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Dear Secretary of State Clinton,
I am a retired US Army Reserve Colonel with 29 years in the US Army
and Army Reserves and a former US diplomat who resigned after 16 years
in the US State Department in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of fourteen American citizens on the Gaza flotilla.
Dear Secretary of State Clinton,
I am a retired US Army Reserve Colonel with 29 years in the US Army
and Army Reserves and a former US diplomat who resigned after 16 years
in the US State Department in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of fourteen American citizens on the Gaza flotilla.
On June 14, 2010 I delivered to the Bureau of Consular Affairs,
Office of American Citizen Services a letter to you requesting
investigation of the Israeli attack on the Gaza flotilla in which one
unarmed American citizen was killed by Israeli commandos and fourteen
other American citizens were kidnapped from international waters and
taken to Israel against their will, imprisoned and their personal
possessions stolen by Israeli commandos.
Despite numerous inquiries to the State Department about the status
of the response to my letter, after seven weeks I have not received a
response to the letter nor to the 80 questions that I requested that the
United States government pose to the Israeli government concerning
their attack on the Gaza flotilla.
As an American citizen, I am distressed that no one in the State
Department government will not respond to this request for assistance.
As a former US diplomat who worked for 16 years in the State
Department and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan (I helped reopen the
US Embassy in December, 2001) and Mongolia, and who received an award
for heroism from the State Department for actions during the evacuation
of the US Embassy and the international community during the Sierra
Leone civil war, I am deeply saddened by the lack of professionalism in
my former organization in responding to such a request.
Now that your daughter Chelsea's wedding is over, could you please
ask the State Department's Inspector General to determine why after
seven weeks there has been no response to my June 14, 2010 letter?
Could you also determine if the State Department has made a
demarche to the Israeli government concerning the circumstances
surrounding the commandos deadly shooting of unarmed 19 year old
American citizen Furkan Dogan, who was shot 5 times, several times to
the head?
Of much less importance, but still of concern because of evidence
contained, I want to know if a demarch was made for the return of our
personal possession including cameras, cellphones and computers taken
when the Israeli commandos forcefully boarded all six of the ships in
the flotilla.
We returned to the United States with the clothes on our backs and
our passports. Despite lists of our possessions being given to US
consular officers during a June 2 visit to us while we were in prison in
Israel, and to US consular officers in Istanbul, Turkey during our
brief stay after being deported from Israel and to American Citizen
Services officials at the State Department in Washington, DC, virtually
nothing has been returned to us (I did receive a diary sent from the US
Consulate in Istanbul, but nothing else -- no computer, camera, cellphone,
clothing, handbag, address book, $800 in cash, backpack, suitcase,
etc.). Phone calls in Israel have been made on cellphones in the
possession of the Israeli government
In case the State Department bureaucracy did not make you aware of my June 14, 2010 letter to you, I am copying it for you here.
Signed,
Ann Wright, former US diplomat and retired US Army Reserve Colonel
ORIGINAL LETTER
June 14, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Department of State
Washington, DC 20001
Dear Secretary Clinton,
I am a retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel and a former U.S. diplomat (Deputy Chief of Mission at U.S. Embassies in Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia) who resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of twelve U.S. citizens that was on the Gaza Flotilla. I have just returned to the United States from having been kidnapped and imprisoned by the Israeli government.
I appeal to you to institute a U.S. investigation into the murder by Israeli military forces of American citizen Furkan Dogan, a 19 year old high school student on the Mavi Marmara ship.
I also ask that the United States demand the return of one U.S. flagged vessels that were seized in international waters in an act of international piracy by the Israeli military.
I
ask that the State Department assist in the location of the personal
possessions that were stolen from American citizens in international
waters by the Israeli military including computers, cameras, cell
phones, identification, credit cards (one credit card has been used in Israel for over $20,000 in purchases), clothing, miscellaneous items such as notebooks, diaries and other personal papers.
I also ask that the United States demand that the Israeli government cooperate with the offer of the European Union to inspect ships and cargo destined for Gaza which would allow the siege to end and commerce to begin.
I
ask that an investigation into whether U.S. made military equipment or
equipment purchased with/through U.S. funding was used in the attacks on
the six civilian, unarmed vessels, and if so, that sanctions against Israel available through the U.S. Arms and Export Control Act be implemented.
I am attaching a list of 80 questions that an inquiry should answer. The list of questions comes from Uri Averny who head the Israeli human rights organization Gush Shalom.
