Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

U.S. NATO Chief Blames Turkey For 'Ethnic Cleansing' Of Greeks, Incl

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • U.S. NATO Chief Blames Turkey For 'Ethnic Cleansing' Of Greeks, Incl

    U.S. NATO CHIEF BLAMES TURKEY FOR 'ETHNIC CLEANSING' OF GREEKS, INCLUDING OWN FAMILY
    By Amir Oren

    Ha'aretz
    Thu., October 15, 2009 Tishrei 27, 5770

    U.S. Navy Admiral James Stavridis, the senior American officer in both
    the U.S. European Command and NATO, blames Turkey for violence against
    its Greek minority, including his own family, almost 90 years ago.

    In a first-person book he published last year, before he took over
    as NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), Stavridis termed
    Turkey's moves "ethnic cleansing" and a "pogrom," whose victims
    included his grandparents, expelled from their hometown of Izmir,
    and his father's uncle, who was killed by violent anti-Greek Turks.

    Advertisement

    Fighter planes from United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE) and
    other elements under Stavridis' command were to have taken part in
    the Anatolian Eagle exercise, from which the U.S. withdrew earlier
    this week, after Turkey barred Israel from participating. Stavridis
    is closely supervising the upcoming American-Israeli Juniper Cobra air
    and missile defense exercise, and is scheduled to visit Israel soon.

    After being nominated to his current position, a mere year after
    publishing these charges against Turkey, Stavridis dropped the
    negative reference to Turkish treatment of his family and other ethnic
    Greeks. His current, sanitized version depicts Turkey as a starting
    point for a one-stop journey west to America.

    Stavridis, a 1976 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, was born in
    Florida and hardly speaks any Greek. As a child, he lived for two
    years in Athens, where his father, a U.S. Marine Corps officer, served
    in the American Embassy alongside a U.S. Navy officer whose daughter
    Stavridis later married. The four-star admiral is widely acclaimed as
    a brilliant officer, with a Ph.D. in international relations and an
    impressive record of command and staff positions. Currently, he wears
    two hats: In addition to his job at NATO - of which Turkey is a member,
    with forces serving in Afghanistan and working to prevent terr across
    its border with Iraq - he heads the U.S. European Command (EUCOM),
    which includes Greece, Turkey and Israel among its dozens of countries.

    A prolific writer of books and articles, with his own blog ("From
    the Bridge") on the EUCOM web site, Stavridis kept a journal of
    his experiences during the 28 months he commanded the destroyer
    USS Barry, from early fall 1993 to December 1995. During that time,
    the Aegis-class warship, armed with powerful radar and anti-missile
    missiles (of the sort taking part in Juniper Cobra), was deployed in
    crises the world over - off Haiti, in the Mediterranean and in the
    Persian Gulf.

    In 2008, before he learned he would be appointed NATO's military chief
    - the first ever from the navy - he published his 1990s journal as
    a book, "Destroyer Captain: Lessons of a First Command." Thus the
    manuscript he authored in his late thirties, as a relatively junior
    Commander, was launched into the public domain more than a dozen
    years later, when he was five ranks higher.

    In "Destroyer Captain," Stavridis does not try to be diplomatic. "In
    the early 1920's," he wrote, "my grandfather, a short, stocky Greek
    schoolteacher named Dimitrious Stavridis, was expelled from Turkey
    as part of 'ethnic cleansing' (read pogrom) directed against Greeks
    living in the remains of the Ottoman Empire. He barely escaped with
    his life in a small boat crossing the Aegean Sea to Athens and thence
    to Ellis Island. His brother was not so lucky and was killed by the
    Turks as part of the violence directed at the Greek minority."

    The "most amazing historical irony I could imagine," according to the
    author, was when a multinational NATO exercise off the coast of western
    Turkey brought him to the place his grandfather was forced out of: "His
    grandson, who speaks barely a few words of Greek, returns in command
    of a billion-dollar destroyer to the very city - Smyrna, now called
    Izmir - from which he sailed in a refugee craft all those years ago."

    In an interview about "Destroyer Captain" on the U.S. Naval Institute
    web l let others decide if it's a good book, but I truly believe it
    is an honest book."

    He was, however, less than fully candid last March, during his Armed
    Services Committee confirmation hearing. The ethnic cleansing he
    sharply rebuked in the book (and which he contrasted with U.S. efforts
    worldwide to prevent) underwent some semantic cleansing. "It's probably
    worth noting that although I'm ethnically Greek, my grandfather was
    actually born in Turkey and came through Greece on his way to the
    United States," he said, as if equally proud of his double origin,
    much like the child of divorced parents boasting that he now has two
    families rather than only one.

    Last July, having visited Turkey as NATO and EUCOM chief, he again
    chose similar words to describe his personal connection to the country
    that ill-treated his grandparents. "Turkey is a vital and important
    NATO ally," he blogged, "and for me it was a chance to return to the
    nation from which my grandfather and grandmother emigrated to the
    United States, after stopping briefly in Greece."

    The Turkish military is not in the habit of ignoring criticism,
    even from fellow officers. Last February, when Haaretz reported the
    stinging attack on Turkish actions in Cyprus and against Armenian
    civilians voiced by Israeli Ground Forces commander Maj. Gen. Avi
    Mizrahi, the uproar in Ankara made Israel Defense Forces Chief of
    Staff Gabi Ashkenazi call his counterpart, Gen. Ilker Sasbug, to
    distance the IDF from Mizrahi's "personal" opinion.
Working...
X