I I Viewpoint The Battalion December 11,19j[l_> C -0 ! Slouch By Jim Earle GOODBYE CLASS OF 81 By DAVID BRODEK WASHINGTON — On Nov. 30, the day the new round of nuclear disarmament talks began in Geneva between the Soviet Union and the United States, Eugene V. Rostow, the director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, made a speech be fore the English-Speaking Union in Lon don. It is a speech worth noting. The sentiments were nothing new from Rostow. But the skepticism this senior Reagan administration official expressed about the effort at capping the nuclear arms race is an important warning sign of the barriers to be overcome — not just in Rus sia but here — before the hopes of Geneva can be realized. The essence of Rostow’s argument can be summarized in a series of excerpted quota tions: “The wall between conventional and nuclear war can never be impermeable, no matter how high we make it. Small wars can become big ones at least as readily as in the days when archdukes w6re assassinated at Sarajevo and Danzig was the center of world concern. It is now apparent that arms-control agreements are hardly worth having if they make the world safe for con ventional warfare, terrorism and the move ment of armed bands across international borders.” Again: While “arms control agreements could residt in a somewhat more stable en- viroment, at least in restraining the poten tial escalation of conventional force conflict- s.. under contemporary circumstances, that is an insufficient goal, and probably an illusory one.... The fruits of SALT I and SALT II have turned to ashes in our mouths. The decade which began ten years ago with high hopes of detente became the worst decade of the entire Cold War. ” Rostow’s argument is that the great dan ger is not nuclear war but the relentless aggressiveness of the Soviet Union. “There is no blinking the fact that the Soviet Union risks war in its campaigns of expansionism all over the world,” he says. And since ev ery war, in his view, is potentially a nuclear war, there can be no real security unless Russia renounces its expansionist goals. Since earlier arms-control agreements have not halted that Soviet imperialism and since the existence of the agreements may have lulled the West into neglecting its own defense needs, the nuclear weapons treaties “have turned to ashes in our mouths.” Believing that, Rostow makes only the most grudging concession to the Presi dent’s decision to enter a new round of arms negotiations. Indeed, he exclaims at one point, “arms negotiations have no magic in themselves. ” Rostow is exceptional in having the tem erity to express these doubts at the very moment when the President has launched an ambitious nuclear disarmament plan. But his view is far from unique. There are many like-minded skeptics in the Reagan administration and in the Congress who argue that no arms-control agreement is worthwhile unless it somehow compels the Soviets also to renounce their habit ofcreat ing and exploiting political and military problems all around the globe. For the moment, Ronald Reagan has embraced the opposite view— that nuclear war is an evil in itself. He said plainly in his National Press Club speech that limitations on deploying, developing and testing nuc lear weapons are goals worth seeking even in — and perhaps especially because of — the shaky international enviroment. He embraced the view that avoiding the use of nuclear weapons in warfare for 36 years is perhaps the most significant achievement of the past generation, one not easily to be dismissed. It is true that in those 36 years there have been a multiplicity of small wars. There have been countless shifts in the world ba lance of power, affecting the interests of the Soviet Union and the United States. But all of those conflicts and shifts have not been one-sided. The Soviets — no less than the United States — must reckon their losses along with their gains. Those calculations are all dwarfed by the overriding fact that, for 36 years, we have avoided nuclear war. We have avoided it because Presidents of both parties under stood — contrary to Rostow — that arms- control agreements are worth having, even if they still leave us to contend with the risks of conventional warfare, terrorism and cross-border conflicts. Rostow may believe the the fruits of those treaties are just “ashes in our mouths.” But there are many — including, I think, this President of the United States —- who rejoice that the globe has not been reduced to nuclear ash, as it might have been without the continuing quest for nuc lear arms control. the small society by Brickman £>KAY’, Y&D I'LL- 1M T<2 - X WAMT LA^r ££ A HAPpr 51981 King Features Syndicate. Inc World rights reserved 0--?/ squad affects Reagan’s lifestyle^ United Press International WASHINGTON — The reported threat from Libya hit squads, and terrorism at large, is having an impact on the life style of president Reagan, already the victim of one assassination attempt. Even after he was shot in the chest last March, Reagan did not fear to venture forth in public. And he told reporters he was not going to be chained to the White House, which presidents often view as a prison. But from now on, it appears all his public movements will be weighed with the thought: Is this trip necessary? despite the dangers and risks? It is a more dangerous world with instant communications and rapid transport. More and more, the Secret Service will be able to impinge on a president’s activities, making perhaps the ultimate decision on where he goes and when. In the past, some presidents have prided themselves on overruling their body guards. When a helicopter pilot told John Kennedy that it was too foggy to lift off, he said, “Let’s try it. Lyndon Johnson was not one to be dic tated to by his protectors, although all pres idents are briefed on the dangerous lives they lead from the moment