s OPINION Page 6 ,Obe Mict-gat Bti Vol. XCIV, No. 31-S 94 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board Missing the point R ECENTLY, REP. Joseph Addabbo, (D- New York), issued a report on military readiness that concluded that the United States was incapable at this time of sustaining a military action for a prolonged period. White House reactions to the report have ranged from frothing accusations of political manipulation to denunciation of the Democrats for creating the problems in the first place. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger feared that the report will give our enemies the wrong impression and harm our national security. Unfortunately, the administration's reac- tion misses the central issues raised in the Ad- dabbo report. Not even Weinberger has denied the validity of the report. The situation, it seems, is that even with the largest peace-time defense budget in history, our military leaders have been unable to produce adequate results. The blame for such a failure is not partisan. There is something wrong with the entire structure of America's military posture. In the waning days of this session of Congress, proposals have been put forth to further increase our defense budget. As well, both major party candidates favor defense in- creases. The recent failures on the part of the Depar- tment of Defense to become any more efficient only weaken the defense establishment's case for more money. Increasing the budget for a woefully inefficient department-at a time when the entire country screams out for lower taxes and increased social programs-is nothing short of obscene. Accusations of political manipulation by both parties are mere dodges for the real problem. Real changes must be made in the Defense Department-changes which involve a serious reassessment of the role U.S. troops stationed abroad, a reexamination of the nation's eagerness to interfere in the affairs of other countries, and a systemic reorganization of the military bureaucracy. The Addabbo report indicates that a serious problem exists, but the nation's politicians continually refuse to address the problem on its own terms. The question is not so much over American preparedness for war-impor- tant as that issue may be. The question is over the failure of a system and over the continued waste and danger that failure has produced. Tuesday, July 31, 1984 The Michigan Daily m Wasseri -]LZ7C nan i s ~ 0 6 I 6 Will Hart's supporters work for Mondale? 0 By Mary Ellen Leary Will Gary Hart's followers work for Walter Mondale? The activists who came to San Francisco this month may have had their appetite for cam- paigning sharpened, but the bulk of the Hart supporters back home are yet to be enlisted. Self-' consciously independent, they, will not be "delivered," they must be won. "We're not all-out Democrats. We're more like in- dependents," said delegate Wayne Koonce of Illinois. THE YOUNG urban professionals, the "yuppies", constitute a whole generation-affluent, educated, successful, but with ideals. These are the MBAs who deman- ded ethics courses in b1-siness school, the lawyers giving "pro bono" service to special causes. Most, grew up outside of politics. Vietnam and Watergate put blinders on them that con- fined theirinterest to thetper- sonal. Yet, one by one, these young men and women became alarmed about the environment, nuclear weapons, military policy, federal deficits-all concerns which candidate Hart managed to address. Their most striking charac- teristic is that they have no in- bred party orientation, no political loyalty beyond en- thusiasm for Hart, although many share a repugnance at Ronald Reagan's policies. FOR MOST,the Hart campaign was a first venture into politics, a spontaneous, unstructured citizen's movement, outside the party organization at first. When they tried to become delegates or set up Hart headquarters, they drew together many novices like them- selves and fancied their faction as wholly unlike the old-style politics that yielded backroom bosses such as the chosen Georgian, Bert Lance. "We are issue-oriented," one said. "Some are for the Equal Rights Amendment, some for the freeze, some for getting out of Central America. Most are cynical about old politics. In fact, many admit they never voted before." THE ONE thing that links them to the party now is the platform which supporters consider replete with Hart's "new ideas." "This platform is dramatically different from past party statements," said Rep. Tim Wir- th of Colorado. "It recognizes changes in the nation's economy and in the world economy. It is concerned with a work force that needs retraining, and with the private sector. It's about today's world." Winning the support of Jackson and Mondale delegates for their strengthened plank against military interference in Central America refreshed Hart suppor- ters' belief that they already have influence on the party and can have more. If the Hart ideas in the plat- form-on nuclear freeze, on in- dustrial gearing up for foreign trade, on retraining workers, on a tighter defense budget-remain the Mondale message, the Hart contingent is likely to bring its zeal into the Democratic cause. BUT THEY need to be convin- ced. Geraldine Ferraro will be their catalyst if she is kept cen- tral to the campaign. "Reagan had us intimidated coming into the convention," said California Lt. Gov. Leo McCar- thy. "We came in split and scared. But since the selection of Ferraro the psychology of this party was completely changed. You can feel it. Now we are looking at a close race with a sub- stantial chance to win." But John Revens, majority leader in the Rhode Island state senate, sees changes in the party which reach beyond the Hart con- tingent. "All through the party, in state governments and in Congress, we have a new generation of young, strong-minded leadership," he said. "There are some tremen- dous young Democrats moving into key offices all across the country, and they have firm con- victions. We want to control spending and build a stable economy. We want to strengthen women's role and protect the en- vironment." "We've got to beat Reagan because he is bankrupting the country with that deficit. A lot of us stsrted out to back Hart, but we are going to stay with the par- ty and make sure the new ideas work." Leary wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. 6 6 q 6