4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, February 16, 1988 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVIII, No. 95 420 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. Politics and pro-Israel lobby 4 By Muzammil Ahmed Political famine ACCORDING TO EYEWITNESSES, 20 Ethiopian peasants who had come to a feeding camp in Korem last Monday were machine-gunned to death by government troops when they ran from the trucks that were to take them to resettlement camps hundreds of miles away. Among the dead were six children. p Such atrocities are the direct result of forced Ethiopian resettlement programs. Large-scale resettlement programs have a long history as a military tool to pacify and control rebellious rural populations. Ethiopia, which is battling more than a dozen different opposition movements, hides its military agenda under the cloak of "relief and development," deceit- fully arguing that removing peas- ants from "useless, degraded" highlands in the North and inserting them into "unoccupied, fertile" lands in the South will alleviate famine. Since 1984, nearly one million peasants have been removed from their homelands with plans to resettle up to six million more. Last week's massacre is only the latest in a long series of atrocities that have occurred during the im- plementation of Ethiopia's ostensi- bly humanitarian resettlement. Tes- timony from refugees who have es- gaped indicates that life in the reset- tlement camps includes forced la- -bor, misery, disease, and abuse. Settlers, in return for food, are used as armed militia to gather intelli- gence and conduct search and seizure raids on rebellious villages in these "unoccupied" southern lands. The assumptions justifying reset- tlement make little sense. Settlers who are volunteers would not run from the resettlement trucks. Peas- ants would not be willing to die when threatened with removal from ecologically "useless" land. Insert- ing millions of people into the last remaining forested lands in Ethiopia will exacerbate, not contain, an ecological crisis of drought. It has become clear that feeding camps lo- cated in government-controlled cities serve as bait to lure starving peasants out of guerrilla-controlled countryside. Food aid in Ethiopia is used as a weapon to squelch politi- cal opposition and transform inde- pendent farmers into forced labor- ers. Since much of this donated food is grown by American farmers, we have a responsibility to understand how our food aid helps manipulate starving Ethiopians. A common myth is that Ethiopia's brutal regime simply redistributes the good will of the Western world to the needy. The motives of the West are not as pure as they appear. Rather than supporting the legitimate opposition movements fighting for self-deter- mination in Ethiopia, the State De- partment has chosen to follow a policy of appeasement with the hope that Ethiopia's military junta can be wooed back from the Soviet camp. The appeasement of the junta is also an attack on groups such as the Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front struggling against the Soviet regime. The periodical "African Confi- dential" reveals that references to war as a factor in Ethiopia's famines have been downplayed in the American press so as not to dis- please the ruling regime. By donat- ing food aid and ignoring how it is used against the hungry, the West is an accomplice in crimes against humanity, and the agencies acting as conduits for this "aid" are placed in the same moral position as physicians who administer to the tortured in Chilean prisons so they can be dragged to the torture cham- bers again. Ethiopia has the largest standing army in all of Black Africa. Forty- three per cent of Ethiopia is a war zone. Resettlement is a brutal means of repression and is accomplished with bullets from the East and food aid from the West. The blood of the 20 hungry peasants killed while running away last week is on the hands of many. The former member of Congress from California, Paul "Pete" McCloskey was in Ann Arbor on January 21 to give a lecture on peace prospects in the Middle East. He was the target of a massive smear cam- paign by the pro-Israel lobby, which tried to discredit him politically because of his critical views on Israel. The following is an interview with him about the pro-Israel lobby in the United States. Daily: First, what kind of a back- ground and what kind of an experience have you had with the Israeli lobby? McCloskey: I was elected to the Congress in 1967 - before that I was in the Marine Corps - and I was the first Republican elected opposing the Vietnam War, which was at that time a platform of the Democrat Party. I made the first speech calling for the impeachment of Richard Nixon, and I was in the Congress for some 15 years. W hen the Israelis invaded Lebanon in 1982, 1 was the one member of Congress who asked for a vote to cut off of aid to Israel under the same law in which we cut off aid to Turkey when they used U.S. funds to invade Cyprus in 1975, and I first ran heavily against the Israeli lobby of the United States, the AIPAC, which is par- tially comprised of leaders from 33 of the major Jewish organizations of America, I have spoken out since then against the false reliance on Israel as our only reliable ally in the Middle East, and argued that... the Palestinians have a right to a home- land... under the same United Nation (UN) resolution which allowed Israel to come into existence in 1947. Under the real definition of some members of the Jewish community, any- one who is against Israel is against a Jew- ish state and is therefore anti-Semitic. I would like to say that I necessarily, prop- erly, and elsely refuse to being anti- Semitic. I am not, I go around the country trying to bring moderate Arab leaders into agreement that Israel has a right to exist with a partition of Palestine, and urging