A group of students join the other protestors at the SOS (Support Our Soldiers) rally on Saturday. JENNIFER UUNET: £Weekend The Great Schism One week of war splinters While opposition to Saddam Hussein was prevalent, many questioned why the U.S. would so easily send forces to fight an Arab leader and his country when similar aggressions have been virtually ignored in the past. "My initial reaction was: what's the fuss about?" said Nabeel Abraham, a social sciences professor at Henry Ford Community College and a panelist at Martin Luther King, Jr. Day activities. "Aggression, invasion, occupation are nothing new to the world. Most Arabs think of the West Bank as well as the Golan Heights and Lebanon when they think of aggression. The U.S. can wait, dawdle about those occupations, the violation of humanities, and the dismantling of those governments... What's different?" he asked. University Public Health Prof. Rashid Bashshur, a Syrian- American, summarized the dismay many Arab-Americans felt when the U.S. bombed Iraq. "Although I never liked Saddam Hussein and was completely against his occupation of Kuwait, I hate to see an Arab country being decimated in the way Iraq is being decimated. They are totally overwhelmed by the technology of the U.S.," he said. "Arab-Americans are stunned... They are stunned because of the extent of the humiliation of the Iraqis and the ease with which the Americans decide to go to war with an Arab country. They expected more patience and restraint," he added. A group of approximately 50 students calling themselves the Ad Hoc Coalition of People of Color Against the War in the Gulf and Racism at Home called the Persian Gulf War racist. They condemned its "anti-Arab" nature and pointed out the numbers of minorities in the military are disproportionately high compared to the U.S. population. This reflects a system that reinforces "domestic imperialism and racism," explained group member Tracye Matthews. Many poor minorities choose the military as a way to earn money for tuition or to learn skills for future careers, she said. The concern for the makeup of the troops contributed to the overwhelming sentiment that no matter what one may think of U.S. policy or President Bush, one should support the troops. "I don't believe in violence, but now that our soldiers are over there, I support our soldiers," said Engineering junior Ron Woods. Supporting her two sisters serving in the Gulf, first-year Engineering student Africa Freeman explained her opposition to the war. "People have to Students f Support Lu KELN SMOLLERi/eekenld Mike Richardson, a Vietnam veteran from Detroit argues with a pro-war student in the Diag last Thursday. students' views on Two days before the United States bombed Iraq, reporters flooded The Daily with calls, asking how University of Michigan students feel about war. A week later, the answer to their question lay on the Diag, where students had shattered a memorial depicting the brutality of war because they opposed its graphic nature. The answer occupied the Institute for Social Research, where 35 students held a sit-in to draw attention to the University's military research. It resonated from the steps of the Graduate Library, where students sang the national anthem of Israel and pledged to return every night that Israel is attacked. And it took over the classroom, where one student called for all Iraqis in America who aren't citizens to be deported to the Middle East, for "This," he declared, "is a war." As Allied planes flew more than 12,000 missions over Iraq by mid-week, public support for Bush soared and tensions on campus splintered. By the end of the first day's fighting, students were becoming familiar with the explanations for and against a war in the Gulf, and groups were forming to spread their views on the conflict. At issue was the question of U.S. involvement in the Middle East, and why the United States chose this particular instance to use its forces. Anti-war ralliers on campus and across the nation took up the cry "No Blood for Oil," in opposition to a war they saw being fought primarily to preserve the U.S. economy and way of life which depends heavily on oil imports. Members of the group Students Against U.S. Intervention in the Middle East (SAUSI) stressed that the war is a result of outmoded Western thinking which accepts intervention in order to preserve a way of life - even at the expense of another culture. "The action of war will not stop other wars; we need to be peaceful in our way of life," said LSA senior Carl Burns, a member of SAUSI. "We've been building up a knowledge of how to fight wars. Yet there is very little discussion on what a philosophy of peace would mean." Some pro-interventionists accepted a war fought for economic interests. the Gulf "It is justified, in that the U.S. position in the world - unfortunately so - is dependent on Western access to oil," said LSA senior Reg Goeke. More often, pro- interventionists countered that Saddam Hussein is a "madman" who must be stopped before he obtains a massive military with nuclear capabilities that could be used against the West or Israel. They pointed to the 12 U.N. resolutions condemning the Iraqi attack and cited human rights abuses committed by Iraqis