(
British Intelligence and Guerrilla Warfare
Operations in the Second World War:
Greece 1941-1944, A Case study
Submitted by André Ger.olymatos
Department of History
McGill University, Montreal
( May 1991
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies
and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
@ André Gerolymatos 1991
(
ii
Abstract
(
The aim of tt~e thesis is to ana1yze the re1ationship between
British guerri11a warfare and espionage operations as we11
as their impact upon the Greek resistance. within this
context the contribution to the A11ied war effort of the
espionage and sabotage groups that operated in occupied
Greece will a1so be examined.
Part one of this study inc1udes an historica1 background
covering the period preceding the occupation of Greece and
an account of the deve10pment of British intelligence
« organizations to 1939. Part two examines the re-
organlzation of the British intelligence services after the
outbreak of the Second World War and the establishment of
the Special Operations Executive.
In addition, emphasis is placed on the deployment of the
British intelligence services in the Middle East. Part
three discusses the development of the Greek resistance and
the implementation of guerrilla warfare in the mountains as
weIl as the activities of the espionage and sabotage groups
in the main cities and to\' -;.3 of occupied Greece. Part four
includes the conclusions and bibliography.
{
iii
Abrégé
1
Cette dissertation a pour but l'analyse de la relation entre
la guérilla britannique et les opérations d'espionnage,
ainsi que leur impact sur la résistanc~ grecque. La
contribution, à l'effort militaire des alliés, des groupes
d'espionnage et de sabotage actifs dans la Grèce, sera
examinée dans ce contexte. La première partie de cette
étude inclue l'examen cie la période qui précédera
l'occupation de la Grèce, ainsi qu'une description dE.!
l'évolutjon des services britanniques de renseignements,
jusqu'en 1939.
J La deuxième partia examine la réorganisation des services
britanniques d~ renseignements, suivant l'éruption de la
guerre, et l'établissement de la section de l'Executif
d'opérations spéciales. Une importance particulière est
accordée au déploiement de ces mêmes services au ~Ioyen
Orient.
La troisième partie de la dissertation traite de l'évolution
du mouvement de résistance en Grèce, ainsi que la mise en
pratiquè opérationnelle de la guérilla sur les montagnes, et
des activités d'espionnage et de sabotage dans les
princlpa13s villes de la Grèce occupée. La quat~ième partie
inclue les conclusions et la bibliographie.
iv
PrefacE.'
First and foremost l would like to thé.tlnk my supervisor,
Professor Robert Vogel, for his in<,aluê.\ble comments and
suggestions as well as the infinite pat~ence and
encou"Cagement he has shown me ove 1.' the ~',ears. Most of all r
am gr'ateful to him for teaching me hO~T t\~\ examin~ sources
critically and with an open mind. l am al'.so indebted to
Professor Peter Hoffmann whose gradua te se~'Ilinars served as
the best trairting ground for research \\rork ·\.md analysis of
primary sources.
A great part of the research l conducted would not have been
possible without the financial support of the Social Science
and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the McConnel
Memorial Fellowship, the University Social Science Researc:h
Grant and the University Summer Research Fellowship from
McGill University. The acquisition of archival sources has
been critical to this study and l would like to thank the
Benaki Museum and in particular Mrs Tselika for allowing me
access to the Apollo ArchIve as well as the Public Record
Office in Great Britain and the National Archives in
Washingt~n D.C. Mr. Gerasimos Apostolatos, the President of
the Hellenic Red Cross, has over the years offered much in
useful advice and has been of great assistance in helping me
to acquire material as well as contacting some of the
v
1 individuals who pIayed a significant role during the
occupation of Greece. In addition, l would also like to
thank Professor Hagen Fleischer for his generous assistance
in acquiring some of the documentation as weIl as his
constructive comments and suggestion~. Finally l am
gratefui to my wife Beverley tor ner support, patience and
kindness which were and are a great asset.
l
vi
Table of Contents
Preface: ....•........•..........................•... p. iv
Introduction: ......................................... p. 9
Part 1: Historieal Background
Chapter 1:
Greece 1936 - 1940 .•.•......••.....•......•.....•.•. p. 31
British Policy towards Greeee 1936-1941 ....•....•.•. p. 48
operation Marita and Enjgma .•....................... p. 76
Chapter 2:
Survey of British Military Intelligence •............ p. 91
Espionage . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . ... . . . . . . . .. . . . p. 108
Chapter 3:
The Impact of War on British Intelligence .•...•.•... p. 130
organization of British Intelligence
~n South Eastern Europe and the Middle East ......••. p. 142
Economie Warfare, Subversion and Sabotage .......... . p. 149
The Special Operations Executive p. 156
Part II: The situation in Greece and the Middle East
1941-1944
Chapter 4:
Policy and Organization of the SOE in Greeee
and the Middle East ................................. p. 169
Organization of the SOE in cairo ..........•..•....•. p. 179
The Greek Government-in-Exile and British POliey ..•. p. 196
British POlicy towards Greece 1941-1943 •.•••......•. p. 212
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vii
Chapter 5:
1 The Occupation of Greece .......•....•............... p. 224
German Military Administration in Greece ......•..... p. 229
Organization of Southern Greece Command .......•..... p. 232
The German Iptelligence Services in Greece .......... p. 237
The Reaction to the Occupation p. 244
The Early Resistance Movements p. 251
"To Andartiko": the Road towards Partisan Warfare p. 266
Part III: Covert Operations and Guerrilla Warfare
1941-1944
Chapter 6:
Cover'/: Operations 1941-1944 .•.•....••••....•........ p. 289
Chapter 7:
Guerrilla Warfûre Operations 1942-1944 •....••....... p. 359
Part IV: Conclusion and Bibliography
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 459
Abbreviations and Terms .....•.........•....•........ p. 481
Transliteration Table ..•....•.........•............. p. 487
Bibl iography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 488
viii
c Introduction
viji
1 Introduction
9
Introduction
On the morning of Sunday 3 December 1944, a procession of
Greek Communists, Socialists, Republicans and anti-
rnonarchists advanced to Constitution Square, the center of
Athens and the heart of Greek political life. The
demonstrators had gathered to protest the decision of the
Greek Government to establish a new army and demobilize the
armed resistance bands that had fought the Axis. During the
four years of brutal occupation, the resistance fighters haà
been hailed by the Allies as the torch bearers of freedom in
Nazi dominated Europe. In December 1944, they had become
the unwant.ed creation of war and an embarrassment to the
Greek Government. The realities of peace could not fulfill
the promises made during the occupation, yet the
dernonstrators believed that their grievances h~d to be
addressed before Greece could be truly liberated. A new
Greek army they feared would simply endorse the political
agenda of the King and the provisional Greek Government. To
avoid this, the resistance bands had to remain intact in
order to ensure an equitable balance of power.
Police cordons blocked off aIl streets leading to this part
of Athens, but one group of approximately six hundred
demonstrators broke through and advanced towards the police
station located near Constitution Square. The demonstrators
10
chanted their demands in front of Lhe police station
1 guarded by fifteen ta twenty terrified policemen. As
the angry crowd advanced to about one hundred yards of
the station, sorneone fired a shot triggering a fusillade
by the policemen which killed at least seven and wounded
another eight. The crowd scattered for a while, but shortly
thousands of new demonstrators arrived until sixt Y thousand
people were jammed in the Square. The police hid within
the walls of their station and after several hours the crowd
dispersed.
Over the next two days dozens of police stations were
attacked by the guerrilla forces of the Left. On the 5th of
December, General Scobie, the Commander-in-Chief of aIl
1 Allied and Greek forces in Greece, committed the British
units in Athens to fight in the second civil war to plague
Greece within one year. The guerrilla bands which had been
aided and supported by the British during the occupation now
stalked British soldiers in the streets of Athens. 1 As a
result the British Government was forced to transfer ta
1. A good account of the events of 3 December 1944 is
included in W.H. McNeill, The Greek Dilemma: War and
Afterrnatq, New York 1947, pp. 165-171. A personal
interpretation of the December uprising is found in Nigel
Clive, A Greek Experience 1943-1948, London 1985, pp. 152-
153 and for a detailed analysis see: Baerentzen, L., "The
Demonstration in Syntagma Square on Sunday the 1rd of
December, 1944", Scandinavian studies in Modern Greek, No.
2, (1978), pp. 3-52. For an account and in-depth analysis
of the causes of the second civil war see: J.O. Iatrides,
RevoIt in Athens: The Greek Communist "Second Round", 1944-
l 1945, Princeton New Jersey 1972.
11
Greece thousands of troops from the Italian front during the
final phase of the war. These treops had to be prepared to
destroy the very forces which their own government had so
desperately tried te create three years earlier in order to
fight the Axis. It was a cycle of violence which had
already caused the death of many Greeks by the hands of
other Greeks and would cause thousands more. It was a cycle
of internecine strife that had started in October 1943, was
resumed in December 1944 and was to shatter the country
again between 1946-1949. It was a cycle of violence that
arose from the war, the Axis occupation of Greece, and the
British efforts to help that resistance.
The story of the Greek resistance is inextricably tied to
the efforts of the British intelligence services to organize
clandestine operations and guerrilla warfare in the Second
World War. Part of that effort included the creation of new
organizations within the intelligence establishment whose
sole purpose was to instigate destruction behind enemy
lines. They were to coordinate and develop the resistance
groups of occupied Europe, regardless of their political
affiliation or even the post-war interests of British
policy. It was assumed, by the creators of these
organizations, that the disgruntled and radical elements of
occupied Europe were the ideal recruits for a strategy of
mass resistance and guerrilla warfare. What was not
assumed, or at least not accepted at the time, was that once
-----------------------------------------------~
12
"
these forces were organized and armed they would demand
their fair share of political power in the post-war period
and that these demands would not necessarily conform to the
British policy of re-establishing the pre-war political
status quo in Europe. Ultimately, the clash of these
incompatible interests pitted the British army in December
against the "revolutionary" forces cultivated by the
intelligence services during the occupation of Greece.
Most accounts of the Greek resistance have been dominated by
the civil wars that were associated with the development of
the guerrilla bands in the mountains and have paid seant
attention to the other kinds of Greek opposition to the Axis
and, in particular, have not dealt adequately with the
significance of Greek espionage and sabotage organizations.
The secret war, as the Greeks named the clandestine
operations which took place in the cities and towns, avoided
the pitfalls of the politically motivated guerrilla
organizations and did not degenerate into a destructive
civil war. In contrast to the relative freedom enjoyed by
the guerrilla bands in the mountains, the organizations
which gathered intelligence and conducted sabotage had to
function secretly and in close proximity to the Axis forces.
The very nature of their work required the establishment of
small groups of dedicated individuals who, if they were to
survive, had ta remain anonymaus ta the rest af Greek
society. Remarkably, despite their success the British
13
• intelligence services failed to take greater advantage of
these groups and, instead, concentrated on the development
of guerrilla armies.
After the Germany victol~ over France and the expulsion of
the British from the continent, British offensive strategy
came to depend largely on three elements - the blockade, the
bomber offensive and the encouragement of guerrilla warfare.
For this reason the British War Cabinet decided to establish
a new organization, the Special Operations Executive (SOE),
with a mandate to implement irreqular warfare and coordinate
the resistance forces of occupied Europe. In Greece, the
SOE was charged with the coordination and development of the
Greek resistance and direct it in a manner compatible with
the strategie objectives of the Middle Eastern Theater of
Operations. However resistance movements cannot be conjured
Up overnight. By the time the Greek resistance movement had
grown into a substantial fighting force, the British had
acquired two very important Allies, the USSR and the USA and
the strategie initiative was passing into Allied hands.
with victory for the Allied cause a distinct possibility,
desperate measures such as guerrilla warfare, were no longer
in the fore front of British strategy. Moreover the planning
of a major land operation in North-West Europe, and the
final agreement of a date for that operation at Teheran, put
the Middle Eastern Theater of Operations into a decidedly
secondary role, a fa ct which it was only natural that the
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14
Greek resistance leaders vould find very difficult to
understand. In addition, the politi~al objectives of the
resistance were largely in direct contradiction to the
likely post-war policy of the Greek Government-in-Exile and
with the policy of Great Britain towards Greece, as
advocated by winston Churchill and the Foreign Office.
Compounding these àifficulties was confusion in the
direction and coordination of the British intelligence
services in Greece. Each service pursued its obje~tives
almost in total isolation and was guided by the interests of
different government agencies. As a result, little effort
was made to harmonize the espionage and sabotage activities
of the clandestine war in Greece with the direction and
development of the guerrilla forces in the Greek nlountains.
critical to an analysis of this problem is an understanding
of the infrastructure of the British intelligence comm'mity.
The inherent contradictions between espionage, sabotage and
guerrilla warfare were not foreseen by the intelligence
establishments during the inter-war periode For the
British, the role of intelligence organizations in military
and political strategy was based primarily on the experience
of the intelligence services during the First World War.
Sinee the primary battlefield of that war layon the Western
Front and between two armies facing each other across lines
of trenches, the main concern was the gathering of adequate
military intelligence. Post-war studies, in so far as they
15
dealt with non-conventional warfare at aIl, were
concentrated on the matter of the gathering of such military
.
intelligence. The experience of 'guerrilla' activity,
particularly the exploits of Lawrance of Arabia and the
highly unconventional operations of the various
organizations that fought in the turmoil of Russia and her
borders, such as the German 'Free Corps', appear to have
been totally ignored or were regarded ab unsuitable in West
European conditions. As a result, the British did not
develop a policy regarding partisan groups nor the role that
intelligence establishments would have to play in
maintaining contact with resistance movements. In the
period after the First World War, the function of the
intelligence branches as interpreted by the Services
themselves and the bodies responsible for them, was the
acquisition, analysis and interpretation of information.
Little consideration was given to resistance and guerrilla
warfare encompassing the use of force as a parallel activity
to espionage and other covert tactics.
According to the official history of British Intelligence in
the Second World War, after 1935 the interest in the
development of the intelligence services was at best mode st
and initially a reaction to the German rearmament and the
outbreak of the Abyssinian crisis. 2 Both events clearly
2. F.H. Hinsley, et al, British Intelligence in the Second
World War: Its Influence on Strategv and Operations, London
1979, Vol 1, p. 11.
16
demonstrated the inadequacies of the intelligenCE! community
since the intel]igence services had failed to give the
Government warning of either crisis. This did not briJlg
about a dramatic reversaI of pOlicy but only a modest
increase in the funding of the intelligence establishments.
Indeed, expansion of the intelligence services did not
become a priority until the outbreak of the war in 1939.
The period between 1935-1939, therefore, represents not a
peri('Jd of growth, or of drastic reorganization across the
entire community, but a time when structural modifications
of the intelligence establishments were ilnplemented to
attempt to coordinate the existing services within the
individual intelligence branches. ~hese adjustments evolved
in each department according ta the particular needs of the
Services and how the Services themselves perceived the role
ot intelligence to apply within their own sphere of
interest. Little consideration was given to the increasing
complexity and inter-dependence of the various types of
intelligence and, despite the strategic implications, each
Service regarded the interpretation of intelligence as its
own prerogative.
In effect, the intelligence community after the end of the
First World War until 1935 consisted of the intelligence
branches of the armed forces - each focussed on its own
narrow field of interest - and the specialized departments
such as the Secret Intelligence Service and the Government
17
Code and cypher School which were created to supply
information to the Services but did not have any role to
play regarding the analysis or interpretation of the
intelligence they acquired. The absence of any inter-
service body to analyze and interpret information collected
by individual intelligence departments, however, was a
deficiency appreciated only after 1935. The war created new
and unforeseen problems which required a flexibility not
inherent in the existing intelligence establishments.
Ultimately, this necessitated the need for the establishment
of new organizations which upset the delicate equilibrium of
relationships established amongst the intelligence services
in the inter-war periode The creation of ne\., organizations
such as the S~ecial operations Executive and the Political
Warfare Executive outside the corresponding structure of
inter-departmental relationships made it difficult for the
new organizations and the traditional Services to coordinate
their efforts with government policy towards the resistance.
