4' OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, September 25, 1984 The Michigan Daily I Democrats aren't Communist-lovers By Dave Kopel As a liberal Democrat - and as an admirer of Harry Truman, John 'Kennedy, and Hubert Humphrey - I consider one'of the president's most im- portant duties to be combatting Com- Diunism. Communism is the enemy of tiose values that Democrats cherish iost: freedom, democracy, oppor- tunity, individualism, and justice. : When Ronald Reagan ran for president in 1980, he assailed President arter's anti-Communist record, and promised to do better. Four years later, let's take a look at how Reagan has done. TO BEGIN with, Reagan deserves great credit for the invasion of Grenada. American troops there over- throw a Stalinist clique which itself had just taken power a few days before in a bloody coup. The previous government - Maurice Bishop's Marxist regime - had a fair degree of popular support, but the new Coard government, which. considered Bishop too pro-West, had not a bit of popular approval. People who say "Let Grenada be Grenada" ought to applaud the American in- vasion, because the Grenadan people .themselves cheered the American liberators. The president also deserves praise for sticking with President Carter's plans to place Pershing II and Cruise missiles in Western Europe. Our NATO allies originally requested deployment of these missiles during Carter's term, as a counter to the massive build-up of Soviet SS-20 missiles in Eastern Europe. The new American missiles ensure that if Soviet troops cross the West German border, they will trigger an American nuclear response. This linkage of American and Western European security is exactly what is needed to deter a Soviet invasion. And to the list of Reagan's accom- plishments, we should also add his strong assertions of American pride and freedom. His "Evil Empire" ad- dress, as well as his televised speeches to the Chinese people about democracy, were just the kind of speeches American presidents should make Admittedly America does some rotten things to the world sometimes, and American democracy isn't perfect, but that doesn't change the fundamental facts: democracy and freedom are good; Communism and dictatorship are evil. I'm glad the president stood. tall and said so. Unfortunately, Reagan's efforts to combat Communism and the evil Soviet empire haven't been completely suc- cessful. Almost all Western European nations now have significant neutralist movements that favor unilateral Western disarmament. While these neutralists may never capture a parlimentary majority, they are well- established as a major political force. Already they are impeding the efforts of pro-American leaders in Europe to increase defense spending and to con- front the Soviet Union. REAGAN bears much of the blame for the growth of these groups. In- significant while Carter was president, they have blossomed under Reagan. His casual talk about nuclear war has scared many Europeans to death. The West German Green party (which is in- creasingly pro-Soviet) ought to send Reagan an award for helping it win seats in the Bundestag. Reagan performed poorly as a leader of the Western alliance. As historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. has observed, the people in charge of America's foreign policy know less about foreign affairs than in any administration in the past half-century. as a result, our foreign policy is often misguided, and almost always uncoordinated. Reagan's clumsy effort to stop the Europeans from helping Russia build a natural gas pipeline is a case in point. While Reagan's goal was worthwhile, the pipeline embargo was undertaken Reagan doesn't understand that the rebellion will never be stopped until the government earns the support of the peole. And the current government, which is nominally headed by Duarte, but is dominated by the same people who run the death squads, is never going to attract popular support. Until the United States takes vigorous action to purge the fascists in El Salvador, the Communists will flourish. A similar story is taking place in Guatemala, where the right-wing By supporting fascism in El Salvador; Guatemala, Reagan has strengthened Communists; with minor variations, same story is happening in Nicaragua. and the the to mount a full-scale civil war. By supporting fascism in El Salvador and Guatemala, Reagan has strengthened the Communists; with minor variations, the same story is happening in Nicaragua. There, Reagan rightfully condemns the Sandinista regime's denials of human rights. But he sends arms to supporters of the old dictator, Somoza, whose regime offered far less freedom and justice than does the current one. The Contra Guardsmen's idea of "liberating Nicaragua" is to machine- gun peasants who are working on farms that have been confiscated from the vast Somoza family estates. The "secret war" does nothing but further embitter the Nicaraguan peasantry against the U.S., and give the hard-line Sandinistas an excuse to crack down on dissent. Our democratic allies in the region, led by Venezuala and Mexico, have proposed the "Contadora" plan for neutralizing and democratizing Central America. While paying lip ser- vice to the Contadora process, Reagan has systematically worked to under- mine it. IN THE Phillippines, we see a sickening repetition of the mistakes in Central America. In 1981, George Bush told Philippine strongman Ferdinand Marcos "We love your commitment to democracy." No-one else in the Philip- pines loves Marcos; even the conser- vative business community is sick of Marcos' corruption and repression. Meanwhile, Communist revolutionaries already control the interior of several of the most important Philippine islan- ds. As murdered democratic reformer Benigno Aquino explained, "The Com- munists love Marcos . . . He's the best thing that ever happened to them. From having 500 men under arms before martial law (which Marcos im- posed in 1972), they now have 17,000 - and they're expanding." Aquino predicted that unless Marcos resored democracy in the Philippines, "The scenario that will unfold in my country is similar to what is now happening in El Salvador." Yet instead of pressuring Marcos to hold elections; Reagan just hands Marcos all the financial aid he wants. Sometimes the struggle with Soviet Communism requires military force or aid, as in Grenada. In such situations, Reagan usually knowswhat to do. But in other countries, the battle with Communism requires not more tanks, but more freedom. Sadly, Reagan seldom.stands up for American values in these situations. Like Ronald Reagan, Presiden John Kennedy was a strong anti-Communist. But Kennedyrealized that, "Those who make peaceful change impossible, make