that Amnesty International reported. When Iraq launched Scud missiles at Tel Aviv and Haifa, ralliers gathered to show support for Israel, and many expressed fear of Saddam Hussein. "America has a right to be involved. Saddam has been defined as a Hitler, and I believe that's true," said Jennifer Loss, an LSA senior who recently returned from studying in Tel Aviv, Israel's capitol. "When Hitler was killing the Jews with gas, [the U.S.] said it was someone else's problem, and by the time we went in, it was a little late... Saddam Hussein is a threat who must be stopped." But many Arab-Americans were torn. interrupt their educations to fight a war that's not even going to benefit us," she said. "It's an unnecessary war. The U.S.is always playing Big Brother in things that do not concern us." Protests were numerous, but the cries heard at rallies throughout the week could only present a few sides of a many- faceted argument, and students tried quickly to develop a better understanding of the complex politics of a regionwhich has been in turmoil for years. military force to restore the independence of Kuwait, I'm uneasy with the argument of Bush that says because Iraq poses a military threat and will so in the future, that we have to destroy the Iraqi military machine," he explained. "Iraq's biggest threat is to Israel... and Israel's problem isn't central to our security interests." The question of Israel's role in the conflict is a core of frustration. Some members of the Jewish The morning after the United States attacked Iraq, Jong Han walked to an anti-war rally on the Diag, her backpack stuffed with fliers urging students to "Support Our Soldiers." She was scared. The campus group - which planned to hold its first mass meeting yesterday - was a little more than a day old, supported by the pocket money of eight people who felt they represented an opinion not often heard on campus. "I thought I was the only person out there that had a different view," said Han, a first-year LSA student. "I was terrified. I thought they [war protestors] were going to laugh at me or hit me." Instead, Han and other members of SOS - which now has a coordinating committee of about 25 people - said they were welcoined by students with diverse political views united in their support for troops in the Persian Gulf. Their first rally drew more than 600 people to the Diag on Saturday. On Tuesday, after much debate, the Michigan Student Assembly passed a resolution supporting the Persian Gulf soldiers. An SOS petition had gathered 1700 signatures by the middle of the week. In the future, SOS plans to sponsor activities such as tying yellow ribbons around trees on campus, sending letters of support to soldiers, and coordinating activities with Ann Arbor residents who support the soldiers. "There's a lot of people on this campus who want to be pro-America," said Reg Goeke, an LSA senior. "The climate is more and more for supporting the troops. That's what I'm seeing." While they have been encouraged by student response to their efforts, members of SOS have also been discouraged by what they call misrepresentation and misunderstanding of their group. The aim of SOS is not to support war, they said. "We're not a pro-war group. It's been very difficult for us to convince people of that," Goeke said. "But right now the deed is done. We need to send a unified message that America supports its soldiers." SOS, which includes students for and against intervention, does not plan to take a political stand on the war, members said. Students with diverse opinions about the war work side by side in 2t T a b( PI to a s m pi st w G i ct b 'I hate to see an Arab country being decimated in the way Iraq is being decimated. They are totally overwhelmed by the technology of the U.S.' - Prof. Rashid Bashshur University Public Health MICHELLE GUY/Weekend Mandy Roger, a second-year Rackham graduate student, and Ken Polsky, an LSA senior marched to the Administration building last Thursday to protest the war . Cover story by Noelle Vance The importance of oil to the world economy, the balance of power among Arab leaders, and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict were topics debated in and out of the classroom. "I'm not a 'strong supporter' of the war," said University Prof. Paul Huth, a specialist in international security issues. "I think the U.S. was correct in going in to defend Saudi Arabia because Saudia Arabia is an important source of oil, and the U.S. economy would suffer tremendously [if that source was lost]," he said. "Kuwait, however, is not nearly as important a sourcetof oil; and while I support the use of community maintain the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has nothing to do with the Persian Gulf War, and an attempt to link it with the crisis is only a tactic Saddam uses to broaden the war into an Arab-Israeli war. "(Saddam) is a strategic man of battle who doesn't have anything to go on, and he's trying to relate it to this issue," said LSA senior Mitchel Adler, who just returned from Israel. Those who considered the Palestinian-Israeli conflict a non- issue challenged those who compare the two issues, saying: Please turn to page 10 January 25, 1991 WEEKEND Page 8 Page 9 WEEKEND Ja