[Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald]

Second US diplomat quits over war

March 11 2003

A veteran US diplomat resigned today in protest over US policy toward
Iraq, becoming the second career foreign service officer to do so in
the past month.

John Brown, who joined the State Department in 1981, said he resigned
because he could not support Washington's Iraq policy, which he said
was fomenting a massive rise in anti-US sentiment around the world.

In a resignation letter to Secretary of State Colin Powell, Brown said
he agreed with J Brady Kiesling, a diplomat at the US embassy in
Athens who quit in February over President George W Bush's apparent
intent on fighting Iraq.

"I am joining my colleague John Brady Kiesling in submitting my
resignation from the Foreign Service - effective immediately - because
I cannot in good conscience support President Bush's war plans against
Iraq," he said.

"Throughout the globe the United States is becoming associated with
the unjustified use of force," Brown said in the letter, a copy of
which he sent to AFP [Agence France Presse].

"The president's disregard for views in other nations, borne out by
his neglect of public diplomacy, is giving birth to an anti-American
century," he said.

"I joined the Foreign Service because I love our country," Brown said.
"Respectfully, Mr Secretary, I am now bringing this calling to a
close, with a heavy heart but for the same reason that I embraced it."

Two senior State Department officials confirmed that Powell had
received the letter from Brown, who had served at the US embassies in
London, Prague, Krakow, Kiev, Belgrade and Moscow before being
assigned to be a diplomat-in-residence at Georgetown University in
Washington.

Brown and Kiesling are believed to be the only US diplomats to have
resigned from the foreign service over Iraq to date.

Reply via email to