I also ask that U.S. funding for the reconstruction of Gaza be disbursed immediately. There are many non-governmental organizations in Gaza that can assist in the reconstruction activities if they have funding.
Sincerely,
Honolulu, HI 96826
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Dear Secretary of State Clinton,
I am a retired US Army Reserve Colonel with 29 years in the US Army
and Army Reserves and a former US diplomat who resigned after 16 years
in the US State Department in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of fourteen American citizens on the Gaza flotilla.
On June 14, 2010 I delivered to the Bureau of Consular Affairs,
Office of American Citizen Services a letter to you requesting
investigation of the Israeli attack on the Gaza flotilla in which one
unarmed American citizen was killed by Israeli commandos and fourteen
other American citizens were kidnapped from international waters and
taken to Israel against their will, imprisoned and their personal
possessions stolen by Israeli commandos.
Despite numerous inquiries to the State Department about the status
of the response to my letter, after seven weeks I have not received a
response to the letter nor to the 80 questions that I requested that the
United States government pose to the Israeli government concerning
their attack on the Gaza flotilla.
As an American citizen, I am distressed that no one in the State
Department government will not respond to this request for assistance.
As a former US diplomat who worked for 16 years in the State
Department and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan (I helped reopen the
US Embassy in December, 2001) and Mongolia, and who received an award
for heroism from the State Department for actions during the evacuation
of the US Embassy and the international community during the Sierra
Leone civil war, I am deeply saddened by the lack of professionalism in
my former organization in responding to such a request.
Now that your daughter Chelsea's wedding is over, could you please
ask the State Department's Inspector General to determine why after
seven weeks there has been no response to my June 14, 2010 letter?
Could you also determine if the State Department has made a
demarche to the Israeli government concerning the circumstances
surrounding the commandos deadly shooting of unarmed 19 year old
American citizen Furkan Dogan, who was shot 5 times, several times to
the head?
Of much less importance, but still of concern because of evidence
contained, I want to know if a demarch was made for the return of our
personal possession including cameras, cellphones and computers taken
when the Israeli commandos forcefully boarded all six of the ships in
the flotilla.
We returned to the United States with the clothes on our backs and
our passports. Despite lists of our possessions being given to US
consular officers during a June 2 visit to us while we were in prison in
Israel, and to US consular officers in Istanbul, Turkey during our
brief stay after being deported from Israel and to American Citizen
Services officials at the State Department in Washington, DC, virtually
nothing has been returned to us (I did receive a diary sent from the US
Consulate in Istanbul, but nothing else -- no computer, camera, cellphone,
clothing, handbag, address book, $800 in cash, backpack, suitcase,
etc.). Phone calls in Israel have been made on cellphones in the
possession of the Israeli government
In case the State Department bureaucracy did not make you aware of my June 14, 2010 letter to you, I am copying it for you here.
Signed,
Ann Wright, former US diplomat and retired US Army Reserve Colonel
ORIGINAL LETTER
June 14, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Department of State
Washington, DC 20001
Dear Secretary Clinton,
I am a retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel and a former U.S. diplomat (Deputy Chief of Mission at U.S. Embassies in Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia) who resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of twelve U.S. citizens that was on the Gaza Flotilla. I have just returned to the United States from having been kidnapped and imprisoned by the Israeli government.
I appeal to you to institute a U.S. investigation into the murder by Israeli military forces of American citizen Furkan Dogan, a 19 year old high school student on the Mavi Marmara ship.
I also ask that the United States demand the return of one U.S. flagged vessels that were seized in international waters in an act of international piracy by the Israeli military.
I
ask that the State Department assist in the location of the personal
possessions that were stolen from American citizens in international
waters by the Israeli military including computers, cameras, cell
phones, identification, credit cards (one credit card has been used in Israel for over $20,000 in purchases), clothing, miscellaneous items such as notebooks, diaries and other personal papers.
I also ask that the United States demand that the Israeli government cooperate with the offer of the European Union to inspect ships and cargo destined for Gaza which would allow the siege to end and commerce to begin.
I
ask that an investigation into whether U.S. made military equipment or
equipment purchased with/through U.S. funding was used in the attacks on
the six civilian, unarmed vessels, and if so, that sanctions against Israel available through the U.S. Arms and Export Control Act be implemented.
I am attaching a list of 80 questions that an inquiry should answer. The list of questions comes from Uri Averny who head the Israeli human rights organization Gush Shalom.
I also ask that U.S. funding for the reconstruction of Gaza be disbursed immediately. There are many non-governmental organizations in Gaza that can assist in the reconstruction activities if they have funding.
