuclear war. Both feel the weight of the nuclear threat, of deterrence. But to avoid W-5 Inl777 Ih 1 ,'s F s 44L~ { .o6a. - -- l iy11 u1A. ( " frustration, lapses of reasoning, error, and desperation. And these men, on both sides are bound into an antagonistic relationship sure to produce periodic confrontations and crises. Sooner or later, in one crisis or another, the day will come when the nuclear threat will not be enough to prevent the outbreak of war. On that terrible D-day our choice, if indeed the choice is left to us, will be between fighting conventionally - win, lose, or draw - or crossing the fateful line into nuclear war. If we, and the Soviets, do not change the way we think about nuclear weapons, one or the other will almost surely make that ultimate mistake. Thomas Powers, in his profound little book Thinking About the Next War, writes, "Since 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union have been preparing to fight each other in a big war, and eventually they are going to do it.... When the war comes, we will fight it with the weapons at hand, and these prominently in- clude nuclear weapons." THIS PINPOINTS the heart of the problem. It is a problem of what people think - government people, military people, and the general public. Specifically, we now conceive of these nuclear instruments as legitimate weapons, tools that can be used like conven- tional weapons for national purposes. The task before us all is to establish that nuclear devices are not legitimate weapons but instruments of suicide and genocide, that their only human function is to prevent their use by others, and that they cannot ever be called on for military operational purposes, even in desperate military situations. Such a profound and fundamental change in the most central element of national and allied strategy cannot be accomplished in secret. It demands discussion, debate, and persuasion, in this country's administration, Congress, military, media, and public, and with our allies. Ultimately, our antagonists need to be con- vinced of the change. Further, when the decision is made, very substantive military changes will be needed, in planning, training, military educationedoctrinal publications, and organizations. Hardware changes will also be necessary: some buildup of conventional for- ces to carry the whole combat load (less is needed here than often assumed), and retailoring of the nuclear forces for the ex- clusive role of retaliation against nuclear at- tack.' The vehicle for this basic change of concept and posture is a declaration that the United States will not be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict. Examining the No-First- Use concept, discussing it at home and with allies, pushing it to adoption, formally issuing the declaration - these steps will irresistibly impel the needed rethinking and the con- sequent military measures. Under No-First- Use, the changeover to a sane strategy will be unavoidable. Let us get on with it. Vice-Admiral Lee, U. S. Navy, retired, served in the navy for 42 years. A former line officer and destroyer officer, he has also served as deputy director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. I '', catastrophe, we must, on both sides, refrain from using these weapons not just today and tomorrow, but month after month, year after year, and decade after decade. WE CANNOT, on either side, go wrong on this one single time. And these weapons are in the control of men. They are human beings with human frailties, subject to stress, anger, - Edite aedbtn thigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan LaBan Vol. XCIV-No. 57 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Preventing sexual harassment HERE HAVE been several major sexual harassment cases at the University over the last year. Two prof- essors have resigned, one in the face of being fired, and at least one other has been disciplined for harassment in- cidents. Yet no one, besides a select few ad- ministrators and faculty who were in- volved with the cases, knows what happened. No one knows 'what actions these professors were disciplined for - near assault? physical, sexual ap- proaches? verbal sexual overtures? of f color jokes? The University has chosen to withhold this information to protect the harasser's family and perhaps, his or her chance to start with a clean slate somewhere else. The result, however, is that while the University has become more aware of sexual harassment, it has not been able to form a clear definition of what exactly it is. Everyone has their own idea of what harassment definitely includes, what it might in- clude, and what is grasping at straws. But few grasp the full range of what constitutes sexual harassment. The University has been combating this problem with its program "Tell Someone," which includes about 50 video tapes describing different types of sexual harassment. But these video tapes deal only with fictional situations, and have failed to reach a great majority of the community. A more effective way to help clear up confusion would be to publish a thorough account of the harassment cases in which the University does take disciplinary action. While obviously withholding the names of involved par- ties, the University could clearly ex- plicate what the offenses are and what degree of punishment those offenses prompted. Because a set of precedents would arise, and a clearer definition of harassment would evolve in the com- munity, the practice would promote a fair disciplinary process for those ac- cused. It would also publicize the cases more, encouraging other victims of harassment to come forward. But much more importantly, it would help promote an accurate definition of harassment, and an awareness of the punishments which go along with it. EF FOORRE EFFE~T to'- 00 .,~,,. V Sih1f.. MIND 4 4 111 f' 1 [ C11' I t 711t, 'f " 1 Ui Ni u, ,; LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Administrators ignorng their committees J( -- -.ri GrREENHOUSE S I MirfiI To the Daily: I am writing this letter to ex- press discontent with several processes occurring within the administration. I am a member of the Advisory Committee on Af- firmative Action, as well as the vice president of personnel at MSA. This letter concerns the process which was used to develop and decide on the new associate vice president of academic affairs who is going to be working with all aspects of minority interests on campus. First off, the position was never presented to nor voted upon by the Advisory Committee of Af- firmative Action. I feel that this is a grave mistake on the part of the administration. The committee was set up as a presidential directive. Thus, the committee should have some policy power .concerning all aspects of affirmative action. The committee was presented with a written document, not a job description, of the position one day before the regents were to vote on it. I am not against the position at all-I feel that it is a necessity. However, I hate to see another University nosition go to waste committees set up in the first place? The Daily recently wrote ar- ticles concerning the lack of student involvement on the regential and University commit- tees ("Student truancy plagues committee meetings," Daily, Oc- tober 5, et seq.). They noted the delinquent attendance of student members and seemed to infer that this is a fault of the appoin- tment process, and it is the duty of my office to keep tabs on committee members. I am not a baby sitter. I do keep track of committee business and agenda for the information of the assembly. This is a task that has been ignored in the past and I have made it a priority for my committee this year. Perhaps the reason for the lack of atten- dance in the past is due to the administrations failure to con- sider the opinions of many of these committees. After all, who wants to commit time to something which does not have any input into policy areas which are of great importance to the university community. BLOOM COUNTY In conclusion, I just want to urge the administration to recon- sider the goals of their commit- tees. They should be consulted and included in the decision making process at all levels, in- cluding the formulative and evaluative. -Susan Povich November 1 Povich is vice president of personnelfor MSA. Concerts aren 'tforflags To the Daily: Recently, I attended a beautiful concert by the Soviet Emigre Or- chestra. As I was leaving the Power Center, I overheard an elder of our generation state: "If I had not known that there were American citizens in this or- chestra, I would not have atten- ded this concert as a mild protest." This made me question my beliefs of what any art form is supposed to accomplish. I always have thought that art was a unification of material and spiritual beauty, not some arena to wave flags and ideologies at one another. (Perhaps, this is why there was poor attendance at this concert.) I say, leave the flag waving and ideologies to politicians and armies. Leave unification of material and spiritual beauty to the artist. I've never seen a flag in Beethoven's 9th symphony or in a lithograph of Salvadore Dali. What do you think? -Jonathan Gregory Harney November 3 4 4 4 t __.--- .-/'.z ..--- . /Y . Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. t, L by Berke Breathed I BllTWwjw*4^1- I I wlwplrr r- - - ae