LETTER to
George W. Bush
(President of the United States of America)
FROM Mr. N. MARTIS (Former
Minister of Macedonia and
Thrace.)

Athens, March 29, 2004
The President of
the United States
Mr. George Bush
Washington
USA
As
President of the United States of America, the
world’s mightiest political, economic, and
military power, with a prestigious record of
playing a decisive part, together with its
struggling allies, during two World Wars and
the Cold War which followed, in safeguarding
the democratic way of life of the people o
Europe, you are in a position to ensure that
the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
ceases to constitute the antidemocratic
communist residuum in Europe.
The fraudulent creation of Stalin
and Tito, FYROM, with the stolen Greek name of
‘Macedonia’, has been strongly criticized and
invariably treated by the American side as a
hostile act, not only against Greece.
The Slavs of FYROM, whom Tito
christened ‘Macedonians’ in
1944, have usurped
the history and the cultural patrimony of the
people who have lived in Macedonia, and are
deceiving international public opinion.
A recent example is a speech made
by Kiro
Gligorov at the
University of Columbia in New York on the
subject of ‘The Contribution of
Ilinden to the
Awakening of Macedonian Consciousness’.
Ilinden was the
name given to the uprising against the Turks
in 1903 in the area of
Monastiri (now
Bitola).
The uprising was fomented by
Bulgarians, but FYROM presents it as an
uprising of ‘Macedonians’. This was
contradicted at the time by the consuls of the
United States, England, France, and Austria,
who were in Monastiri.
In a book titled The Events of 1903 in
Macedonia as Presented in European Diplomatic
Correspondence (Doc. 34), the four consuls
report in dozens of documents to their
respective foreign ministers that the uprising
was fomented by Bulgarians (Doc. 34). A report
by the Turkish Ambassador to France (Doc. 39)
also contradicts what FYROM says.
Gligorov
also deceived the international community from
the rostrum of the United Nations (p. 91 of my
book FYROM: The anti-democratic residuum in
Europe and its problematic Stabilization and
Association Agreement with the EU and Doc.
43).
Skopje also deceived the Vatican
and the Italian people in 1986 when it
exhibited Greek icons as ‘Macedonian’ icons in
a room in the Vatican.
Following protests by the
Archbishop of Athens, the Vatican stated: ‘We
were tricked by Skopje’.
All their assertions are false (p.
87-93 of my book). Under the name of
Macedonia, FYROM is a cancer threatening peace
in the region. The only solution for its
survival –which would be an important factor
for peace in the Balkans - is a new name,
agreed on by all the ethnic groups of which it
is made up. It is a solution, which was
supported by an American Undersecretary of
State in 1992.
As a Macedonian myself, as
Minister for Macedonia and Thrace for seven of
my twelve years as a government minister, and
as a reserve officer who saw 83 months of
service during the Second World War and fought
in the battle for the fortified positions of
Macedonia and Thrace during the German
invasion of Greece in 1941 and then at El
Alamein,
Rimini, and the
Battle of Athens in December 1944, I consider
it my duty, as I did towards your predecessors
Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton,
to inform you too about the Macedonian
question.
I am also spurred to write to you
by the recent judicial assistance agreement
between the USA and FYROM, not, however, under
its present legal name of the ‘Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia’, but under the stolen
Greek name of ‘Macedonia’.
As you will realize, this
agreement using the name of ‘Macedonia’ was a
political mistake and the blame is shared by
those who bowed to coercion from Skopje and
recommended that it be signed.
The agreement between the USA and
‘Macedonia’ was also surprising because it
confutes the USA’s and the UN’s firm positions
against FYROM as ‘Macedonia’.
In 1944, no sooner had Tito
created the ‘Republic of Macedonia’ that the
Roosevelt administration condemned all their
assertions as demagoguery with veiled threats,
and ever since then American presidents and
important figures have condemned or taken
steps against FYROM as ‘Macedonia’.
Tito’s declared aim of wresting
the geographical area of Macedonia away from
Greece to gain access to the Aegean, which
would neutralize the line of defense of the
democracies (Greece and Turkey), the President
Truman’s statement in his memoirs, based on
reports by the information services, that
Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Albania were waging
a campaign to create a communist Greece, led
to the enunciation of the Truman Doctrine.
