World Affairs

Letter to President Bush from Former U.S. Diplomats

By: Us Diplomats   May 4, 2004

April 30, 2004 

President George W. Bush 
The White House 
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW 
Washington, DC 

Dear Mr. President: 

We former U.S. diplomats applaud our 52 British colleagues who recently sent a letter to Prime Minister Tony Blair criticizing his Middle East policy and calling on Britain to exert more influence over the United States. As retired foreign service officers we care deeply about our nation's foreign policy and U.S. credibility in the world. 

We also are deeply concerned by your April 14 endorsement of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral plan to reject the rights of three million Palestinians, to deny the right of refugees to return to their homeland, and to retain five large illegal settlement blocs in the occupied West Bank. This plan defies U.N. Security Council resolutions calling for Israel's return of occupied territories. It ignores international laws declaring Israeli settlements illegal. It flouts U.N. Resolution 194, passed in 1948, which affirms the right of refugees to return to their homes or receive compensation for the loss of their property and assistance in resettling in a host country should they choose to do so. And it undermines the Road Map for peace drawn up by the Quartet, including the U.S. Finally, it reverses longstanding American policy in the Middle East. 

Your meeting with Sharon followed a series of intensive negotiating sessions between Israelis and Americans, but which left out Palestinians. In fact, you and Prime Minister Sharon consistently have excluded Palestinians from peace negotiations. Former Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo voiced the overwhelming reaction of people around the world when he said, "I believe President Bush declared the death of the peace process today." 

By closing the door to negotiations with Palestinians and the possibility of a Palestinian state, you have proved that the United States is not an even-handed peace partner. You have placed U.S. diplomats, civilians and military doing their jobs overseas in an untenable and even dangerous position. 

Your unqualified support of Sharon's extra-judicial assassinations, Israel's Berlin Wall-like barrier, its harsh military measures in occupied territories, and now your endorsement of Sharon's unilateral plan are costing our country its credibility, prestige and friends. 

It is not too late to reassert American principles of justice and fairness in our relations with all the peoples of the Middle East. Support negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis, with the United States serving as a truly honest broker. A return to the time-honored American tradition of fairness will reverse the present tide of ill will in Europe and the Middle East-even in Iraq. Because the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is at the core of the problems in the Middle East, the entire region-and the world-will rejoice along with Israelis and Palestinians when the killing stops and peace is attained. 

Sincerely, 

 

Andrew I. Killgore    Ambassador to Qatar, 1977-1980 
Richard H. Curtiss    Former chief inspector, U.S. Information Agency 
Colbert C. Held    Retired FSO and author 
Thomas J. Carolan    Counsel General Istanbul, 1988-1992 
C. Edward Bernier    Counselor of Embassy, Information and Culture, Islamabad, Pakistan 
Donald A. Kruse    American Consul in Jerusalem 
Ambassador Edward L. Peck    Former Chief of Mission in Iraq and Mauritania 
John Powell    Admin Counselor in Beirut, 1975-1976 
John Gunther Dean    Former U.S. Ambassador to India 
Greg Thielmann    Director, Office for Strategic Proliferation Military Affairs, Bureau of Intelligence and Research 
James Akins    Ambassador to Saudi Arabia 
Talcott Seeyle    Ambassador to Syria 
Eugene Bird    Counselor of Embassy in Saudi Arabia 
Richard H. Nolte    Ambassador to Egypt 
Ray Close    Chief of Station Jeddah, Saudi Arabia 1971-1979 
Shirl McArthur    Commercial Attache, Bangkok

 

Source: Washington Report on Middle East Affairs

Author: Us Diplomats   May 4, 2004
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