Greek-Turkish Panel Examines Regional Problems, Potential Solutions
By John Sitilides <sitilides@westernpolicy.org>,
Executive Director, The Western Policy Center1
Contact: Spiros Rizopoulos (202) 530-1425
Washington, D.C.
Friday, February 19, 1999
Senior U.S. Government officials from the
Departments of State and Defense, and the Intelligence Community,
gathered at the Western Policy Center today to discuss Greek-Turkish
relations at a "Perspectives Roundtable" featuring Professor Theodore
Couloumbis from the University of Athens and Colonel Haldun Solmazturk
from the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Prof. Couloumbis and Col. Solmazturk addressed current problems and
security perceptions between Greece and Turkey, as well as prospects for
creative and workable solutions. Their professional backgrounds and
extensive experience in Greek-Turkish affairs helped provide the
executive branch officials with new insights into the nuances of
building a more secure, stable, and prosperous eastern Mediterranean
region.
Prof. Couloumbis has been appointed by the Greek Foreign Ministry as one
of two Greek experts that are to meet with their Turkish counterparts to
examine strategies leading to conflict resolution and reconciliation
between the two countries. He holds a Ph.D. in international relations
from The American University. He currently serves as Chairman of
Political Science and Public Administration at the University of Athens,
and as Director General of the Hellenic Foundation for European and
Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP).
Col. Solmazturk is a career infantry officer and a specialist on
military strategic planning who served on the Turkish General Staff
before his fellowship at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
He holds an M.A. degree in international relations from Boston
University and has served in key command and staff positions in Somalia,
Cyprus, and the Balkans. Col. Solmazturk also served at the Supreme
Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in Mons, Belgium.
Today's event was the third "Perspectives Roundtable," part of a series
at the Western Policy Center, which convenes government officials,
foreign policy analysts, and diplomats to exchange ideas and promote
solutions to problems among Greece, Turkey, and Cyprus. The Center's
next "Perspectives Roundtable," on March 3, will feature U.S. Ambassador
to Greece Nicholas Burns before an audience of foreign policy
specialists focusing on developments in U.S.-Greek relations, the
eastern Mediterranean, and the Balkans.
The series of high quality discussions on the serious issues in the
Aegean, Cyprus, and the Balkans began with the Center's first roundtable
in November 1998 with Prof. Speros Vryonis, Jr., and Prof. Christos
Ioannides of the S.B. Vryonis Center for the Study of Hellenism
addressing State Department, Defense Department, and Intelligence
Community officials. In January 1999, the Center hosted Greece's
Minister of Development, Vasso Papandreou, who discussed "Greece's
Economic Leadership Role in the Balkans" before an audience of State
Department officials, think-tank analysts, and financial journalists.
1[The Western Policy Center is a public policy corporation promoting
U.S. geostrategic interests and Western institutions in southeastern
Europe by strengthening the debate on American foreign policy toward
NATO allies Greece and Turkey, and toward Cyprus. Based in California
since 1994, the Center opened new offices in Washington, D.C. in
February 1998.]