To some extent, part of the difficulty lay with the lack of
experience in daaling with the phenomenon of resistance of
the scale and scope presented by the underground
organizations of occupied Europe. Intelligence, as
understood before the Second World War was an activity
confined to collecting information either through espionage
or from open sources. Early in the Second World War the use
of sabotage, subversion and guerrilla warfare wa~
18
envisioned as an integral element of war and to achieve the
greatest possible effect it was assumed that the
organizations designed to accomplish these ends had to be
integrated into the pre-war intelligence establishments.
The creation of the SOE reversed this trend and off-set the
delicate equilibrium that had characterized the pre-war
intelligence community.
The SOE was formed by the amalgamation of the following
groups: Section D, set up by the Secret Intelligence Service
to plan for sabotage and subversive activities, HI(R)
(Hilitary Intelligence Research), created by the
intell~gence branch in the War Office to implement guerrilla
warfare operations, and Electra House, organized by the
Foreign Office to control propaganda. Although the
amalgamation was easily achieved by the stroke of a pen, the
relationships of these bodies within the SOE were uneasy and
their activities in Greece were poorly coordinated until
almost the end of the war.
Historians have assessed the performance of the SOE in
Greece according to the degree of destruction which the
resistance inflicted on Axis forces and the number of German
units that were diverted to Greece as a result of its
activities. However, resistance in Greece has been, for the
most part, defined as the guerrilla war in the mountains.
Little scholarly attention has been given to the major
19
contributions to the Allied war effort in the Mediterranean
by the espionage and sabotage networks which functioned in
the cities and towns of Greece. Part of the difficulty has
been that the activities of these intelligence groups, to a
great extent, have remained classified and thus inaccessible
to historians. Because of this most acc~unts of the Greek
resistance have tended to concentrate on the guerrilla war
since the sources have been more readily available. Even
lat~r on as more documents became accessible in the Public
Record Office most writers have focussed on the political
implications of the rp.sistance and not on intelligence
activities attempting to understand British policy and the
role of the SOE in Greece in relation to the development of
the Greek Left during the occupation.
The opening of the British archives in 1972 has enabled
scholars to take a much closer look at the Greek resistance
and British policy towards Greece. Unfortunately, a great
many documents were destroyed in 1942, as a result of the
plans to move SOE headquarters from Cairo, in anticipation
of a German advance into Egypt while others wcre destroyed
as a result of fire in 1946. Most of the records that have
survived and are accessible in the Public Record Office are
contained in the Foreign Office archives. The bulk of the
SOE documents, however, remain closed and very few are
available from the other intelligence services. Although
the dvailability of some documents has encouraged research
20
on this period most studies focussed primarily on the
development of the guerrilla bands and the political
implications of the Greek resistance. On the other hand,
little interest has been shown for the espionage and
sabotage activities of the British intelligence services in
Greece during the occupation.
The Greek state archives provide a surprising number of
documents and reports that deal with the activities of
espionage and sabotage organizations. At the same time,
there are some important British documents held in the
archives of the Greek General Staff, the Ministry of
External Affairs and the Benaki Museum. Although they
remain closed to scholars l was able ta consult the Apollo
archive in the Benaki Museum and have had access to the
Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean Sea written anonymously in 1945.
In the immediate post-war period the publication of C.M.
Woodhouse's, Apple of Oiscord (London 1948) had a profound
influence on the study of the Greek resistance for two
decades. Woodhouse, as one of the first SOE officers in
Greece and later as the head of the Allied Military Mission
in t.he Greek mountains, was not only directly involved with
the development of the resistance but had first hand
knowledge of the key British and Greek personalities that
shaped the events in Greece between 1940-1945. The Apple of
21
resistance organizations whose political agenda conflicted
with the post-war policies of the British and Greek
governments. In this account, Woodhouse barely mentions the
SOE and apart from a few general references he hardly
touches on the activities of the espionage and sabotage
groups. His assessment of the resistance is negative and he
concludes that it was of little use to the Allies. In his
second book, The Struggle for Greece 1940-1949, Woodhouse
concentra tes on the development of the left-wing Greek
~esistance as a cause of the civil War between 1946-1949.
Although in this account Woodhouse modified his views on the
value of the resistance, suggesting that in certain cases it
p1ayed a useful role, such as in the effort (Operations
Animals) to deceive the Germans that the Allies were planing
(
a landing in Greece which resulted in the diversion of two
German armored divisions away from the Italian front.
His third account, The Autobiography of C.M. Woodhouse:
Something Ventured, (London 1982), is an autobiography
of which a large section is devoted to his activities in
Greece. Although Woodhouse, again slightly alters his
interpretations regarding the resistance, he
does provide sorne inf.::>rmation on the problems with SOE
headquarters in Cairo and a few examples of the
intelligence side of the British effort in Greece. On the
whole, Woodhouse's books and articles on the Greek
resistance are based on the impact of the guerrilla war and
are not concerned with intelligence. As one of the main SOE
22
officers in Greece, Woodhouse viewed the resistance from the
perspective of the mountain and naturally assigned it the
primary role during the occupation.
Edmund Myers', Greek Entanglement (London 1955 new edition
1985), is a personal account of the author's experiences as
the first head of the British Military Mission in Greece.
He does not attempt to analyze the resistance nor is he
concerned with the activities of the espionage and sabotage
groups in the cities but mainly tries to justify his role in
the development of the guerrilla bands. Myers was the first
victim of the conflict between the Foreign Office and the
SOE. He was largely blamed for the pre-dominance of the
Ieft-wing organizations in the Greek resistance and relieved
of his duties in 1943. The re-publication of his book in
1983, although it includes sorne additional information about
his activities in London after his return from Greece in
1943, adds Iittle more to the study of the periode
The account of Bickham Sweet-Escott, Baker street Irregular
(London 1962), has served as the unofficial account of the
role of the SOE in the Balkans and a basic history of the
Cairo branch. In addition to providing considerable insight
into the relationship between the Cairo satellite and the
London headquarters of the SOE, Sweet-Escott views the
development of the Greek resistance from inside the system.
Unfortunately, he pays only scant attention to the
,
23
intelligence and sabotage side of SOE's activities in
Greece.
N.G.L. Hamrnond's, autobiography: Venture into Greece: with
the Guerrillas 1943-1944 (London 1983), although it provides
interesting details of the author's life in the Greek
mountains, as a British Liaison Officer, and a little
information on SOE activities in Greece before the war, it
offers very little on the structure and organization of the
SOE in the Middle East or its intelligence role.
More recent studies on the Axis occupation of Greece focus
on the political aspects of the resistance and the role of
British policy while concentrating on the guerrilla war in
the rnountains. The Greek accounts, on the whole, attempt to
justify the activities of either the Left or the right-wing
guerrilla organizations while occasionally rnaking sorne
reference to the activities of the espionage-sabotage groups
in Athens. An annotated bibliography of these as weIl as
the main publications and archive collections on the Greek
resistance can be found in: Greece in the 1940s: A
Bibliographical Companion (ed. J.O. Iatrides, Hanover and
London 1981) or in the updated version edited by Hagen
Fleischer but available only in Greek: l Ellada stin
Dekaetia 1940-1950, Ena Ethnos se Krisi: Biliographokos
Odigos, Athens 1984 (Greece in the Decade of 1940-1950, A
Nation in Crisis: A Bibliographical Guide).
24
The works of John L. Hondros and Hagen Fleischer, however,
provide a more balanced account of the resistance and the
history of the Axis occupation. Hondros': Occupation and
Resistance: The Greek Agony 1941-1944 (New York 1983), based
on German as weIl as British archives examines the German
counter-insurgency efforts in Greece as weIl as offering a
detailed account of the Greek resistance organizations.
Hondros' aim, however, is the German occupation and the
guerrilla war not the role of intelligence. Hagen
Fleischer's: Stemma kai Swastika: l Ellada tis Katochis kai
Andistasis, 1q41-1944 (Athens 1986) is not only a much
broader history of the period but it provides considerable
analysis on the Axis occupation, the development of the
resistance and British policy, both before and during the
occupation. Based on an exhaustive study of Greek, German,
British and American sources, F'leischer's work surpasses aIl
the accounts of the Greek resistance written thus far but
its primary aim is the political history of the period.
The only official history of the SOE was written by M.R.D.
Foot in 1966. Foot was writing the hjstory of the Special
Operations Executive in France (S.O.E. in France, London
1966) as part of the first studies in a series of country-
by-country accounts but the sen~itive nature of the material
and the ensuing libel actions against the British Government
discouraged the extension of the series to other countries.
25
Alt.hough the focus of Foot's book is on the SOE in France it
does offer valuable insight into the origins and structure
of the SOE. In a second study, European Resistance to
Nazism. 1940-1945, New York 1977, Foot provides a survey of
the European resistance movements with one chapter devoted
to Greece. Although useful, the chapter offers only a
general account of the resistance and the activities of the
SOE in Greece. In 1984, Foot published a general history of
the SOE (SOE: An outline History of the Special Operations
Executive 1940-46, London 1984) which traces the origins and
development of that organization. In addition to providing
a catalogue of the main activities of the SOE in each
occupied country as weIl as a summary of the SOE efforts in
the Far East, the book has the merit of offering a detailed
{,
account of the organizational set up of the Special
Operations Executive including the training undergone by its
operatives.
other accounts, such as J.G. Beevor's: SOE: Recollections
and Reflections 1940-1945 (London 1981) and Douglas Dodds-
Parker's: Setting Europe Ablaze: Some Account of
Ungentlpmanly Warfare (London 1983), provide some
information on the development of the Special Operations
Executive and a general account of Its activities but
essentially these works are based on individual perspectives
and are not supported by documentation of primary sources.
r
26
The pUblication of Hinsley's mammoth study on: British
Intelligence in the Second World War: Its influence on
strategy and operations (London 1979-88), has shed
considerable light on the role of Ultra and the organization
of British intelligence but it pays scant attention to
espionage, sabotage or guerrilla warfare operations.
Although it offers some insight into the origins and
development of the Secret Intelligence Service, SOE, and
Political Warfare and some discussion on their
interdepartmental conflicts, it only touches upon their
activities in Greece.
David Stafford's work: Britain and Europ~an Resistance 1940-
1945: A Survey of the Special Operations Execul;ive. with
Documents (Toronto and Buffalo 1980), provides a general
account of the activities of SOE and their relationship to
British strategie and diplomatie objectives. As the author
states, he does not concentrate on the details of SOE
operations but focuses his study on the policy making level.
The very general nature of this account limits its use
concerning the SOE and British policy towards Greece and
even less on the intelligence role of the Special Operations
Executive.
Other studies on the role of the SOE and intelligence found
in collections of papers such as those edited by M. Elliot-
Bateman: The Fourth Dimension of Warfare (Manchester 1970-
27
1974) and PhYLlis Auty and Richard Clogg: British Policy
( towards Wartime Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece (London
1975), approach th,,;! subjects from a general perspective or
focus on individual participation. The latter work contains
several informative articles on the strained relations
between the SOE and the Foreign Office, with regard to
Greece, and considerable insight can be gleaned from the
subsequent discussions following the papers included with
the collection. More popular works including: Nigel West's
"16: Britjsh Secret Intelligence Service Operations 1909-
1945 (London 1983), Anthony Cave Brown's: C: The Secret Life
of Sir Stuart Menzies. Spymaster to winston Churchill (New
York 1987) and Christopher Andrew's: Secret Service (London
1985), provide interesting and occasionally informative
(
accounts of British intelligence but are limited by the
unavailability of documentation on the SIS in the Public
Record Office and do not include Greece <..r the Greek
resistance.
On the other hand, Greek publications on the role of
intelligence during the occupation are either marred by
exaggerations or the total absence of any supporting
documentation. The account of G.B. Ioannides, Ellines kai
xenoi Kataskopoi stin Ellada (Athens 1952), provides an
overview of sorne of the underground espionage and sabotage
groups in G~eece but it is based on several other sources
(
.~
and focuses on the adventurous aspect of intelligence. The
28
accounts of Regas Regopoulos: Mvstikos Polemos: Ellada - M.
Anatoli. Gyro apo to Istoriko tis Yp~resias 5-165 (Athens
1973) and Panagiotes Lykourezos' Koàros: Chroniko apo tin
Ethniki Andistasi (Athens n.d.), provide considerable
insight into establishment of two espionage networks in
Athens: Service 5-165 and Kodros. Both offer details on the
organization of these two particular espionage cells but,
remarkably, provide little information on their actual
accomplishments and even less on their relationship with the
respective British intelligence services which directed
them. Part of the semi-autobiographical and ten year
history of Greece l ElIas: 1940-1950 (Athens 1955), written
by Panagiotis Konstas, the head of the Greek intelligence
service set up by the Greek Government-in-Exile, is devoted
to intelligence activities in occupied Greece and the Middle
East. Although a general overview, Konstas' account
includes a useful, although incomplete, catalogue of
espionage, sabotage, subversive and guerrilla organizations
operating in Greece during the occupation.
For the most part, the role of British intelligence in
Greece and its relationship to the Mediterranean Theater of
Operations as weIl as to the Greek resistance, despite its
significance, has heen ignored. Scattered in the Foreign
Office archives are sufficient documents that offer
considerable insight into the intelligence activi~ies of the
SOE but to a lesser extent on the efforts of the other
29
intelligence services in the Middle East. However, these
combined with the material available in the Greek state
archives as weIl as with documents accessible in other Greek
collections, provide sufficient basis for a study on British
intelligence, not only as another dimension of the
resistance in Greece but on its contribution to the Allied
war effort in the Mediterranean.
Finally, to understand the relationship between guerrilla
warfare and intelligence operations, it is necessary to
examine aIl the composite elements of the Greek resistance.
In order to do that, it will be necessary to approach the
material from a variety of different perspectives, a
procedure which will sometimes necessitate covering the same
{ time-frame more than once. But only in this manner can one
hope to understand the role of espionage and guerrilla
warfare as inter-related factors and not as lndividual and
unique phenomena.
(
-
30
Part I
Historical Background
31
Chapter 1
Gr.eece 1936-1940
The creation of the modern Greek state in 1831 owed a great
deal ta the intervention and support of the British Empire.
Consequently there existed a rather special relationship
between the two countries which on the one hand, was
represented by the romanticism of Lord Byron's death at
Mesolongi fighting for Hellenic liberty and, on the other,
by the actions of the Royal Navy during the Don Pacifico
( affaire
Throughout the first one-hundred and fifteen year history of
the Greek state, her foreign policy was dominated by the
presence of the ottoman Empire and then the Turkish state,
on the one side, and the predominant power of the Royal Navy
in the Eastern Mediterranean on the other; ,her internaI
affairs often were modelled on the British example, an
influence that could be formidable when combined with the
economic predominance which the British Empire clearly
exercised in Greece until the 1930's.
Accordingly, there was almost a tradition of British
( intervention in Greece which played a significant role in
32
the internaI and external affairs of that country. The
British-Greek relationship was exploited by Greek
politicians, most notably by Eleftheros Venizelos, to
advance the irredentist policies of Greece and used with
great effect on domestic politics. Venizelos understood the
dynamics of the relationship and did his utmost to lead
Greece to the side of the Entente during the First World
War. 1 When this policy was opposed by King Konstantine, the
British openly intervened in 1917 to force the monarch into
exile and restore Venizelos to power. As a result Greece
emerged from the war on the side of the victors and was
rewarded with territory on the Turkish mainland at the
expense of the ottoman Empire. 2
In 1920 a war weary population deserted the cause of
Venizelos and elected a Populist Government which brought
back the exiled King Konstantine. The British resented the
restoration of the pro-German King and abandoned their
support of Greek interests. without the material and
1. Andre Gerolymatos, "Lloyd George and Venizelos 1912-
1917", Bùlletin de la Societe Historique et Ethnologique de
la Greee, Vol. XXVIII (1985), pp. 205-219.
2. Under the terms of the Treaty of Sevre, Greece received
the whole of Thrake, the Gallipoli Peninsula and the
northern coast of the Sea of Marmora along with a11 of the
Aegean Islands, with the exception of the Italian held
Dodekanese. In addition, Greece was awarded control of the
city of Smyrna along with its hinterland for a period of
five years after which the sovereignty of the region was to
be decided by the decision of a locally elected assembly.