The Truman Doctrine, which also
covered Turkey, and the statement in the
President’s speech that the loss of Greece’s
independence would also have repercussions for
the countries of Europe show that the United
States regarded the creation of a Macedonian
problem as the first incident in a cold war,
which was also obvious from the circular
airgram issued by
Stettinious.
Arthur
Vanderberg, the President of the Senate
Committee for Foreign Affairs, was more
explicit in a letter of 1947, in which he
stated that the problem of Greece was symbolic
of the global ideological conflict between the
Eastern bloc and Western democracy.
As a cold-war incident, however,
the Macedonian problem evolved in Greece and
especially in Macedonia as a warm-war
incident.
This was pointed out by President
George H. W. Bush on an official visit to
Greece in 1991, when he stated that Greece
alone had halted Soviet expansionism in Europe
during the difficult period.
The Roosevelt government’s blunt
(and still appropriate) description of
Skopje’s
assertions as ‘democracy’ would be charitable
if applied to FYROM’s
latest deliberate hoodwinking of international
public opinion.
In 2001, FYROM signed an
association agreement with the European Union.
However, on the Skopje
government’s official website it is stated
that ‘The Republic of Macedonia –not FYROM-
signed an association agreement not with the
European Union, but with the (named) fifteen
member countries of the European Union,
including Greece (Doc. 12).
When they
learn that the member states of the European
Union, including Greece, and also the United
States have accepted ‘Macedonia’ as
FYROM’s name in
the recent agreement, Internet users all over
the world will have no reason to wait for the
UN decision regarding a new name, mutually
acceptable to both FYROM and Greece.
The whole ‘Macedonian problem’ is
not a local squabble, nor is it simply a
matter of FYROM’s
name.
The history of Macedonia
constitutes an important part of the
infrastructure of Western civilization.
Consequently, respect for the historical truth
about Macedonia is not a matter that concerns
the Greeks alone.
By disseminating Greek culture and
establishing Greek as the only language of the
people, Alexander the Great and his successors
(the Ptolemies and
the Seleucids) profoundly influenced the
history of the human race.
Christianity used the Greek
language as the medium by which it was
transmitted. Of the 48 books of the Old
Testament, eight were written in Greek and the
other 40 were translated into Greek. The New
Testament was written entirely in Greek and
these two sacred texts were translated from
Greek into hundreds of other languages (p. 99
of my book).
In his book Hellenistic Period,
the Soviet academician
Avraam Rankovitch
states that the culture created by Alexander
and his successors (Hellenistic period) was
inherited by Rome, Byzantium, and the people
of the Far East and strongly influenced the
modern era.
In a special study signed by
Staggan
Stolpe in 1995,
the Swedish Institute for Foreign Affairs and
the University of Lund point out that the
history of Macedonia is not only the history
of the Greeks, but the history of all
Europeans, because the Macedonians propagated
Greek culture, which still influences us
today.
The re-establishment of the
Alexandrian Library, with funding
(US$200,000,000) from UNESCO, the
international community, and the Egyptian
government, is a major cultural achievement of
the third millennium and underlines the role
of the Hellenistic period, one of the
achievements of which was the legendary
ancient Alexandrian Library, which was founded
by the Macedonian Ptolemy I and developed by
all the Ptolemies
until Cleopatra, whom Liz Taylor played in the
film of the same name as a Greek.
Philology and the sciences were
developed by the Alexandrians (p. 117 of my
book).
The geographical territory of
Macedonia, a bridge between East and West,
North and South, has always been a target of
aggressive designs, especially on the part of
our northern neighbors.
Two events have been the main
sources of problems in Macedonia.
The first was the Treaty of San
Stefano in May 1878, by which the victorious
Tsarist Russia forced the defeated Ottoman
Empire to cede Thrace and most of Macedonia to
Bulgaria. The Tsar’s aim was to gain access to
the Aegean.
Following Greek protests, the
European powers, which were also affected,
forced the Tsar, with the Treaty of Berlin in
July 1878, to revoke the San Stefano Treaty.
The Bulgarians used special gangs
(Komitadjis)
to try to change the demographic make-up and
led to the Macedonian Struggle (1903-8)
between Greeks and Bulgarians. This was
followed by the first and second Balkan Wars
and the First World War, the end of which
found Russia under the communist regime.
