Letters

  • (3 of 3)

    MICHAEL KROMBERG Kongsberg, Norway

    A New Legitimacy Needed

    MARK THATCHER, SON OF FORMER BRITISH Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, has been charged with helping finance a plot to overthrow Teodoro Obiang Nguema, President of oil-rich Equatorial Guinea [Sept. 6]. Nguema's regime is undemocratic, but Thatcher and his wealthy friends did not have any legitimacy to overthrow it. The U.S., however, by deciding unilaterally and without the approval of the U.N. to topple the bloody and dictatorial regime of Saddam, has provided a poor example to the world. What will now stop regional powers — or even individuals — from intervening in neighboring countries? A proper, legal vision of intervention must be reconstructed at once and action taken only when a resolution approved by U.N. members has deemed that intervention is legitimate.

    PAUL VAN DER SCHUEREN Paris

    The Price of Spurious Ads

    JOE KLEIN'S COLUMN "WHAT THE SWIFTIES Have Cost Us" [Sept. 6], on the way political attack ads like those by the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth have stifled real political debate, was refreshing. It is very disheartening that politics has become a constant bashing of opponents instead of focusing on the issues and actually doing something to address them. It's especially discouraging when you consider what good might be done with the funds that are used to wage misdirected political wars.

    SCOTT A. FARBER Boston

    Prisoner of the Nazis

    I WAS STUNNED TO SEE THE TERM "POL-ish labor camp" in the Milestone on the death of Navajo code talker Frank Sanache [Sept. 6]. The Nazis organized and ran the German concentration, labor and POW camps of World War II [including the one in what is now Poland where Sanache was imprisoned]. We need to preserve the truth about atrocities committed by the Nazis instead of creating harmful stereotypes that involve Poland.

    PRZEMYSLAW GRUDZINSKI AMBASSADOR OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND TO THE U.S. Washington

    The Dream Team No More

    YOU REPORTED THAT THE U.S. OLYMPIC basketball team was the first "NBA-stocked bunch not to win gold" [Sept. 6]. Next time, let the team that has last won the National Basketball Association title represent the U.S. in international competitions. Can you imagine the pride and the might with which the NBA champion Detroit Pistons would have performed in Athens? But instead of a well-coordinated team that knew how to control the ball and shoot well, we saw a hurriedly assembled group of NBA superstars who could not manage to play in a cohesive manner.

    IME DAVID EKPO Phoenix, Ariz.

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