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>>Washington Post 04/04/2008 Response
to "For
Hellenic
Electronic Center (HEC) A Non-Profit Organization
Registered in the with 37,000
Hellenes as members and 36 Hellenic associations
in the
The following letter is intended to
clarify certain points in the April 4 article on the
NATO Greek fears of a long term threat
emanating from about this threat by
referencing the long history of provocations and historical and geographic
distortions that come from
Theodore G. Karakostas TKarakosta@aol.com
Member of
HEC Executive Council
For Macedonia, NATO Summit a
Disappointment
By Peter Baker
Friday,
For 17 years,
The impasse disrupted the
alliance's carefully laid plans to expand deeper into the once-troubled Balkans
by admitting "This
decision will cause considerable frustration among our citizens because it is
unfair," an irritated Antonio Milososki, the Macedonian foreign minister, said
in an interview Thursday as he packed to leave town. "It's not easy to
understand that immaterial arguments from ancient times in history put forward
by the Greek government have defeated the arguments and the real needs of the
real-life stability challenges in the Balkans." The dispute over
"It's a very
sensitive issue," said Evangelos Antonaros, a Greek government spokesman. "It
has nothing to do, as some people say superficially, with Alexander the Great
and history. It has to do with the relations on the ground
today." International mediators
tried to avoid the train wreck that happened here. Every NATO member agreed that
President Bush appeared
bewildered by the situation. "The name issue needs to be resolved quickly so
that The issue has its roots
in the long dominance and messy fall of the The two sides reached a
partial resolution in 1995 when The
"Resolution of this name
issue is critically important for the long-term stability of the region," said
Matthew Nimetz, a former Nobody
understands better than Nimetz that the name question is not really a laughing
matter, and nobody understands better how difficult it is to fix. After all,
he's been at it for the better part of 14 years. It's proven such a Sisyphean
task that a Macedonia blog posted a mock obituary of Nimetz dying decades from
now at age 100: "He went peacefully while taking a cab to a meeting between the
Greek and Macedonian governments to settle the long standing 'name'
dispute." In the run-up to the NATO
summit, Nimetz called the two sides together and offered a list of five possible
names -- the Constitutional Republic of Macedonia, the Democratic Republic of
Macedonia, the Independent Republic of Macedonia, the New Republic of Macedonia
and the So Nimetz came back with
another proposal, the Republic of Macedonia (Skopje), using the nation's capital
to make clear that it referred to the Macedonia associated with that area, not
all of historic Macedonia. Not good enough for the Greeks.
The whole thing might
seem crazy to outsiders, but then again, regional specialists point out, look at
the deep emotional response of Americans to their own issues of symbolism, such
as the Confederate flag. Rallies on the name issue in
"The question is what's
in a name," said Ivan Vejvoda, director of the Balkan Trust for Democracy,
affiliated with the German Marshall Fund of the
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