Palestinians to recognize Israel within its original borders, and urging Israelis to recognize the Palestinian right to - what I would say Resolution 242: that they give up the West Bank and the Gaza and the participation in the government of Jerusalem. D: Where do you think the Israeli lobby gets its power? Is it money, organization, support? M: It's not so much money as people say. What it is, is that in the American electoral process, a politician like myself who is elected every 4 or so years - that politician is sensitive to what American public opinion is, but he is 20 times more sensitive to the small interest groups that care so deeply on a given issue that they will work to defeat him on the next elec- tion. And the example of that is our most recent election in 1986 where the Senate changed hands. In 10 of the 12 elections that were crucial, the margin of victory was less than two percent. If you have two percent of the people who care so deeply on an issue that they will vote solely that way, than in a year of apathy, when only half the people are voting, that two per- Muzammil Ahmed is a Daily opinion page staffer. cent becomes four percent, and essentially, four percent controls most elections. D: I'm sure you know about the recent unrest in the West Bank and Gaza. What sort of role do you think the lobby is playing in portraying it to Americans? M: Well, for the first time the lobby doesn't know what to do, and doesn't have a good way of doing it. They can chal- lenge the networks - as they are - say- ing its an unfair portrayal of Israeli vio- lence and no corresponding sensitivity to the poor Israeli people. There is no way that the Jewish community in this country in my judgement can justify the "iron- fist" policy that prime minister has an- nounced. And I would say that probably the two worst institutionalized examples of racism in the world today are apartheid in South Africa and the treatment of the Palestinians by the Israel. Increasingly I think that the Israel's in- terests are not only different from those of the United .States, but hostile to United States, because Israel wants the Iraq-Iran war to continue, for example, since it as- sures Iraq from any joining of Syria, though if Iraq and Syria agree on some- thing I'll probably join up with an Arab church... [When] a newspaper or a televi- 'I would say that probably the two worst institutional- ized examples of racism in the world today a r e apartheid in South Africa and the treatment of the Pales- tinians by the Israel.' -Ex-member of Congress Paul "Pete" McCloskey sion station comes out and says we are critical of Israel, or they run night after night of pictures of Palestinian kids being brutalized by Israeli soldiers, the Israeli lobby utilizes networking. The [lobby's] network is capable of saying to ten indi- viduals, get the word out, withdraw your advertising from that newspaper, or threaten to withdraw your advertising un- less they present a "fair" presentation. In San Fransisco, there was an eight part series on the Arab world, and a public serving station bought only the six parts that were not deemed "favorable" to the Arab side. Two sides were "favorable" to the Palestinians, but the station didn't run them because they knew that this community is capable of generating all kinds of letters to the editor, threaten to withdraw contributions or support. And you see the Israeli lobby right now saying the media is unfair to Israel as they did during the Lebanon invasion, but this time I don't think they'll get away with it. D: How do you think the influence of the lobby has changed since Beirut. You mentioned the invasion of Lebanon and in my opinion the United States didn't do much ,to criticize Israel. But now the United States in the UN is supporting resolutions against Israel, and abstaining from others. M: There has been increasing public understanding that Israel is not right on any number of issues. They were not right in refusing to sign the nuclear prolifera- tion treaty, they were not right in kidnap- ping Mordechai Vannunu and trying him in secret, they were not right in sponsor- ing Jay Pollard and stealing secrets from the United States, and they were not right in the Irangate affair. One of the most interesting things was Senator Inouye who conducted the Irangate trial, who recently disclosed that he on behalf of his Jewish wife put aside $8 million in Congress for the education of Jews in France. I can't believe the Ameri- can people support that kind of activity. But more than that Senator Inouye had in- structed his staff in the Irangate hearings that there was to be no hostility towards Israel - no mention of Israel if they can help it - because Israel was clearly at fault, both at the beginning and during the 4 implementation of that whole Iran ques- tion. The problem is that every American politician up till now has been afraid in any way to be identified with criticizing Israel for fear that the Israel lobby would defeat him or her in the next election, as they defeated Paul Findley, Chuck Percy, probably Bill Fullbright. Any one who is deemed insensitive to Israel has been de- feated thus far. Jesse Jackson is the only 4 candidate among the presidential candidates who even discusses the issue. There is a deafening silence I would say in the presi- dentiai race. D: Speaking of the candidates, the next election is coming up, and who else be- sides Jesse Jackson do you think will come out and speak up against Israel, or do you think they need the support of the lobby too much? M: If you look at the statistics, Jewish contributions to Democratic candidates run as high as 50-70 percent of the money which is contributed to the candidate. No other Democratic presidential candidate has ever dared to take on the Israeli lobby... Republicans have generally attracted their money from business and industry sources, and have not yet been