40 OPINION Page 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVI, No. 34 420 Maynard ST, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Tuesday, October 22, 1985 The Michigan Daily 'Intelligence is' only the start* Prize tainted THE DECISION to give the 1985 T Nobel Peace Prize to the In- ternational Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War is positive only in its intent. While the ideal of preventing nuclear war is one deserving of recognition, the organization chosen should uphold more of the values with which the award has come to be identified. Among those values is a strong respect for human rights. This was teaffirmed in last year's selection of Bishop Tutu. The IPPNW, an organization of Physicians from both the East and West, is notable for its lack of respect for human rights. Prof. Marat Vartanyan of the In- 9titute of Psychiatry and a leading member of the group has been a proponent of putting dissidents in mental hospitals, a practice which lead to the expulsion of the Soviet delegation from a recent world psychiatry conference. The American branch of the group has been equally callous in its attitude toward those members of the Soviet peace community who work outside the government. Co- President Dr. Bernard Lown of Harvard has repeatedly failed to acknowledge the attempts of relatives of jailed Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov to meet with him. At a group conference in Helsinki both Lown and Co-President Yevgeny Chazov of the Soviet Union categorically refused to meet with Sakharov's step- children. The award could be justified only if these groups were particularly successful in bringing the dangers of nuclear war before all the people of the world, and they have clearly failed to do so. Although a group of Soviet members did publish the medical effects of nuclear war, their work was distributed almost entirely in the west, giving no im- petus to development of a stronger peace movement in the Soviet Union. Another hindrance is the fact that the Soviet physicians tend to hold high government positions. Chazov, for example, was Brez- nev's personal physician and has never endorsed a peace plan which hasn't first been proposed by the Kremlin. By contrast, there are groups in the Soviet Union, attempting to maintain contact with American peace groups, which maintain their independence from gover- nment dogma. The leader of the Moscow Group to Establish Trust between the U.S. and USSR was recently sentenced to a three year prison sentence in part for possessing information on the American peace movement. Mem- bers of this group, as well as more famous dissidents such as Sakharov have repeatedly been jailed or put into mental hospitals for demonstrating against the ar- ms race. In the past the Nobel committee has honored those who stand for both peace and social justice. Even if this meant that they stood in op- position to their governments. The IPPNW, unfortunately, is no such noble organization. By David Buchen and Mark Weinstein One year ago, protests against the Central Intelligence Agency here at the University of Michigan helped to spark nationwide campus protests against CIA recruitment. In April, nearly 500 people were arrested at the University of Colorado for protesting the CIA. On campuses everywhere, the CIA has been met with active resistance to their attempts at recruitment. This Tuesday and Wednesday the CIA is returning to Ann Arbor to recruit. And again they will be met by large crowds demanding that they leave. Why does the CIA get such treatment from people all across the nation? Aren't they just an intelligence gathering agency for the government? What is wrong with that you might ask? The CIA is the government department in charge of not only "intelligence gathering" but also more importantly overthrowing governments they don't like, assassinating people they consider a "threat" to our security, training the secret police of fascist countries to protect "democracy," influen- cing the elections of foreign countries, producing misinformation to manipulate public opinion in the U.S., keeping track of U.S. citizens opposed to government policies, and who knows what else. Everything that we know of the CIA's ac- tivities is vehemently denied by the gover- nment. The operations of the agency are kept secret from the U.S. public. What we know of the CIA is only the tip of an iceberg. The action of the CIA most prominent right now is the training, funding, and directing of the Somocista contra forces fighting to over- throw the government of Nicaragua.Ac- cording to Edgar Chamorro, a former contra leader, the contras "have been subject to manipulation by the Central Intelligence Agency, which has reduced it to a front organization."- The CIA has trained the contras to be a highly effective terrorist force. The contras based in Honduras and Costa Rica make regular runs into Nicaragua with the help of U.S. air support to destroy farm cooperatives, health care clinics, schools. Over 7,000 people have been killed by the Contras. Stansfield Turner, former director of the CIA, has said that "The people they're sup- porting down there are committing murders and terrorism and so on. The CIA is suppor- ting terrorism in Nicaragua. The contras are Buchen is an AnnLArbor resident. Weinstein is a junior in LSA. doing things that I'm ashamed of hearing that the United States is doing." In 1984, the CIA mined the harbors of Nicaragua. This action was in direct conflict with international laws. Edgar Chamorro recalls, "After the CIA mined Nicaragua's harbors, I was awakened at my "safe house" in Tegucigalpa, Honduras at 2 a.m. by an anxious CIA agent. He handed me a press release written in perfect Spanish by CIA of- ficials.... Of course we had no role in mining the harbors." The mining of the harbors, the murder of health care workers, the rape and murder of wedding parties, the constant threats of in- vasion have all been justified by the claim that the U.S. is trying to stop arms shipments from Nicaragua to El Salvador. These two countries have no common border and the bay that separates them is filled with U.S. warships. David MacMichael, a former CIA analyst who had access to all reports from the region in the time that these arms shipments sup- posedly occurred, recently testified to the World Court that these allegations were com- plete fabrications. Why then is the United States so involved in the contra war? Stansfield Turner says, "There's no doubt about it in anybody's mind. All along, there's only been one objective -- to overthrow the government of Nicaragua." Overthrowing the democratically elected gover- nments may seem like a strange thing for an "intelligence gathering" agency to be doing, but unfortunately the CIA has much practice in ousting democratic governments in favor. of military dictatorships. In 1954, the CIA