The second event that was the
source of the current problem with Skopje was
the decision in Moscow in July 1921 by the
Comintern and the
Balkan communist parties (including the
Communist Party of Greece) to make Macedonia
and Thrace autonomous socialist republics.
The decision was reportedly taken
in Lenin’s presence and proposed by the
Bulgarian communist
Kollarov.
In Moscow in September 1924 at the
seventh Congress of the Balkan Communist
Federation and at the fifth Congress of the
Third International, with the intervention of
Russian representatives on both occasions, the
idea of autonomy was abandoned and it was
decided to create an independent Macedonian
state. The decision was ratified at the
Panhellenic
Congress of the Communist Party in December
1924 in the presence of representatives of the
Third International.
Apostolidis and
Kordatos raised objections and were
expelled.
Also, when the Germans invaded
Greece in 1941, Bulgaria, as Hitler’s ally,
invaded and annexed Thrace and a large part of
Macedonia.
With the German invasion of Greece
and Serbia in April 1941, the Kingdom of the
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, which had existed
since 1919, was abolished and the communist
Tito prevailed and renamed the kingdom
‘Yugoslavia’.
In 1944, thanks to Churchill’s
intervention at Yalta, Greece escaped becoming
a communist country. Tito, certain that
communism would prevail in Greece also, with
the support of the Communist Party of Greece
and with Stalin’s agreement, in the hope of
attaining the aim of the
Comintern and the Balkan communist
parties and especially the decision of 1924 in
Moscow, fraudulently changed the name of
southern Serbia (which had been known as
Vardaska since
1912) to the ‘Socialist Republic of Macedonia’
and christened its Slav inhabitants
‘Macedonians’.
He then proceeded to create on
paper the non-existent component elements of
the non-existent ‘Macedonian Nation’, in 1944
a ‘Macedonian government’ and a ‘Macedonian
parliament’, and in 1944 he named the
pro-Bulgarian dialect spoken in the Skopje
area the ‘Macedonian language’.
In 1968 he established in FYROM an
autocephalous Macedonian Church, which is not
recognized by any church, and 1969 saw the
publication of the three-volume History of the
(pseudo-) Macedonian Nation, which is the
biggest political and historical hoax the
world has ever seen.
FYROM: the
ticking bomb in the
Balcans.
Paddy Ashdown, speaking as a candidate for the
post of UN High Representative in Kosovo in
December 2000, described FYROM as the ‘ticking
bomb in the Balkans’. With the stolen Greek
name of ‘Macedonia’ FYROM is a cancer
permanently threatening peace in the region.
All the neighboring people, who
are well aware of the treaties and of Tito’s
aspirations when he created the Republic of
Macedonia, consider it foredoomed to failure
and regard their ethnic kinsfolk as a vehicle
for political aspirations.
The Bulgarians regard the Slavs of
FYROM as Bulgarians, and
Zhelev, as President of the Republic of
Bulgaria on an official visit to Sweden in
June 1993, declared that the ‘Macedonian
Nation’ created by the
Comintern after the War was a crime
committed by Tito and Stalin.
In 1997,
Arben Xhaferi,
leader of the Albanians in FYROM, accused
Gligorov of
falsifying his neighbors’ history, and stated
that his Macedonianism
was not real but fictitious.
On August 4, 2003, the Serbs
banned an official delegation from FYROM from
entering Serbian territory to visit the
Monastery of Prohor
Pcinjski, where
Tito founded the Socialist Republic of
Macedonia in 1944.
The false and, to Greeks,
objectionable assertion by the Slavs of FYROM,
which was used as the cornerstone of their
fictitious nation, that the ancient
Macedonians were not Greeks and that they
themselves became Macedonians, is an insult
not only to the Greeks but to any rational
person with the most elementary knowledge of
history.
At the same time,
Skopje’s assertion
that there are supposedly ‘Macedonian
minorities’ in Greece, Bulgaria, and Albania
is a permanent provocation and the motive
behind constant peace-threatening claims and
provocations, which risk fragmenting FYROM.
