• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Special Report

Phillip Smith of Bedford County, Tennessee, takes part in a rally at the Tennessee State Capitol at the Tax Day Tea Party in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, in this April 15, 2009 file photo. Credit: REUTERS/Harrison McClary/Files

Brewing tensions between the Tea Party and GOP

Tea Partiers want it known that they are not Republican Party lapdogs, but are they a fringe movement or a sleeping giant, awakened?  Full Article 

    Macedonia deal before NATO summit unlikely: Greece

    ATHENS
    Tue Apr 1, 2008 1:13pm EDT

    ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece said on Tuesday it was unlikely to resolve a dispute with NATO aspirant Macedonia over its name before an alliance summit this week.

    World  |  Barack Obama

    Pressure to resolve the dispute has intensified ahead of the April 2-4 NATO meeting in Romania, where Croatia, Albania and Macedonia will be considered for membership.

    NATO member Greece has threatened to veto Macedonia's invitation to join NATO if the former Yugoslav republic does not change its constitutional name, which is the same as Greece's northernmost province, birthplace of Alexander the Great.

    "There is no or very little time left," Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman George Koumoutsakos told reporters. "The time left until then (NATO Summit) is dramatically limited or even non-existent."

    NATO and the European Union want a solution to the dispute for the sake of stability in the Balkans. Macedonia came to the brink of ethnic war in 2001 after an Albanian insurgency.

    In a commentary in the International Herald Tribune on Tuesday, Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyanni said her country had done more than its share to resolve the dispute but was up against Macedonian "intransigence".

    "As long as this problem persists we cannot and will not endorse FYROM joining NATO or the European Union," Bakoyanni wrote. "No Greek government will ever agree to it. No Greek parliament will ever approve it."

    Macedonia uses its name in bilateral ties with many states, but is called "The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" at the United Nations, and by NATO and the European Union. It split from Yugoslavia in 1991.

    U.N. negotiators suggested a compromise, Republic of Macedonia (Skopje), but it was not accepted by Greece, which would accept a name such as Republic of New Macedonia or one with a geographical distinction.

    Koumoutsakos denied suggestions Greece was under pressure from Washington to allow Macedonia to join under the temporary name it uses at the United Nations.

    (Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, Editing by Giles Elgood)



    More from Reuters

    Photo editor May Naji during an embed with U.S. troops in Iraq.  REUTERS/File

    Witness from the hurt locker

    For Reuters journalist May Naji, a Iraqi native, some things are impossible to forget even after she left home to work abroad.  Full Article 

    A general view of the northern Italian coastal town of Portofino, June 15, 2007. Credit: Reuters/Dario Pignatelli

    Top playgrounds of the rich

    Want to vacation like CEOs and celebrities? A men's website has listed its top towns that border the magical Mediterranean.  Full Article