Although the treaty was not ratified the Greek army quickly
occupied the new territories.
33
international backing of the British the Greeks were unable
(
to stem the tide of Turkish nationalism and their forces
suffered a disastrous defeat in Asia Minor. 3
The withdrawal of British support for the Greek venture in
Asia Minor in 1922, represented the first major set back for
British popularity and influence in Greece. This, however,
was a temporary aberration and after the Treaty of Lausanne
the British-Greek relationship continued to be relatively
close until 1947. British influence in Greek affairs not
only served for the basic orientation of Greek external
policy but aiso colored the internaI political evolution of
the Hellenic state.
(
The dynamics of Greek politics in the 1930's, accordingly,
were shaped by the tumultuous events that had characterized
Greek history in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. The course of Greek irredentism launched
successfully by Eleftheros Venizelos in the Balkan wars of
1912-1913 culminated in disaster with the qefeat of the
3. The Greek-Turkish conflict was brought to an end with the
conclusion of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923. Turkey
acquired sovereignty over the islands of Imbros and Tenedos,
eastern Thrake and Konstantinople. Greece renounced her
claims to Smyrna and its hinterland. Italy maintained her
possession of the Dodekanese and northern Epiros was
restored to Albania. Turkey, in addition, renounced her
claims to Cyprus in favour of Great Britain and accepted
international control of the straits. To avoid further
unrest between Turkey and Greece both parties agreed to a
compulsory exchange of Greek and Turkish minorities in both
( countries, with the exception of the Greek minority in
Konstantinople and the Muslims of western Thrake.
34
Greek army in Asia Minor during the summer of 1922. The
rest of the decade was marked by military coups, the
abolition of the monarchy and the establishment of a short
lived republic.
The collapse of Greek financial institutions and the mass
unemployment resulting from the Great Depression, as weIl as
problems created by the influx of over a million refugees
from Asia Minor, greatly undermined the credibility of the
republic and hastened its demise. In 1935, after another
round of attempted military coups, a fraudulent plebiscite
led to the restoration of the monarchy. The return of King
George II was not so much the result of increased popularity
for the monarchy but reflected a national malaise brought
about by the Depression and by the political intrigues on
the part of the major parties as weIl as by now the almost
institutionalized poiiticai intervention of the military.
Individuai members of the military had played a significant
role in Greek politics from the inception of the modern
Greek state in 1831. Nevertheless, untii 1922 the army had
refrained from assuming pover directly and had only
occasionally attempted to influence a particular party or
the monarchy.4 The armed forces were led by an officer
4. In 1909 for example the army demanded that the King and
government accept a series of military and economic reforms
by threatening to march on Athens. At this critical
junction the military refrained from establishing a
dictatorship and turned to Venizelos tQ implement their
demands.
35
corps riddled with factions based on a system of clientage.
( In fact, the officer corps most often simply mirrored the
divisions within Greek society, each faction looking to a
different political leader or the monarchy for professional
favours. 5
In 1916 the officer corps was forced to choose between the
neutrality of Greece in the First World War advocated by
King Konstantine or the alignment of Greece with the Entente
espoused by venizelos. 6 The cleavage that was created in
the army, as weIl as throughout the country, between those
5. Thanos Veremis, oi Epemvaseis tou Stratou stin Elliniki
Politiki, Athens 1983, pp. 75-92. Veremis (Athens 1983, p.
83) also makes the point that during the crises in the early
( part of the twentieth century the majority of the officers
did not necessarily support the monarchy or a politician
such as Venizelos but remained on the sidelines and followed
the faction that won control of the army.
6. The issue of Greek foreign policy came to a head in 1915
with the resignation of Venizel os over the King's refusaI to
permit the Greek army to participate in the Anglo-French
attack against the Dardanelles. In the subsequent election
of June 1915 Venizelos won an impressive majority (184 out
of 310 seats) with a pro-Entente campaign platform. In
October of the same year Venizelos once again resigned
bringing about a major constitutional crisis. On this
occasion Venizelos was forced to step down because the King
refused to honor the Greek-Serbian treaty of 1913 invoked by
the Bulgarian attack against Serbia. The second resignation
of Venizelos was followed by another election only this time
the party of Venizelos, the LiberaIs, abstained from
participation. The ensuing struggle between the followers
of the King and those of Venizelos, known as the National
Schism, brought the country to the brink of civil war and
left Greece divided until the end of the Second World War.
King Konstantine's policy of neutrality earned him the
bitter hostility of Britain and France especially when he
authorized the surrender of a Greek fort (Fort Rupel) to the
Bulgarian army.
36
who supported Venizelos and those who followed the King
necame permanent with the military coup of 1922. 7 The coup,
led by pro-Venizelos officers, and the subsequent execution
of six prominent Royalist (five politicians and one general)
held accountable for the defeat of the Greek forces in Asia
Minor, further exacerbated the political division. The
result of the execution, in effect, was a blood feud.
The revolution of 1922, as the coup came to be known, not
only forced the abolition of the monarchy but heralded a new
era of direct intervention by the army, through military
coups, in the making and unmaking of governments. Each
coup, whether successful or not, was followed by a purge of
the armed forces which by 1940 had forced almost aIl of the
pro-Venizelos officers into retirement. The dismissal of
many Royalist officers in 1922 was matched by the disrnissal
of as many as 1,800 Republican officers as a result of the
unsuccessful coups of 1933 and 1935. 8 During the remainder
7. According to Veremis (Athens 1983, p. 59), the officer
corps in 1916 was made up of two categories of officers: the
first included graduates of the military academy and those
that had attained permanent status in the army. This group
having achieved its position and status in the anny was
generally loyal to the King and preferred to maintain the
status quo. The second category was formed from non-
professional officers who held lower rank and had attained
permanent status as a result of the Balkan wars but their
position would be less secure if there was a general
demobilization. The latter group became staunch supporters
of Venizelos and later on proved to be the most fanatical
Republicans.
8. Andre Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps
in the Resistance", Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora, Vol.
XI, No. 3, (Fall 1984) p. 71 note 7.
37
of the decade of the thirties the army was the determining
factor in the restoration of the Monarchy. However, there
remained a group within the officer corps which would play a
significant role during the Axis occupation of Greece and
prevent the officers from participating in the resistance as
a united organization.
After the purges in March of 1935 the armed forces were
under the control of Royalist officers who, in conjunction
with some members of the Populist Party, began to clamor for
the return of the King. In 1932 the Populists had disavowed
their allegiance to the monarchy but, as Daphnis comments,
their rejection was superficial and in 1935 they re-asserted
( their support for George II. 9 After the Populist victory at
the polIs, immediately following the coup attempt,
tremendous pressurA was placed on Tsaldaris, the Populist
Prime Minister, to bring about an immediate restoration.
Tsaldaris had promised a referendum on the issue of the
monarchy but following the landslide victory in the election
many in his party, but primarily senior army officers,
demanded that he abolish tl!e republic and invite the King to
9. G. D~phnis, l ElIas Metaxi Dio Polemon 1923-1940 Vol. 2,
Athens 1955 (reprinted 1974), p. 369. Daphnis attributes
the victory of the Populists to the strong support from the
middle class. He points out that this support did not
translate into acceptance of the monarchy on the part of the
( voters but a rejection of the Liberal party. His assertion,
however, is not based on any hard evidence.
-- - ----- ---------
38
return. 10 Tsaldaris refused and h~s government was promptly
overthrown by the military. He was replaced as Prime
Minister by General G. Kondylis, one of the conspirators and
a former republican, who, upon assuming office, declared the
end of the republic and advanced the date for the referendum
on the monarchy to 3 November 1935. The results of the
plebiscite were suspect since 1,492,992 voted for the
restoration and only 34,454 against. 11 The restoration of
the monarchy, according to Koliopoulos: " ... brought in a new
and decisive factor, the King, who held the undisputed
loyalty of the military .... 12 Other factors, however,
emerged which not only secured the position of the monarchy
but brought Greece cl oser to the totalitarian regimes of
Germany and Italy.
The restoration of the Monarchy did not solve Greek internaI
divisions and the elections of 1936 showed this clearly when
the results produced a parliament divided almost evenly
10. It should be noted that the victory of the Populists may
have been aided, in great part, by the boycott of the
Venizelists.
11. According to the American Ambassador, Lincoln MacVeagh
(Ambassador MacVeagh Reports: Greece, 1933-1947, ed. J.O.
Iatrides, Princeton 1980, p. 60), The number given for the
monarchist vote was higher than the total vote cast by aIl
parties in any previous election and by a margin of 400,000
votes. Hagen Fleischer (stemma kai swastika, Athens 1988,
p. 54), adds that the Danish ambassador in Athens commented
that the entire process was a farce and " •.. the greatest
comedy performed on the European scene for a long time.".
12. John s. Koliopoulos, Greece and the British Connection
1935-1941, Oxford 1977, p. 6.
39
between the LiberaIs and Populist along with fifteen
( communist deputies. Furthermore, the bitter divisions
between the Venizelists and Monarchists made it impossible
for the major parties to cooperate and form a coalition
government, the other option was for one or the other major
party to turn to the Communists for support.
In 1936 the Greek Communist Party (KKE) was on the fringe of
the political scene which was dominated by the major parties
and the military. The Communists, although they did not
enjoy widespread support, were able with the fifteen seats,
which they won as a result of the 1936 election, to hold the
balance of power in the Greek parliament. 13 Both of the
major parties begun talks with the Communists in order to
( secure their cooperation in forming a government and the
LiberaIs actually managed to reach an agreement with them,
but these efforts at political compromise were stillborn.
When news of a possible Liberal - KKE coalition leaked out,
Papa~os, the Minister of Army affairs with the support of
the Chiefs of the Air Force, Navy and Gendarmerie informed
the King that the armed forces would not tolerate a
government backed by the Communists. 14
13. The breakdown of seats in the new parliament of 1936
was: 143 for the anti-Venizelists, 141 for the Venizelists
and fifteen for the Communists (Daphnis, Athens 1974, vol.
2, p. 402).
( 14. Koliopoulos, Oxford 1977, p. 40.
40
In the period preceding and following the election, Greece
was undergoing a series of labour difficulties accompanied
by strikes which in some cases resulted in serious
casualties. 15 The country, in the absence of a majority
government or coalition was administered by a caretaker
government headed by Konstantinos Demertzis. In April
Demertzis died and l. Metaxas, the leader of a small right-
wing party, and deputy Premier, succeeded him as head of the
government. The death of Demertzis had been preceded by the
demise of a number of other prominent political figures
including: Kondylis, Venizelos, Tsaldaris and Papanast1siou,
which deprived the country at this critical moment of some
its most influential leaders. The coincidence between the
deaths of these individuals and the labour unrest sweeping
over Greece provided an opportunity for Metaxas, with the
support of the King, to gain control of the state. In
August the Workers' Federation had declared a twenty-four
hour general strike for the 5th and on the 4th of August
Metaxas persuaded the King to suspend certain articles of
the constitution and declare martial law in order to avert a
communist revolution. 16 In effect, after the 4th of August
15. On 8 May 1936 a strike by 6,000 tobacco workers ended in
violence in Thessaloniki which prompted other workers,
railway and tram-workers, to go out on strike in sympathy.
The Government called out the army to support the
Gendarmerie and issued a decree mobilizing the railway men
and tram-workers. These measures were ineffectual and the
number of strikers reached 25,000. On the 9th the
Gendarmerie clashed with demonstrators around Government
House and in the ensuing battles twelve died and two hundred
.. were wounded (Daphnis, Athens 1955, vol. 2, pp. 423 ff.) •
16. In his diary, Metaxas wrote that the country was on the
41
1936, King George II gave Metaxas the authority to establish
( a dictatorship which lasted beyond the death of Metaxas
himself until the exiled King reinstated the constitution in
February 1942.
Unlike the totalitarian regimes of Germany and Italy the
Greek dictatorship was not based on a political party.
Although supported by the military, it was not given power
by the army and did not develop a Fascist or Nazi ideology
except for some vague references to the establishment of a
"third Greek civilization".17 Indeed, the dictatorship
eve of a revolution, instigated and directed by the
Communist party. Commun~~t propaganda, he stated, had
already infiltrated the civil service and threateneù to
paralyze the state; and it had started the process of
eroding the discipline of the armed forces (Ioannis Metaxas,
( To Prosopiko tou Imerologio, ed. C. Christidis (Vols. 1-2,
1896-1920), P.M. Siphnaios (vol. 3, 1921), P. Vranas (vol.
4, 1933-1941, pp. 222-223, 4 August 1936).
17. This was considered by Metaxas the successor to the
classical and Byzantine civilizations. There are several
published in Greek sources on the Metaxas dictatorship but
as Koliopoulos (Oxford 1977, p. 51) points out they are
either polemics against Metaxas or apologies in favor of his
regime. These include: D. Kallonas, Ioannis Metaxas, Athens
1938; B.P. Papadakis, 1 Chethesini kai i Avriani ElIas,
Athens 1946: T. Nikouloudis, toannis Metaxas, Athens 1941
and 1 Elliniki Krisis, Cairo 1945; A.P. Tabakopoulos, Q
Mythos tis Dictatorias, Athens 1945; M. Malainos, 1 4e
Avgoustou, pos kai Yiati epevlithi 1 Dictatoria tou 1.
Metaxa, Athens 1947: I.G. Koronakis, 1 Politeia tis 4e
Avgoustou, Fos eis Mian Plastographimenin Periodon tis
Istorias mas, Athens 1950; S. Linardatos, Pos Eftasame stin
4e Avgoustou, Athens 1965, and by the same author: 1 4e
Avgoustou, Athens 1966, 1 Esoteriki Po1itiki tis 4e
Avgoustou, Athens 1975; N. Psiroukis, 0 Fasismos kai i 4e
Avgoustou, Athens 1974; G. Chiotakis, Politikes Thyelles: 2.
1 Dictatoria 4es Avgoustou, oi Protagonistes tes, 0 Polemos
1940-1941, Athens 1983; in English John V. Kofas,
Authoritarianism in Greece: The Meta~as Regime, New York
( 1983. A more recent and reliable addition to the
bibliography of the period is the: Praktika tou Diethnous
42
consisted of the King, Metaxas and a small but devoted group
of lieutenants propped up by the support of the armed
forces, whose Royalist officers depended upon the monarchy
to maintain their rank and keep out their Venizelist
counterparts, as well as an efficient security service that
quickly weeded out any opposition to the regime. Unlike
Hitler and Mus,solini, Metaxas did not make a conscious
attempt to distance himself from the military, to avoid the
appearance of relying on the army for support, because the
officer corps remained loyal and devoted followers of the
King. Consequently, his authority rested entirely at the
King's discretion. Indeed, Metaxas did not enjoy the
traditional support of the military as had other Greek
leaders, therefore during the short span of his dictatorship
Metaxas made every effort to gain control of the armed
forces. 18
On the other hand, the leaders of the major parties failed
to mount an effective opposition or make any attempt to
Istorokou Synedriou. E Ellada 1936-44: Diktatoria. Katochi.
Andistasi, ed. Hagen Fleischer and Nikolas Svoronos, Athens
1989.
18. John Kofas, (Authoritarianism in Greece: The Metaxas
Regime, New York 1983, pp. 53-54), however, argues that the
Metaxas Regime evolved from a conservative dictatorship to
an authoritarian quasi-fascist state. By 1938, Kofas states,
Metaxas had purged the Royalists from his government and
replaced them with his followers and gradually became
politically autonomous of the King. He institutionalized
corporate state policies and applied them to every sector of
society. In addition, the establishment of a para-military
youth organization gave Metaxas the hope for a mass base in
the future.
