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‘Symbol of a Shambles’

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Your articles on nuclear weapons and “Star Wars” have been very informative but I disagree with your editorial (Dec. 22), “Symbol of a Shambles.”

You assert that a nuclear test ban cannot be declared, but must be negotiated through a long and complex process. But, provisions of a model Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty have been established for decades; I believe only the frequency of inspections remains unsettled.

Also, the Soviet moratorium on nuclear testing (since Aug. 6, 1985) has been their unilateral declaration. It has been a constructive and workable policy. We should participate in this moratorium. The Russians can afford to extend it indefinitely, without jeopardizing their security, and so can we.

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The complexities you mention, of verifying test yields, apply only to “limited” testing, not to a test ban.

I do not believe that new nuclear weapons, especially the nuclear-pumped X-ray laser for Star Wars, can be developed by simulation, so a test ban would have real benefits for peace, by keeping the nuclear weapons race away from outer space.

I suggest that we don’t need “improved” nuclear weapons. Improving our security will come instead through confidence-building arms control programs.

By banning nuclear tests instead of merely limiting them, we can:

--Simplify verification.

--Demonstrate that we can do business with the Russians.

--Take a first step to halting the nuclear arms race.

DICK HEISER

Los Angeles

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