Letter to President
Bush from U.S. Diplomats
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 counterparts 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. At the request
of our government and military colleagues, we have added their
names as well.
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. Nor is this endorsement even in the best interests
of the State of Israel.
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, chief inspector, U.S.
Information Agency
- Colbert C. Held, Middle East Regional
Officer
- Thomas J. Carolan, Consul General, Turkey, 1988-1992
- C. Edward
Bernier, Counselor of Embassy for Information and Culture,
Pakistan 1995-1996
- Donald A. Kruse, American Consul in Jerusalem
- Ambassador
Edward L. Peck, former Chief of Mission in Iraq and Mauritania
- John
Powell, Admin Counselor of Embassy in Lebanon, 1975
- John
Gunther Dean, Ambassador to India
- James Akins, Ambassador
to Saudi Arabia
- Talcott Seelye, 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, Thailand
- David Fredrick, Country
Director Peace Corps Morocco 1986-1990
- Bill Rugh, Ambassador
to UAE and Yemen
- James Curran, Deputy Chief
of Mission Togo 1973-1975
- Joseph Cheevers, Office of Inspectors General
1987
- Robert L. M. Nevitt,
Minister for Press
Affairs for the
U.N.
- John Brady Kiesling,
Political Counselor,
Greece
- E. William
Tatge, Counselor for Commercial
Affairs,
France
- Henry
Precht, Deputy Chief
of Mission,
Egypt
- John
O. Sutter, FSO, The Asia
Foundation's
Representative
for Indonesia,
1982-1984
- James J. Halsema,
Counselor
for
Public
Affairs, Egypt
- Nancy LeRoy,
Public
Affairs
Officer,
Mexico
- Thomas M. Martin,
USIA
Congressional
Liaison
Officer,
- Robert C.
McLaughlin,
USIA
Madrid
- Edward Alexander,
Counselor for
Public Affairs,
East Berlin,
1976-1979
- Roman
Lotsberg, Admin
Officer, Office
of European
Affairs
- Dr.
Shirley Hill
Witt, Cultural
Affairs Officer,
Zambia, 1994-1996
- Arthur
L. Lowrie,
Political Advisor
to the
Commander in
Chief, U.S.
Central Command
- Carleton
Coon, Ambassador
to Nepal
1981-1984
- Jane
Coon, Ambassador
to Bangladesh,
1981-1984
- George
B. Roberts,
Ambassador to
Guyana, 1979-1981
- Robert
V. Keeley,
Ambassador to
Greece
- John
E. Marsh,
First Secretary,
Embassy Kuwait,
1971-1973
- Thomas
W. Fina,
Consul
General,
Milan, 1973-1979
- Harland
H. Eastman,
Consul
General,
Tangier,
Morocco,
and Tel
Aviv,
Israel
- Arthur
Mudge,
Director,
USAID
Mission
to
Sudan,
1980-1983
- Ronald
I.
Spiers,
Undersecretary
of
State
for
Management
- Albert
L.
Seligmann,
Director,
Office
of
Japanese
Affairs,
1981-1983
- Orin
D.
Parker,
President,
America-Middle
East
Educational
Services,
1979-1988
- Robert
C.
Amerson,
Counselor
for
Public
Affairs,
Italy
- Christian
Freer,
Colonel,
AUS
ret.,
former
chief
of
CIA
stations
and
War
Plans
staff
- Thomas
J.
Hirschfeld,
Deputy
U.S.
Rep
MBFR
Negotiations
- Edward
R.
M.
Kane,
Deputy
Chief
of
Station,
CIA,
Iraq
- Col.
Richard
Hobbes,
US
Army
Retired,
Politico-Military
Adviser
to
NEA
1974-1977
- Col.
David
Antoon,
US
Air
Force,
Retired
- Brig.
General
Augustine
A.
Verrengia,
USAF
Ret.
- Greg
Thielmann,
Director,
Office
for
Strategic
Proliferation
Military
Affairs, Bureau
of
Intelligence
and
Research
- Robin
Berrington,
Cultural
Attache,
Japan
- Gary
S.
Usrey,
Deputy
Chief
of
Mission,
Morocco
- Owen
Roberts,
Ambassador
to
Togo
- Chas
W.
Freeman,
Jr.
Ambassador
to
Saudi
Arabia,
Assistant
Secretary
of
Defense,
1993-1994
- Edwin
Paul
Kennedy,
Jr.,
Regional
Affairs
Officer
for
N.
African,
Near Eastern,
and
S.
Asian
Affairs,
USIA
- Thomas
J.
Scotes,
Ambassador
to
Yemen,
1975-1978
- Michael
Mennard,
Ph.D.,
Regional
Public
Affairs
Officer,
India
- Francois
M.
Dickman,
Director
Arabian
Peninsula
Affairs
1972-76,
Ambassador
to
UAE
1976-79
and
Kuwait
1979-83
- Terrell
E.
Arnold,
Former
Deputy
Director
Office
of
Counterterrorism
and
Consul
General,
Brazil
Others
- Edy Korthals Altes, Ambassador of the Netherlands in Madrid
1983-1986
- Mr. Gerben Meihuizen (The Hague) former Netherlands
Ambassador in Syria, Saudi Arabia and Algeria
- Former Congressman
Paul Findley (R-IL)
- Robert Norberg, Director ARAMCO, ret.
- Bishop John William
Assemby of Yahweh
- William Hughes, WWII veteran, retired engineer
- Clyde A. Farris
- Mary Ann Schwab, teacher, voter
- Rev. J. Martin Bailey, Consultant
to the Common Global Ministries Board
- Henry E. Kydd, retired
Army Sergeant, director of homeless shelter, grandfather
- Dr. Edna Homa Hunt
- David Wade, Ph.D, Researcher
- E. Faye Williams, Esq.
- Koen Stork, Netherlands Ambassador
in Bucarest
- W. Lance Haynes, Professor of Speech and Media
Studies, University of Missouri-Rolla
- David S. Dodge, President, American University of Beirut,
ret.
- Mrs. Frederick G. Roberts, widow
of Frederick Roberts, CIA,
Turkey
|