The only solution for FYROM to
prosper and constitute a stable factor for
peace in the Balkans is a new name, agreed on
by all the ethnic groups, which live there, so
that it can nip its neighbors’ aspirations in
the bud.
This solution was proposed by Mr.
Thomas Niles, US Undersecretary of State,
before a Congress subcommittee on June 22,
1992.
There is, after all, the precedent
of Byelorussia, which, by Stalin’s own
admission (Doc. 5) was created by the
communist party itself and is now member of
the United Nations.
American data indicate that the agreement
between the United States and ‘Macedonia’ is a
political mistake
-
The USA has been criticized for ignoring the
United Nations over the war of Iraq. With
the above-mentioned agreement, the United
States’ critics have an additional argument
that the United States had disdained that
international organization on a matter of
equal importance to the war. As you know,
the UN has ruled that the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia shall be known as
FYROM until a mutually acceptable name can
be found and agreed upon; and the
negotiations are taking place under UN
auspices.
-
Those who proposed that the agreement be
signed under the name of ‘Macedonia’ insult
the memory of
Stettinius, Secretary of State under
the Roosevelt administration, who, with
circular airgram
868.014/26 Dec. 1944, immediately denounced
any ‘talk of “Macedonian nation”,
“Macedonian fatherland”, or “Macedonian
national consciousness” as ‘unjustified
demagoguery’ (Doc. 1). He regarded it as ‘a
possible cloak for aggressive intentions
against Greece’ and stated that the United
States would take steps against those who
would help Yugoslavia and Bulgaria to foment
a Macedonian question.
Therefore, the recent agreement between the
United States and “Macedonia” unfortunately
helps to exacerbate a Macedonian question.
-
It is an insult to the memory of President
Truman, whose Truman Doctrine helped to
bring about the collapse of the communists’
plans. Had they occupied Macedonia and
Thrace, the communists would have smashed
NATO’s eastern wing, with serious wider
consequences. So it was thanks to sacrifices
by American taxpayers and the blood of the
Greeks that Macedonia was saved from being
incorporated into FYROM.
-
This agreement if contrary to President
Clinton’s position, who in October 2, 1992
prior to the elections declared that “The
United States position must be clear. If
the southernmost former Yugoslav Republic
wishes to receive American recognition, it
must first accept the principles of the
Helsinki Final Act, satisfy its neighbors
and the world community that its intentions
are peaceful, and abide by the European
Community’s decision which rejects the use
of the name Macedonia. A Clinton
Administration will stand by these
principles and ensure that Greece’s
legitimate concerns are met”.
-
With this agreement, we see two American
administrations, each under a President
Bush, adopting contrary positions over an
issue with political and moral implications.
On an official visit to Greece in 1991,
President George H.W. Bush praised Greece,
because during the difficult period between
1947 and 1949, Greece alone, of all the
countries of Europe, halted Soviet
expansionism. However, these Soviet efforts,
which were so dangerous to the democratic
nations and the United States, were assisted
with separate armed divisions by FYROM,
which had its eye on Macedonia.
In 2003, with
this agreement, a United States government
under President George W. Bush has
retrospectively legitimized that hostile (to
Greece and the USA alike) act during what
President Bush termed in 1991 “that difficult
period”.
-
The agreement between the USA and Macedonia
lends credit to Henry Kissinger, who at the
annual meeting of Management Centre Europe
in 1992 stated: ‘Greece is right [about the
name]… I know history, which is not the case
with … most of
the government and administration in
Washington. The strength of the Greek case
is that of history, which I must say that
Athens has not used so far with success’
(Doc. 2).
-
The agreement goes against the clear
statement made by Bill Clinton a month
before he was elected President of the
United States that he would not accept the
name ‘Macedonia’.
-
The agreement is an insult to the American
people, who, as a democratic and liberal
people, respect the truth, which is an
indispensable condition of democracy.
Two recent examples reveal that, just as
American governments and US Presidents have
condemned and exposed this political and
historical deception, informed Americans
reject the fraudulent construct that the
communist parties have built up over decades.
The legislative bodies of, to
date, eleven US states have unanimously
resolved that ‘the ancient and the modern
Macedonians were and are Greeks, and only
Greeks’.
The second example is the decision
by the SOUTHERN BELL telephone company, which
I shall discuss later.
