I 0 OPINION Page 4 t iigant tuIld Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVII, No.27 420 Maynard St. Ann'Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Friday, October 10, 1986 Media The Michigan Daily time for Shooting down rhetoric THE SHOOTING DOWN of a U.S.. built airplane in Nicaragua and the subsequent death of at least one American on board, dispels the myth that the Contras are fighting a war in which the United States will play only a limited advisory role. The CIA has been working to supply insurgent units on the Costa Rican border which have recently joined the U.S. supported United Nicaraguan Opposition as part of President Reagan's strategy to increase a two-front war effort. The fact that this specific plane was shot down when others have not been does not absolve the CIA, nor does it minimize the seriousness of the issue. The issue is that the Reagan administration's line, that American boys will not die in Nicaragua, is proved false with this incident. Reports to the contrary and administrative refusal of respon- sibility do not alter this unfortunate fact. Indeed, it is inconceivable that helicopters, even if they are privately flown, could be operated without the knowledge of U.S. -military advisers in the area. The Honduran or El Salvadoran governments, from whose countries the plane and ammunitions were coming from, would never allow stockpiling of military supplies for a private U.S. citizen without government clearance. And if, as the Reagan administration claims, the group was acting privately on this specific mission, but with approval from the government, there is still no justification for private citizens' carrying out a war against a foreign government. Just last year, the state department refused a request by Oxfam America, a non-profit relief organization, to send farm tools, seeds, and agricultural materials to Nicaragua because the supplies were not considered as humanitarian aid, and were - supposedly going to Sandinista groups. The claim is false, since the supplies were to be distributed by independent Catholic church organizations; but it points out the hypocrisy and motives of the government. To approve of private groups supplying bullets, boots, and other military equipment is abhorrent. In addition, this incident shows how the U.S. government confuses the public by appeasing them with insignificant congress- ional measures. The supposed congressional ban on Contra aid is an example of such disinformation. The ban does not affect a contingency fund, which can be used at the CIA's discretion under the stipulation that it inform at least two members of Congress of its intended use. The CIA itself has said that it was not violating congressional guidelines in supplying troops with supplies. This is correct; the prohibition banning the use of the CIA's contingency fund expired on September 30, the last day of fiscal 1986. The president could thus use the funds for special projects, such as escalating the two-front war on Nicaragua. The final decisions in Congress over the allocation of $100 million dollars of Contra aid have been delayed and debated intensely since both the house and senate approved some form of the president's original request last summer. A crucial aspect of this debate has been concern about the purpose of U.S. support for the Contras. Nicaragua, which is about the size of Ohio, hardly poses a threat to United States security. It has become increasingly clear that the Reagan administration intends to overthrow the Sandinista government and mislead the U.S. public. Many in congress who remember Vietnam rhetoric are skeptical of the United States' ability to maintain a limited involvement in Nicaragua. Already, state governments, such as Michigan, have. sent their National Guards, at the president's request, to practice maneuvers in Honduras, which is home to Contra training bases. It would be naive to believe that the United States will watch from the sidelines while supporting the Contras. In this very real game of war, the players inevitably are American soldiers. By Jeffrey Marc Parness A tremendous hue and cry was heard last week emanating from the Washington press corps and the various media establishments over the alleged U.S. "deception campaign" pertaining to the Administration's intentions towards Libya's Moammar Khaddafi. I must admit that I rather enjoyed watching the moaning and groaning on the part of some of this country's most popular journalists and especially T.V. anchormen as they protested the Administration's use of the media to deceive and confuse Khaddafi as to possible U.S. attacks on his country. This campaign of selected disinformation, could have theoretically been carried out by any Administration, so the issue is not the policies and directives of the Reagan White House or Schultz State Department. Rather, the issue at hand is the relationship between the government and media and how that relationship is affected by the coverage of terrorism. The media and terrorism are inherently linked by the shared concept of sensationalism. As a business, the media must (and does) print or broadcast news that sells. When journalists argue that "truth" is paramount in the media business, they're not telling the truth because if it were not for network rankings or circulation and subscription rates, journalists would not have the opportunity to tell you their version of the "truth." (op. cit. National Enquirer) Blood and violencetsells--sensationalism is the media's tool for business success. On the same note, sensationalism is the terrorist's tool for political success as they realize that the larger the explosion or more dramatic the hijacking, the more media coverage they can garner to publicize their political beliefs and Parness is an LS &A senior demands. Terrorists calculate that they are able to influence public opinion by their cowardly deeds because there will always be a print journalist or camera - person nearby to document their actions and describe their motives. Both the terrorist and the journalist