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John Granville

Editorial of The New York Sun | January 2, 2008

The murder of an American diplomat in Khartoum, Sudan, John Granville, with roots in New York state, and of a Sudanese embassy employee who was his driver is both a tragedy for the families of the victims and a test for American foreign policy. For if it was not a random attack but a premeditated effort to kill an American diplomat, it falls into a disturbing pattern.

The American ambassador to Sudan, Cleo Noel, and another American embassy official, George Curtis Moore, were killed in Khartoum in 1973. The State Department, years later, after being pressed by Scott Johnson of Powerlineblog.com, acknowledged, "The Khartoum operation was planned and carried out with the full knowledge and personal approval of Yasir Arafat, Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and the head of Fatah." Arafat was never held to account for the attack — instead he was received at the White House and Camp David and honored with the Nobel Peace Prize.

In August of 1998, 224 people, including a dozen Americans, were killed in bombing attacks on the American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. A few terrorists were convicted of the attacks, but the head of the terrorist organization, Al Qaeda, that carried them out, Osama bin Laden, was left unpunished and went on to attack America on September 11, 2001.

In October 2003, three American security contractors, John Branchizio, Mark Parson, and John Martin Linde Jr., were killed in a bomb attack on an armored convoy of American diplomats in the Gaza Strip. They were there to interview Palestinian Arabs who had applied for Fulbright scholarships to study in America. A bill introduced by Rep. Gary Ackerman of Queens requiring the Secretary of State merely to report to Congress on the status of efforts to bring the killers of Branchizio, Parson, and Linde to justice passed the House last year but is now languishing in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where three Democrats on the panel, Joseph Biden, Christopher Dodd, and Barack Obama, were too busy running for president to forward the bill to the full Senate.

The bill expresses the sense of Congress that "it is in the vital national security interest of the United States to safeguard, to the greatest extent possible consistent with their mission, United States diplomats and all embassy and consulate personnel, and to use the full power of the United States to bring to justice any individual or entity that threatens, jeopardizes, or harms them." That would seem like common sense, and it won the joint backing of influential Congressional Democrats such as Rep. Thomas Lantos and Rep. Brad Sherman and Republicans such as Rep. Michael Pence and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. Here's hoping President Bush, who as of early yesterday evening had issued no statement on Granville's killing, takes the message to heart, and does his utmost to make sure that this case breaks the pattern.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

The death of John Granville is a tragedy not only his family, but the entire population of southern Sudanese people,... [MORE]

Daniel,Daniel 

Jan 2, 2008 06:57

If anyone needed more proof that the entire world is under attack by radical Muslims, this should provide more than... [MORE]

John Spencer Yantiss 

Jan 2, 2008 14:46

Uncle John was my uncle. He is very missed, and we are getting his dog. We were close, and I... [MORE]

Julia 

Jan 3, 2008 20:50

Dear Julia, Your Uncle John was an amazing man as you know. He was a hero to the people in Africa... [MORE]

Debbie 

Jan 4, 2008 23:26

To the mother and family of John Granville, Please know that there are average Americans like me who read about your... [MORE]

Becky 

Jan 5, 2008 10:31

I encountered John on a number of occasions whilst I was working for the aid agency GOAL in Kurmuk, Southern... [MORE]

Jim Clarken 

Jan 4, 2008 08:34

I met John at Clark University in Worcester, MA and reconnected with him in Nairobi in 2005. At that time,... [MORE]

Darren 

Jan 5, 2008 00:42

I started my American journey with John Granville in 1997 when he was a Peace Corps Volunteer in my village,... [MORE]

Andre Guy Soh 

Jan 5, 2008 18:48

Dear sir; Can you please explain to those of us who are unfamiliar with your ways what a traditional funeral in... [MORE]

Debbie 

Jan 6, 2008 00:07

Your words were very touching. It was so nice to hear of the wonderful bond you had with John and... [MORE]

Ann 

Jan 20, 2008 20:24

The significance of supplying radios to a rural population does not impact most people. On my last trip to Sudan,... [MORE]

Cindy Castano 

Jan 6, 2008 16:36

To Julia, the mother and family of John Granville, I met your uncle in Nairobi at the East Africa Kennel Club,... [MORE]

Ana Maria Ferraz de Campos 

Jan 10, 2008 02:13

John and I both started off as Fellows with USAID/Sudan, in Nairobi back in 2005. John was known by everyone... [MORE]

Mike 

Jan 10, 2008 08:12

It is sad for his family and friends to have this news. We were together in the Nuba Mountains Southern... [MORE]

Worku Tegegne 

Jan 11, 2008 01:35

Yesterday I had the honor of attending John Granville's funeral. Never have I felt such pain for a family, pride... [MORE]

Sue 

Jan 10, 2008 10:19

I have finally gathered enough courage to read the articles on the web with regards to John's sudden passing. I... [MORE]

Anne Sumbeiywo 

Feb 19, 2008 05:18

First, to all involved, my most heartfelt condolences on the tragic events regarding John Granville. Every couple of years, I do... [MORE]

Rob Goldsmith 

Mar 17, 2008 21:42

May he rest in peace. My heart still aches when i see his pictures. My sincere condolences to his family... [MORE]

May Osama 

May 14, 2008 11:23