Mr. President,
Those who proposed the signing of the
agreement between the United States and
‘Macedonia’, as also those who refer to FYROM
as ‘Macedonia’, are going to find themselves
in a difficult position over what they are
going to call the people of FYROM.
They cannot call them
‘Macedonians’, because only the Greeks are,
and ever have been, Macedonians.
The Greek identity of the Macedonians is
confirmed by:
I.
The Old and New Testaments (pp. 63
- 64 of my book);
II.
The works of ancient Greek, Jewish,
and Roman writers (pp. 66 - 72 of my book);
III.
More recent events: treaties wars,
censuses (pp. 74– 85 of my book);
IV.
Skopje’s
false assertions (pp. 86 - 93 of my book).
They could not be called ‘Macedonians’ even if
the Greeks were not Macedonians.
Historically, the Macedonians existed a
thousand years before the Slavs arrived in the
Balkans in the sixth century AD.
It is therefore absurd for them to assert that
as communists they discovered fourteen
centuries later that they had united with the
Greek Macedonians and became Macedonians
themselves.
The absurdity is also self-evidently
laughable. There is no such precedent in
history for the metamorphosis of one person
into another.
It is also absurd for Skopje to refer to
itself as the capital of Macedonia. In the
ancient and the Roman period, Skopje was the
capital of Dardania.
In the Ottoman period it was the capital of
Kosovo; and from 1912 to 1944 it was the
capital of Vardaska
(Doc. 14).
Ever since 319 BC, the capital of Macedonia
(the metropolis of Macedonia, according to
Strabo,
Geography VII 21) has been one of the
oldest and most historic cities in Europe:
Thessaloniki.
After 2,300 years, Skopje has renamed it ‘Solun’
and deleted it from the roster of Greek
cities, because even in its modern school
textbooks FYROM shows Greece’s northern border
limited to Mount Olympus.
Skopje has been taught a lesson for its absurd
and improper actions by the Southern Bell
American telephone company. The story is as
follows.
During the Olympic Games in Atlanta,
Melas
Yanniotis,
Managing Director of
Intersalonika S.A., consulted the
Southern Bell telephone directory in order to
make a telephone call to
Thessaloniki. To his surprise, he found
that Thessaloniki
was not included among the cities of Greece;
and he found a map showing Greece’s northern
border limited to Mount Olympus and
Thessaloniki
marked as ‘Solun’.
On returning to
Thessaloniki, he sent a letter citing
chapters 16 and 17 of the Acts of the
Apostles, in which it is written that St. Paul
was summoned in a vision by ‘a man of
Macedonia’ and came to Macedonia, where he
baptized the first Christian in Europe at
Philippi, and that Greek men and women in
Thessaloniki and
Berea believed
The biblical text confirms:
I.
The Greek identity of the
Macedonians, for the cities which St. Paul
visited had the same Greek names then as they
still have today;
II.
That there were Greeks and Jews in
Macedonia, giving the lie to those in FYROM
who dare even today to teach in schools (Doc.
11) that there were no Greeks in Macedonia;
III.
That the language of the
Macedonians was then, and has been ever since,
the Greek language, for St. Paul spoke in
Greek and wrote his epistles to the
Thessalonians and the Philippians in Greek.
On the strength of what is written in the Acts
of the Apostles, Southern Bell changed its
directory, now including
Thessaloniki as a major Greek city and
listing the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia as FYROM, not as Macedonia (Doc.
21).
These two
cases also confirm that a political mistake
was made when the US-Macedonia agreement was
signed.
Those who
proposed the signing of the agreement between
the United States and ‘Macedonia’ have also
insulted:
-
Pope John Paul, who has stated that
Macedonia is the land of Philip, Alexander,
and Cyril and Methodius
and that Macedonia is Greek (Doc. 4).
-
The United Nations, which (Doc. 3) set up a
special committee at the suggestion of the
United States, and concluded that the
communists had aggressive intentions towards
Greece and described as an act of genocide
the forcible abduction from Macedonia and
Thrace of 28,296 children, who were taken to
communist countries, where they were
brainwashed on the subject of Macedonia, and
a number of them now spearhead
Skopje’s
campaigns.
-
Stalin’s admission has been ignored (Doc.