strive for the front-page story. It's news. Right? When NBC's Tom Brokaw aired an in- depth interview with the terrorist Abul Abbas, the mastermind of the Achille Lauro hijacking, one of the newsworthy points was the whereabouts of Abbas as Italian and American authorities were seeking his extradition for the hijacking and murder of Leon Klinghoffer. Yet, this detail, his location, went undisclosed to the two governments as Brokaw and NBC admitted to a deal enabling the broadcasting of the interview. Instead, Brokaw gave Abbas the opportunity to don a fashionable double-breasted suit, and talk of how he and his colleagues planned to expand their war, which at first was limited to Israel, to the United States, as he calmly dragged from his Marlboro cigarette. Abbas, who looked more like a worldly statesman than a terrorist as the interview progressed, basically proclaimed that "no American would be safe, anywhere in the world." There was nothing new in what Abbas said that couldn't already be determined by his actions or his group's statements. The interview was the news. Then, of course, there was Khadafy's great claim that he would raise a worldwide army to "set a great fire under the foot of America!" All any unemployed terrorist had to do was pick up a copy of the New York Times to learn of employment opportunities from Khadafy as he was ready to pay anyone who would carry out acts of terror against the government and people of this country. Yet the best example of terrorists terror manipulating the media occurred during the TWA Beruit hijacking in the summer of 1985. Remember all the cameramen and photographers at the elaborate new conference orchestrated by the Shi'it4 terrorists who hijacked flight 847 and brutally murdered Bobby Steitham? Yes! A press conference by terrorists-so they could dictate to the world their skewed and hostile view of international politics. Whereas the American hostages were there against their will, it seemed as though the American news cameras were willing participants. I wonder how many Americans cancelled their trips to Europe1 relinquishing their right to free travel, with the memory fresh in their minds of the TWA pilot leaning out the cockpit window with a gun at his head? Since we permit the terrorists to paralyze the populace with fear by their use of the media, curtailing travel abroad and creating a feeling of insecurity at home, why then can't our government make use of the media to instill the fear of retribution in the godless terrorists?. Or does the media give the terrorists preferential treatment to more media access since they are both dealing in the same business of sensationalism? Last week's protests from print and electronic journalists seemed as if the members of the media caught their spouses cheating on them. Well, the government and media are not, married. They are wholly independent institutions. The government is elected to, among other things, protect this country from external threats. The media is in the business of selecting news that sells. When it comes to terrorism, the media must realize that it is no longer on the sidelines in a position of neutrality. The media is an active participant, subject to manipulation by terrorist and government alike. RZEA6M5 ( GOIN6 To CAVE IN To oRAGCEV1or Z CA~N FEE.L 1T w C~' OtN 6 TO 61tV RWAY ^(}{E SORE TMI 5WMAT Y/O SAID LASrT TIM t EyME t'/ IL (-.I cj- 1 b I II I 1 i. ,..r J AND LOOoV 'zq tAE WEED To MEET AGAV , '4H~Nr? i lt I zF 4 .., /.. R.- V .,,,. L I I LETTERS: 1I YOUJ jW1E aANEStED FOR , WIO WERE FLEEING THE .-' 6ivING SANCTUARY To ./ MILTARY FOR~CES OUR CENTRAAME~iCN GOVENMT ' I Animals deserve humane treatment 4 WH~AT IS THE CAR~GE., YOUR~ H~ONO? MEtZcY WinnT INTENrTTo - EM6ARP5S l F s To the Daily: I was outraged and saddened by the extreme arrogance displayed in Philosophy Professor Carl Cohen's position on animal rights , "Animals don't have rights, 'U' prof says." (Daily, 10/7/86) Professor Cohen is quoted as saying, "they [animals] are not beings of a kind capable of exercising or responding to moral claims. The assertion that all aminals, only because they are alive and have interests, also possess the 'right to life' is an abuse of that phrase and wholly without warrant." This anthropocentric view, while arried to the noint cause massive, and in some cases, permanent damage to Earth. Earth is made up of an extremely complex set of ecosystems. Every species plays a vital role in maintaining an ecological balance. No single species is more valuable than any other. In nature, the grass is just as important as the mouse who eats that grass. And the mouse is equally as essential as the predator who feeds on it. In this respect, intelligence level or the ability to make moral claims have no significance whatsoever in nature. If we are to maintain a balannced ensvsem. then we ordained value. We must recognize that animals have a right to exist purely for their own sake, and not simply because it is in our best interest to allow for their continued existence. This is not an idea that is immediately acceptable to many people because it goes against everything we have come to believe about our position in relation to the rest of the world. Because of our greater intelligence, we all too often set ourselves apart from and above all the other inhabitants of Earth. The idea that humans are separate allows us to feel little or no guilt while we commit ros acts of tropical rain forest in order to make room for cattle grazing). Many of us may be tempted to dismiss Professor Cohen's statement as too ridiculous to be worth paying any attention to. Yet, if we are wise, we will take this opportunity to examine our own attitudes toward ourselves and the world around us. It is imperative that we all overcome the notion that our superior intelligence makes us somehow more worthy of life than the animals with whom we share this planet. Until we can learn to honor and respect all species of life and recognize their own intrinsic right to existence. we cannotd .. -_,_-. -. . ,,,,,...,, ,,,.. .. r.... ,.... ,,