43
undermine the dictatorship and for the rnost part the y did
( not pose a serious threat to the regime. Their activities
were limited to rnaking written protests. Sorne attempted to
convince the King that they could provide equally good
government in place of the dictatorship.19 There were
exceptions, most notably, P. Kanellopoulos, but the main
non-Communist resistance effort came fI'om Venizelist
officers forcibly retired after the 1930's coups. with the
exception of a single abortive coup in 1938 the activities
of these ex-officers were confinAd to plotting future coups
and printing illegal parnphlets. 20
For Metaxas, the Communists represented the most serious
danger and he lost little time in trying to elirninate their
( organizations. 21 Immediately following the proclamation of
19. J. Koliopoulos ("Esoterikes Exelixeis apo tin Protin
Martiou os tin 28 octovriou 1940", Istoria tou Ellinikou
Ethnous: Neoteros Ellinismos apo 1913 os 1941, Athens 1978,
p. 393) attributes the passivity of the politicians to
several factors. First and forernost the lack of an active
resistance indicated the weakness of the parties and their
inability to galvanize popular support against the
dictatorship. Sorne in the Liberal party remained passive
because they entertained the hope that Metaxas would
reinstate the cashiered Venizelist officers. Another
consideration was the fear that the reaction of Metaxas to
vociferous opposition would be to create his own party.
20. Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps in the
Resistance", p. 71.
21. Anti-communist policy was not anything new in Greek
politics. previous administrations had been as fervent in
cornbating Communism. Between 1929-1932 the police, under
the Government of Venizelos, had made 11,000 arrests
resulting in 2,130 convictions (A. Elefandis, l Epangelia
tis Adinates Epanastases: K.K.E. kai Astismos ston
( Mesopolernon, Athens 1976, p. 256).
44
the dictatorship the Greek communist Party was outlawed. K.
Maniadakes, thp. Minister of Security, established a wide
network of informants and through the use of Communist
renegades and pOlice agents he was able to infiltrate and
ultimately dominate the local Communist organizations. 22
Hundreds were arrested and sent to prison or to internaI
exile in remote islands while thousands more were coerced
into signing declarations of repentance 23 in order to avoid
incarceration. 24
The tactics used by Maniadakes quickly left the Communist
cadres in total disarray with most of their leadership in
prison, while the few that managed to escape were forced to
live a clandestine existence that served as use fuI
22. A month after the declaration of martial law the General
Secretary of the KKE, Nikos Zachariades, was apprehended by
the authorities. By April 1938 aIl members of the Politburo
had been arrested with the exception of G. Siantos. (John
Loulis, The Greek communist Party, 1940-1944, London 1982,
pp. 4-5).
23. Essentially it meant that someone accused of being a
Communist had to sign a declaration renouncing Communism
which was then published.
24. The Minister of Propaganda Nikoloudis referred to a
total number of 57,000 until the outbreak of war in 1940
(Hagen Fleischer, Stemma kai S~astika, Athens 1988, p. 128).
One historian, D.G. Kousoulas (Revolution and Defeat. The
Story of The Greek Communist Party, London 1965, p. 130)
claims there were over 45,000 su ch declarations during the
period of the dictatorship. These figures, exceeded the
total membership of the Communist party and are attributed
to the excessive zeal of the police who often included
individuals assumed to have Communist sympathies. According
to John Loulis, (London 1982, p. xiv, Table 1) membership in
the KKE was only 14,000.
45
preparation fer the occupation. 25 In addition to the use of
(
informants and infiltration of police agents into Communist
organizations, Maniadakis created, as a counter-weight to
the existing Central Committee, a fake Central Committee
which along with the many declarations of repentance came
close to destroying the KKE. Throughout this period the
police, Gendarmerie and the security service were the
principal forces used not only to combat the Communists but
served as the main prop of the Metaxas Regime. The army,
unlike the police forces remained exclusively loyal to the
King despite Metaxas' efforts to gain the whole-hearted
support of the officer corps.26
( The continued survival of the communist Party, outside the
persistence and audacity of its loyal cadre, is partially
attributable to the policy of Zachariades of decentralizing
sorne of the KKE' underground organization into self-
25. According to the official history of the Greek Communist
Party, (Syntome Istoria tou KKE, Part A 1918-1949, ed. The
Historical Committee of the Greek communist Party, Athens
1988, p. 142) the process of decapitating the leadership of
the party was complete by November of 1939 with the arrest
of G. Siantos and G. Skafida. Despite these adversities the
KKE continued to function underground. Approximately 2,000
communists were imprisoned throughout the period of the
dictatorship (A. Elephandis, Athens 1976, p. 257).
26. O.H. Close makes this in a study of role of the police
during the dictatorship see: "The Police in the Fourth of
August Regime", Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora, Vol. XIII,
nos. 1 & 2, (1986), pp. 91-105. According to Close (p. 93)
two departments of the Gendarmerie: the Eidiki Asfalia
(Special Security) and Yeniki Asfalia (General Security) ,
( formed the political or secret police responsible for
counter-espionage and anti-communism.
46
contained cells. 27 Although Many of these were penetrated
by the Metaxas security services enough of them survived to
serve as a core for the party's reorganization after 1941. 28
Another important, albeit unwilling, contribution was made
by the policy of the Metaxas Regime in keeping arrested
~ommunists together in special political prisons and islands
of exile. The imprisoned Communists transformed their
incarceration into useful activity by conducting classes on
Marxism and training the less experienced cadre in
clandestine work. 29 These factors, to some extent, explain
the contradictory situation of how the KKE, although
seemingly at the point of extinction during the Metaxas
period, was yet able by autumn of 1941 to begin the
organization of a wide and effective underground. 30
27. Loulis, London 1982, p. 4; D. G. Kousoulas, KKE: Ta
Prota Chronia. 1918-1949, Athens 1987, p. 158.
28. On the underground activities of one prominent member of
the KKE during this period see: B. Bartziotas, Exinda
Chronia Kommounistis, Athens 1986, pp. 151-153. Some of
these cells estaL:ished contact with other non-communist
underground organizations including with a group of serving
officers that had socialist sympathies (A. Elephandes Athens
1976, p. 245).
29. B. Bartziotas, Athens 1986, pp. 159-168; A. Phlountzes,
Akrovafplia kai Akronafpliotes, Athens 1979, pp. 213-216 and
passim; S. Linardatos, E 4e Augoustou, Athens 1975, pp. 415-
417; A. Stinas, Anamneseis: Evdomenda Chronia Kato apo te
Semaia tis Sosialistikis Epanastasis, Athens 1985, pp. 235-
238; M. Vapheiades, Apomnemonevmata vol. 1, pp. 308-311.
30. A. Elephandis (Athens 1976, p. 258), remarks that the
collective imprisonment of the Communists enabled Many of
........ them to develop closer ties and forro lasting personal
relationships thus solidifying their unit y and their
affiliation with the KKE.
47
Therefore, despite the vigilant efforts of the
" dictatorship's security services, sorne opposition remained.
Communist cells and groups of Venizelist officers went
underground. Their survival and re-emergence during the
occupation would play a pivotaI role in the resistance.
Their continued existence depended upon secrecy and
mastering the skills of functioning in a clandestine
environment. Each year, however, the Metaxas regime
tightened its grip on the country and made it progressively
more difficult for these groups to organize any type of
effective opposition. The general population continued to
remain indifferent to the dictatorship particularly as the
Metaxas regime provided a number of reforms which, if they
did not inspire popularity for the regime, assured it of
(
benign toleration. In the face of public apathy towards
Metaxas and the King, sorne of those who were in the
underground became willing recruits for the British
intelligence seL~ices. It is impossible to discern their
motives except that the increased presence of the British
intelligence services after 1939 brought on the specter of
possible British intervention; a situation which had
historical precedent in Anglo-Greek relations.
(
48
British Policy towards Greece 1936-1941
'.
Even before the conclusion of the Treaty of Lausanne in
1923, the British had in fact begun to re-consider their
policy towards Greece, Turkey and the Balkans. On 14
October 1922 the Chiefs of Staff, in a memorandum to the
Foreign Office, had recommended closer ties between Britain
and Turkey and warned that an aggressive attitude could
endanger the allegiance of Britain's Muslim subjects who
regarded Turkey as the ch~mpion of their faith. The Chiefs
of Staff also suggested that friendly relations with Turkey
would allow Britain to maintain control over the Straits
with minimal forces. 31 Consequently, as far as the Balkans
and Near East were cor.cerned the British were now content to
maintain the status quo. Within this context Greeee ceased
to be the focal point of British poliey in the Eastern
Mediterranean. The British Government regarded the internaI
political situation in Greeee with indifferenee and for the
most part lost aIl interest in Greeee. Aeeording to Robert
Vansittart: "Those who helped Greeee into a mess did nothing
to help her out.".32 After the Chanak crisis in 1922
Britain had lost interest in foreign adventures and the
31. Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919-1939: First,
Second and Third Series, London 1947 et seg., Vol. 18,
Series l, London 1972, pp. 984-989.
32. Robert Vansittart, The Mist Procession, London 1958,
p. 289.
49
prime ministers who followed Lloyd George were more
concerned with domestic and imperial matters. "When they
looked to Europe at all", comments Woodhouse, "Greece fell
within their blind spot. The Near East was insensibly
superseded by the Middle East, which meant the Arab states
and the problem of carrying out the Balfour Declaration on
Palestine .•• ".33
In the Middle East, British strategy was based on the
defence of the canal through control of Palestine and Egypt
and on the mobility of the Mediterranean fleet. In
addition, British interests in the region were protected by
mutually reinforcing garrisons and air bases in: Iraq,
Palestine, Transjordan and Egypt. 34 Despite its strategie
( importance the Mediterranean was regarded by successive
British governments as a means for the security of the
empire and treated as a training and staqing ground for the
defence of the Far East. 35 The possibility of a war in the
Mediterranean was not taken seriously between 1919 to 1935
by British strategists and accordingly Greece was only of
minor importance to British security. The Treaty of
Lausanne further reduced the strategie importance of Greece
33. C.M. Woodhouse, Mod~rn Greece: A Short History, London
1968, p. 210.
34. L.R. Pratt, East of Malta West of Suez: Britain's
Mediterranean Crisis, 1936-1939, 1975, p. 9.
35. E. Monroe, The Mediterranean in POlitics, London 1938,
p. 1; Pratt, London 1975, p. 12.
50
by transferring control of the Dardanelles from Turkey to an
"
international commission, thus safeguarding British
interests ln the Straits, and the acquisition of Cyprus
reinforced British naval and air bases in the eastern
Mediterranean along with those in Alexandria and Haifa.
During the next seventeen years (1922-1939) British-Greek
relations remained dormant except for the occasional
disturbance by the Greek population of Cyprus. Despite the
flare up of Greek nationalism in Cyprus and demonstrations
of anti-British feeling, Greek politicians were content to
maintain the status quo in Cyprus and avoided doing anything
that might have antagonized the British. 36 The Greeks felt
that it was imperative to maintain good relations with Great
'.
Britain not only because of her military influence in the
Mediterranean but because London provided one of the main
sources of foreign loans.
The service of these debts which amounted, in sorne years, to
36. In 1929 a delegation of cypriots in London petitioned
the British Government for the unification of Cyprus wlth
Greece but it was rejected. In 1931 the combined votes of
the Turkish minority representatives and British officials
defeated a vote on the budget by the Cypriot Legislative
Council. In response Greek Cypriots declared a boycutt of
British goods and refused to pay their taxes. On 21
October, a demonstration in Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus,
grew violent resulting in the burning of Government House.
This led to numerous uprisings throughout the island
requiring the use of British troops to rûstore order
(Daphnis, Athens 1955, vol. l, pp. 74-82). Despite the
strong sympathy that the people of Greece had for Cyprus the
Government of Venizelos refused to make any kind of protest
against the British (Daphnis, Athens 1955, Vol. l, p. 79).
51
one third of Greece's budget, became due in the years when
the Depression was at its height. On the other hand,
Britain's slower recovery from the Depression tended to work
against those of her client states such as Greece who were
forced to seek other trading opportunities. Germany clearly
provided such an opportunity through her more rapid recovery
in the mid-thirties. Between 1932 to 1935 Greek exports to
Germany rose from 14.5% to 29%. At the same time Greek
imports from Germany doubled to 18.7% from 9.7%. After 1935
German imports superseded goods from Great Britain and
reflected the growing influence of Germany in Greece. 37 The
growing trade dependencv of Greece on Germany was increased
during this period by the system of payment the Germans
implemented in the 1930's. Accordingly, exports to Germany
( from Greece were not paid for in currency but settled
through a clearing account in Berlin and could only be
liquidated upon purchases in Germany.38 German influence
upon the Greek econemy reached peaked on 24 September 1937
when a trade agreement was signed between Greece and Germany
37. During the same period Greek experts to Britain fell
from 23.4% to 12.8%, while imports rose slightly from 13.6%
to 15.5%. Trade with the United states fared better,
although imports fell from 15.3% to 6.2%, Greek exports te
America went from 14.4% te 17.1% (Royal Institute of
International Affairs, "The Balkan states, l, A Review of
the Economie and Financial Development of Albania,'Bulgaria,
Greece, Rumania and Yugoslavia since 1919", London 1936, pp.
139-140; Alexander Cadogan, The Diaries of Sir Alexander
Cadogan 1938-1945, ed. David Dilks, London 1971, pp. 117-
118) .
38. Mogens Pelt, "Greece and Germany's POlicy towards South-
Eastern Europe 1932-1940", Epsilon Vol. 2, No. 2 (1988), p.
56.
52
which attempted to regulate the economic relations of the
two states. Under the terms of the economic treaty official
representatives from beth countries were to meet once a year
in order to establish a fixed rate of imports and exports
between Greece and Germany thus bringing Greek - German
trade under joint control. 39
In 1935 the Abyssinian crisis forced the British to re-
consider once again the strategie position of Greece and it
once more raised British interest in Greek affairs. For
example, it was while British attention was focussed on
Ethiopia, that General Kondylis with the support of the
Chiefs of the armed services, had staged his coup in order
to restore the Greek King to his throne. ultimately, the
British response to the events in Greece mentioned above,
coming in the wake of the Abyssinian crisis, was the final
blow to Greek parliamentary democracy. Koliopoulos writes
that: "The British Government was faced with a serious
dilemma: they wished to stay out of the internaI affairs of
Greece: yet they needed the co-operation of the Greek
Government in the present international crisis, and in a
39. According to Pelt ("Greece and Germany's Policy towards
South Eastern Europe", p. 67), the Germans in order to
guarantee supplies of chrome, cotton, olives and bauxite had
to secure Greece as a sources of these products. For the
Greeks, however, to sell these items through the clearing
accounts ran counter to Greece's economic interests since
they saved currency or were trade in for foreign currency
and therefore the Greeks were reluctant to sell them te
Germany. The trade agreement of 1937 was one means by which
the Germans were able to force the Greeks to sell them a
higher percentage of these products.
53
possible emergency in the Mediterranean.". He also adds
that:
Recognition of the new regime, however, was
tantamount to recognizing a restoration of the
monarchy by force. But from now on the Abyssinian
crisis acted as a catalyst in the formulation of
British policy towards Greece and Greek affairs.
Hitherto, the British Government had followed
events and issues in Greece as an interested
spectator; thereafter, the British Govtônment
became a participant in Greek affairs.
On the 15th of October 1935 the Foreign Office instructed
the British Ambassador in Athens to establish contact with
the Government of Kondylis and assure him personally of
British support. Accordingly, the British Ambassador in
Athens was told by the Foreign Office that:
(
We think that the present political situation, in
which we might at any time require the goodwill
and friendly co-operation of the Greek Government,
renders it desirable that you should enter into
personal relations with General Kondylis and other
ministers, whether there be official recognition
of the new regime or note As for official
recognition, the sooner it can be safely effect~d
the better from the point of view of British
interests. Delay merely on technical grounds is,
in view of the international situation, to be
deprecated. 41
King George II, unlike his father Konstantine, was pro-
British in sentiment as weIl as in action. From 1924 until
his restoration in 1935 hE lived in London and not only
40. Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 23.
