
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
| October
19, 2004—No.61 |
(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 October 16, 2004,
page 11.
Greece or Turkey: Who is Best for U.S. Interests?
By Gene Rossides
Greece or Turkey—does it make a difference for U.S. interests?
Yes, it does make a difference and a big difference for U.S. interests.
Greece is a loyal ally and has been throughout the 20th
century and into the 21st century. In World War I, Greece sided with
the allies and played an important role in the Balkans, while Turkey
fought against 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 Greeks 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 in the spring of 1941. Hitler’s invasion of Greece delayed
his invasion of the Soviet Union by several weeks, from April to
June 1941, and required the diversion of valuable troops and equipment.
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 the New York Times editorial footnote,
stated that Hitler believed that the 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)
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 the 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.
Greece’s actions in World War II have been characterized
by General Andrew J. Goodpaster (U.S. A. Ret.), former Supreme Commander
of NATO, as a turning point in the war.
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 Greek blood and American military aid provided under the Truman
Doctrine (but without American combat troops), was called by General
Goodpaster an historic turning point in world history. 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.
The American Hellenic Institute held a two-day conference
in Washington D.C. March 12-13, 1997, commemorating the 50th Anniversary
of the Truman Doctrine. One of the conference sessions was titled: "Greece’s
Strategic Importance: the Military Dimension." The Honorable
Lawrence J. Korb, former Assistant Secretary of Defense, and Admiral
Henry C. Mustin, U.S. Navy retired, outlined Greece’s strategic importance
then and now. They stated that Greece’s importance is greater now
than in the Cold War because the center of attention has shifted
from the Central Front in Europe during the Cold War to Southeast
Europe, including the Balkans, and the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas.
Turkey was a disloyal ally during the Cold War in the second
half of the 20th century and is a disloyal ally in the 21st century
as the Iraqi War of 2003 proved. During the Cold War, Turkey actively
aided the Soviet military to the great detriment of U.S. interests.
In the 21st century Turkey’s disloyalty to the U.S. regarding the
Iraqi War has been well documented.
During World War I, Turkey fought on the side of Germany
against the U.S. In World War II, Turkey in 1940 abandoned its treaty
with Britain and France to enter the war on their side, remained
neutral, and profited from both sides. In fact, it is well documented
that Turkey supplied Adolph Hitler with chromium, a vital resource
to Nazi Germany’s armament industry and war effort, which prolonged
World War II by seven months! See F. Weber, The Evasive Neutral 44
(1979) and the book by Hitler’s armaments chief, Albert Speer, Inside
the Third Reich 316-317, 405, 550 note 10 (1970).
Greece is a
strategic ally of great importance to the U.S. interests, and has
proven its reliability. The Souda Bay naval base in Crete is the
key base in the Eastern Mediterranean for the U.S. Sixth Fleet,
and the air base in Crete is of significant importance. The Souda
Bay naval base is worth far more to the U.S. than all the base facilities
in Turkey put together.
Greece’s role in the Balkans makes it the key ally for
U.S. interests in furthering economic and political progress and
stability in the Balkans.
Turkey was of minor strategic importance to U.S. interests
during the Cold War and is of minor strategic importance today as
proven by the Persian Gulf War of 1991 and the Iraq War of 2003.
Greece is a democracy. Turkey is a partial democracy as
stated in Freedom House’s annual survey.
Greece is a law-abiding nation. Turkey is an aggressor nation,
which continues to occupy 37 percent of Cyprus, now in its 30th year.
Greece’s citizens have full legal, political, cultural and
human rights. Turkey is a terrorist nation, which uses torture on
a national scale against its citizens, has thousands of political
prisoners in jail, commits ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity
and genocide against its Kurdish minority of 20 percent, jails journalists
and restricts freedom of speech, press and religion.
Successive U.S. administrations have followed a double
standard on applying the rule of law and human rights criteria to
Turkey and have appeased Turkey at the expense of Greece and Cyprus,
all to the detriment of U.S. interests.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Greece Monteagle Stearns, in
his book, Entangled Allies (1992), criticized U.S. policy of tying
U.S. policy on Greece with U.S. policy on Turkey. He stated that
the U.S. should have a Greek policy and a Turkey policy and not make
our policy on Greece dependant on our policy on Turkey.
In the presidential debate on foreign policy on September
29, 2004, President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry discussed
the major issues of Iraq, North Korea, Iran and did not deal with
secondary issues such as Cyprus, the Aegean, Macedonia or Albanian
issues or U.S. relations generally with Greece, Cyprus and Turkey.
That is understandable. However, the winner in the presidential election
race on November 2, 2004 will have to deal with these issues.
Although, the Cyprus issue is a secondary level issue,
the democratic principles involved—the rule of law, majority rule
and protection of minority rights, opposition to aggression and occupation—are
frontline, major issues of global importance for the U.S.
Greek Americans should be the active in the presidential
campaign by making sure they are registered to vote, by voting on
November 2, 2004 and by voting and calling the two candidates and
asking for their views on Greek issues and any other issues of concern
to you.
Gene Rossides is President of the American Hellenic Institute and
Former Assistant Secretary of the United States 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.
Back to top
|