Editorials
Tuesday, February 25, 1997


White House should
back off in dispute

THE Clinton administration has gone off the deep end in its defense of a law that it initially opposed. It is defying the World Trade Organization's decision to arbitrate a European Union complaint about the Helms-Burton Act, which penalizes foreign companies that defy the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba. Administration officials declared that the WTO is "not competent" to pass judgment on such a foreign policy issue and said the U.S. would boycott sessions of the arbitration panel.

This attitude stems from President Clinton's obsessional need to be on the popular side of issues. The Helms-Burton measure was widely protested by important U.S. allies - Canada, Mexico and the European Union - when it was before Congress. It was seen as an attempt to impose U.S. policy on other governments - none of which recognize the U.S. embargo.

Clinton initially opposed the bill but changed his position after the Cubans shot down two civilian planes piloted by Cuban Americans a year ago, inflaming relations with Havana at a time when the nation was immersed in the presidential election campaign. Now the administration has gone a step farther by defying the World Trade Organization on behalf of Helms-Burton.

The WTO's creation two years ago was a high priority of the Reagan, Bush and Clinton administrations because it was seen as meeting the need for an effective referee of international trade disputes. Regrettably, it depends whose ox is gored. The first time a U.S. policy is at risk, Washington responds with defiance.

This is a childish defense of a bad law. It makes the U.S. look foolish and damages the effectiveness of the WTO, which represents the main hope for settling trade disputes. All that Clinton gets out of it is support from Florida's Cuban-American community, for whom the overthrow of Fidel Castro supersedes any other consideration. That isn't important enough to trash this important international agency.

Kenneth Starr stays on

KENNETH Starr blundered last week in announcing he would resign as the Whitewater independent counsel no later than Aug. 1 to become dean at the Pepperdine University law school in Malibu, Calif.

Reversing his decision four days later, Starr yielded to a torrent of criticism and promised to remain independent counsel until his investigation was completed. The astonishing turnabout may have damaged Starr's credibility, but he showed respect for the public interest in deciding to stay on.

Riding in truck beds

THE latest accident involving pickup truck beds - three boys and a man were thrown from the bed of a truck Sunday on the H-2 freeway - underlines the importance of the bill in the Legislature to ban riding in truck beds.

The simple truth is that no one should ride in truck beds because it's dangerous.




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John M. Flanagan, Editor & Publisher


David Shapiro, Managing Editor


Diane Yukihiro Chang, Senior Editor & Editorial Page Editor


Frank Bridgewater & Michael Rovner, Assistant Managing Editors


A.A. Smyser, Contributing Editor




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