41. Foreign Office Telegram, 15 October 1935, FO 371/19508.
54
enjoyed the life-style of an English gentleman but made
several useful contacts with influential British
pOliticians. 42 He was greatly admired and trusted by
members of the Foreign Office who, in turn, were quite
sympathetic to the exiled Greek monarch. Vansittart, for
example described George II as: " ... a companiable man, who
preferred his affections in Britain to rickety eminence in
Greece.". 43 Before George II left London he met with the
Foreign Secretary, Sir Samuel Hoare, and the latter informed
him, that while the British Government could not endorse nor
discourage the restoration, Great Britain would not delay
recognition and would wish to see the new regime established
as securely as possible. 44
The Foreign Office, in effect, wanted to secure a friendly
Greece in case a military crisis occurred in the
42. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 187; S. Markezines, Politike
Istoria tis Neoteros Ellados: i Syngchronos ElIas 1932-1936,
vol. 4, Athens 1978, p. 64.
43. Lord Vansittart, London 1958, p. 537. According to the
American Ambassador in Athens, Lincoln MacVeagh, the British
Minister in Athens confided in him that the restoration of
King George II would be a "calamity". Once, however,
Waterlow was inforrned that the restoration of the monarchy
would take place he irnmediately told the Greek Minister for
Foreign Affairs that the King: " ... would have the full
support of the British Legation and of himself personally.".
Waterlow later confessed to MacVeagh that he had not changed
his views on the return of the King but since the Greeks
were going to restore the monarchy it seemed best to try and
help them make it a success (MacVeagh, Princeton 1980, pp.
56-58).
44. Memorandum by the Foreign Secretary 16 October 1935, FO
371/19508; Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 24.
55
Mediterranean while the British Government was attempting to
implement a parallel policy with Italy.45 British policy
after the end of the Abyssinian crisis had focussed on
restoring good relations with Italy while placating the
fears of Greece, Yugoslavia and Turkey with assurances of
military support. 46 The Foreign Office also considered the
idea of turning the declaration of British support into a
military pact with Greece and Turkey.
The issue of military support for Greece, however, troubled
the British Chiefs of Staff and a lengthy analysis concluded
that a military understanding with Greece would burden
England with liabilities and offer little in return. The
( analysis was based on a report by the Joint Planning Sub-
Committee which suggested that Greece was difficult to
de fend and that the risk existed of Britain becoming
involved in local Balkan disputes. On the other hand, the
Chiefs of Staff indicated that an alliance with Turkey would
bring about valuable military advantages in a war against
either Italy or Russia. Finally the Chiefs of Staff
recommended that the best method of securing the
45. Viscount Templewood, Nine Troubled Years, London 1954,
pp. 160-161.
46. Anthony Eden made a declaration in the House of Commons
(18 June 1936) that Great Britain would continue her
assurances to the small Mediterranean states during the
period of uncertainty, as was the case under Article 16 of
the League of Nations, after the lifting of sanctions by the
League (The Earl of Avon, The Eden Memoirs: Facing the
Dictators, London 1962, p. 386). On 1 July Eden made a
similar declaration at Geneva.
56
Mediterranean was the restoration of Britain's former
friendly relations with Italy.47
The report of the Joint Planning SUb-committee influenced
British policy towards Greece until the outbreak of the
Second World War. It was a policy which minimized the value
of an Anglo-Greek alliance and underlined its liabilities
for British security interests. 48 The report stated that:
Moreover, the Greeks are poor fighters and the
military problem of protecting their country
against Italy in war would be a very difficult
one. Greece lies so close to Italian airdromes
that a heavy scale of air attack could be directed
by Italy against any military bases established in
that country. We should also be committed to the
maintenance of Greek sea conmunications, which
would be a commitmcnt, in some respects, greater
than maintaining our own, as for us ther~ are!
routes alternative to the Mediterranean 4 .
The Greeks, on the other hand, had little faith in the
League of Nations restraining a major power and throughout
the Abyssinian crisis feared a repetition of the Korfu
Incident of 1923. 50 According to James Barros, although the
47. Pratt, London 1975, p. 38; COS Memorandum, 29 July 1936,
in FO 371/20383.
48. Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 33.
49. Joint Planning Sub-Committee Report, 21 July 1936, FO
371/20383.
50. On 27 August 1923, General Tellini and his staff,
members of an International Commission appointed by the
Conference of Ambassadors in Paris to define the Albanian-
Greek frontier, were killed by unknown assassins on the
Greek side of the Albanian-Greek border. Although there was
no evidence that the assassin was Greek Mussolini seized
upon this incident to bomba rd and occupy the island of
57
Greeks would have been overjoyed to see the Abyssinian
crisis turn into a major Italian defeat prudence prevailed
over any manifestation of open hostility towards Italy.51
For the se reasons the Greek Government, while profeEsing its
historical commitment to Great Britain, attempted to delay
and avoid any action which would antagonize Italy.52 In the
end, however, Greece adhered to the League and followed the
Korfu. Under pressure from the League of Nations Mussolini
had to withdraw his forces from the island but the Greek
Government was forced to pay a substantial indemnity to
Italy. Aiso see James Barros, "Mussolini's First Aggression:
The Korfu Ultimatum", Balkan Studies Vol. 2 (1961), pp. 257-
286 and by the same author: 1he Korfu Incident of 1923:
Mussolini and the League of Nations, Princeton 1965, passim.
51. James Barros, Britain. Greeoe and the Politics of
Sanctions: Ethiopia. 1935-1936, London 1982, p. 67.
(
52. In a long memorandum to Tsaldaris defininq Greece's role
in the League and policy in the Italian-Abyssinian crisis,
P. Pipinelis pointed ùut that Greece was bound by the terms
of the Le"lgue Covenant. Under Article 16 of the Covenant
each League member had the responsibility of contributi,q to
sanctions in accordance with its particular military and
geoqraphical conditions. Greece's proximity to Italy,
accordingly, could invoke paragraph three of Article 16
which stipulated that a League member had to make available
territory and territorial waters to military forces
operating on behalf of the League against violators of its
Covenant. In the present situation Greek neutrality would
be inconsequential. Greek harbors and airfields would be
made available to the British without any time limite The
implementation of these League obligations which might
prcvoke Italian reprisaIs were ~ot under Greek control since
Britain under Article 16 could, without the consent of the
Greek Government, justifiably make use of Greek territory to
attack Italy. Pipinelis added that from the point of view
of Greek interests Greece had to maintain British sympathy
and since she would have little choice under the present
circumstances it was preferable to follow Britain against
Italy and create a good impression storing up credit for
future consideration (Memorandum by Panagiotes Pipinelis,
( "Greece and the Italo-Ethiopian Situation", in Barros,
London 1982, p. 109).
58
lead of Britain by imposing sanctions against Italy.53
After the end of the Abyssinian crisis several new factors
characterized the Anglo-Greek relationship. Britain refused
to be committed to the defence of Greece or to any of the
Balkan states and Turkey. At the same time Greek foreign
policy reflected the dichotomy of power represented by the
King and Metaxas. The Greek Government appeared to steer a
neutral policy while attempting to court a British alliance
for protection against the encroachments of Italy.
According to Koliopoulos:
The long tradition of Anglo-Greek co-operation and
friendship made the Greek Government take for
granted British support in aIl circumstances and
this prompted it to follow, despite the serious
and repeated warnings of the Gree~ Chiefs of
Staff, a policy which depended to a great extent
on Britain. 54
53. The Tsaldaris' Government support of the League did not
go unchallenged. Sorne political and military circles, in
particular those led by Kondylis and Papagos, were
advocating strict neutrality and closer ties with Italy.
They feared that Greece would not only be attacked by Italy
but would also be exposed to threats from Turkey and
Bulgaria which the ill-equipped Greek fOlces were in no
condition to oppose. Events however proceeded quickly and
the coup d'etat of Kondylis coincided with the vote of the
League Assembly to accept the Council's sanctions against
Italy. The restoration of George II, furthermore, added a
new factor in Greek foreign policy. The pro-British
sentiments of the King and the appointment of Theotokis, an
ultra Royalist, as Foreign Minister indicated, cornments
Barros, a tacit admission that foreign policy would be a
royalist preserve. The King's contacts with London, it was
also felt, might be able to secure any assistance for the
short term difficulties that could develop in the
Mediterranean during the crisis but also acquire support for
Greece in the future (Barros, London 1982, p. 121).
54. Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 35.
'-'
59
( This interpretation, however, reflects the wishes of King
George II and not the policy advocated by Metaxas.
The reaction of the British Government to the dictatorship
was mixed and, for the most part, the British reconciled
themselves to the new order. The appraisal of the British
Ambassador, sir Sydney Waterlow, of the Greek political
situation in August 1936 played down the 3bolition of
parliamentary democracy and stressed that the King was in
control of the situation and the dictatorship, he argued ta
the Foreign Office, was advantageous to British interests. 55
Metaxas for his part went out of his way to assure the
British that he would maintain the traditional Anglo-Greek
( friendship. He informed Waterlow, in December 1936, that
Greece: tI • • • was irrevocably and unreservedly devoted to the
British connection .... 56 These sentiments, however, reflect
typical polite diplomatie exchanges and do not represent
British support for the dictatorship or that Metaxas wished
to abandon Greek neutrality in exchange for an alliance with
Great Britain.
In the same vein, Metaxas, in the aftermath of the
Czechoslovakian crisis, attempted to placate the German
Ambassador in order to preserve Greek neutrality. During
55. Athens Dispatch No. 281, FO 371/20390.
56. Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 60.
60
the course of a meeting with the German Minister, Prinz zu
Erbach, in early October 1938, Metaxas admitted tnat the
King would oppose a pro-German policy and any movement in
that direction would lead to the downfall of his government.
At the same time, Metaxas told the Prinz zu Erbach that if
Greece sided with Great Britain the Venizelists would use
this opportunity to take control of the state. In his
dispatch to the German Foreign Ministry, Erbach pointed out
that during the Sudeten crisis Greek public opinion was
overwhelmingly in favour of Britain and France but he stated
that the Metaxas Government was not affected by the attitude
of the general population. He also added that the Greek
Government saw:
••• its salvation rather in a collaboration of the
European Great Powers and from this standpoint
welcomed with sincere joy and satisfaction the
happy solution of the European crisis through the
Munich Agreement. 57
As he indicated to the German Ambassador, Metaxas had to
tread very carefully in regard to Greek foreign policy sinee
he required the goodwill of the King and the latter desired
close ties with Britain. Metaxas had to, at least, maintain
a veneer of pro-British sentiment. He feared that the
British did not like the dictatorship and that they harbored
strong misgivings about his past affiliations with Germany
as weIl as his loyalty to King Konstantine, who had
57. DGFP, Vol. 5, pp. 316-318.
61
attempted to keep Greece from joining the Entente during the
First World War. On 12 March 1939 Metaxas wrote in his
diary that he feared that the British would try and remove
him and as late as April 1940 he was still suspicious of
British intrigues against him. 58
Metaxas' suspicions were not without foundation. Waterlow,
originally a supporter of the dictatorship had by 1938
changed his views. His dispatches included warnings that
the dictatorship might soon be violently overthrown and
recommendations that the British Government withhold any
assistance to the Metaxas regime since this might cause an
anti-British reaction. 59 Waterlow also attempted to use his
( influence with the King and convince him to drop Metaxas but
without any success. 60 In 1938 Metaxas met with Waterlow
and proposed an Anglo-Greek alliance and, when this was
rejected, he confided in his diary that this left him free
to pursue his own policy, essentially one of neutrality.61
His distrust of British intentions towards the Balkans was
reinforced when Britain accepted the Italian invasion of
58. Metaxas Imerologio, vol. 7, p. 359, Sunday 19 March
1939.
59. Waterlow also begun to include in his reports
descriptions of the repressive measures taken by the Metaxas
regime, especially the compulsory enrollment of young people
in the dictatorships youth movement EON, Athens Dispatch No.
485, 19 December 1938, FO 371/22371; Letter from Waterlow to
Alexander Cadogan, 17 October 1938, FO 371/22363.
60. Athens Telegram No. 185, 6 October 1938, FO 371/22362.
(
61. Metaxas Imerologio, Vol. 7, p. 311, Thursday 1938.
62
Albania in April 1939.
For their part the British had issued a mild reprimand to
the Italians, whereas, in contrast the Greek Government
began preparations to meet a possible Italian invasion of
Greece. Mussolini, on the other hand, had assured the
British that Italy did not have any hostile intentions
against Greece and Halifax persuaded the Italian dictator to
repeat these assurances to the Greek Government. 62 Greek
officiaIs, however, remained skeptical and looked to Britain
for support but the British Government was not prepared to
give any guarantees to Greece except in close consultation
with Italy. Finally, it was only after Mussolini's
statement reaffirming Italy's intention to respect the
territorial integrity of Greece on the 10th of April that
Britain and France issued their guarantees to Greece and
Rumania on the 13 April 1939. 63 The guarantees to Greece
and Rumania, however, must be seen within the general
62. Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919-1939, Third
Series, Vol. 5, Nos. 95, 101, 109-110, (CrollajHallifax);
97, 111-112, 117 (Greek fears); 118 (Ita1ian assurance to
Greece); N.H. Gibbs, Grand Strategy, Vol. 1, London 1976. p.
709.
63. Koliopoulos, London 1977, p. 111. The guarantees
offered by the British Government to Greece, adds Pratt
(London 1975, p. 160), indicated a partial shift in British
diplomacy from appeasement to one of containment but it did
not lead to Anglo-Greek alliance. According to Gibbs (Grand
Strategy, Vol. 1, London 1976, p. 713), "It is important to
emphasize that these new guarantees were almost entirely
pOlitical in scope and immediate in purpose. There was no
detailed analysis of their military implications during
preliminary discussions, and no follow up Staff talks once
the guarantees had been given.".
63
framework of British policy in the spring of 1939. The
assurances of Britain and France to Poland represented a
watershed in British foreign policy regarding further German
expansion. The guarantees to Greece and Rumania, although
implernented in a manner to avoid a break with Italy, fell
within the policy of containrnent invoked by Great Britain in
the spring of 1939. 64
The strategie considerations that determined British policy
towards Greece were guided by the premise that Italy would
stay neutral in the event of war. This would allow free
movement of the British fleet in the Mediterranean to the
Far East. After 1936, according to L.R. Pratt, the British
Government had taken the view that Mussolini would regard an
Anglo-Greek alliance with suspicion and interpret it as an
attempt to build an anti-Italian coalition. 65 In fact, the
Foreign Office feared that any political and military
alliance with Greece would be regarded by Germany and Italy
as an atternpt to encircle them 66 . On the other hand closer
64. Cadogan, London 1971, pp. 170-175.
65. Pratt, London 1975, p. 150. Mussolini for his part,
writes MacGregor Knox (Mussoloni Unleashed 1939-1941, London
1982, pp. 52-53), toyed with the idea that rapprochement
with Greece wrnlld eventually enable him to bring that
country into the Italian sphere of influence and deny
Greece's harbors to the Royal Navy in the event of war. The
Metaxas Government welcomed Italian expressions of
friendship but remained cautious and ultimately nothing carne
of this except to an exchange of declarations reaffirming
both governrnents' continued desire to maintain good
relations.
66. Pratt, London 1975, p. 155.
64
Italian-Greek relations created other difficulties. In
September 1939 the Greek-Italian Pact of Friendship
(concluded in 1928) was due to expire and the Metaxas regime
at first, attempted to use the opportunity of renewing the
treaty as a means of improving relations with Italy.
Mussolini responded with equal enthusiasm but the effort to
renew Greece's ties with Italy ultimately collapsed because
they could not be reconciled with British interests and the
pact was not renewed. Indeed, the Italian proposa]s caused
sorne degree of confusion in the Foreign Office since it
created the dilemma that although a Greek-Italian agreement
went along with British policy of keeping Italy neutral,
should Britain find herself at war with Italy, such a pact
-, would keep Greece and her ports closed to the British. 67
In essence, however, Greek and British foreign polices were
not in direct contradiction. The desire for an alliance
with Britain was essentially the wish of George II and
those around him who wanted closer ties with the British,
partly as a reflex of tradition, as well as to counter the
influence of Metaxas. The British guarantee served the
purpose of protecting Greece while allowing her to negotiate
with Italy and trade with Germany. The British, on the
other hand, wanted reconciliation with Mussolini and
therefore did want to be seen to be building an alliance
against ItalYi an alliance with Greece would have
67. Koliopoulos, London 1977, pp. 114-119.
65
had the opposite affect of pushing Mussolini closer to
Germany.
