
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
| May
10,
2005—No.38 |
(202)
785-8430 |
Greek American Organizations’ Policy Statement
Calls on the U.S. to Establish a "Special Relationship" with
Greece
WASHINGTON, DC—American Hellenic Institute president Gene Rossides
announced today that the major Greek American membership organizations
endorsed the policy statement "The
U.S. Should Establish a ‘Special Relationship’ with Greece" prepared by
the American Hellenic Institute. These are: the Order of AHEPA, the Hellenic
American National Council, the Cyprus Federation of America, the Panepirotic
Federation of America, the Pan-Macedonian Association of America and the American
Hellenic Institute. The endorsed statement, which is part of the 2005 Greek
American Policy Statements, follows:
The U.S. Should Establish a "Special Relationship" with
Greece
The U.S. has important and vital interests in Southeastern
Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean. These include the significant
energy, commercial and communications resources that transit the
region. The U.S. should look to Greece as an immensely valuable link
in the region. The U.S. should do more to capitalize on Greece’s
location and close cultural, political, and economic ties to the
Mediterranean countries, Western Europe, Southeastern Europe, and
the Middle East in advancing U.S. interests.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met with Greece’s Foreign
Minister Petros Molyviatis in Washington, DC on March 24, 2005 for
a working visit. Secretary Rice stated the following to the media:
"We had an opportunity to review the excellent state
of relations between Greece and the United States, the outstanding
bilateral relationship that we have, and also our joint desire and
commitment for the spread of democracy and freedom throughout the
world.
Greece has been a strong supporter of the work that we are
doing in the broader Middle East, in Afghanistan, in supporting the
people of Iraq as they are concerned and looking forward to a better
future based on the elections that they've had.
We also had a very good opportunity to talk about the Balkans,
a place in which we believe great progress has been made. But, of
course, there are many challenges yet to meet. And we have no better
friend in meeting these and other challenges than our friends in
Greece."
Minister Molyviatis said:
"Indeed, we had an excellent opportunity to review
our excellent state of bilateral relations and also to express and
reaffirm our determination to further promote that relationship into
strategic cooperation on several fields.
We, of course, discussed the Balkans and the Mediterranean.
And we greeted with satisfaction this mobility toward the spread
of democracy and freedom in many parts of the world….
Also we discussed, of course, Cyprus and we considered ways
in which we can promote our common objective, which is the reunification
of the island through negotiations on the basis of the Annan plan.
And, frankly, I could say that we have both agreed to further
strengthen our cooperation in all fields."
Secretary Rice responded to a question about "working
together on strategic areas. Could you be more specific where Greece
and the United States could work together?"
"Of course. First of all, we did talk about our joint
responsibilities as members of NATO and the responsibilities that
we hold in trying to promote stable and progressive developments
in the Balkans. That is a place where we have had very, very good
cooperation, and where it's extremely important that that process
move forward.
We have some reports that will be coming forward, for instance,
on Kosovo. We believe that this is an area that is ripe for cooperation
between Greece and the United States as well as the other members
of NATO.
I can remember quite well, for instance, at our recent NATO
ministerial, that we talked about the need for there to be constant
dialogue and discussion as we move forward through the spring on
the situation in Kosovo.
We also talked about the Mediterranean, where we share interests
and where there are now very active movements toward democracy and
perhaps we could find a strategic common purpose there.
The foreign minister also talked about what Greece might
be able to do as we continue to try to stabilize Afghanistan, and
as we try to provide for the Iraqi people support for their newly
elected transitional government.
So this is wide ranging.
We did not have a chance to talk today, although we have
talked, of course, in the past, about the Middle East and the Israeli-
Palestinian issue, where Greece has an important role with us to
play in helping the Palestinian people to develop institutions that
can be the institutions on which a state can be built.
So we have a broad strategic course ahead of us.
And the good news is that since Greece and the United States
are good friends, since we're both democracies, since we work together
in a number of institutions, well, we look forward to using all of
those opportunities to promote this agenda, which is focused very
much on the spread of freedom and democracy, and I might say, also,
greater prosperity to the people of the world."
We have stated for decades that Greece is the strategic
and political key for the U.S. in Southeastern Europe and the Eastern
Mediterranean and a proven and reliable ally. In 2001 the American
Hellenic Institute Foundation published Greece’s Pivotal Role in
World War II and its Importance to the U.S. Today with an introduction
by General Andrew J. Goodpaster, USA (Ret.), the former Supreme Commander
of NATO.
In World War I, Greece sided with the allies and played
an important role in the Balkans, while Turkey fought against the
U.S. as an ally of Germany. Greece’s actions also prevented Turkish
troops from reaching the Western Front and saved many American and
allied lives.
