Newspaper Page Text
Page 14
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, Nov. 18,1971
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COTTON FIELDS BACK HOME—in Uzbekistan, in the Soviet Union. This is a cot
ton depot in the Gagarin District.
Nixon’s summit venture
recalls past failures
By RAY McHUGH
Chief, Washington Bureau
Copley News Service
WASHINGTON -
President Nixon’s visit to
Moscow might come under the
heading of “unfinished
business.”
In 1960, the Eisenhower-
Nixon administration was
poised for a venture into the
Russian capital. Then came the
ill-fated U-2 incident, the
collapse of a Big Four summit
meeting and cancellation of the
Moscow visit.
In the fast-paced decade that
followed there was little time
for speculation on what might
have been, although admirers
of President Dwight
Eisenhower believe he might
have influenced the Russian
course in Vietnam, Berlin, the
missile race and other areas.
Mr. Nixon may have won
dered, too, on the effect of a
successful 1960 summit might
have had on his race that year
against the late John F. Ken
nedy.
However, President Nixon
faces an altogether different
world equation. The Soviets
have achieved nuclear parity,
even superiority in some
weapons areas. They have
developed a global navy,
pushed their sphere of in
fluence into most of the Arab
world, generated a real or
illusionary air of detente in
Western Europe, signed a
friendship treaty with India to
offset their feud with Com
munist China and solidified
their hegemony over Eastern
Europe.
First reactions to the
President’s announcement
have been favorable. Allied
European governments are
particularly satisfied. Many
had been concerned that Mr.
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Nixon’s trip to Communist
China might bring on icy
suspicions in U. S.-Soviet
relations.
But the President is con
fronted with a paradox at
home. Misgivings over his
mission to Moscow appear
concentrated on the political
right, among many of the same
conservatives who pressed for
his election in 1968 as a man
with unmatched foreign policy
credentials, a man who could
well represent U. S. interests in
any confrontation with Com
munist leaders.
The misgivings reflect not so
much on Mr. Nixon himself, but
on the disappointing American
record of summitry. The name
“Yalta” still haunts the
memory of President Franklin
D. Roosevelt. Potsdam proved
a disillusionment for President
Harry Truman Gen.
Eisenhower’s talks with
Soviet leaders at Geneva
and Camp David failed to bring
any basic change in Russian
policy. Some historians trace
the Berlin Wall and the Cuban
missile crisis to Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev’s 1961
Vienna meeting with Kennedy.
Continued Russian nuclear
programs and continuing
Russian military assistance to
North Vietnam, Egypt, Syria,
Algeria, etc., long ago dispelled
the “spirit of Glassboro” that
was evoked after President
Lyndon Johnson’s 1967 meeting
with Soviet Premier Alexei
Kosygin in that New Jersey
town.
President Johnson suffered
the added sting of having to
cancel a scheduled Moscow
visit late in the summer of 1968
when Russian troops invaded
Czechoslovakia.
Instead of announcing his
trip, Johnson suddenly faced
possible Russian moves
against Romania and
Yugoslavia and was forced to
warn Moscow against
“unleashing the dogs of war” in
Europe.
Now President Nixon is
preparing for an unparalleled
adventure in personal
diplomacy.
“There is nothing wrong with
summitry, if it is used to im
press an adversary with your
toughness,” said one con
servative Republican senator.
“If this is the President’s
purpose, I wish him well. But
American experience in
summitry is so bad that it
requires an act of faith’ to
really indorse such a mission.”
Mr. Nixon is obviously
thinking in concrete, not just
philosophical terms.
The President has hinted
broadly of strategic arms
agreements with the Soviets.
He has spoken of possible
accords in the Middle East.
Indochina will obviously be on
any agenda, as well as a
possible East-West European
security conference.
All these areas promise to be
the subject of intense scrutiny
in the months ahead.
, Kids love
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THE HOME OF INSTANT SERVICE
Across from Courthouse
Phone 227-3678
No smoking
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Interstate Commerce Commis
sion has ordered no smoking
sections put in all of the
nation’s 23,000 interstate buses
by Jan. 6.
The commission said no more
than 20 per cent of each bus
would have to be so designated.
In a Bus with 50 seats, 10 would
be set aside for nonsmokers.
The ruling was prompted by
Ralph Nader who had asked for
a total ban, but the ICC said a
complete end to bus smoking
would be unfair to habitual
smokers.
IMPERIAL
11 IE. Solomon Street
Telephone 227 4214
Held Over
Thru Saturday
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SUMMER OF ’42
A Robert Mulligan/Richard A Roth
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JENNIFER O'NEILL ■ GARY GRIMES
JERRY HOUSER • OLIVER CONANT
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