Former US Ambassador to Greece during Imia crisis, Thomas Niles, dies at 85

·

Thomas Niles, a career diplomat and US Ambassador to Greece from 1993 to 1997, has died at the age of 85.

His death from cancer was announced Wednesday, April 30, by his brother, John Edward Niles, in a social media post.

Niles served in Athens during a particularly volatile period in the Balkans following the breakup of Yugoslavia and amid escalating tensions between Greece and Turkey.

His tenure included the 1996 Imia crisis, in which both nations deployed special forces to disputed islets in the Aegean Sea.

A Greek Navy helicopter crash during the standoff killed three officers, and a military escalation was narrowly avoided through high-level US diplomatic intervention, including direct talks by President Bill Clinton with Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis and Turkish President Suleyman Demirel.

Reflecting on the crisis a year after leaving Athens, Niles criticised the US decision to remain neutral on the sovereignty dispute.

“We knew by the time we took this position that the Greeks were right on the sovereignty argument,” he said.

“When we refused to take a position it sent a signal back to the Turks that we were prepared to countenance or not do anything about aggressive Turkish behaviour toward the Greeks.”

He also defended then-Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke’s sharp criticism of the European Union’s inaction during the crisis, calling it “unkind, perhaps unnecessary, but true nonetheless.”

The crisis occurred just days after Simitis replaced ailing PASOK founder Andreas Papandreou as prime minister. In a parliamentary debate, Simitis acknowledged US help by stating, “I thank the Americans,” a remark that drew widespread backlash from Greek politicians across the spectrum.

Before his posting in Greece, Niles served as US Ambassador to Canada (1985–89), Ambassador to the European Union (1989–91), and Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs (1991–93). He was succeeded in Athens by R. Nicholas Burns.

Born in Lexington, Kentucky, on September 22, 1939, Niles studied at Harvard and earned a master’s degree from the University of Kentucky.

He served 36 years in the US Foreign Service, with earlier assignments in Belgrade, Moscow, and the US Mission to NATO in Brussels.

Source: Ekathimerini.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Jimmy Galanakis sells Crystal Palace Hotel after 45 years

Veteran publican Jimmy Galanakis and his family have sold Sydney’s Crystal Palace Hotel for around $35 million.

Harry Stamoulis set to acquire $200m Collins Street office tower in Melbourne

Property tycoon Harry Stamoulis is poised to purchase a major Melbourne office building at 357 Collins Street for around $200 million.

Kon Vatskalis slams proposed NT council mayor election changes

LGANT president and Darwin Lord Mayor Kon Vatskalis has criticised a proposed amendment to the Local Government Act.

Paul Nicolaou urges NSW Government to keep Glebe Island port open

Business Sydney Executive Director Paul Nicolaou has warned that closing Glebe Island port would threaten Australia’s national security.

Eurovision 2025 bans LGBTQI+ flags for contestants under new policy

Artists competing in the Eurovision Song Contest 2025 will only be permitted to display their country’s official flag at Eurovision events.

You May Also Like

Language teachers praised by the new NSW Government

Language teachers praised by the new NSW Government at the annual conference of community language teachers on Saturday in Sydney.

Cyprus enhances relations with Australia in meeting between Foreign Affairs Ministers

As part of UN General Assembly in NY, Minister of Foreign Affairs Konstantinos Kombos held a series of bilateral contacts with counterparts.

Sydney Metro’s multibillion-dollar rail line finally opens to commuters

Sydney Metro has opened its first new train line beneath the city centre in over four decades to the public.