In World War II, with Europe under the heel of Nazi Germany
and with Britain fighting the Axis powers alone, Greece’s courageous
reply on October 28, 1940 of OXI (No!) to Mussolini’s surrender ultimatum
echoed throughout the world and give support to Britain and the forces
of freedom.
The defeat of Mussolini’s army by Greek forces, actually
pushing them back into Albania, gave the first taste of victory to
the allies against fascism. Greece’s success against Mussolini forced
Hitler to change his plans and divert valuable troops, arms and equipment
to invade Greece. Hitler’s invasion of Greece delayed his invasion
of the Soviet Union by several weeks, from April to June 1941. That
delay has been credited by military experts and historians as one
of the main factors that prevented Hitler’s defeat of the Soviet
Union.
Karl E. Meyer, in a New York Times editorial footnote, stated
that Hitler believed that several weeks it took Germany to subdue
Greece was responsible for his losing the war against the Soviet
Union. (April 16, 1994, A20, col.1)
General Andrew J. Goodpaster, former Supreme Commander of
NATO, has characterized Greece’s actions in World War II as a turning
point in the war.
But the glory of Greece’s actions in World War II did not
end there. During the harsh Nazi occupation, Greek resistance activities
forced the Germans to retain a large number of troops in Greece,
which otherwise would have been deployed to Eastern Front and in
North Africa, and could have tipped the balance in both of those
campaigns. Six hundred thousand Greeks, 9 percent of their population,
died from fighting and Nazi Germany’s starvation policy.
In contrast with Greece, Turkey failed to honor its treaty
with Britain and France to enter the war, remained neutral and profited
from both sides. In fact, Turkey supplied Hitler with chromium, a
vital resource to Nazi Germany’s armaments industry and war effort.
Albert Speer, Hitler’s armaments chief, wrote in November 1943 that
the loss of chromium supplies from Turkey would end the war in about
10 months. See F. Weber, The Evasive Neutral 44 (1979) and A. Speer,
Inside the Third Reich 316-17, 405, 550 n. 10, (1970).
While the rest of Europe was rebuilding following World
War II, Greece was involved in a civil war from 1946 to 1949 against
communist forces supported by Stalin and Tito and supplied by them
from the Skopje area of Yugoslavia. Greece’s defeat of the communists,
with the Greek blood and American military aid provided under the
Truman Doctrine (but without American combat troops), was an historic
turning point in the post-World War II Cold War period.
Stopping the communist takeover of Greece, including Crete
with its Souda Bay naval base, prevented Stalin’s domination of the
Aegean Sea and Eastern Mediterranean and the strategic encirclement
by the Soviet Union of the Middle East oil resources including the
Persian Gulf area. General Goodpaster has called the Truman Doctrine
and Greece’s role a turning point in world history.
Secretary Rice’s comments give hope that finally the U.S.
recognizes the full value of Greece to the U.S. for their mutual
benefit. Words are important, but need to be followed by action.
Secretary Rice can give meaning to her words by positive action on
the key issues: Cyprus, the Aegean, FYROM, the Ecumenical Patriarchate
and Halki Patriarchal School of Theology and Albania.
Greece is a vigorous and stable democracy with a rapidly
modernizing economy that serves as a stimulus for regional growth.
It is also the only Balkan country that can boast membership in the
EU and its European Monetary Union (EMU) as well as NATO. In combination,
these factors make Greece a regional force for political stability
and democracy-building and a sensible partner for U.S. strategic
interests, economic cooperation and investment. Greece hosted an
exceptional 2004 Olympic Games, which enhanced Greece’s visibility
worldwide.
The 1999 Kosovo crisis confirmed Greece’s leadership role
in the Balkans and its utility as the U.S.’s pivotal partner in the
wider region. Greece coordinates the administration of EU aid to
the Balkans and is itself a source of developmental capital, private
investment, and know-how in the newly emerging Balkan economies.
The 1991 Gulf War and the 2003 Iraq War confirmed that the
Souda Bay, Crete naval base and airbases in Greece are the most important
Eastern Mediterranean bases for the projection of U.S. power. There
is clearly nothing remotely comparable in Turkey.
The U.S. should establish a "special relationship" with
Greece by broadening and deepening its relationship through a coordinated
program in the strategic, political, military, commercial and cultural
fields. Establishing such a relationship with Greece will allow the
U.S. to capitalize on Greece’s unique assets, thereby increasing
the prospects for achieving the U.S.’s long-term goals of political
stability, economic progress and democracy in Southeastern Europe,
the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East.
###
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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