After the outbreak of war in september 1939 the Foreign
Office requested from the CID (Committee of Imperial
Defence), a strategie appreciation of what was expected of
Greece and what possible support Britain could provide the
Government of Metaxas should circurnstances bring the Greeks
into the conflict. According to the Chiefs of Staff:
... it will be to our advantage for Greece to
rernain neutral as long as possible, even if Italy
declares war against us. As a belligerent she
will undoubtedly prove to be a liability and will
tend to absorb allied resources which could be
used elsewhere. It has already, however, become
apparent that the use of Suda Bay for our patrols
engaged in interrupting German sea-borne trade
( would be an advantage. If Turkey cornes in on our
side this need would be obviated since contraband
control could be more effectively exercised from
the Bosphorus. If Turkey, however, remains
neutral or even becomes hostile the use of a Greek
harbor rnay become necessary. In this event Greece
might submit to "force majeure" while remaining
neutral in the best interests of the allied cause.
The report went on to elaborate on what possible assistance
the allies could give Greece should she enter the war and
the strategy that could be adopted:
ACTION REQUIRED OF GREECE IF SHE BECOMES AN ALLY
We require the following:
(i) The denial of Greek harbors to our enemies.
(ii) The co-operation of Greek surface vessels in
the protection of trade.
(
66
(iii) Free access for allied Naval forces to
certain Greek harbors, such as Suda Bdy,
Navarin, Mundros and the Saronic Gulf.
The Greek forces are insuff;_cient to cover the
defence of aIl her frontiers. It is most
important that the territory south of the line
between the Gulf of Corinth and the Euboean
Channel should not be overrun. Greece must
therefore ensure that her early o,erations do not
prejudice her ability ultimately to de fend this
line.
ASSISTANCE WE ARE PREPARED TC GIVE GREECE IF AN
ALLY
We should provide security for sea communications
in the Eastern Mediterranean and as much
protection as possible for the Greek coast.
In the event of a German advance through
Yugoslavia or of Italian aggression, it would be
desirable that Salonica should be denied to the
enemy. with a hostile Italy, however, the
establishment and maintenance of an dllied force
there would not be practical by sea in the early
stages.
The French favour the establishment of a bridge-
he ad at Salonica as a base for future offensive
operations, and they have two divisions earmarked
in Syria for the purpose. We consider, however,
that Salonica is unsuitable as a base for an
offensive, for topographical and climatic reasons.
In any event we could not provide any British land
or air forces ta assist Greece unless the
neutrality of Italy is assured beyond aIl possible
doubt.
It is apparent that neithe~ France nor ourselves
are able ta offer any great measure of assistance
to Greece if she is attacked. From aIl points of
view, therefore, she should remain neutral as long
as possible, except in the special case of Turkey
and Bulgaria both entering the War on our side.
Moreover, until the attitudes of Italy and Turkey
are clarified it is impossible to advise Greece
upon a disposition of her forces, or to specify
our own naval requirernents. AlI we can say with
certainty at present is that:
(a) In aIl circumstances we want Greece to deny
67
the use of her harbors to our enemies.
(b) We can spare no land or air forces to operate
in Greece unless the neutrality of Italy is
assured beyond doubt.
In view of the above we consider that the
disadvantages of the possible repercussions of any
conversations with Greece at present, would far
outweigh any military advantages we could possibly
obtain. 68
The strategie report of the Chiefs of staff, although not
read by the Greek Staff, was in conformity with the foreign
policy of the Greek Government. Metaxas wished, at aIl
costs, to keep Greece out of the war. He confided in his
diary that the interests of Greece, as far as the major
powers ~ere concerned, received a very low priority. The
only options for his country was to becorne self sufficient
( and rnaintain her neutrality.69 At the sarne tirne the British
policy of keeping Greece neutral enabled Metaxas to avoid a
possible showdown with the King should the latter press for
Greece to enter the war on the side of Great Britain.
Despite Metaxas' repeated displays of friendship for Britain
and maintaining a strictly formaI relationship with Germany,
the British always had doubts about the Greek dictator.
However, they accepted the situation because they could do
68. War Cabinet: Chiefs of Staff Cornmittee, "Greek Co-
Operation Report", 22 September 1939, FO 371/23782 R7921.
69. Metaxas, Imerologio Vol. 4., p. 406, Sunday 13 November
1939. In December, Metaxas confided again in his diary that
he was pleased with the state of affairs of Greece
considering what was going on in the rest of the world.
(Metaxas, Irnerologio Vol. 4, p. 412, Sunday 31 December
( 1939) .
68
little else under the circurustances and they could count
upon the pro-British attitude of King George II.
On the 28th of October 1940 Mussolini issued an ultimatum to
the Greek Government which, if accepted, would have reduced
Greece to the status of an Italian satellite. The imrnediat~
and uncompromising refusaI of Metaxas to accept the Italian
demands leo to war. The Greek dictator's strong stand
against Italy alleviated any doubts that the Foreign Office
had over Metaxas' sympathies towards the Axis, at least as
far as Italy was concerned. There was still the question of
Germany and the British were particularly sensitive to the
possibility that Metaxas ~ould turn to her for medlation and
support. Gerrnany, however, stayed formally neutral and
Hitler gave his personal support to Mussolini, which
elimlnated any possible German effort to assist Greece.
Inltially, Hitler's policy towards the Balkans was to
maintain the status quo. Greece, on the other hand, writes
E. Schramm von Thaden, was not considered part of the
Balkans and the Italians assumed, wjth Hitler's concurrence,
that it fell within their sphere of influence and could be
invaded with impunity.70 The hypothesis put forth by Martin
Van Creveld for Mussolini's attack on Greece and Hitler's
acceptance of this action, is based on the conjecture that
70. E. Schramm von Thaden. Griechenland und die Grossrnachte
im Zweiten Weltkrieg, Wiesbaden 1955, p. 74.
69
when Mussolini and Hitler met on 4 October 1940 at Brenner
the German dictator gave his Italian counter-part verbal
assurance that the Italians could proceed with their
invasion. However, the attack against Greece, Creveld
speculates, was acceptable to Hitler only after the Italian
capture of Mersa Matruh in Egypt and the subsequent blocking
of the Suez Canal. In addition, the Italian plan had to
include the occupation of the entire Greek mainland and
probably the Aegean islands as well. 71
Creveld attempts to substantiate his theory by pointing out
that after the Brenner meeting Hitler received a continuous
flow of reports from the German Foreign Office
representatives in Italy as weIl as from the military
attaches in Rome about the imminent Italian invasion but he
did not react. 72 On the 28th of October, while on his way
to meet Mussolini, he received the news that the Italian
attack had started. According to A. Hillgruber, who bases
his account on the record of Hitler's aide de camp, D.G.
Engel, the German dictator upon hearing the news was
'swearing and cursing' accusing the German liaison staffs
with the Italians and attaches of being 'idlers but no
spies,.73
71. Martin Van Creveld, Hitler's Strategy 1940-1941: The
Balkan Clue, Cambridge 1973, pp. 34-35.
72. Creveld, Cambridge 1973, pp. 46-48.
73. A. Hillgruber, Hitlers Strategie, Frankfurt am Main
1965, p. 286.
7
Creveld's explanation is that although Hitler was aware of
Mussolini's intentions of invading Greece, he put on a
charade of indignation and acted surprised in order to give
himself an alibi in case the Italian attack failed. He adds
that during the course of his meeting with Mussolini, Hitler
did not give the Italians any sign of displeasure and that
the subject of Greece was hardly rnentioned, except when
Hitler congratulated his ally for the attack and offered him
the use of German airborne forces to assist in the invasion
of Krete. 74 The only hard evidence for Creveld's theory
(there is no record of any private talk between Hitler and
Mussolini at Brennner) is a letter from Mussolini sent to
Hitler on 19 October 1940, in which while he reviewed the
overall strategie and political situation facing the Axis,
Mussolini included veiled threats against Greece: "As
regards Greece, 1 am resolved to end the delays, and very
saon. Greece is one of the main points of English waritirne
strategy in the Mediterranean.". Mussolini stated that the
Greek King was English and that the British had taken over
Greek naval and air bases while the Greek armed forces were
being mobilized. He compared the Italian situation in
Greece to that of the German strategy in Norway: "In short,
Greece is to the Mediterranean what Norway was to the North
74. Creveld, Cambridge 1973, p. 49.
71
( Sea, and must not escape the same fate .... 75
Mussolini's indirect references to an attack against Greece
are hardly conclusive of a solid agreement with Hitler nor
does this letter provide any indication of an imminent
invasi,.,n of the Greek mainland. Hagen Fleischer explains
that Hitler, despite the rumors and reports about an
immanent Italian attack against Greece, believed that he
could rely on the in-decisiveness of the Italians until he
met with Mussolini in early November and then deal with the
Italian ambitions in the Balkans. In the meantime he
advanced his meeting with Mussolini from 5 November to 28
october. 76 MacGregor F~ox contends that at the Brenner Pass
( meeting Hitler did not encourage Mussolini in his Greek
ambitions, as part of the developing German Mediterranean
strategy as stipulated by Creveld, and suggests that:
"Hitler proposed to draw Greece into the Axis fold by
consent rather than by force.".77 He also quotes a remark
made by Ciano in his record of the Brenner conference which
states that the Axis had to avoid: "any action that might be
of less than absolute utility in the struggle". According
to Knox this is a strong reflection of the previous German
warnings against immediate invasion. 78
75. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XI, No. 199, p. 334.
76. Hagen Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 63.
77. Knox, London 1982, p. 203.
(
78. Knox, London 1982, p. 203; Walter Ansel (Hitler and the
Middle Sea, Durham N.C., 1972, p. 34 note 6), comments that
--- -------------------------
72
Hitler had already made it clear to Mussolini that he would
not tolerate any interference in Yugoslavia and that his
main objective was to drive the British out of the
Mediterranean. By September, Hitler had decided that he
could not invade Britain and, for the time being, the only
option was to neutralize the Mediterranean by taking
Gibraltar and the Suez Canal. This strategy, however,
required the co-operation of Vichy France and spain and in
the autumn of 1940 Hitler attempted to create an alliance of
the "southern dictators".79 Before the discussions at the
Brenner pass, Hitler met with Franco in late October and
with Petain on the 24th but failed to draw either dictator
into the war. Ita~y;s invasion of Greece, consequently,
opened up a new front in a region that Hitler planned to
contain by diplomatie and economic pressure. 80
Almost a month later (20 November 1940), Hitler wrote to
Mussolini and gently reprimanded him for his premature
attack on Greece. Albeit, the letter was written with the
benefit of hindsight, but in it Hitler points out that he
Hitler at Brenner may have rclented and given his assent for
an Italian invasion of Greece. Ansel bases this on a
comment by Jodl to Warlimot that he thought: "it possible
that at the Brenner Pass conference the Fuhrer gave his
consent to the Duce for an attack on Greece without
informing his military entourage.".
79. DGFP, Series D, No. 323, Vol. XI, pp. 527-528; Vol. XI,
No. 352, pp. 598-606; Vol. XI No. 3~3, pp. 608.
80. DGFP, Series D, No. 369, Vol .. XI, pp. 639-642.
73
( had only been informed about the Greek conflict in a general
way and had wanted Mussolini to postpone the invasion until
a more favorable season and after the American presidential
election. Hitler also expressed his concern that, as a
result of the Italian invasion, the British had seized the
opportunity to occupy Xrete and were in the process of
establishing air bases on other Greek islands. He went on
to outline the Axis strategy in South Eastern Europe which
essentially was aimed at destroying the Royal Navy through
the use of air power and closing off the Mediterranean to
the British and only after this condition was met could
further land operations against Greece be resumed. 81
( The surprising victories of the Greek army over the Italians
in Greece and Albania reinforced the British policy of
support for Metaxas despite pressure from the Foreign Office
to encourage the Greek Government to release political
prisoners and co-operate with the opponents of the regime. 82
In December 1940 a meeting was held between Fore:gn Office
and SOE representatives to discuss the situation in Greece.
The SOE representative indicated that the Special Operations
Executive had already an agent in Athens: "with the object
of promoting a united front".83 He was attempting to secure
the return of the exiled politicians, encourage the
81. DGFP, Series D, No. 369, Vol. XI, pp. 639-643.
( 82. FO 371/24910.
83. FO 371/24982.
74
Venizelists to support Metaxas and make known to the Greek
Government of the undesirability of having two pro-German
ministers in the government. The Foreign Office had serious
doubts about the use of such activity and the SOE had to
ensure that its representative would not undertake any
action in such matters without the express approval of the
British Ernbassy in Athens. 84
In fact the newly created SOE had very little contact with
the intelligence services, ministries or individuals close
to the Metaxas Government. The raison d' etre of its
function was to prepare for and create sabotage, resistance
and to use the often quoted phrase of winston Churchill:
"Set Europe AbIaze". Its role in Greece was to organize a
network of agents to conduct such activity in anticipation
of a possible Axis occupation. Despite the assurances given
to the Foreign Office by the SOE in London, Special
Operations Exec~tive officers in Athens began to make
contact with Venizelists, Communists and other opponents of
the Metaxas regime since, as will be illustrated below, the
SOE believed that such groups were capable of the type of
underground work required to pursue its objectives in an
occupied country. As a result, after the occupation of
Greece the SOE's contact was mainly with Venizelists and
Communists who were still opposed to the Greek monarchy
which effectively was the Greek Government-in-Exile. On the
'.'
84. FO 371/24982.
-
75
other hand, the Foreign Office and the British Government
were committed to the Greek King and the traditional British
intelligence services, su ch as HI6, had contacts in Greece
with the supporters of the Greek monarchy and individuals
who had been a part of or were in sympathy with the Metaxas
regime.
{
"
(
76
operation Marita and Enigma
The continued success of the Greek armies against the
Italians in Albania and the appearance of Brit.ish forces,
even of token strength, on the Greek mainland and Krete made
a German invasion a distinct possibility. As early as 4
November Hitler had decided that some kind of intervention
in the Balkans was necessary ta rescue his only ally from a
humiliating defeat. On 12 November 1940 Hitler directed the
Commander-in-Chief of the Army to make preparations for the
occupation of the Greek mainland north of the Aegean should
it become necessary to attack British air bases in Greece. 85
Despite Greek assurances that the British presence in Greece
was minimal and only to support operations against the
Italians 86 Hitler by 13 December had decided that the
British had to be prevented from threatening the Romanian
oil fields; although he had not yet decided on the outright
occupation of Greece he was contemplating the seizure of
bases for the German air force in order to dominate the
eastern Mediterranean. His main concern, according to
Directive No. 20, was to frustratè British designs against
the Ploesti ail fields and for this reason he ordered the
85. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XI, No. 323 , "Directive 18",
.... p. 530 •
86. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XI, No. 540, p. 916.
77
planning for the invasion and occupation of northern Greece,
but if necessary he was prepared to capture the entire Greek
mainland. 87
The continued defeats of the Italians in Albania, North
Africa, Ethiopia, in the eastern Mediterranean and the
presence of British forces in Greece, however, forced Hitler
to make up his mind and on 22 March 1941 he decided that
Operation Marita should include the entire Greek mainland as
weIl as the islands of Thasos and Samothrace off the Aegean
Coast. 88 The only changes to Hitler's plans came as a
result of the coup in Yugoslavia on the evening of 26-27
March whicn brought about the resignation of the Regent,
( Prince Paul, and the fear that Yugoslavia would withdraw
from the Tripartite Pact. This required the transfer of
additional forces to participate in the attack against
Yugoslavia as weIl as Greece. On the other hand the
Yugoslav coup expanded Hitler's strategie options wi~h
regards to Operation Marita by simplifying the logistical
and transportation difficulties anticipated by the German
high command fo!- the invasion of Greece. 89
87. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XI, No. 511, "Directive 20:
Operation Marita".
88. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, No. 195, "Directives of the
High Command of the Wehrmacht", pp. 338ff: F.H. Hinsley,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: its influence
on Strategy and Operations, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 347-348.
