Letters to the Editor
The Washington Times, 18 Ιουλίου 2007
Experience has taught us that it is very difficult to communicate with people
who have lived under, and have been trained by, the Communist mentality. Case in
point: the misleading and well-camouflaged claims made by the honorable foreign
minister of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Antonio
Milososki, to The Washington Times in the article "Name game blame" (Embassy
Row, July 11) that his country will promote stronger trade relations with the
United States, and, with its transition to an independent nation, should be
designated Macedonia, not FYROM.
Mr. Milososki claimed that his country has "gone from a security consumer to
a security provider," which is hardly accurate and honest. What the minister
forgot to mention is the teachings in FYROM's schools and military academy that
continue to poison the new generations with falsehoods, planting the seeds of
hatred to come in the years ahead and in clear violation of the U.N.-brokered
"Intermediate Agreement" signed by his country and Greece. FYROM today is more a
picture of a terrorist training camp rather than a "security provider."
"Our
name is the cornerstone of our identity," said Mr. Milososki. What he left out
was when and how it received that name. Did the name belong to somebody else for
millennia before Josip Broz, or "Tito," and Josef Stalin in 1944 re-baptized
"Vardarska Banovina" into "Macedonia," usurping the name Macedonia from the
northern province of Greece with the ultimate goal of annexing Macedonia away
from Greece and gaining access to the Aegean?
Unfortunately for the minister,
history recorded that President Truman provided the arms, and the Greeks
provided the rivers of blood to stop Tito's and Stalin's plans, rescued the
Macedonia province and the rest of Greece from the Communists' deadly embrace,
and kept Greece and her Macedonia province on the western side of the Iron
Curtain. What the province lost in battle then, it now expects to be given on a
silver platter.
Mr. Milososki, your people once claimed that there were about
750,000 of them in the United States. The 2000 census revealed the truth as
being not even 40,000. You now claim that 120 countries have recognized you by
your self-declared identity. Would you kindly produce such a list for the public
and identify exactly which countries have recognized you so officially by
government-to-government official letter and which others are only coerced by
bilateral agreements between companies in your country and other
countries?
We hope you enjoyed your visit to the United States of America,
Mr. Milososki. The truth can neither be killed nor ignored. The name "Macedonia"
is an indisputable part of Greece's historic and cultural legacy, and the
Hellenic world will never give up its ownership.
NINA GATZOULIS
Supreme President
Pan-Macedonian Association
Dover,
NH
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