News Digest Edited by Jennifer O'Cilka World watches, waits for peace in gulf DHAHRAN. Saudi Arabia - A waiting world watched Baghdad and the bleak Arabian desert Wednesday—Baghdad for word on peace, the desert for news of all-out war. American helicopters carted off hundreds of Iraqi prisoners after one action and Iraqi gunners zeroed in on a U.S. unit in an other, killing one Ameri can and wounding seven. A key French lawmaker said the Desert Storm allies would give Iraq until late Thurs day to respond to a Soviet peace proposal or face a final offensive to drive iis forces from Kuwait. “Now, more than ever,” said French For eign Minister Roland Dumas, “the ultimate decision rests with Saddam Hussein." Late Wednesday, Baghdad radio said For eign Minister Tariq Aziz would travel to Moscow “soon” with the reply of President Saddam and the rest of the Iraqi leadership to the Soviet plan, believed to call for an unconditional Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait, coupled with vague assurances that Saddam could stay in power and the Palestinian question would eventually be addressed. The U.N. secretary general, Javier Perez de Cuellar, described the initiative as a “historic opportunity,” and U.S. ally Italy also endorsed it House Speaker Thomas Foley said that if the withdrawal is unconditional, “I don’t know how (President Bush) could fail to accept it.” Bush kept a public silence on the issue Wednesday, a day after describing the plan as “well short” of U.S. requirements. Although Bush did not elaborate on his objections, Re publican House leader Robert Michel said, “We want to see conditions change.” Dismissing the alliance’s strategy for an assault on Kuwait, Baghdad radio declared: “Their paper plans will be nothing when the ground battle starts.” Desert Storm commander Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf said the Iraqi army, under aerial bombardment for a month, was “on the verge of collapse.” Other senior U.S. officers added that they still expected a bloody fight. “There’s still a formidable force out there,” one said. British military sources said Iraqi troops were dispersing multi-rocket launchers and other artillery at the front in apparent readiness to take on the allies with chemical weapons. Early Wednesday afternoon, a U.S. task force clashed with Iraqi forces south of the Saudi border, and the Iraqis called in artillery fire that killed one American and wounded seven others, the U.S. command reported. It said the Iraqi fire hit an American anti-aircraft gun and two Bradley personnel carriers. U.S. forces destroyed five Iraqi tanks, 20 artillery pieces, and captured seven prisoners. A short time later, the command said, U.S. Army strike helicopters attacked a complex of Iraqi desert fortifications just north of the bor der, destroying 15 to 30 bunkers and leading 400 to 500 stunned Iraqi infantrymen to surren der. As darkness fell, Army Ch-47 Chinook helicopters were completing the task of ferry ing the prisoners to a holding camp in northern Saudi Arabia, said command spokesman Brig. Gen. Richard Neal. It was the largest roundup of prisoners yet by U.S. forces. The command did not specify locations or identify the U.S. units involved in the two actions. The command also reported U.S. aircraft pounded an Iraqi armor concentration 60 miles north of the border and destroyed 28 tanks. B 52 bombers blew up an Iraqi Scud missile launch site. The Desert Storm air fleet mounted 2,900 sorties against targets in Kuwait and southern Iraq on Wednesday, for a total of more than 86,000 in the 35-day-old war. British officers reported that a smoky haze over Kuwait, pre sumably from oil fires, obscured some targets. More than four hours of bombing rocked Baghdad overnight, and the Iranian news agency said panicked residents “rushed to the streets to escape to the nearby villages.” Pilots say Kuwait on fire; Iraqi tanks still formidable Editors Note: The following dis patch was subject to U.S. mili tary censorship. AT AN AIRBASE IN SOUTH WESTERN SAUDI ARABIA - U.S. combat pilots said Wednesday that Kuwait is already a burning, cratered battlefield, but that allied forces still face a formidable, dug-in Iraqi Iarmy with plenty of tanks. F-l 11 pilots have been flying round-the-clock bombing missions to prepare the battlefield in Iraq and Kuwait for a ground offensive, and report that the allies have de stroyed a significant part of the Iraqi war machine. “The whole military establish ment is burning,” said Capt. Bra dley Seipel, 34, of Virginia Beach, Va. As a weapons system officer of an F-l 1 IF fighter-bomber, Seipel directed some of