Sincerely,
Honolulu, HI 96826
Dear Secretary of State Clinton,
I am a retired US Army Reserve Colonel with 29 years in the US Army
and Army Reserves and a former US diplomat who resigned after 16 years
in the US State Department in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of fourteen American citizens on the Gaza flotilla.
On June 14, 2010 I delivered to the Bureau of Consular Affairs,
Office of American Citizen Services a letter to you requesting
investigation of the Israeli attack on the Gaza flotilla in which one
unarmed American citizen was killed by Israeli commandos and fourteen
other American citizens were kidnapped from international waters and
taken to Israel against their will, imprisoned and their personal
possessions stolen by Israeli commandos.
Despite numerous inquiries to the State Department about the status
of the response to my letter, after seven weeks I have not received a
response to the letter nor to the 80 questions that I requested that the
United States government pose to the Israeli government concerning
their attack on the Gaza flotilla.
As an American citizen, I am distressed that no one in the State
Department government will not respond to this request for assistance.
As a former US diplomat who worked for 16 years in the State
Department and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan (I helped reopen the
US Embassy in December, 2001) and Mongolia, and who received an award
for heroism from the State Department for actions during the evacuation
of the US Embassy and the international community during the Sierra
Leone civil war, I am deeply saddened by the lack of professionalism in
my former organization in responding to such a request.
Now that your daughter Chelsea's wedding is over, could you please
ask the State Department's Inspector General to determine why after
seven weeks there has been no response to my June 14, 2010 letter?
Could you also determine if the State Department has made a
demarche to the Israeli government concerning the circumstances
surrounding the commandos deadly shooting of unarmed 19 year old
American citizen Furkan Dogan, who was shot 5 times, several times to
the head?
Of much less importance, but still of concern because of evidence
contained, I want to know if a demarch was made for the return of our
personal possession including cameras, cellphones and computers taken
when the Israeli commandos forcefully boarded all six of the ships in
the flotilla.
We returned to the United States with the clothes on our backs and
our passports. Despite lists of our possessions being given to US
consular officers during a June 2 visit to us while we were in prison in
Israel, and to US consular officers in Istanbul, Turkey during our
brief stay after being deported from Israel and to American Citizen
Services officials at the State Department in Washington, DC, virtually
nothing has been returned to us (I did receive a diary sent from the US
Consulate in Istanbul, but nothing else -- no computer, camera, cellphone,
clothing, handbag, address book, $800 in cash, backpack, suitcase,
etc.). Phone calls in Israel have been made on cellphones in the
possession of the Israeli government
In case the State Department bureaucracy did not make you aware of my June 14, 2010 letter to you, I am copying it for you here.
Signed,
Ann Wright, former US diplomat and retired US Army Reserve Colonel
ORIGINAL LETTER
June 14, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Department of State
Washington, DC 20001
Dear Secretary Clinton,
I am a retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel and a former U.S. diplomat (Deputy Chief of Mission at U.S. Embassies in Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia) who resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq.
I was one of twelve U.S. citizens that was on the Gaza Flotilla. I have just returned to the United States from having been kidnapped and imprisoned by the Israeli government.
I appeal to you to institute a U.S. investigation into the murder by Israeli military forces of American citizen Furkan Dogan, a 19 year old high school student on the Mavi Marmara ship.
I also ask that the United States demand the return of one U.S. flagged vessels that were seized in international waters in an act of international piracy by the Israeli military.
I
ask that the State Department assist in the location of the personal
possessions that were stolen from American citizens in international
waters by the Israeli military including computers, cameras, cell
phones, identification, credit cards (one credit card has been used in Israel for over $20,000 in purchases), clothing, miscellaneous items such as notebooks, diaries and other personal papers.
I also ask that the United States demand that the Israeli government cooperate with the offer of the European Union to inspect ships and cargo destined for Gaza which would allow the siege to end and commerce to begin.
I
ask that an investigation into whether U.S. made military equipment or
equipment purchased with/through U.S. funding was used in the attacks on
the six civilian, unarmed vessels, and if so, that sanctions against Israel available through the U.S. Arms and Export Control Act be implemented.
I am attaching a list of 80 questions that an inquiry should answer. The list of questions comes from Uri Averny who head the Israeli human rights organization Gush Shalom.
I also ask that U.S. funding for the reconstruction of Gaza be disbursed immediately. There are many non-governmental organizations in Gaza that can assist in the reconstruction activities if they have funding.
Sincerely,
Honolulu, HI 96826