89. The Yugoslavian railroad system had been inherited from
( the Habsburg Empire and connected with those of Austria,
Hungry, Rumania and Greece, as was not the case with
Bulgaria. Consequently, it offered the German army a direct
78
On 6 April 1941, the German armies began their offensive and
quickly overwhelmed the Yugoslav forces reaching the Greek
frontier within days and not weeks as had been anticipated
by General Papagos. The deployment of the Greek army and
the British Expectitionary Force (BEF) was, according to
Creveld, "ouicidal".90 General Papagos had dissipated his
limited forces by keeping four divisions along the Metaxas
line, to protect eastern Makedonia and Thrake, while he only
allocated three divisions to hold a defensive position, a
hundred miles to the rear on the Aliakhmon line along with
the British Expeditionary Force. 91 These dispositions
created three defensive positions which depended for their
approach to Macedonia (John Keegan, The Second World War,
Toronto 1989, p. 152).
90. Van Creveld, Cambridge 1973, p. 158.
91. The BEF was to consist of the: 6th Australian Division,
1st New Zealand Division, Ist British Arrnored Brigade, one
Polish Brigade and the 7th Australian Division. The last
two units however did not have the opportunity to
participate in the Greek campaign since by the time they
were ready to sail the BEF was preparing for evacuation.
The British had assumed from their discussions with Papagos
on 21 February 1941 that the ldtter would abandon the
Metaxas Line and use those forces to hold the Aliakhmon
Line. When the first elements of the BEF arrived in Greece
on 5 March, however, Papagos refused to withdraw his forces
to the Aliakhrnon Line because he feared the political
repercussions of abandoning Makedonia and Thrake to
Bulgaria. Instead he recommended that the British commit
their forces piece-meal to reinforce the Makedonidn frontier
Line. This proved to be unacceptable te the British and a
compromise was reached that left the BEF defending the
Aliakhmon Line with the support of three Greek divisions
(Great Britain Cabinet Office. Cabinet History Series:
principal War Telegrams and Memoranda 1940-1943, Vol. 1,
"Middle East, From the Occupation of Cyrenaica to the Fall
of Keren and Harar", Nos. 39, 40, 69, 73).
79
security on the Yugoslavs holding their ground against the
German superiority of manpower and equipment. Papagos' plan
was not what the British had agreed to when General Wavell
had discussed with the Greek general the role that British
expeditionary force would play in the defence of Greece, but
was the result of misinterpreting Yugoslav intentions and
pOlitical expediency.92
This was particularly disheartening for the British
especially since the decision to send troops to Greece was
made over the objections of the Chiefs of Staff and the
Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East. 93 It was not based
on military considerations but was motivated by Churchill's
J
\ enthusiasm to support a "gallant" illly and the faint hope
that it might result in a significant set back for the
Germans as weIl as the fear that if Britain did not support
Greece it would have grave repercussions on relations with
92. Papagos believed that by keeping a defensive position
which included Makedonia and Thrake, as weIl as the port of
Thessaloniki, the Yugoslavs could be induced to deploy their
forces in southern Yugoslavia and protect the flank of the
Greek army. At the very least Papagos believed that he
would have sufficient time to withdraw his forces to the
Aliakhmon line if the Yugoslavs remained neutral. Another
important consideration for the Greek Commander-in-Chief was
that by not defending Makedonia and Thrake he would be
abandoning Greece's second largest city and most probably
the entire region would fall under Bulgarian control. At
this time Bulgaria was Greece's greatest rival in the
Balkans and abandoning any national territory to a
traditional enemy would have had severe political
repercussions.
93. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 361.
80
Yugoslavia and Turkey.94 The Chiefs of Staff finally agreed
to send help to Greece but they cautioned that if the
presence of British formations were to have any affect they
had to be dispatched as soon as possible and the strategy of
holding the Aliakhmon Line with the Greek forces withdrawn
from Thrake and Makedonia they concluded, would have the
only chance of success. 95
Despite the earlier success of British intelligence on
breaking sorne of the German codes, the assessment of German
intentions in the Balkans and the Middle east was very
limited throughout 1940. In early 1941, however, the
information made available from Enigma increased
sufficiently to enable British intelligence to form a better
picture of Hitler's intentions in the Balkans. During this
period (December 1940 - January 1941) the British assumed
Hitler had ambitions of not only taking the Balkans but
pushing through Turkey and advancing on to Iraq.96 By 21
November, British Military Intelligence had informed the
Chiefs of Staff that the German preparations to enter
Bulgaria were complete. On 24 December Enigma decrypts
94. Great Britain Cabinet Office, Cabinet History Series:
Principal War Telegrams and Memoranda 1940-1943, Vol. 1,
"Middle East, From the Occupation of Cyrenaica to the Fall
of Keren and Harar", Nos. 36, 39; Sir Llewellyn Woodward,
British Foreign Policy in the Second Word War, Vol. l,
London 1970, p. 511.
95. Sir Llewellyn Woodward, British Foreign policy in the
Second Word War, Vol. l, London 1970, p. 526.
96. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 347.
1
81
began ta yield information on the German concentration of
forces in the Balkans and on 25 December an Enigma decrypt
carried the first mention of Operation Marita. 97
The combination of Enigma decrypts and ~ntelligence reports
from other sou~'ces convinced the Chiefs of staff that the
Germans were planning ta invade Greece on 20 January 1941.
Since the British Government had conc1uded that it was
necessary ta support the Greeks it was decided to send the
Commander-in-Chief, Middle East to Athens and offer the
Greeks immediate reinforcements. Although the German
invasion did not materialize on 20 January the Chiefs of
Staff's assessment of the situation in late January
predicted a graduaI German occupation of Bulgaria, over a
two month period, followed by an attack on Greece or
Turkey.98 It was not until mid February, however, that a
combinat ion of Enigma traffic and intelligence reports from
agents in occupied Europe indicated without any doubt that
the Germans were going ta invade Greece. 99
The War Cabinet had already agreed on 10 February that
reinfarcements would have ta go ta Greece and this required
a build up of forces in Egypt which, in turn, had a direct
97. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 352.
98. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 355: Butler, Vol. II,
pp. 377-378.
,f
99. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 358.
82
impact on the campaign in North Africa. 100 The Cabinet
decision to support Greece required that Wavell's army would
not advance through Tripolitania to Tripoli but to stop at
El Agheila. On 12 February Churchill telegraphed the
decision of the War Cabinet to Wavell and explained that:
Our first thoughts must be for our ally Greece,
which is actually fighting so weIl. If Greece is
trampled down or forced to make a separate peace
with Italy, yielding also Air and naval strategie
points against us to Germany, effect on Turkey
will be very bad. But if Greece with British aid
can hold up for some months German advance,
chances of Turkish intervention will be favoured.
Therefore it would seem that we should try to get
in a position to offer the Greeks the transfer to
Greece of the fighting portion of the army which
has hitherto defendeà Egypt and make every plan
for sending and re~nforcing it to the limit with
men and material. 1 1
Wavell accepted the War Cabinet's instructions and believed
that, although sending a force to Greece entailed
considerable risks, it was worth the chance since it would
encourage the Greeks to continue fighting and it might even
force the Germans to fight on a front which they had hoped
to dominate without the use of military force. In addition,
according to Wavell's strategie appreciation, if Greece fell
it would damage British prestige and eliminate any
possibility of Yugoslav and Turkish assistance. 102
100. Gilbert, Finest Hour, Vol. 6, London 1983, pp. 1011-
1012.
101. CAB 69/2.
102. John Connell, Wavell: Soldier and Scholar, New York
1964, pp. 330-336.
83
On 2 April Enigma decrypts clearly showed the attack would
take place on the 5 April and shortly after that date was
corrected to 6 April 1941. 103 Despite the tremendous
advantage which Enigma afforded the British Government and
Chiefs of staff, the Greek campaign proved to be a disaster
which the Enigma decrypts could not avert. By 9 April the
Germans had routed the Yugoslavian army and captured the
Metaxas Line. Once they achieved this objective they were
able to turn the left flank of the Aliakhmon Line and
advance into central Greece, while a detached force
outflanked the Greek position in Albania.
The Greek forces in Albania held their ground despite an
Italian attempt to Mount an offensive to coincide with the
German attack but the Italian army ultimately failed to
achieve a breakthrough. The British, on the other hand, did
not have the opportunity to offer serious resistance since
each defensive position they took deteriorated rapidly
thanks in part to German superiority in equipment and air
power. Once their position on the Aliakhmon line was
outflanked they fell back from one position to another,
until they were rescued by the Royal Navy.l04 Accordinq to
103. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 372-373.
104. Evacuation of the BEF began on the night of 24-25 April
and continued for the next five nights, S.W. Roskill, The
War at Sea 1939-1945, Vol. I: "The Defensive", London 1954,
p. 436.
84
John Keegan: "Though they lacked the numbers and equipment
to resist the Gerrnans, they had the motorized transport in
which to wi~hdrawi . . . . ".105 The Commander of the First
Greek Arrny in Albania , General George Tsolakoglou, once he
realized that his forces were eut off decided on his own
initiative to surrender to the Gerrnans rather than give the
Italians a victory they did not deserve. 106 Perhaps, if he
had used his initiative to defy his Commander-in-Chief
earlier, the BEF may not have been outflanked at the
Aliakhmo~ Line. In sorne respects, the comments of Keegan
and the actions of Tsolakoglou serve as a fitting epitaph of
the doomed Greek-British campaign in Greece.
On 21 April General Papagos recommended that the British
begin evacuating their forces from Greece and by the 25th of
April most of the BEF was rescued by the Royal Navy.107
The remnants of the BEF, the Greek Government and the King
were brought to Krete with the hope that the island would
serve as the base of operations against German occupied
mainland Greece. In terms of numbers, the Allied forces in
Krete seemed more than adequate. In reality, however, most
105. John Keegan, The Second World War, Toronto 1989, p.
157.
106. Tsolakoglou opened unauthorized discussions with Sepp
Dietrich, the commander of the Adolf Hitler Division and
surrendered his forces on 20 April 1941.
107. The British Mediterranean Fleet provided a force of six
cruisers, 20 destroyers and 30 other ships to facilitate the
evacuation. Slightly over 50,000 men were rescued by the
Royal Navy at a cost of two destroyers and four transports.
85
of the 40,000 British troops were what was left of the BEF
in Greece. The majority were disheartened, disorganized and
lacked essentlal equipment. The commander of the Allied
forces in Krete, General Bernard Freyberq, could only rely
on the one brigade of British infantry, brought to the
island direct from Egypt, as weIl as two brigades of the 2nd
New Zealand Division and one Australian Brigade. ~he Greek
forces on the island consisted cf mainly raw recrui~s and
reservists, since the 5th Kretan Division had been abandoned
on the mainland.
The allies, however, had one significant advantage - the
proposed German operation against Krete was known from the
start thanks to Enigma. In effect, the raison d'etre of a
J
airborne attack was surprise and that was compromised from
the beginning of the operation. Mercury, the operation
against Krete, was not part of the original Marita directive
and it was not until 25 April that Hitler gave his approval
for the airborne attack. The Chiefs of Staff had speculated
as early as 18 April that Krete would be the next German
objective but also included Cyprus and Iraq as possible
targets. 108
108. Enigma traffic on 18 April revealed that 250 Ju 525 had
been withdrawn from routine flights and earmarked for a
special operation which turned out to be a paratroop attack
on the Korinth Canal (26 April) in order to cut off the
British retreat. Afterwards new Enigma decrypts indicated a
new operation was imminent but there was still no evidence
that Krete was the next objective. Hinsley (London 1979,
Vol. l, p. 416) comments that this may have prompted
Churchill, an advocate of holding Krete, ~o give priority to
the withdra~al of the BEF from mainland Greece and maintain
86
On 26 April, Enigma traffic confirmed preparations for
another large scale German operation in the Balkans and
German Air Force decrypt.s began to refer to Krete. Between
1 to 5 May Enigma decrypts confirmed that Krete was the next
target and more importantly the JIC (Joint Intelligence Sub-
Committee) was able to estimate that the German operation
was imminent. The flow of En~gma traffic in the next two
weeks provided the British with detailed information about
the German dispositions for Operation Mercury and suggested
JO Mayas the date of the airborne assault against the
island. During the course of the battle, Enigma decrypts
contain~d: information from German situation reports
reinforcement rates and identification of units landed on
Krete. 109 On the evening of the 21-22 May Enigma traffic
also warned that Malerne was the principal Germ~n objective
as weIl as be~oming the main point of entry for German
reinforcements and supplies. 110
the British positions in Libya since both the Chiefs of
Staff and the JIC had strong concerns about a possible
German mOYé into Syria and Iraq. Hinsley's analysis,
however is based on s.o. Playfair, (The Mediterranean and
Middle East, Vol. II, p. 124) who states that Churchill
decided that the extrication of the Dominion troops from
Greece and the battle for Libya were imperative but if these
priorities clashed emphasis should be given to Libya, Krete
would get whatever reinforcements were left over from the
forces evacuated from Greece. On 17 April Enigma traffic
had confirmed Br1tish suspicions that Rashid Ali had
appealed to the Axis for support (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol.
l, p. 410).
109. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 420.
110. Ralph Bennett, Ultra and the Mediterranean Strategy
1941-1945, London 1989.
87
Despite a great effort by the British and the tremendous
courage of the Kretans to defend their island, the Germans
were able to seize the three major airports and once again
the Royal Navy had to rescue the BEF. According te ninsley:
••• the conduct and the outcome of the battle were
affected by Enigma and that the British, whether
from weakness or for other reasons, were not in a
position to make better use of an intelligence
service i~at was at least getting into its
stride. l
In the conclusion of another author, Ralph Bennett, the
British in Krete did not have sufficient forces and
equipment to take advantage of the intelligence provided by
Enigma and despite the information that was available to
Freyberg he could do little to affect the outcome of the
batt.le. 112
A more precise appraisal is that the British had more than
sufficient manpower but lacked mobility and firepower to
cope with the German attack. In the final analysis the
battle of Krete is a good example that neither a clear
advantage in intelligence nor numerical superiority is a
111. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 420-421.
112. Bennett, London 1989, pp. 60-61. Accordipg to Peter
Cal vocoressi, (Total War: The Causes and Courses of the
Second World War« Volume 1: The Western Hemisphere, second
edition, London 1989, p. 178), Freyberg was instructed by
Wavell not to make tactical use of Ultra without
corroborating intelligence from another source.
88
guarantee for victory. The battle of Krete proved to be the
ideal testjng ground for the operational use of Enigma but
it also demonstrated that there was a great gap between the
acquisition of ~ntelligence and the transmission of that
information to the relevant ~ilitary commando
After operations Marita and Mercury, the role of Enigma, as
far as it concerned German activities in Greece, was limited
because the Axis forces in Greece remained static.
According to Hinsley, there was a plethora of Enigma traffic
relating to Yugoslavia but negligible amounts dealing with
Greece because: " ... it is obvious that more Sigint would be
produced by purposive warfare than by warfare consisting
chiefly of passive waiting for the isolated guerrilla
raid.".113 Accordingly British intelligence on Greece had
to depend on the establishment of espionage networks and the
infiltration of agents which, with few exceptions, had to be
organized after the occupation.
In the inter-war period, however, the use of espionage and
other forros of conventional intelligence received little
attention. The British intelligence agencics maintained
minimal espionage networks in general and small and
ineffectual organizations in places such as Greece. This,
for the most part, was a legacy of the pa st which considered
the use of espionage as an odious and distasteful practice
113. Hinsley, New York 1984, Vol. 3 p. 501.
89
1
to be kept at arms length but a necessary evil in time of
( war.
In the nineteenth century the role of intelligence as a
complementary part of military planning was accepted only
after considerable hesitation and, as a result, develop~d
unevenly and usually as a reaction to wartime needs.
Espionage, on the other hand, continued to be viewed both by
Whitehall and the military with distaste and it was not
until 1906 that, after most major countries had established
intelligence organizations, that the British Government
established MI6 as an agency to deal with espionage.
Despite this, the use and function of intelligence
organizations continued to be vjewed by the Foreign Office
( with suspicion and every effort was made to keep these
organizations at arms length.