the bombs that started the fires. He and other airmen at this desert airbase for U.S. Air Force F-l 11 strike aircraft gave a bird’s-eye view of what the battlefield will look like to allied troops moving forward in a ground war. “It is amazing flying up there. You look at Kuwait, that whole area, it’s just fire,” Seipel said. “It’s like constant explosions, constant fires,” said Capt. Mike Russell, 33, of Bradenton, Fla., the pilot on Seipel’s jet. “It’s just awe inspiring night after night how we ripped them up.” The airmen with the 48th Tacti cal Fighter Wing (Provisional) have been concentrating on tanks, artil lery and Iraqi army reserves in their nightly missions in Kuwait and Iraq. “This is a war and wc’rc beating them bad,” Russell said. Russel and Siepcl already have flown 100 hours dropping prcci sion-guided bombs. Their targets included Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s sum mer palace in his hometown of Tikril; halting the oil flow into the gulf from an Iraqi-sabotaged off shore oil terminal near Kuwait City, and two dock buildings in Kuwait City stacked with ammunition. “We’re one small part of the picture and there are so many other people . . . that are just bombing them constantly,” said Russell. “It seems to me it’s still a very target-rich environment, and I don’t think we’ve come close to exhaust ing all the possible targets,” said Lt. Troy Stone, 25, of Hemlock, Mich., an F-111F weapons system officer. Capt. Brad Roberts, 29, of Boise, Idaho, Stone’s pilot, said taking on an entrenched enemy is “the worst position you want to be in” but that superior allied armor “is going to help us a lot.” Several pilots said they favored delaying the ground war to save American lives by taking out more targets. The airmen said Iraqi cities are dark because allied bombers have knocked out most of Iraq’s power plants. Unconditional withdrawal Baker: Iraq will leave ‘soon’ WASHINGTON - Secretary of State James Baker III declared on Wednesday that Iraqi troops “will leave Kuwait soon,” but he steered clear of the question of Saddam Hussein’s postwar future. House Speaker Thomas Foley said it would be "extremely difficult” for President Bush to refuse an uncondi tional Iraqi withdrawal. Baker, speaking at a luncheon for Denmark’s Queen Margrethc II, re newed ihe U .S. demand that Iraq pull out of Kuwait “immediately, totally and unconditionally” and comply fully with U.N. resolutions. “Any thing short of that is unacceptable,” he said. “One way or another, the army of occupation of Iraq will leave Kuwait soon,” Baker predicted. Foley, the top-ranking Democrat in Congress, said lawmakers share the administration’s concern about Saddam remaining “a serious prob lem in the gulf for years to come.” But if Saddam agrees to an uncondi tional withdrawal, Foley said, Bush would have “a very difficult choice.” “I don’t know how he could fail to accept it.” He said later that the question might be academic because there has been no indication Saddam is prepared to withdraw unconditionally, despite much discussion of a still-secret Soviet proposal on the subject. Lt. Gen. Thomas Kelly, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, noted that he and other officials had said a day earlier a ground war would be won “in short order.” “I should have said ‘good order,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to be any kind ot pushover. . . . It s not going to be a snap.” One military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said ‘‘We are in the eye of Desert Storm. There is something of a lull right at the mo ment.” He added, “It suggests the; machinery is in place and we are waiting for presidential orders.” “We want to stay on course with our military tack,” said House minor ity leader Robert Michel, an Illinois Republican, “and not be delayed ’ “Even a cease-fire type of thing cer tainly would only play into Saddam’s hands.” . The Iraqi president was weighing a Soviet peace proposal, which was still secret but which Bush had dis missed on Tuesday as “well short of what would be required” to end the conflict. Albanian president promises new government VIENNA, Austria - The president of Communist Albania, responding to unprecedented protests that toppled monuments to Stalinist founder En ver Hoxha, said Wednesday he would lake direct control of a new govern ment. “I have decided to take into my hands the government and create a new government and a new presiden tial council,” President Ramiz Alia said in an announcement broadcast nationwide on state television. He said the country was ‘‘at a criti cal point,” and appealed for the coop