
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
| November
12, 2004—No.74 |
(202)
785-8430 |
Op-Ed by AHI President Published in The National
Herald
Washington, DC—The following Op-Ed article by AHI President
Gene Rossides appeared in The National Herald on November 12, 2004,
page 11.
State Department Policy Regarding Greece- A Continuing Disaster
By Gene Rossides
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Marc Grossman,
is and has been the main architect of U.S. policy on Greece, Cyprus
and Turkey these past years. His policies towards Greece, Cyprus
and Turkey demonstrate a sharp anti-Greece and Cyprus bias and a
pro-Turkish bias, all to the detriment of U.S. interests.
It is important to understand how the policy process operates
at the State Department. On secondary and third level issues the
point person is the senior career official and that person is Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs Marc Grossman. He approves
all policies on such issues and can initiate policies on such issues,
which then go to the Secretary of State.
1. FYROM
The latest harmful Grossman policy is the betrayal of Greece
by the State Department's unilateral decision to recognize the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) as the Republic of Macedonia.
The U.S. policy had been that we would use the name FYROM until Greece
and FYROM, by negotiations, determined a solution to the name issue.
We broke our pledge.
The UN and the European Union (EU) were also part of the diplomacy
which called for negotiations between Greece and FYROM on the name issue. They
have kept their pledges.
The reason provided to AHI by the State Department and by the State
Department Spokesperson Ambassador Richard Boucher in a lengthy exchange with
reporters on November 4, 2004, is that this decision was made for the purpose
of providing "stability" in "Macedonia" regarding the November
7, 2004 referendum on the law giving the ethnic Albanian minority greater local
autonomy.
On November 7, the law was easily upheld with its opponents getting
only twenty five percent of the vote. The EU, a key economic supporter of FYROM,
had openly supported the law. There was no U.S. need to intervene in the internal
affairs of FYROM. AHI disagreed strongly with States’ position. On the contrary,
it should have been clear that recognition would not help stability in the
region and would be counter-productive.
Consideration was not given to the impact on FYROM’s neighbors, especially
Greece, by this decision. Incredibly Spokesperson Boucher, during his press
briefing stated that the U.S. did not have any consultations with FYROM’s neighbors
prior to recognition.
If the United States is interested in promoting peace, democracy, stability
and economic progress in the Balkans, our main ally in the region in promoting
these goals is and has been Greece. However, the U.S. act of recognition will
have a harmful impact on Greece and on our relations with Greece, our long-time
loyal and NATO ally, EU member and a member of the United Nations Security
Council for 2005-2006.
In a letter to President Bush on November 5, 2004, I wrote:
"We find incomprehensible the advice from the State Department
to you, which, in effect, equates the FYROM, a nation of only 13 years, of
little, if any, strategic, economic or political value to the United States,
with Greece, a long-time important strategic, political and economic ally of
the United States, who fought as allies with the U.S. in four wars in the 20th
century, whose defeat of Mussolini’s forces in 1940 was a turning point in
World War II, whose defeat of the communists (1946-49) was their first defeat
by arms and a turning point in the Cold War and world history, who is an important
partner in the war on terrorism, and who is the strategic key for the United
States in the Balkans and the Eastern Mediterranean.
• • • •
"We urge you, Mr. President, in the best interests of the United
States to reconsider this misinformed and ill-advised policy and to tell the
State Department to withdraw recognition of FYROM as Macedonia and to tell
FYROM to continue its diplomatic dialogue with Greece on the name issue in
accordance with UN and EU policy."
The action of the State Department can be characterized as a diplomatic
blunder at best and a betrayal of Greece to the detriment of U.S. interests.
2. Cyprus
Mr. Grossman has been the lead policy official on U.S. relations
with Greece, Cyprus and Turkey since he was appointed Assistant Secretary
of State for Europe in 1997 and Under Secretary of State for Political
Affairs in March 2001. He is the person responsible for the disastrous
U.S. policy on Cyprus including (1) the appeasement of Turkey and double
standards for Turkey on applying the rule of law to Turkey; (2) the undemocratic,
unworkable and financially not viable Annan Plan which would have made
Cyprus a Turkish protectorate; (3) the attacks on the Greek Cypriots for
their "NO" vote in the
April 24th, 2004 referendum on the Annan Plan; (4) the attacks on President
Tassos Papadopoulos for his opposition to the Annan Plan; and (5) for his
misleading the American people regarding the economic isolation of the
Turkish Cypriots by failing to state publicly that the economic isolation
of the Turkish Cypriots is caused by Turkey's 35,000 armed occupation troops
and the infamous Turkish barbed wire fence- the Green line.
3. The Aegean
Sea boundary
Since at least 1997, Mr. Grossman has been the career official
who has appeased Turkey by failing to state that the treaty-defined
maritime border between Greece and Turkey in the Aegean Sea is
clear and that the islet of Imia is sovereign Greek territory.
Turkey has made outrageous and outlandish claims to one-half
of the Aegean Sea and refuses to take its claim to the International
Court of Justice at the Hague for a binding ruling.
The relevant agreements are the Lausanne Treaty of 1923,
the Italy-Turkey Convention of January 4, 1932, the Italy-Turkey
Protocol of December 28, 1932 and the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty,
under which the Dodecanese Islands and adjacent islets were ceded
by Italy to Greece.
The U.S. is a signatory to the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty
and is obligated by U.S. law to carry out its provisions. Yet Mr.
Grossman has failed to declare publicly what the law is and has
failed to inform successive Secretaries of State of their obligation
to carry out the law. Mr. Grossman is further in violation of his
oath of office by failing to faithfully execute the laws of the
land.
4. The Halki Patriarchal School of Theology
The Halki Patriarchal School of Theology was illegally
closed by Turkey in 1971. Mr. Grossman was Deputy Chief of Mission
to Turkey in 1989-1992 and U.S. Ambassador to Turkey during 1994-1997
prior to his becoming Assistant Secretary of State for Europe in
1997 and Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs in 2001
to the present time.
During these periods of time, Mr. Grossman has been all
talk and no action. Despite nice sounding phrases regarding religious
freedom to Greek American audiences, Mr. Grossman has not made
one concrete action of diplomatic, economic or political pressure
on Turkey regarding Halki or the other issues referred to above.
At no time did Mr. Grossman recommend conditions on our
military and economic aid to Turkey. Mr. Grossman has been the
chief appeaser of Turkey in the State Department for the past decade
to the detriment of U.S. interests. If there is progress on Halki
it will not be because of Mr. Grossman's words but pressure from
the EU, pressure which the U.S. refuses to exert.
If you concur with these comments and wish to act please
refer to the AHI Web site www.ahiworld.org and
the November 5, 2004 Action Alert on how to contact President George
W. Bush and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell to express your
thoughts.
Gene
Rossides is President of
the
American Hellenic Institute
and former
Assistant Secretary of Treasury
###
For additional information, please contact Georgia
Economou at (202) 785-8430 or
at georgia@ahiworld.org.
For general information about the activities of AHI, please see
our Web site at http://www.ahiworld.org.
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