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Op-Ed
by AHI General Counsel Gene Rossides Published in The National
Herald
WASHINGTON, DC—The following Op-Ed
article by AHI General Counsel Gene Rossides, appeared in The
National Herald on November 22 2003, p.11.
YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE
By Gene Rossides
The American Hellenic Institute believes that military
and economic aid to Turkey is not in the best interests of the
U. S. The Executive Branch is currently preparing the budget for
Fiscal Year 2005 which will go to the Congress in February 2004.
Each of you can make a difference by calling and
writing to the President, your elected Representative and your
two Senators opposing aid to Turkey in the FY 2005 Budget and
Appropriations Bill for Foreign Operations as contrary to U.S.
interests. It is easy to do and it doesn't take too much time.
If you don’t want your tax dollars going to
Turkey then act now. Following are ten reasons why the U.S. should
not give more taxpayer dollars to Turkey:
- Turkey’s action on March 1, 2003 opposing the use of
Turkish bases by U.S. troops to open a northern front against
the Saddam Hussein dictatorship, when we needed it most, demonstrated
Turkey's unreliability as a strategic ally. The Turkish military
wanted more dollars, a veto on policy regarding the Iraqi Kurds
and access to Iraqi oil. They miscalculated the U.S. reaction.
- A senior administration official called Turkey’s actions
"extortion in the name of alliance" (N.Y. Times,
2-20-03).
- The Administration gave Turkey $1 billion in the Iraq War
Appropriations Bill in April and another $255 million in the
FY 2004 Appropriations Bill for Foreign Operations. They did
not deserve that money and they don’t deserve any more.
- The U.S. defeated Saddam Hussein without Turkey demonstrating
that Turkey is of minimal strategic value for U.S. interests
in the Middle East. The Iraqi rejection of Turkish troops for
the coalition in Iraq further demonstrates Turkey’s minimal
strategic value.
- Giving Turkey more money would continue to reward disloyalty.
- Turkey’s continuing illegal occupation of Cyprus, now
in its 29thyear, with over 35,000 Turkish armed forces and 100,000
illegal colonists. U.S. aid subsidizes Turkey’s occupation
of Cyprus.
- Our huge deficit.
- Our substantial domestic needs.
- Turkey’s horrendous human rights violations against
its citizens, in particular its 15 million Kurdish minority.
- Turkey’s illegal blockade of Armenia.
"All politics is local." I first came across this phrase
in my American politics seminar at Columbia in one of the required
reading list books,You're The Boss by Ed Flynn, the legendary
Democratic political leader of the Bronx who put Franklin Roosevelt
in the White House in 1932.
Flynn's book epitomizes what Tip O'Neill, former Speaker of the
House said in his memoir that " all politics is local."
I mention this because each person can make a difference in public
affairs.
Central to making a difference is being active in the political
arena. A key way is to be active in a political party. If you
do not want to be in a party, you can still be effective by being
in contact with your elected representatives on the national,
state and local levels on issues of concern to you. Also make
campaign contributions to the candidates of your choice.
The second way to be active is to become engaged with the media.
Too often someone has told me that they wrote a letter to the
editor and it wasn't published and they became discouraged. Don't
be! Every letter is important because it may help one get printed
and some day that one could be yours.
If you don't want your tax dollars going to Turkey then get active
politically by contacting the President, your two U.S. Senators
and your Representatives.
It's easy to contact the President and leave a message. You simply
telephone the President's message line, which is 202-456-1111.
Your message will be recorded and tabulated so that he will be
informed as to what issues the public is calling about and their
positions on the issue.
You address correspondence to the President as follows:
President George W. Bush
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President:
Your letter should be as brief as possible. Your purpose should
be stated in the first paragraph—opposition to economic
and military aid to Turkey in the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget and
Appropriations Bill for Foreign Operations. Also state you object
to your tax dollars going to Turkey when we have a huge debt,
a huge deficit and domestic needs.
Also fax the letter to the President—fax: 202-456-0200
and e-mail it to him at President@whitehouse.gov.
It is easy to call your Representative and two Senators by dialing
the central Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121 and ask for your
Representative or Senator. Also make sure to write them. You address
letters to the Senate as follows:
Senator ____________
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator ______:
You address letters to the House as follows:
Representative _____________
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Representative______:
You can find all this information on the AHI websitewww.ahiworld.org.
If you don’t want your tax dollars going to
Turkey, do something about it. Get active. You can make a difference.
For additional information, please contact Angeliki Vassiliouat
(202) 785-8430 or atangeliki@ahiworld.org.
For general information about the activities of AHI, please see
our Web site at http://www.ahiworld.org.
# # #
The American Hellenic
Institute (AHI) and its affiliate
organizations, the American Hellenic Institute Public Affairs
Committee (AHIPAC), the American Hellenic Institute Foundation
(AHIF), and the AHI Business Network, a division of the AHI, are
working together under one roof, to provide a joint program for
strengthening United States relations with Greece and Cyprus and
within the American Hellenic community. |