brought about the over- throw of the government of Guatemala. A man named Arbenz had justbeen elected and he was "left-leaning." After he nationalized some land claimed by U.S. corporations, the CIA and the corporations worked together and brought about his overthrow. There have not been democratic elections since that time. In 1972, the CIA led the coup which ousted! Chilean president Salvador Allende. General Pinochet who took over the government still reigns today. Of course the Bay of Pigs fiasco was a poor attempt by the CIA to overthrow Castro in Cuba. And in Iran, the Shah was put in power by the CIA in 1953. The CIA also uses more subltle ways of af- fecting foreign affairs. In El Salvador, Jose Napolean Duarte received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign con- tributions from the CIA. The CIA also subver- ts foreign labor unions, student groups, and political parties. Of course as an "intelligence gathering" agency, the CIA has the obligation to share that information with our "friends." The CIA trained the South African secret police force, BOSS. In El Salvador and Guatemala, the CIA trained the right wing death squads which have killed thousands and "disap- peared" 38,000 people in Guatemala alone. The CIA also has trained the secret police of South Korea, Taiwan, Chile, and other coun- tries such as the Phillipines. During the Vietnam war, the CIA carried out the Phoenix program. The Phoenix program would identify key anti-government dissidents and then have them assassinated. This program alone brought about thousands of deaths. The CIA was also in Vietnam long before most of our troops were there. They were there as "advisorsi" According to Ralph McGehee, a CIA agent for 25 years, "The Agency forged documents, planted evidence of weapons shipments, and doctored documents to justify military inter- vention." Sound like Nicaragua? Here in the United States, the CIA has illegally kept track of U.S. anti-government activists. Ralph McGehee says that the CIA's domestic programs often violated "U.S. law and the agency's own charter. The Agency also infiltrated labor, student, youth and religious groups: It had thousands of college professors and administrators working for it on hundreds of campuses.'' One example of the CIA gathering in- telligence was in one program they subjected U.S. citizens to mind altering drugs without their knowledge. According to the Church Commission, a mid-70s Senate committee in- vestigating CIA abuses, the CIA opened over 28 million pieces of mail between 1953 and 1973. The CIA also has trained police forces across the United States in special tactics.0 When the CIA comes to campus on October 22 and 23, people should realize that it is not an "intelligence gathering" agency coming to recruit librarians and analysts. The CIA is the largest, best funded, best equipped, and most violent terrorist organization in the world. A terrorist organization which overthrows democraticly elected governments and then claims innocence in the U.S.. media. A terrorist organization which teaches torture techniques to the secret police of fascistO regimes to protect "democracy." A terrorist organization which funds the murder, torture, and rape of people in Nicaragua. A terrorist organization which keeps files on you and me. These are the practices that the CIA is ultimately recruiting employees for here at the University. Chassy TI[ DOMINI1O TII EORLY Health care bias D EATH, SUPPOSEDLY, is color blind, yet a recent government report indicates that American Blacks and Hispanics have a higher premature death rate than White Americans. The report, issued by Secretary of Health and Human Services Margaret Heckler, focused on the disparity in effective health care between the groups, and deter- mined that minority groups had "not benefited fully or equitably" from the "fruits" of the advances made in medical research in the last several decades. The series of statistics indicates a disturbingly higher incidence of preventable deaths, particularly for minorities in the Black American population. In all, the study estimated that if the premature death rates for Blacks and other minority groups were the same as those for whites, 60,000 deaths would be prevented each year. In response to the problem, the report recommends that current government programs such as Medicaid alter their focus to offer more prenatal care and self-help programs. It does not advocate the creation of any new programs, nor call for increased funding to existing programs. As serious a problem as the report documents, however, will not fade away as a result of self-help practices. It will take in- creased education programs and increased availability of simple medical examinations to alleviate the problem; and those programs will obviously take more money. The fact that the health discrepancies take place along racial lines is particularly distur- bing because it demostrates latent constraints on minorities. Even as legal discrimination has vanished, effective discrimination, resulting additionally in lower average salaries and less education, per- sists. In order to attend to the problem the report exposes and to respond to residual racial barriers, the government is going to have to pay the problem more heed than it seems inclined to. LT -1 ~ Vr LET TERS 0 0 MSA should not advocate disruption To the Daily: Learning comes not only from classroom lectures and tex- tbooks, but from the exchanges of varying opinions and ideas. A university environment facilitates such educational processes by bringing together individuals to share their dif- fering perspectives. Certainly it is ironic that a Republican Vice-President and former Director of the Central In- telligence Agency spoke at a repugnant. Vice-President Bush nonetheless has the right to speak publically, not only as Vice- President, but as a U.S. citizen. The right to protest is an inherent right of every American, Doubtless, anti-Ad- ministration demonstrations will be staged regardless of MSA's position. If MSA is going to advocate protest, it should specifically urge constructive protest over of- BLOOM COUNTY fensive disruptions. Simply put, MSA's energies should be spent proclaiming what we are for, rather than decrying what we are against. There are many pressing issues confronting the Assembly such as the nonacademic code of conduct, campus security, minority recruitment and reten- tion, and financial aid. While it is important to consider national and international issues as they concern students, it is important that we not lose sight of campus issues or overlook the celebration of the Peace Corps 25th anniver- sary. -Stephen M. Heyman October 2 Heyman is an MSA represen- tative from LSA. We encourage our readers to use this space t' discuss and respond to issues of teir rnornW IA/hnthor thn 'o tnnirc by Berke Breathed ser i ro I