5): ‘They have no Macedonian consciousness,
but they will acquire
it, …. just
as communism created the Byelorussian nation
and now no-one questions it’.
-
The US-‘Macedonia’ agreement goes against
the political heritage of the late, great
founders of Greece’s two major parties,
Constantine Karamanlis and Andreas
Papandreou.
In a letter to the heads of the European Union
nations (Doc. 9), Constantine Karamanlis, as
President of the Hellenic Republic, stated:
‘The so-called “Republic of Macedonia” has
absolutely no right, either historical or
ethnological, to use the name of Macedonia’’;
and he concluded: ‘It is inconceivable today,
after the end of the Cold War, to grant a
historical legitimation
to Stalin’s and Tito’s aspiration to gain
access to the Aegean by wresting Macedonia
away from Greece.’
The
most competent Greek, in this case as Mr.
Karamanlis a native of Macedonia, presented
the Macedonian problem to his opposite numbers
as a fact and a circumstance of the Cold War
between East and West. He was particularly
preoccupied by the subject of the Cold War on
his official visit to the White House as a
guest of President Kennedy in 1961. A
Greek-American who met me in Athens some years
ago told me that, at an official dinner given
by Greek-Americans for President Nixon, the
guest of honor revealed that President Kennedy
had told him that Mr. Karamanlis’s presence at
the White House during the Cold War had been a
‘ray of light’.
In a letter
of Iakovos,
Archbiscop of
North and South America, Andreas Papandreou,
then Prime Minister of Greece, assured him
(Doc. ….) that ‘there is no question of my
consenting to the recognition (de
jure or de
facto) of the name “Macedonia” used,
whether qualified or not, in the name of
Skopje’s
statelet’.
The same
stance was adopted by the council of all the
political leaders, under President Karamanlis.
The recent agreement
between the United States and Macedonia may
also be criticized as a political mistake with
reference to the German assault on the
fortified positions of Macedonia and Thrace in
April 1941
The failure of the Germans
to overcome the English resistance during the
Battle of Britain in 1940, ii) Greece’s
victorious confrontation with fascist Italy in
October 1940, and iii) the German invasion of
Greece in April 1941 starting at the fortified
positions of Macedonia and Thrace, which
delayed the German attack on the Soviet Union
and ultimately led to the defeat of the
Germans on the Russian front (pp. 75-81 of my
book), were the three events of which
separately thwarted the victorious Axis
advance during the Second World War.
America’s
entry into the War in December 1941 heralded,
as in the First World War, the victory of the
democratic people.
The battle
for the fortified positions of Macedonia and
Thrace has one distinctive feature, however.
The heroism and
self-sacrifice of the Greek defenders of the
fortified positions, as also the public
recognition awarded them, and the respect and
treatment of the surrendering fighters by the
German units, constitute acts of military
virtue that were perhaps unparalleled in the
Second World War.
Addressing
the Reichstag on May 4, 1941, Hitler declared
that historical justice compelled him to state
that of all the armies, which Germany had
confronted, the Greek soldiers had fought with
most exceptional heroism and self-sacrifice,
and had surrendered only when further
resistance was futile. On Hitler’s orders, the
Greek Army was not taken captive and the
officers retained their personal arms. On 11
June, Hitler’s general headquarters reported
that select Greek troops had defended the
fortified positions of Macedonia and Thrace
with exceptional heroism.
Profoundly impressed by the heroism of those
who had defended the fortified positions, the
German commanders ordered their troops to
present arms to the surrendering fighters. The
German flag was not raised until the last
soldier had disappeared from view.
One German officer wrote in a book that the
positions changed hands four times.
Your correspondent, as a reserve officer,
served along the fortified positions of
Macedonia and Thrace in April 1941 and
experienced the frightful assault of the
German Stukas and
also the heroism of the men who defended the
fortified positions.
On April 6, 1941, simultaneously with the
assault along the fortified positions of
Macedonia and Thrace, German troops coming
from Bulgaria also marched into Skopje, the
capital of Vardaska.
In the fortified positions of Macedonia and
Thrace, the Greeks defended themselves
heroically.
In Skopje, by contrast, the Germans were
hailed as liberators by thousands of Bulgarian
flags, and then entered Greece and flanked the
Greek forces.