eration of opposition parties. ‘‘We must all of us work to get out of this situation,” he addetfc The change watf ‘‘necessary for J peace and democracy,” Alia said, appealing to Albanians to preserve calm. Anti-Communist demonstrators in two cities toppled Hoxha statues Wednesday, unleashing decades of pent-up wrath against the late dicta tor. Police, some with dogs, at first fired in the air in an attempt to keep thousands of people from a 30-foot tall bronze statue that dominated Skanderbeg Square in the center of Albania’s capital, Tirana, state tele vision showed. But then the police began to em brace people in the jubilant pro-de mocracy protest, witnesses said. Sources in Tirana, who asked not to.be named, said they also had heard the Hoxha statue in the southeastern city of Korea came down. There was no official confirmation. Ignoring police warning shots over their heads and smoke bombs thrown around the statue’s stone pedestal, demonstrators surrounded the Tirana monument. Some scaled it and pulled it over with a rope, television re porters said. Crowds punched the air with V signs symbolizing democracy and shouted opposition slogans as two military helicopters hovered overhead, witnesses said. There was no immediate reaction from Albania’s Communist govern ment or from opposition parties first founded in December. Soviet parliament blasts Yeltsin MOSCOW - The Soviet parlia ment formally censured Russian leader Boris Yeltsin on Wednesday for urg ing Mikhail Gorbachev to resign, and Gorbachev’s former foreign minister pleaded for peace in the “war of presi dents.” The plea by Eduard Shevardnadze, in his first public remarks since his resignation as foreign minister last December, suggested the depth of the crisis in Soviet government. Shevard nadze quit after warning that the na tion was heading toward dictatorship. In a stormy session of the Supreme Soviet parliament, fellow lawmakers accused Yeltsin, the president of the Russian Federation and a frequent Gorbachev critic, of declaring a civil war and seeking more power for himself. In a resolution adopted 292-29, with 27 abstentions, they accused Yeltsin of defying the constitution. The resolution said his statement on national television Tuesday was “aimed at replacing the lawful organs of state power_It contradicts the constitution and aggravates the situ ation in the country.” Shevardnadze, who spoke at the opening of a non-governmental for eign policy association he heads, told reporters that if destabilization con tinues, dictatorship or a civil war is still possible. He urged Yeltsin and Gorbachev to meet to resolve their differences because “this war, a war of parlia ments, a war of laws and now a war of presidents, must be ended.” “Everybody must think of the country, the people, the fate of de mocracy in the Soviet Union and the world,” Shevardnadze said. In his resignation speech last December, Shevardnadze blamed the military and the Communist Party’s Old Guard for Gorbachev’s shift away from reform. He said Wednesday that the Soviet crackdown in the Baltics, which occurred after his resignation, “confirmed that my fears were not baseless.” Yeltsin seemed to blame Gorbachev alone for the nation’s ills. In his televised interview, he pro claimed that Gorbachev “has led the country to a dictatorship, giving it a pretty name: presidential rule.” He went on to say: “I am in favor of his immediate resignation, with the power being transferred to a col lective organ, the Federation Coun cil.” Nebraskan Edito' Eric Planner 472-1766 Night News Editors Pat Dlnalage Managing Editor Victoria Ayotte Cindy Woetrel Assoc News Editors Jana Pedersen Art Director Brian Shelllto Emily Rosenbaum General Manager Dun Shaitll Editorial Page Editor Bob Nelson Production Manager Katherine Pollcky Wire Editor Jennifer O'ClIka Advertising Manager Loren Melrose Copy Desk Editor Diane Brayton Sales Manager Todd Sears Sports Editor Paul Domeler Publications Board Arts & Entertainment Chairman Bill Vobe|da Editor Julie Naughton 436-9993 Diversions Eoitor Connie Sheehan Professional Adviser Don Walton Photo Chief William Lauer 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-060) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year weekly during summer sessions Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m and 5 p.m Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Bill vobejda, 436-9993 Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster; Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St .Lincoln, NE 68588 0448 Second Class postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1991 DAILY NEBRASKAN