violent revolution inevitable."4 That's why President Kennedy con- sistently put America on the side of democratic reform movements around the world. Reagan's alliances with dic- tators play straight into the hands of the Kremlin. Reagan deserves credit for Grenada and the Euromissiles, but the most important anti-Communist task in the next four years will be turning back Communism in Central America and the Philippines. Because vigorous sup- port for democracy is the best antidote to Communism, I'll be casting my anti. Communist ballot for Walter Mondale. Kopel is a third year la w student. so clumsily, and with so little backing from our allies, that it was bound to fail. All it did was reduce American credibility. The White House staff ought to make foreign policy well, or else leave it to state department. professionals. REAGAN'S Central American policy also looks weak from the anti-Com- munist perspective. After four more years of war, and millions of dollars of American military aid, the corrupt Salvadoran army is further than ever from defeating the Communist rebels. military government permits no political opposition, and systematically slaughters the native Indian population. Because peaceful reform is impossible, peasants who want social justice in Guatemala have no alter- native but the Communist insurgents. Instead of pressuring the Guatemalan government to improve, Reagan un- critically ships it all the military aid it wants. Thanks to the lack of reform, the Communists have been growing stronger every day. By the end of Reagan's second term, they will be able Edie m d tig anl' Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Cramer So THEIM, ANr~RR; $ AwD ..THE Arm go Vol. XCV, No. 17 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Cooking up diplomacy /I"EKTL J:.i AREMA rIiAIj ,Z N'{ N> 4 So President Reagan wants to be a diplomat. In a speech to the United Nations General Assembly yesterday, the president pledged to play a greater role in the regional diplomacy of Cen- tral America and the Middle East and minade clear his intention to work ,ward a more constructive relation- 'ship with the Soviet Union. If indeed he does pursue those goals in deed - not :just in word - the best that can be said is that it took him three-and-a-half years to decide on a policy which would have been followed from the start by any responsible world leader. A president shouldn't decide on diplomacy, he should follow it instin- -tively. What Ronald Reagan does follow in- stinctively is political opportunity. 'he time is ripe to appear the cham- .pion of peace since one of the few guestions the American voting public has concerning Reagan is his war- monger image. Now would be the time to put everyone at ease. There is little reason for comfort, however, in reviewing the Reagan ad- ministration's diplomatic record. When the president met with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko on Sunday he declared, "We have it within our power to make history." But history has already been made in an unfortunate way. Reagan is the fir- st president since Hoover not to have met with a Soviet leader and he has rejected every arms limitation agreement ever proposed between the two nations. His "diplomacy" regar- ding the Soviet Union has included terming it an "evil empire" whose philosophies are destined for the "ash heap of history." With diplomacy like that, who needs antagonism? His renewed interest in regions such America comes after three-and-a-half years of spotty and unsuccessful in- volvment in those areas. Reagan has proposed no solutions, other than military ones, for the problems associated with Central America. Large military aid packages have been granted but little serious discussion has ever been proposed. The administration's record in the Middle East is even more bleak owing to the extensive loss of life resulting from its weak policies. Instead of dealing intelligently with the problems in Lebanon, the problems have thrust themselves upon the president. Two separate attacks on American in- stallations in 1983 killed 304 people and last week 23 died in the most recent at- tack on the American Embassy. Each attack could have been avoided, and each successive one means the excuses are harder to make. The Reagan ad- ministration has contributed nothing toward a diplomatic solution in Lebanon, it has not even succeeded in protecting its diplomatic corps from slaughter. Responding to the lax security precautions at the new embassy, the president said, "Anyone that's ever had their kitchen done over knows that it never gets done as soon as you wish it would." It is doubtful that the families of those killed would appreciate the metaphor, but it does provide an in- teresting way of looking at Reagan's diplomatic record. He has yet to clean up a single kitchen. His diplomatic ef- forts are characterized by disarray and ineffectiveness - when they exist at all. All of this big talk about strengthening America's diplomatic efforts should be viewed with skep-, ticism. A president who discovers diplomacy this late in his term is ..... r. 1 4i . . , . "-,%nn- o m-0l 00 #"* .;; ,. it +. i , ,, + , , ' t , , ,E 4 ,i . ;, ' ,+t I A itt \ 1 0 4 MVI1DAL6 CHARM BREM6 TUE MIWAE ARRR-- .. ..- LETTERS TO THE DAILY Jewish students may miss classes To The Daily: I am writing to you on behalf of the Jewish Students at 'the University. With the rapid ap- proach of the Jewish high holy days of Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah, a feeling of concern is growing among these students that the University is "penalizing" them for their beliefs. In order to observe Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, Jews all around the world attend synagogue or tem- ple. This year, Rosh Hashanah happens to be on Thursday and Friday, September 27, and 28, 1984, and many Jewish students will miss classes on these days. We at MSA have written letters to the deans of the various schools informing them of the situation. We would like all professors and teaching assistan- ts to be aware of the Jewish holidays and to excuse students BLOOM COUNTY accordingly. Jewish students deserve to be assured that their course schedules will not interfere with their religious practices. - Benjamin Long September2A is MSA 's vice for academic af- Long president fairs. by Berke Breathed Y6.5 ? / /N54'tT 1EI4RAM -FOR M407R 4-i 4 50ON, YOUR~ MOTHER VW(W 1'2jA orA VAVfIRMVfAYVn AACM-,, M/W5 MAA M'MlIz WI3l5 iv 0CONWYHE?? MVST INTMA~TE F66(.1& ON 7m1 /0 M ANNIM5AKY OF M76 17ME YOU 3TIUA& HE 11a 7At(P, pAqPP6,P BKINI UP YOOR FRlTfl{N/TY FtFMOE: 1. Ma jv/rw tWA wn rr nl/ I or THANKS. YOU CAN E OK6 PI 179.-! £VENt HE,6KCrX-AHK(N& frllri/A i vutI 4iadeal~ 14 c r i IA