4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 29, 2001 OP/ED 4 a1be lWirbi!uu 0U4Ut 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief MICHAEL GRASS NICHOLAS WOOMER Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. NOTABLE QUOTABLE The military was bogged down in questions of nation-building, Ramadan, winter, humanitarian concerns, serial bombings of the Red Cross and whether America could win a Miss Congeniality contest with Muslims." - Maureen Dowd in yesterday's New York Times, on the state of the US. Military six weeks after the terrorist attacks. I 4 NUEIfUCK &VOW tNOR Rath NOR AEAT KOK BIoLOG & CALL Z..- Is the Red Cross our enemy? AMER G. ZAHR THE PROGRESSIVE PEN 4 e have now hit the International Red Cross facili- ty in Kabul twice. Both bombings, according to the Pentagon, were "inadver- tent." But many of the sto- ries that have emerged seem to tell a different story. A quick examination reveals some disturbing truths. An Oct. 17 CNN head- line read "U.S. admits mistakenly targeting Red Cross warehouse." "Mistakenly targeting" seems to mean it was on the list of facilities to be hit, i.e., it was indeed targeted. In this bomb- ing, the main building, which contained blan- kets, tarpaulins and plastic sheeting, was destroyed. A second building containing food supplies caught fire and was partially damaged. But the Pentagon also commented that the "warehouses were among a series of warehous- es targeted by U.S. forces because the Taliban used them for storage of military equipment ... U.S. forces did not know that ICRC (Interna- tional Committee of the Red Cross) was using one or more of the warehouses." A statement issued from the ICRC noted that there were no military activities going on at the Kabul compound, stating that they were in a good enough position to know whether the Tal- iban was using the buildings. The ICRC also noted that the compound marked all of its buildings with a huge painted red cross clearly visible from aircraft. British Defense Ministry sources stated that while the strike of the Red Cross warehouse in the Kabul was "regret- table," the compound that was hit housed Tal- iban guards and military equipment. Amidst the bombing of the warehouses, Afghan workers were running in and out of the burning building in order to salvage as much of the supplies as possible, supplies, as one can imagine, that are desperately needed by the populations of Kabul and surrounding areas. After the first attack, U.S. forces again hit the compound just a few days ago on October 26. The BBC reported that U.S. jets "mistaken- ly bombed six warehouses, destroying vital stocks of food. Two of the warehouses hit this time were struck last time around." A furious Mario Musa, the spokesman for the ICRC, told reporters, "It has happened again ... Huge explosions took place and three of our ware- houses are on fire now." The compounds hit on Friday contained food, blankets and other mate- rial that was to be distributed to thousands of Kabul residents. Musa also stated that all involved parties knew the locations of the ICRC facilities. As one local Red Cross worker told an Associated Press reporter, "I am sad. We had special programs over the next several days to distribute these items to the disabled people." Meanwhile, worldwide aid agencies are pleading for a temporary halt on air strikes so that food supplies can be distributed before winter sets in. According to their estimates, two million Afghans need donated food to help them get through the winter, and half a million of them will be cut off by snow if aid doesn't reach them by mid-November. A statement issued by a conglomerate of private aid agen- cies noted that the "current rate of food deliver- ies and distribution is inadequate to supply enough food by mid-November" and that "all the obstacles to those food deliveries must be lifted." Further, many of these agencies have indicated that U.S. drops of food rations achieve very little if no clearance is given to food agencies to thoroughly distribute the food. What is most striking from these reports concerning aid agencies, and the double bomb- ing of the ICRC facilities in particular, is that U.S. forces in fact intended to hit the Red Cross complex. In other words, military gains out- weighed humanitarian concerns. What, though, would be the motives behind striking humanitarian facilities and therefore greatening the suffering of the quite innocent and disenfranchised Afghan population? Per- haps it is the same misguided formulation that has gone into ten years of economic sanctions on the civilian population of Iraq, killing about one and a half million people, including over 600,000 children. The U.S. is probably hoping that increasing the suffering of the everyday Afghan man, woman, and child will lessen the dictatorial hold of the Taliban. Dropping pack- ets of food where they cannot be distributed amply seems to be a cynical ploy to divert attention from that objective. But, just as in Iraq, such policies will fail. Starving the Afghan population will only strengthen the hold of the Taliban, allowing them to transform, much like Saddam Hussein does, the deep physical suffering of their people into a vehemently anti-American propaganda campaign. II Amer G Zahr can be reached at zahrag@umich.edu. V LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Is mainstream America seeing the the War on Terror's bigger picture? 0 YIN PASSING THANKS ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT, YOU'RE THE BEST! Actually, not really. You're quite the oppo- site. I've stopped going to hockey games. It's not that I've lost faith in the team. It's not that I have to study on Fridays and Saturdays. I'm just not excited jo go to them anymore. As Sports Editor Jon Schwartz indicated last week in a column ("Yost's 'improvements' aren't worth it for fans," 10/23/01), the addition of luxury boxes this past summer has blocked the view of people stuck in the upper rows of the student section. That includes me. The athletic department will argue that you can still see the ice from my seats. I will agree, I can see the action on the ice. But not much else. To me, going to Yost was much more than watching the game. It was the overall environ- ment that made the ice arena among the best places to watch hockey. I've always admired Yost as an architectural gem. The Romanesque brickwork and arches always drew me to the exterior - the barn vaults to the interior. Couple that with the energetic hockey band, the on-edge fans, the student section cheers and Yost sym- bolizes intercollegiate athletics in its most poetic form. I've always been a sports fan in the macro sense - taking in all the elements that makes a sporting event exciting. Now in order to get a sense of what's hap- pening in the