Consequently, the battle for the fortified
positions of Macedonia and Thrace, the
military archives, and other documents, such
as the New Cambridge Modern History (Doc. 13),
all reveal that in 1941 Macedonia existed only
in Greece.
Skopje, however, as we can see from a postage
stamp (Doc. 14) and a map (Doc. 15) was the
capital of Vardaska
in 1941 also.
It was only on August 2, 1944 that Tito
renamed Vardaska
and fraudulently created the Socialist
Republic of Macedonia.
This, together with the fact that the
Macedonians as Greeks have historically
existed since the sixth century BC and that
Macedonians with their achievements as the
Hellenistic period influenced cultures and the
history of humankind generally, to call FYROM
‘Macedonia’ and its inhabitants ‘Macedonians’
shows a serious lack of gravity.
The following point, together with the battle
for the fortified positions, is a telling one.
For five centuries, during the period of
Ottoman rule in the Balkans, Macedonia as an
administrative area did not exist.
With the First Balkan War of the Balkan states
against the Turks in 1912, when the Greek army
liberated Thessaloniki,
the Governorate General of Macedonia was
established immediately, with its headquarters
in Thessaloniki.
It was universally accepted that Greece had
the right to do this and no one objected.
Until 1944, no one ever conceived of the
existence of any other Macedonia.
The Treaty of Bucharest fixed the border
between Greece and Bulgaria in 1913, with no
mention anywhere of the word ‘Macedonia (Doc.
37).
With regard to the border between Greece and
Serbia, in accordance with the Treaty of May
19, 1913 (Doc. 38) it was agreed (Art. 3) that
the demarcation line should constitute the
start of actual occupancy, which is also the
present border with FYROM.
In this Treaty too there is no mention of the
word ‘Macedonia’.
After 1921, when the
Comintern and the communist parties
decided to wrest Macedonia away from Greece,
the map of the Roman administrative division
of Macedonia was found and it was alleged that
Macedonia had been divided up in 1913, which
is utterly false. That is why all maps, such
as the Cambridge map (Doc. 13), show Macedonia
only in Greece, but a Yugoslav map of 1937
(Doc. 14) also does not have Macedonia.
Consequently, if the Germans had not invaded
the Balkans in 1941, before the invasion of
the Soviet Union, the Kingdom of the Serbs,
Croats, and Slovenes, which had been founded
in 1919 and had never disputed that Macedonia
was Greek, would not have been overthrown, nor
would the communist Tito have prevailed, who,
as I have said, undertook to fulfill the
aspirations of the
Comintern and the Balkan communist
parties to wrest Macedonia away from Greece.
The recent agreement
between the United States and ‘Macedonia’ is
not only a political, but also a moral
mistake.
Greece, which is the
country most insulted by this agreement,
fought alongside the democratic people during
the First and Second World War.
On October
28, 1940, when the Soviet Union was allied
with Hitler and almost all of Europe had been
subjugated by the Axis, when the Greek Prime
Minister received an ultimatum from the
Italian ambassador at three o’ clock in the
morning for Greece to surrender, he said “NO”.
The Greek people fought heroically and
trounced the Italians in the mountains of
Northern Epirus. English ministers and
officials stated that if Greece had been
defeated or had surrendered, the Axis would
have won the War.
In February 1941, Athony
Eden, England’s Foreign Minister told Greek
Prime Minister that Turkey and the Kingdom of
the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes had refused to
fight Germany. Although Churchill had stated
that Greece should not be pressured into a
hopeless struggle,
Koryzis declared that Greece would
fight alone against Germany.
This statement resulted in the German invasion
of Greece in 1941.
The Greek Prime Minister and the Greek people
asked for nothing in return.
As a consequence of its struggles, Greece:
I.
Suffered occupation by three
hostile nations (Germany, Italy and Bulgaria);
II.
Terrible devastation (Truman’s
speech before Congress);
III.
620,000 dead (including those who
died of hunger in 1941: Doc. 32), as against
400,000 American dead and a similar number of
English losses;
IV.
during
the Second World War, Greece lost 434 of the
533 ships in its mercantile fleet and 472 of
its 717 motorized sailing vessels; and
suffered additional misery at the hands of the
communists in 1946-9.
