‘Reagan Can Only Lose at Summit’
- Share via
Barnes’ article makes the point that the Reagan White House, rightly in Barnes’ view, regards the Reagan-Mikhail Gorbachev meeting as a “no-win summit” because, with arms control the issue, “the President can’t get any pluses out of the summit.” A “senior White House adviser,” he tells us, has concluded that what’s really important is that, “above all,” Reagan has to to “capture the agenda public affairs-wise.” And, it is not only the White House, Barnes says, but also the National Security Council, the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and the State Department as well, of course, the hard-liners in the Defense Department, who “view the U.S.-Soviet summit meeting in Geneva with fear and loathing.”
That certainly tells it like it is. And, who can quarrel with the deep intelligence, insight, understanding, imagination and hard-headed grasp of the realities and necessities of the nuclear world we all live in that shines through these thought-processes? How fortunate we are to have elected and received a leader of the Free World who has gathered together such wise counselors and sincere seekers of a better world. Surely, the Soviets must be reassured, too.
There is, perhaps, one small loose end that may have been overlooked. What will the President’s “pulses, public affairs-wise” matter to anyone if this increasing enmity lets loose 50,000 nuclear warheads to burn down the house?
ALAN R. GORDON
Los Angeles
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox twice per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.