arena, I have to watch it on a tele- vision monitor which I cannot even see because it's pointed away from me. With the addition of the luxury boxes, that has been ruined. Observing my fellow fans stuck underneath the boxes, they seem frustrated. The' ones who still yell and scream seem confused - half the time they're watching the television monitor and the other half trving to direct their emotions down and underneath the boxes. I feel that I will get an equal viewing of the game at home, on my couch, watching the game live on WOLV. I'm all for the athletic department for pulling itself out of the red and into the black. But the luxury boxes aren't even filled. Degenerate groundlings, like myself and others, deserve bet- ter. I will not be returning to Yost this season (unless I get an invitation from the athletic department for a one-time viewing of a game from the luxury boxes.) Bill Martin, please consider my remaining tickets a donation to the department. -Michael Grass GOD'S P.R. PEOPLE ARE AT IT AGAIN , Coming off a pervasive public relations cam- paign of unknown success waged on freeway billboards across America, God, this country's unofficially official deity, is at it again, this time with a strategy that capitalizes on this nation's renewed patriotism. Though God did not specifically claim credit for the current advertising blitz, his characteristic style of white block letters on a jet-black back- ground shines through. God's simple message of "In God we Trust. United we Stand" ranks right up there with his Golden Rule billboard procla- mation of, "You know that 'love thy neighbors' thing? I meant it," and his threatening dictate of, "Don't make me come down there." Just one more example of advertising's abil- ity to brand a product for the masses. -Josh Wickerham In Passing views represents the individual opinions ofDaily editorial board members, but do not necessarily represent the views of The Michigan Daily. U.S. foreign interests concentrate on American capitalism TO THE DAILY: After reading Yulia Dernovskaya's letter on how the United States could support oppressive regimes in the Middle East ("U.S. should take second look into Arab coalition," 10/26/01), I must comment that contrary to what she said, the United States does not want to defend "freedom and democracy everywhere." What the United States is really defending is capitalism. The United States' goal is to not allow regimes, which would be harmful to the American economy, to appear. For a long time, the U.S. has supported the Shah in Iran because, although being very oppressive, he was a pro ;vestern leader. The last thing this country needed was a regime which would hinder American invest- ments. Because of the Islamic revolution, many American companies had to flee Iran. Similarly, this nation has sent either its armed forces, military, or financial aid to remote areas of the world to prevent commu- nist expansion.CThese areas include Nicaragua, Cuba, Chile and Vietnam. Did the United States really defend democracy and freedom? Hell no, they supported dictator- ships that were much more oppressive than their communist counterparts. The only reason why they did that was because Communist regimes would not have allowed American companies to invest in those nations, thus bringing the American economy down. Desert Storm was no different. We defended Kuwait for one reason: Oil. If Sad- dam Hussein would have gotten his hands on the Kuwaiti oil, gas prices back home would have skyrocketed. Kuwait to this day has a dictatorial regime, but is it in the best interest of the United States to overthrow it and estab- lish a democracy? No, this country doesn't give a hoot as long as gas prices are low. AP PHOTO Ralph Lauren and Donna Karan sport the latest in flag fashion. War punishes many for actions of a few TO THE DAILY: Today, mainstream America in the 21st Cen- tury is supportive of the war against Afghanistan. Well, mainstream Germany in the early 20th Century was also supportive of the Nazis move- ment to exterminate Jews in Europe, and main- stream America in the 18th Century was supportive of slavery as an institution. What is happening today will always haunt us in the future (and I mean by us all those who have a conscience). The United States is unjustly going to war. The so-called evidence against Osama bin Laden is not enough to permit us to go on a bombing spree killing thousands of innocent people and risking the lives of millions who may starve because of food shortages or freeze to death because their homes were bombed. The events of Sept. 11 were pure evil, and those responsible should be held accountable. But let us not forget that the actual executers of the plan died along with all the victims. Now assuming that people other than the executers planned the event, we need to know who they are (through a legitimate court trial, where real evidence is actually presented) in order to punish them. College students. hold reason's future TO THE DAILY: When traveling through Damascus last winter I met a bright young Syrian man who secretly confessed that he would do any- thing to be able to move to the United States and enjoy the daily freedoms of which his people can only dream, though he detested how the American government has treated the Arab world: Using it as a mere pawn against the current enemy and then raping its land and its culture in the name of oil. Yet, Tariq confessed, he envied the right to protest greed and fight for reason in the streets of the free world. Average Americans may be too suffocated by their wealth and naivete to correct their leaders' corrupt foreign policy, he said. But at least their opinions are methodical and enlightened, as a result of their access to education. , Americans have no reason to make desperate decisions like those in dirt-poor countries like Afghanistan, where the lack of running water and the lack of hope leads too many young men to see the world in a black- and white perspective, and funnel their dispair into anger ... against the West, against Israel, against Americans. But Tariq would cringe if he read about how quickly Americans have dropped their individual freedoms and their capabilities for thinking rationally since Sept. 11: Declaring "war" against an idea rather than an enemy, banning comforting songs of peace on the radio, and declining to chal- lenge their government for a long-standing solution to a crisis encouraged, but not deserved, by the United States' nearly-pure- ly capitalist interests throughout the world. Many Americans believe that their civi- lization holds the key to prosperity in the world. To some extent that's true. But if Americans, educated Americans studying at prestigious universities for instance, toss away reason to reveal their animal instincts in I it