
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: GEORGIA ECONOMOU |
June 22,
2004—No.42 |
(202)
785-8430 |
AHI Sends Letter to President George W. Bush
1. Setting the record straight on the Annan Plan; and
2. Cover-up of the State Department’s role in Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus
WASHINGTON, DC—On June 21, 2004 AHI President Gene Rossides sent a letter to
President George W. Bush on (1) setting the record straight on the
Annan Plan and (2) the cover-up of the State Department’s role in
Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus. The text of the letter follows:
June
21, 2004
The Honorable George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20500
Re: Letter to Secretary of State Colin L. Powell on
(1) Setting the record straight on the Annan Plan; and
(2) Cover-up of the State Department’s role in Turkey’s
invasion of Cyprus in 1974
Dear Mr. President:
I am enclosing a copy for you of my detailed letter to
Secretary Colin L. Powell on the above subjects. Most of the
letter is devoted to setting
the
record straight on the Annan Plan in view of the unseemly and undiplomatic
attacks by U.S. officials on the Greek Cypriots for their "no" vote of 76 percent on the Annan Plan for Cyprus and statements to reward the
Turkish Cypriots for their "yes" vote of 65 percent.
Setting the record straight on the Annan Plan
The
following topics are discussed under this heading:
▪ The undemocratic
veto for the 18 percent Turkish Cypriot minority;
▪ The proposal is unworkable;
▪ The proposal subverts property rights;
▪ The proposal is not financially viable;
▪ The security issue—the proposal fails to fully demilitarize
Cyprus and gives Turkey "intervention" rights;
▪ The proposal does not provide for the return to Turkey of the
119,000 illegal settlers in the occupied area;
▪ The proposed territorial adjustment is clearly unfair;
▪ The Annan Plan and economic isolation/embargoes;
▪ The Annan Plan and the Rule of Law;
▪ The failure to hold Turkey accountable for its aggression against
Cyprus;
▪ Compensation from Turkey for the victims of Turkey’s aggression;
▪ The pro-Turkish bias in the Annan Plan; and
▪ Mr. Secretary, you have been misled.
Cover-up of the State Department’s
role in Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus in 1974
This section covers
in detail
the State Department’s illegal actions under Secretary Henry A.
Kissinger in 1974 which encouraged Turkey to invade Cyprus on July
20, 1974
and thereafter further encouraged Turkey to break the UN cease-fire
and
to renew its aggression
on August 14, 1974, three weeks after the legitimate government
of Cyprus had
been returned to office. In the second phase of the aggression
Turkey occupied an additional 33 percent of Cyprus for a total of
37.3 percent.
_______________
For all the reasons set forth
in the discussion of the topics above, the Annan Plan was unfair,
unbalanced, unworkable,
not
financially
viable, rewarded the aggressor, Turkey, and punished the victims,
the Greek Cypriots. For the State Department to contend otherwise
is Orwellian.
The Greek Cypriots worked hard and abided by the
rule of law to pull themselves up from the destruction, killings
and
rapes
caused
by the
Turkish
military in 1974 and thereafter. They have supported the U.S.
throughout this period, particularly in the Persian Gulf War
period in 1990
and 1991 and the
Iraq War of 2003 while Turkey did not. The Greek Cypriots deserve
better from the U.S. and the UN.
The U.S. should muster the
political will (1) to apply diplomatic and economic pressure on
Turkey to remove promptly
its 35,000/40,000
troops and
settlers from Cyprus, and (2) to apply the American principles
of majority rule, the rule of law and protection of minority
rights to Cyprus as
we have to Afghanistan.
Mr. President, I bring to your attention
that then Vice President Bush made the following statement in Boston
on July
7, 1988:
"We seek for Cyprus a constitutional democracy based on majority rule, the rule
of law and the protection of minority rights . . . . I
want to see a democratic Cyprus free from the threat of war."
Respectfully,
/s/Gene Rossides
Enclosure
cc: Vice President Richard B. Cheney
Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snow
Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
UN Ambassador John D. Negroponte
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Lee Armitage
Chief of Staff Andrew Card
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
Senior Advisor to the President Karl Rove
Advisor to the President Karen Hughes
Director of OMB Joshua Bolten
Under Secretary of State Marc Grossman
Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian
Affairs A. Elizabeth Jones
Special Coordinator for Cyprus Thomas Weston
The Congress
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
UN Under-Secretary-General Alvaro de Soto,
Special Advisor on Cyprus
###
For additional information, please contact Vivian Basdekis at (202) 785-8430 or at [email protected]. For
general information about
the activities
of AHI, please see our Web site at http://www.ahiworld.org.
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