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Documentary Proof of Kissinger's Complicity in Turkey's Aggression Against CyprusBy Gene Rossides
The evidence is mounting as to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's involvement in, and complicity with, Turkey's invasion of Cyprus and the resultant war crimes against the 80 % Greek Cypriot majority. A shocking August 14, 1974, "SECRET/EYES ONLY MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY" from Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Counselor of the U.S. State Department, to Secretary Henry Kissinger became public a few weeks ago. It was published in the Cyprus Weekly of August 10, 2007. The text of this important document follows: "THE COUNSELOR If the Turks move fast and can then be gotten to stand down, it may pre-empt Greek counteraction and then give us a chance to try for a deal. (It may also save Karamanlis). While the Soviets can serve as a bogey, we must keep them at arms length. They cannot become the arbiter between US allies. Their interests differ drastically from ours: we want a modus vivendi between Greece and Turkey, they want a non-aligned Cyprus, preferably with Greece or Turkey or both disaffected from NATO. Thus, we should - assure Greeks we will
contain Turk demands and allow no additional enclaves, etc. I do not think Brussels/NATO is the place to use when the time comes. The Greeks are probably too sore at NATO and the vehicle of a ministerial meeting is awkward. Anyway, you need Ecevit and Karamanlis. London may be unacceptable to
the Turks because of Callaghan's blast at them. On the same day, July 20, 1974, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution, S.C. 353, calling upon "all states to respect the sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity of Cyprus." The resolution called for a ceasefire and demanded "an immediate end to foreign intervention" in Cyprus. On July 22, 1974, a ceasefire was declared and subsequently violated by Turkish armed forces (NY Times, July 23, 1974, A1, col. 8). The next day, July 23, 1974, both the Greek junta and the Sampson regime fell (Wash. Post, July 24, 1974, A1, col. 4). Pursuant to the 1960 constitution, Glafkos Clerides, President of the Cyprus House of Representatives, was installed as acting President of Cyprus. Former Greek Prime Minister, Constantinos Karamanlis, was called home from his self-imposed exile in Paris and sworn in on July 24, 1974 to head a unity government. Meanwhile, Britain, Greece and Turkey, the guarantor powers under the 1959-1960 London-Zurich agreements, entered into negotiations in Geneva, Switzerland. On July 30, 1974, the three nations ended the first phase of their talks and signed the Declaration of Geneva, which called for a second ceasefire and for a halt to the expansion of occupied territory (NY Times, July 31, 1974, A1, col. 1). Once again, Turkey's armed forces violated the ceasefire (NY Times, Aug. 1, 1974, A1, col. 5). At this point, Turkey held less than five percent of Cyprus and the legitimate Cypriot government had been reinstated on July 23, 1974, which reestablished the constitutional state of affairs prior to the July 15, 1974 coup. On August 8, 1974, Britain, Greece and Turkey began the second round of talks in Geneva. On August 13, 1974, Turkey issued a thirty-six hour ultimatum to Greece and Britain to accept Turkey's proposal, which was tantamount to partition, for six separate Turkish Cypriot "cantons" consisting of thirty-four percent of the island nation for the eighteen percent minority community. That same day, the State Department spokesman, Ambassador Robert Anderson, issued the following statement, cleared by Kissinger, saying that the Turkish Cypriots needed more security (although there was no evidence of any danger to the Turkish Cypriot community):"The United States position is as follows: we recognize the position of the Turkish community on Cyprus requires considerable improvement and protection. We have supported a greater degree of autonomy for them. The parties are negotiating on one or more Turkish autonomous areas. The avenues of diplomacy have not been exhausted and therefore the United States would consider a resort to military action unjustified. We have made this clear to all parties." On August 14, 1974, three weeks after the legitimate government of Cyprus had been restored, Turkey unilaterally broke off the negotiations and violated the ceasefire, launched a second more massive aggression without a pretext, occupied over thirty-seven percent of Cyprus- up from the less than five percent occupied as a result of the first attack of July 20, 1974- and forcibly expelled 180,000 Greek Cypriots from their homes and properties. On that day and ensuing days, the UN Security Council passed resolutions demanding a ceasefire, and recorded "its formal disapproval of the unilateral military actions undertaken" by Turkey against Cyprus and urged compliance with its previous resolutions. On August 14, 1974 there was a meeting in Kissinger's office about what the State Department was going to do. In his oral history on May 8, 1989, Robert McCloskey, Ambassador-at-Large and media and policy adviser on Kissinger's immediate staff, stated that Kissinger "went around the room, and I said, 'I think that we should announce that from today we will suspend any further deliveries of U.S. military equipment to Turkey.' Well, he exploded." (Emphasis added.) The Sonnenfeldt memorandum indicts Kissinger as an accomplice to Turkey's aggression, ethnic cleansing, and war crimes against the Greek Cypriots and exposes his incompetence. What did Kissinger do when Turkey issued its 36 hour ultimatum on August 13, 1974, three weeks after the legitimate government of Cyprus had been restored? He gave full support to Turkey's renewed aggression by the official State Department statement saying "the Turkish community on Cyprus requires considerable improvement and protection" which was a false and misleading statement. Kissinger made no public
statement that renewed Turkish aggression would violate U.S. law. Clearly Kissinger told
Sonnenfeldt what he wanted in the memorandum. |