But for the full magnitude of Greece’s
contribution to be appreciated, it is
important to know how its neighbors conducted
themselves.
Turkey.
In the First World War, the Turks were allied
with the Germans. In the Second World War,
they were described as ‘shrewdly neutral’, yet
they helped Hitler three times:
i) in March 1941,
when they signed a non-aggression pact with
Bulgaria in anticipation of the German
invasion of Greece from Bulgarian territory,
ii) three days before Germany invaded the
Soviet Union they signed a pact with Hitler;
and iii) when a pro-German rebellion broke out
in Iraq, they allowed the German airplanes to
use their airports.
Bulgarians.
During the First and Second World War, they
were allies of the Germans and invaded the
territory of Macedonia and Thrace, where the
Greeks suffered nightmarish experiences, to
the extent that flight into German-held
territory was regarded as a flight to freedom.
When the Red Army reached the Bulgarian
border, the Bulgarians turned communist from
one day to the next.
Serbs.
During the First World War they fought
alongside the democratic people. In the Second
World War, on March 25, 1941, the Kingdom of
the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes signed a
friendship pact with Hitler, which led to the
overthrow of the government by the army. The
Germans launched a harsh assault on Belgrade.
At the end of the War, the communist Tito
prevailed and proceeded to take actions
against Greece.
Mr. President,
I enclose personally dedicated copies of:
1)
My book The Falsification of
Macedonian History, which received an
award from the Athens Academy and has been
translated into seven languages;
2)
The recently published FYROM:
The Antidemocratic Residuum in Europe and the
Problematic Stabilization and Association
Agreement with the EU;
3)
Photocopy of my letter to your
predecessor: President George H. W. Bush.
4)
A DVD about the new Alexandrian
Library in 10 languages;
5)
Photocopies of replies:
I.
From the White House, dated August
28, 1991, including the assurance: “You may be
sure that your views and suggestions have been
fully noted by the President’s foreign policy
advisers” and
II.
From Mr. Johnson, the Director of
European Affairs in the US National Defense
Department, dated March 5, 1992, including the
observation: “I always find it extremely
beneficial to obtain first hand documentation
on matters of great importance”.
Mr. President,
The fabrication of FYROM, which was also an
act against the United States, which was
fighting for democracy and the freedom of the
people, is also the greatest political and
historical hoax, which only a harsh one-party
regime would have the effrontery to devise and
impose upon its people and with its machinery
of propaganda to deceive naïve people with no
knowledge of history all over the world.
POSTSCRIPT
Mr. President,
I was very gratified to read, in the context
of your appeal of November 7, 2003 for
democratic reforms in the Middle East, your
reference to the fact that the United States
defended Greece in 1947 (and later Berlin
also) to safeguard the free peoples democratic
way of life from Soviet expansionism. As you
stated, in order to safeguard the democratic
way of life in Iraq, you are now working with
the citizens of Iraq, who are themselves
preparing the ground for this.
However, in
1947 the immediate aim of the Soviet policy
against Greece was to wrest Macedonia away
from Greece and create the Socialist Republic
of Macedonia with Skopje as its center.
In your
recent statement, you too, like your
predecessors in office (Roosevelt, Truman and
Bush), say that the United States defended
Greece, as it struggled to hold on to
Macedonia and to prevent its being
incorporated into the Republic of ‘Macedonia’,
which was fraudulently created by Stalin and
Tito in 1944 to serve their expansionist arms.
Consequently, those who recommended the recent
signing of the agreement between the United
States and ‘Macedonia’ erroneously out of
ignorance or deceived or coerced by Skopje
have made it seem that the United States is
abandoning its consistent policy (ever since
1944) of assertion that FYROM will fall apart
is untrue.
With a new
name, the existing links between the
neighboring people and their ethnic kinsfolk
in FYROM (links which threaten peaceful
co-existence) will be severed, and with the
support of the United Nations, the USA, the
European Union, and above all Greece, the
people of FYROM will prosper.
With the usurped name of ‘Macedonia’, not only
is this republic a provocation, not only does
it vindicate Stalin and Tito, but it has no
hope of accession to the European Union.
Nicholaos K.
Martis
Former Gov. Minister