The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 16, 1986, Image 10

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    Iccbok
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Page 10/The Battalion/Thursday, October 16,1986
World and Nation
Reagan upbeat despite stalemate
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi
dent Reagan, declaring “let’s not
look back and place blame,” said
Wednesday the two superpowers
were closer than ever to ridding the
world of nuclear weapons.
In a Baltimore speech, Reagan
welcomed a promise by Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Gorbachev not to aban
don negotiations despite the stale
mate in Iceland over Star Wars and
repeated his proposal for the elimi
nation of all ballistic missiles over a
10-year period.
“Let’s look forward and seek
agreements,” the president said. “I
repeat my offer to Mr. Gorbachev:
Our proposals are serious; they re
main on the table and we continue to
be prepared for a summit.”
But Igor Bulay, press counselor at
the Soviet Embassy, said his govern
ment wanted to be certain of con
crete results before setting a date for
Gorbachev to come to the United
States for a third summit with Rea
gan.
A Soviet editor appearing with
Bulay at a news conference, said last-
minute intransigence by Reagan
over the U.S. Strategic Defense Ini
tiative (SDI) deprived the world of
an agreement to reduce strategic nu
clear weapons by 50 percent.
“The results of Reykjavik under
mined the hopes and aspirations of
people around the world,” said
Giorgi Fediyashin, editor of Soviet
Life, an English-language magazine
circulated in the United States.
Former U.S. negotiator Gerard
Smith said at a news conference,
“We can either have arms control or
we can really have a crash program
to deploy defenses. We cannot have
both.”
Reagan’s positive remarks in Bal
timore were part of a U.S. campaign
to portray the Iceland summit as a
success. “We are closer than ever be
fore to agreements that could lead to
a safer world without nuclear weap
ons.”
Reagan spokesman Larry Speakes
dismissed as expected and unexcep
tional Gorbachev’s criticism of Rea
gan’s stand on SDL
Reagan and Gorbachev blamed
each other Tuesday for the Iceland
stalemate but repeated their intent
to reverse the nuclear arms race at
the bargaining table or at a future
summit.
In other post-summit devel
opments:
• The State Department dis
missed as meaningless a Soviet deci
sion to withdraw six regiments from
Afghanistan. New arms were
shipped in recently, and four of the
regiments were not in combat. If all
of them left, there still would be
more than 1 10,000 Soviet troops in
the country, spokesman Pete Marti
nez said.
• The last of 25 Soviet diplomats
expelled from the United States un
der a broad accusation of spying
have left the country, the State De
partment announced. They had
been granted a two-week grace pe
riod, which expires on Sunday.
• Soviet sources confirmed tla
Foreign Minister Eduard A. She-
vardnadze will meet in Vienna earli
next month with Secretary of Sian
George P. Shultz. They will ft
among 35 ministers attending a re
view of the 1 975 Helsinki
agreement, which was designedtt
ease East-West tensions.
Nobel
(Continued from page 1)
award that he felt “like a kid right
now with a new toy.”
He jokingly described himself and
his fellow chemistry winners as being
on the “lunatic fringe” of the re
search community for their study of
reactions that can last only a mil
lionth of a billionth of a second.
Sture Forsen, a chemistry profes
sor and member of the Swedish Aca
demy, said the three chemists’ re
search eventually could be used to
fight air pollution, acid rain and ero
sion of the ozone layer of the Earth’s
atmosphere.
But he stressed that at this stage
the discoveries are “very remote
from any practical application.”
In Reuschlikon, a suburb of Zu
rich, Rohrer and Binnig were ap
plauded by co-workers when they
appeared at a news conference.
“We’re just at the very beginning”
of research, said Binnig, visibly
moved. He said he expected the
scanning tunneling microscope to
produce “an explosion of results” in
various fields of science.
Ruska was staying at a hotel in
southern Germany recuperating
from rheumatism when he was told
of the award.
World Briefs
Vietnam reports Chinese attack
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) —
Vietnam’s official news agency re
ported Wednesday that Chinese
forces, backed by the heaviest
shelling in months, repeatedly at
tacked a Vietnamese village.
The agency said the Chinese
were repulsed and that 90 intrud
ers were wiped out.
The agency also said about
35,000 artillery and mortar
rounds pounded a village in the
Vi Xuyen district of Ha Tuyen
province Tuesday and that
Chinese troops attacked the vil
lage three times in the early af
ternoon.
Most Western diplomats be
lieve that while Vietnam and
China occasionally dash along
their common border, both sides
exaggerate the scale of the fight,
ing.
CIA agent implicated in bombing
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)
— A top Sandinista official said
Wednesday that an American
captured in Nicaragua identified
a man he claims is a CIA em
ployee in El Salvador as being in
volved in the 1976 bombing of a
Cuban airliner that killed 73 peo
ple.
Deputy Interior Minister Luis
Carrion Cruz said Ramon Me
dina, identified last weekbytht'
American, Eugene Hasenfus, ai |]
one of two Cuban-American CIA |j
employees working at llopango
Military Base in San Salvador,ac
tually was Luis Posada Carriles.
Hasenfus said in a news con
ference that Medina worked for
the CIA and coordinated flight'
from llopango, El Salvador's milt
tary airport.
Soviet troops leave Afghanistan
SHINDAND, Afghanistan
(AP) — Communist Party chief
Najibullah cast flower j>etals at
about 1,500 members of a Soviet
tank regiment as they clanked
away in a dusty column Wednes
day on their long and well-publi
cized trip home.
The departure from a parched
basin in this region near the Ira
nian frontier began the withdra
wal of al>out 8,000 of the esti
mated 115,000 Soviet soldiers
who help the comnuinist govern
ment fight Moslem guerrillas.
Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorba
chev promised the pullout in lull
during a speech in Vladivostok
Western diplomats in Afghan:
stan say the withdrawal is a ges
ture timed to ward off criticisir
during the annual U.N. debate
on the Afghan war later this year.
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