they set foot in the White House. During the Vietnam War, particularly as the protests mounted, Johnson soon came to the point where he could only go to milit ary bases, and to his home in Texas. Time was when Harry Truman could take his early morning walk with Secret Service agents and a few reporters and cameramen dogging his heels. But a morn ing constitutional outside the White House fence would not be recommeneded for a president these days. Many new safeguards have been intro duced in the protection of Reagan, and as they become institutionalized, as they will, the public exposure of any president will be lessened considerably. More and more, he is expected to resort to television as people contact is ruled out for safety reasons. [By NAN< Administration officials are there has been some skepticism regari« ( <) the reports, and they have seennoreas# y a PP r( *y publicly justify their concerns. There is enough support for theadi^ (ration to bank on general faith intki tion’s intelligence community. also are some questions relating tocre| igth the ity that somewhere along the linen to be answered. iques in the Pres If the reports are true, livesareatsd s plaque and no one would want to jeopardize in But the White House is have to produce more facts in thehitie win support for any tough measures^ proposes Whether the reports of Libyan death squads dispatched to eliminate the U.S. top leadership are true are false, they cannot be ignored and steps are being taken to en hance the president’s protection. And although the present administration is not fond of laying its cards on the table, it may just have to produce some of the “evi dence” that has heightened international tensions and worried the country. esident’s south w d not the oposed. Council •foot-3- que, wh lOol When Kennedy had his secondCn missile crisis, he showed on nationals sion the photographs of Russian that he wanted removed. The decisis show the pictures was a happy strolfi convinced the people that i gers were there in Cuba. Whether the Reagan White follow suit and back up its story will crete evidence is not known. But it convince some of the skeptics, andei By I But [hoppers pi usual lie for I |ted to pu e rate the administrations’ stature in (iti Sistmas policy. 'OXUNCCG |er says. Most bui [veen 6 giiev kap >n Police Nuclear arms control needed for survival ...SCENE ONE...TAKE Tm HERE’S THE 'WORLD WAR m SoijAPRON Of 1 ' SOVIE1 H&HTERS. W00SHHIKABCOM! 'SCRATCH FIVE RUKSKH'S.' UK MUSES- CUT! PRINT/ o B1 VICTORY Riding e holida is and lx I ptorcyel fer and Trhe c Bie nu figs of Iso tha can It s your turn r USJ Merry Christmas with stolen tree Visit i gifts Editor: First of all, Merry Christmas to every one, but mainly to the person who visited our door Tuesday night. Yes, we had a little problem at Fowler Hall. It seems our Christmas spirit was so impressive that someone became jealous. We want the person who took the Christ mas tree at Fowler to really enjoy it. The tree was going to he taken to a nursing home on Thursday, hut it appears you needed it more than they did. Not only did you disappoint us with that, you also had to take the Santa’s boot that was on our door. We want you to have a Merry Christmas with OUR tree and hoot. Oh, and if you need a string of popcorn for the tree, it’s inside, but we ll put it outside for you — we have no use for it now. bang, the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshi ma. Now, if these don’t sell furniture, no thing will. Let me close by saying thank-you for pro ving to me once again, that for many people in today’s world, the only thing that matters is the almighty dollar! Steven M. Harris ‘80 Nutrition vs edibility Editor: When I came to A&M at the beginning of this semester, I was against having to eat in a school cafeteria. But after 1 hadvi Sbisaand eaten there, I found theW: very good. In the past few weeks, though, has been going downhill. The servid Sbisa is still very good, but the cb good food is getting progressively wofi ' Last Monday night, when I\ eat dinner and saw they were sen spaghetti with watery sauce and beef: novers, I was tempted to walkouts But I stayed and went to the “jur 1 *™ * section to get something to eat. looked around, it seemed as though at l( one-half of the students who eat in v had the same idea. I think it’s pretty bad when youl# resort to eating “junk food” because: choice of good nutritional food is nearti Cotton Lauri Strickland Pam McDonald ‘84 Karen Zern ‘84 Fowler Hall Local ad in poor taste Editor: (re: letter to Teague Furniture) This letter is in response to the advertise ment you ran on December 7 on a local radio station. I find this commercial, adver tising Teague Furniture Store, to be the most tasteless advertisement I have ever heard. “Zeros are dropping from your prices like the Japanese on Pearl Harbor that day.” Really! Is business so bad that you must use the tragedy of Pearl Harbor to sell furni ture? If so, I have a few ideas for your next advertising campaign. Let’s start with, oh say, the Boston Mas sacre, Custer at Little Big Horn, the sink ing of the Titanic, the Alamo, or you could use the senseless murder of 6 million Jews during World War II, and finish with a The Battalion USPS 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Angelique Copeland Managing Editor Marcy Boyce City Editor JaneG. Brust Asst. City Editor Kathy O’Connell Photo Editor Dave Einsel Sports Editor Ritchie Priddy Focus Editor Cathy Saathoff Asst. Focus Editor Debbie Nelson News Editors Phyllis Henderson Bernie Fette, Belinda McCoy Diana Sultenfuss StaffWriters . . . . Gary Barker Frank L. Christlieb, Randy Clements Gaye Denley, Nancy Floeck, Tim Foarde Colette Hutchings, Daniel Puckett Denise Richter, Mary Jo Hummel, Rick Stolle Nancy Weatherley, Barbie Woelfel Cartoonist Scott M cCullar Graphic Artist. 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