Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
1998, Page 83
Diplomatic Doings
KILLGORE SPEAKS AT YOUNGSTOWN U.N. DAY OBSERVANCE
Israel's power and influence in Washington has grown
to the point where, at international conferences, the United States
seems to be pushing the Israeli agenda rather than its own, according
to Ambassador Andrew I. Killgore. Publisher of the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs. Killgore, a career foreign service
officer, was ambassador to the State of Qatar when he retired from
the U.S. foreign service in 1980.
He addressed the Youngstown, Ohio chapter of the United
Nations Association of the United States on Oct. 22. Speaking on
the failure of the United States to push Israel for real progress
in the Middle East peace process, Killgore attributed this to the
power of the Israel Lobby in both the Republican-dominated Congress
and in Democratic President Bill Clinton's White House. Hosts for
his appearance were U.N. Association President Tom Fernea and his
predecessor, Ray Nakley, Jr.
On the following day Ambassador Killgore appeared
on a Youngstown radio show with prominent talk show host Dan Ryan.
The visiting publisher's radio appearance was extended to three
hours to enable him to deal, in depth, with some 30 call-in questions
and comments from the listening public.
—Ruth E. Steele
TUNISIA EXHIBIT COMMEMORATES FRIENDSHIP
Newly-appointed Tunisian Ambassador to the United
States Noureddine Mejdoub arrived in Washington just in time to
open an exhibition as part of a series of observances entitled "Tunisia
and the United States: 200 years of Cooperation and Friendship."
The exhibition of photos of archeological sites and treasures unearthed
in Tunisia was set up in the rotunda of the Senate's Russell Office
Building and was inaugurated with an Oct. 21 reception.
The exhibition also was scheduled for a showing at
the Department of State and in various parts of the United States.
The event is one of a series of activities commemorating the negotiation
in 1797 of a treaty to regulate navigation and commerce in the Mediterranean
between the Bey of Tunis and the newly independent United States.
Written in Turkish with a French translation, the treaty specified
that "There shall be a perpetual and constant peace between
the United States of America and the magnificent Pasha, Bey of Tunis;
and also a permanent friendship which shall more and more increase."
A Tunisian Embassy booklet provided visitors to the
exhibit noted: "While treaties proclaiming 'perpetual and constant
peace' and 'permanent friendship' have rarely withstood the test
of time, Tunisian-American-relations have made good the terms of
the treaty in an exemplary way. Since 1797, peace between the two
nations has been indeed perpetual and constant, and their permanent
friendship did 'more and more increase over the years.'" For
more bicentennial information turn to the World Wide Web at http://www.TunisiaOnline.com/bicentennial.
—Richard H. Curtiss |