captive to the Jewish community, but people like Pat Robertson, for example, and Jack Kemp, have courted the evangelical far right, which now says that Israel is like the 51st state from their standpoint. Robertson he's really bizarre in his views, but he has a significant following, and in a year where there is a lot of apathy in the United States, the man or woman who has dedicated supporters in Iowa could be a real challenge. Any caucus where maybe only 10 percent of the people turn out to vote on the caucuses, you may only have 3 percent of the people for you,. but if your people all turn out, you look very strong. D: Recently, the Palestinian Informa- tion Office was closed,-what kind if role did the lobby play in that, and also, do you think the lobby has any influence over the courts to keep the offices closed? M: No, I think the court decision will be irrespective of the lobby... Essentially those are Americans who are operating an office on behalf of the PLO... I'm con- vinced the PLO under Arafat is at least as moderate as the Israeli government. To call the PLO today a "terrorist" organiza- tion is unfair. There are people under the PLO umbrella who are out and out "terrorists", and probably George Habash, and some of the folks are still "terrorists" in the sense that they will try to wipe out Israeli army installations. The idea that the PLO officially sponsoring hijackings or things like the Achilles today - I don't think so. Save Tiger Stadium THE CITY OF DETROIT, and every baseball fan, is in serious peril of losing Tiger Stadium. The move by a few greedy, power-lusting indi- viduals like Tom Monaghan and Coleman Young to construct a con- vertible suburban Monster Dome must be stopped for moral, eco- logical, economic, and sentimental reasons. First of all, there is no pressing need for a new home for the Tigers. Tiger Stadium is getting on in years, but it could still be refur- bished for much less than a new stadium. People complain about the ob- structed seats, which do exist; however, any seat in the stadium is preferable to any seat in a dome, which should never be used for any sort of athletic competition. Be- sides, the Silverdome is out in Pontiac, and Tiger Stadium is one of the increasingly few stadiums to actually be in the city whose team it houses. It is possible that the proposed Retractodome would be built in suburbia. This means that some land mass which could be used for affordable housing or a new and the athletes who play on it. Mon- aghan's promises to keep a grass field under the retractable roof will undoubtedly be forgotten when they realize how expensive it is to main- tain life in a concrete womb. Money is, of course, the main is- sue for the Domino man. The added expense of a new stadium-ap- proximately $200 million- will in- variably be passed on to the fans, especially when cost overruns oc- cur. More expensive parking, tick- ets, and food are bound to come, plus the cost of actually getting to the stadium. All for the benefit of a man who wants to spend $30 mil- lion to build "The Leaning Tower of Pizza" in Ann Arbor. Moving the Tigers out of Detroit would hurt the city economically. There is an entire Tigers industry, from vendors, nearby businesses, restaurants, and parking merchants to the hundreds of Tiger Stadium employees who would most likely lose their jobs when and if the Tigers leave. Granted, the new dome would create new jobs for whichever suburb it ends up in, but it is easy to see the importance of keeping jobs and revenues in an ecnnnmimliv menk rieiks Dent;, LETTERS Don't strengthen lab requirements To the Daily: Tuesday's (Daily, 2/9/88) article on the proposed increase in the Natural Science segment of the LSA distribution re- quirement included Chemistry Professor Henry Griffin's statement, "Given that society places such a heavy emphasis on science - how can our students be graduating without it?" He then goes on to pro- pose that LSA students be re- quired to take an extra three science credits, including >ne laboratory course. While I heartily agree that LSA graduates should have a thorough knowledge of scien- tific ideas in order to function in today's world. I disagree that this knowledge should come surv and ties disc exp vey of scientific methods course was extremely popular. course be instituted as an ideas, but from a humani- I strongly suggest that, native to Prof. Griffin's perspective (i.e., readings, whether or not the proposal for posed lab requirement. ussions, and papers, not lab an additional three science -Suzanne Pi eriments and reports). This credits goes through, a similar Februa King wouldn' t have used such tactics alter- pro- ierce ry 9 To the Daily: Please address the following letter to UCAR. It's time enough someone told you that you are too radical. For a group claiming to be the modern-day successors of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., you disgrace his name. Have you ever thought how he would respond to the recent problems we have had on campus? Certainly not the way you have been doing. He preached and utilized a criticism is constructive. Yes, I am criticizing y o u r organization but not your cause. Your cause is valid and deserves the utmost attention; however, calling those who challenge your actions "racists" is not the proper way and only impedes your goals. It was necessary for me to go to one class on Martin Luther King day which happened to be in Angell Hall. For violating the man on a-megaphone. He is the racist, not me! Had I not had a test in that class, I would not have gone. I did boycott the rest of my classes that day, but it was not for UCAR, it was for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. I would not roll out of bed for today's radical UCAR. You claim to be an organization that upholds and implements the ideals of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Bull! -Nick Mavrick I