First, the Greek City Times has reported that the State Department has repatriated coins and other artifacts to the Greek Ambassador as part of discussions related to a renewal of the current Cultural Property Agreement with the Country. Once again, though the narrative is that these items were “stolen,” they instead appear to have been seized from American collectors solely due to “missing legal documentation,” i.e., the lack of proof that they were out of Greece for at least ten years. Even worse, once again it appears that at least one of the coins— a gold stater from Lampsacus in present day Turkey- isn’t even on the “designated list” for Greece, a mere detail for the State Department and the archaeological advocacy groups celebrating yet another round of repatriations.
Second, today’s Federal Register announced an extension of highly controversial “emergency import restrictions” on behalf of Taliban Afghanistan. Presumably, the extension will be again be billed as necessary to help “save” Afghan cultural heritage from “terrorists” even though the governing statute mandates repatriation back to the same Taliban warlords responsible for blowing up the Bamiyan Buddhas and allowing Chinese mining interests to bulldoze the important Buddhist site of Mes Aynak in search of copper ore.
How is this possible? Blame the State Department’s addiction to using cultural property agreements as “soft power” measures in the hopes that even “failed states” “will like us more” as well as the continued influence of politically connected archaeological advocacy groups that also receive significant State Department funding.
So, what’s the solution? At this point, sanity can only be restored with reform legislation to place guard rails on the system to ensure that the private property and due process rights of collectors and the trade are considered too.
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