As a result, the British intelligence agencies developed as
organizations whose role was to collect and process
information but had little control over how this
intelligence was evaluated or interpreted. In addition, the
intelligence organizations were confined to a relatively low
position within the government hierarchy. Consequently,
they had limited access to how the intelligence they
compiled was used in the formation of strategy and policy,
yet their isolation permitted them a degree of operational
freedom which, as in the case of Greece, led to considerable
90
confusion over British policy.
In arder ta comprehend the role of British intelligence and
its impact on Greece between 1940-1941, it is essential ta
examine the development of the British intelligence
community between the two world wars. An examination of
these two periods is necessary in arder to understand the
relationship of the intelligence crganizations te the
implementation of Bri~ish policy and strategy as weIl as
place the raIe of intelligence within the context of the
Second World War and in particular ta the situation in
accupied Greece.
91
Chapter 2
Suryey of British Military Intelligence
In its early history, British military intelligence
fluctuated between periods when departments of military
intelligence exercised considerable influence within the
armed forces and government to periods of relative
obscurity. This variation is generally attributed to the
notion held by military officers and even by government
officiaIs, before the Second World War, that espionage was
an illegal activity incompatible with the principles of
( honor and diplomatic protocol. Most senior staff officers,
therefore, could not comprehend the value of maintaining a
peace time intelligence service to compile information on
foreign armies preferring to rely on fire-power and
initiative for the conduct of any war. 1 Yet, with the
1. According to B.A.H. Parritt (The Intelligencers: The
Story of British Military Intelligence up to 1914, Ashford
1971, p. 150), during the last decade of the nineteenth
century the attitude amongst British officers towards the
Intelligence Branch was: " ..• distrustful and disdainful.".
This attitude towards intelligence continued right up to the
early phases of the First Word War. Haswell (British
Military Intelligence, London 1973, p. 89) states that:
"Most regular officers felt that war was so serious a
business that it would be dangerously unwise to leave any
aspect of it in the hands of these people (civilian
intelligence specialists) who really knew no~~ing about the
arroy.". In the inter-war period, the lack of adequately
trained field intelligence officers is attributed by Hlnsley
( (London 1979, Vol. l, p. 14) partly to the low esteem into
which int~lligence had once again fallen. Haswell (London
92
exception of the ancient Greeks, military and political
espionage had been based on the use of officers as the main
suppliers of information. 2 In the nineteenth century,
Napoleon not only made use of generals as ambassadors but
employed in French legations, centers of espionage headed by
officers. The prussian General Massenbach had also proposed
to his government the attachment of officers, destiner for
higher staff duties, to foreign courts so that they could
observe and study the enemy's forces. 3 According to Alfred
Vagts:
In certain respects the military attache of
nineteenth century is part of the military
progress instituted by Napoleon, and adopted by
those who overthrew him while they rejected his
militarism. Henceforth the rnilitary sector of
diplomatie reporting took on a more expert
character, and military competition called for
specifie information on foreign armies. 4
Between 1870-1871, the defeat of France and the sudden
emergence of Prussia as a major military power created the
1973, p. 161), adds that the real problem was that: "To many
military minds intelligence was no profession for an officer
and a gentleman.".
2. The ancient Greek city-states up until the time of Philip
and Alexander did not maintain permanent military
establishments with a professional officers corps. Espionage
was employed but remained under the control of politicians
and diplomats. (see: Andre Gerolymatos, Espionage and
Treason: A study of the proxenia in Political and Military
Intelligence Gathering in Classical Greece, Amsterdam 1986,
passim) .
3. Alfred Vagts, The Military Attache, Princeton 1967, pp.
9-10.
4. Vagts, Princeton 1967, p. 15.
93
impetus in Britain for the establishment of a department
that would be responsible for the acquisition of military
intelligence. Even before the prussian victories, the Duke
of Cambridge, the Commander-in-Chief of the British army,
had proposed to establish a military attache in Berlin, and
after much hesitation by Lord John Russell, officers were
stationed in Paris, Berlin, Turin, st. Petersburg, Vienna
and Frankfurt. 5 Between 1871-1914 aIl the major powers, and
even some of the smaller ones, had begun to employ military
and naval attaches on a regular basis thus by the outbreak
of the First World War the attache 6 had become a permanent
feature of the legation staff. 7
In 1873, the British Government announced the creation of an
Intelligence Branch within the War Office under the command
of a Major-General. 8 The terms of reference for this
department, as quoted by J. Haswell, were to take into:
" ... consideration in time of peace of the measures to be
taken for home defence in order to prevent confusion on the
5. In addition, two naval attaches were posted in Paris and
Washington (Vagts, Princeton 1967, pp. 28-29).
6. The term "military attache" in the British army became
standard after 1857. On the variety of tiles used by other
states see Vagts, prirlceton 1967, pp. 24-26.
7. Vagts, Princeton 1967, p. 34-35.
8. The precise term was Deputy Adjutant-General (Major
General), J. Haswell, British Military Intelligence, London
1973, pp. 34-35; T. G. Fergusson (British Military
Intelligence 1870-1914: The Development of a Modern
Intelligence Orsanizatiün), Frederick, Maryland, 1984, p.
47) .
-- --------------------
94
outbreak of war.". 9 B.A.H. Parrit adds that the chief of
the new bran ch was also " ... made responsible for the
strategie application of information available ..• 11.10
Initially, the Intelligence Branch was subordinated to the
Adjutant General's department but a year later (July 1874)
it was transferred to the Quartermaster General. The
transfer, T. G. Fergusson suggests, reflected the
traditional wrangling in the British army over who had
control of intelligence. In the early eighteenth century,
the Adjutant General's responsibilities included the
supervision of outposts and security thus involving him,
states Fergusson, in both operations and intelligence.
However, the Quartermaster General was in charge of
selecting and organizing ca~üp sites through the use of
reconnaissance and in this manner was involved in one aspect
of intelligence activity. A century later both the Adjutant
General and Quartermaster General had intelligence
functions. 11 According to Fergusson:
... traditionally the Adjutant General had been the
more important of the two officers, but Wellington
favoured the Quartermaster General, and as time
went on he gave the latter most of the operations
and intelligence functions. 12
9. Haswell 1973, pp. 34-35.
10. B.A.H. Parrit, The Intelligencers: The Story of British
Military Intelligence up to 1914), Ashford 1971, p. 100.
Il. Haswell, London 1973, p. 47.
12. Haswell, London 1973, p. 47.
95
The return of the Intelligence Branch to the Quartermaster
General in 1874, concludes Fergusson, was consistent with
the practice of the British army during the Napoleonic Wars
in the first half of the nineteenth century.13
Unfortunately, the new Branch was also given the additional
responsibility for mobilization planning, without any
increase in staff or resources, which limited the amount of
time that could be devoted to intelligence work. 14
On 1 June 1887, the title of Deputy Quartermaster-General
for Intelligence was replaced by that of oirector of
Military Int.elligence (DMI) which remained in use until
1965. 15 A year later (February 1888), the mobilization
section was transferred to the office of the Adjutant-
General, the head of the Intelligence Branch was promoted to
Lieutenant-General and the service was upgraded to the levei
of Intelligence Division. By 1891, according to Haswell, it
had become an established principle thQt the Director of
Military Intelligence was consulted on aIl military rnatters
13. Fergusson (Maryland 1984, p. 48) cannot determine why
the Intelligence Branch was originally placed with the
Adjutant General except ta suggest that it was probably due,
in part, to the resurgence of the position of Adjutant
General who by the 1870's had bec orne the "unofficial deputy
of the Commander-in-Chief, and his functions most closely
approximated t.hose of a chief of staff.".
14. Haswell, London 1973, p. 35.
15. In 1965, a joint Defence intelligence staff was
established which included the intelligence departments of
the three Ser~ices.
96
concerning foreign countries. 16 Despite these innovations,
and a great deal of research by the Intelligence Bra~ch Ou
various countries and potential trouble-spots, most
operational cOïrumanders were reluctant to take advantage of
the services of the Intelligence Branch and had no use for
trained intelligence units to accompany the army in the
field. J. Haswell comments that:
Although at home there had b2en times when it
seemed as if progress was bej.ng made, under the
test of actual war the majority of officers at aIl
levels remained unconvinced or saw no need for any
intelligence corps. Either expressing their
contempt or ignoring the intelligence service
altogether, they preferred to rely on their own
intuition or instinct wt'ch they were apt to
regard as a fine blend of experience and common
sense. 17
The shortcomings of this attitude were clearly demonstrated
by the disasters which haunted the British Army during the
Boer war. 18 By 1900, the British had defeated the Boer
armies in the field but the war continued with the Boers
maintaining the pressure on the British forces through a
16. Haswell, London 1973, p. 46.
17. Haswell, Lcndon 1973, p. 57.
18. Part of th( blame for the failure of the British army in
South Africa was attributed to the Intelligence Division for
not providing the government with realistic assessments of
the capabilities of the Boers. An investigation by the
Elgin Commission, after the Boer War, of the performance of
the Intelligence Division clearly indicated that the fault
lay with the government for not following up on the
recommendations of the service or simply ignoring any
intelligence which had not been compatible with current
f notions about the situation in South Africa (Haswell, London
1973, pp. 57-58).
97
campaign of guerrilla warfare. Under these circumstances,
the British commanders in South Africa accepted the creation
of field intelligence units which ultimately led to the
establishment of a Field Intelligence Department. To sorne
extent, the activities of this organization, in conjunction
with specialized counter-insurgency units, played a major
role in the defeat of the Boer Commandos and demonstrated
the inadequacy of regular forces against the hit and run
tactics of a guerrilla army.19 It is significant that the
lessons learned from this confllct were ignored after the
end of hostilities so that when the British had to contend
with the "phenomenon" of guerrilla warfare in the Second
World War, albeit from a different perspective, they dealt
with this problem almost in a vacuum.
In the period after the 80er War, the function of the
Intelligence Division underwent extensive modification and
its relat~onship with the military hierarchy as weIl as the
scope of its responsibilities wer~ redefined. In 1904, the
post of Director of Military Intelligence was abolished and
under the new guidelines the function of the Intelligence
Division was defined as a sUb-departmentaJ advisory
service. 20
19. T. Pakenharn, The Boer War, New York. 1979, p. 574.
20. The disposition of the intelligence department came as a
result of the recommendations of the Hardwicke committee,
set-up to study the permanent establishment of the
Mobilization and Intelligence Department (in 1901 the
Intelligence and Mobilization Divisions were reunited). That
its recommendations were carefully considered is
98
The reorganizatjon of the Ir.telllgence Branch was part of
several fundamental changes within the British Army which
included the establishment of a General Staff and the end of
the position of Commander-in-Chief. According to HinsleYI
the elimination of the post of Director of Military
Intelligence was caused:
Partly, perhaps, because the power of the early
OMIs had aroused opposition within the Army, no
less th an on the part of the civilian departments,
it was then laid down that Intel~igence should be
only an advisory sub-department. l
The Intelligence Division was incorporated in the
Directorate of Military Operations (the G bran ch of the
( General Staff) and in spite of the experiences in South
Africa the field intelligence units were disbanded. 22 The
only provisions that were made, for the trainjng and
deployment of intelligence officers for any futur~ conflict,
were: the publication of a General Staff manual which
devoted twenty-two pages to field intelligence work and a
demonstrated by the efforts of General Nicolson, the last
DMI, who attempted to contest the findings of the Committee
only to have a second committee, the Esher Committee,
confirm the recommendations of the Hardwicke Committee
(Haswell, London 1973, pp. 72-73).
21. Hinsley, London, 1979 Vol. 1, p. 9.
22. At the end of the Boer War the Field Intelli~ence
Department numbered 132 officers and 2,321 other ranks. In
addition, a separate headquarters was establi&hed in
Praetoria (DM! South Africa) to coordinate aIl intelligence
( activity (Haswell, London 1973, p. 64; Pakenham, New York
1979, p. 573).
99
register of potential candidates that would be inclnded in
the formation of an intelligence unit. Accordingly, when
the First World War broke. out several hundred unsuspecting
civilians from various walks of life were invited to join
the newly establiEhed Intelligence corps.23
Historically, the AdmiraIt y had been as reluctant as the
army when it came to matters of reform and almost oblivious
to the value of intelligence. According to AdmiraI Sir
William James, the duties of the Royal Navy in the
nineteenth century were:
Apart from assisting the Army, the main dut Y of
the Navy during those hundred years was policing
the seas and 'showing the fIag', and, as there was
no prospect of a maritime war, the efforts of the
officers and men were devoted to achieving a high
standard of seamanship, discipline, and smartness,
and little attention was paid to fighting
efficiency . . • . The tranquil life disappeared
almost overnight. A rival had appeared (Germany)
and the time had come to concentrate on fighting
efficiency, metallurqy and engineering and oil-
power to increase the battle-power of aIl men-of-
war. 24
Pressure for the establishment of an Intelligence Branch
came, according to R. Deacon, not from the AdmiraIt y but
from the naval attaches but little was accomplished. It was
not until Colonel, later General, Charles Gordon pointed out
to the First Lord, Lord Northbrook, that lack of
23. Haswell, London 1973, p. 80.
24. AdmiraI Sir William James, The Eyes of the Navy: A
Biographical study of Sir Regina~ Hall, London 1955, p. 1.
100
information, which could be supplied by the navy, was
causing serious difficulties for the War Office that
prompted the AdmiraIt y to accept the creation of an
Intelligence Branch. 24 According1y, in 1887 the Admiralty
set up ~he Naval Inte1lig~nce Branch and, although it was a
small organization and did not expanded rapidly, it focussed
on the use of cryptography and decoding of (·yphers. This
early start in the use of signal communicati0ns and,
subsequently, the successful efforts at decodlng enemy
cyphers enabled the NID to achieve tremendous resu1ts in
World War l and served as the genesis of the Government Code
and Cypher school. 25
During WWI, the value of good intelligence became obvious
once again and, in particular, the growing complexJty of
this type of activity made it necessary to reintroduce in
1916 the post of DMI. 26 It i5 beyond the scope of this
study to provide a survey of British military intelligence
in the First Wor1d War, suffice to say that during the
conflict the nature and extent of intelli~ence activity
24. Richard Deacon, The Si1ent War: A History of Western
Naval Intelligence, London 1978, pp. 44-45.
25. On the success of the NID in this field of intelligence,
in addition to Hinsley, see: Patrick Beesly, Very Special
Intelligence: The St9ry of the Adrniralty's Operational
Intelligence Center in World War II, London 1978; Donald
Maclachlan, Room 39: Naval Intelligence in Action 1939-1945,
London 1968: AdmiraI Sir William James, The Eyes of the
Navy: A Biographical study of Sir Reginal Hall, London 1955.
26. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 9.
101
made great strides both in technique and usefulness, but
when the war ended the Intelligence Corps was abolished and
the Directorate of Intelligence assumed its pre-war
structure. 28 Characteristically very little wa~ done, with
the exception of the publication of a Manual of Military
Intelligence in the Field, to maintain the skills acquired
in the war. 29 When the Air Staff was organized in 1918 the
same process followej and the Air Intelligence Branch was
made a subordinate section of tha Directorate of Operation~
and Intelligence. The mainstay of military intelligence,
for the most part, remained the attaches who were used by
the victorious powers to report on the compliance with the
Treaty of Versailles and who later continued to provide
information on military developments in foreign countries. 30
The work of the Service attaches continued to expand both in
volume and range of activity. They now reported not only
28. After the position of Director was again abolished a
combined Directorate of Military Operations and Int~lligence
was set up in 1922 (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 9).
According to Haswell (London 1973, p. 159), by 1918 the
Intelligence Corps had reached 3,000 men but in 1929 when
the British Army of Occupation left Gerrnany the Corps
consisted of the Commandant, one intelligence officer and
one Field Security Policeman.
29. Haswell (London 1973, p. 167) states that although the
manual provided considerable detail on the organiza~ion of
intelligence at various levels of command and listed the
functions of intelligence officers it did not explain how
these tasks would be performed.
30. In the 1920'5, the number of attaches increased with the
introduction of an Air Attache, first established by the
French in 1920 and adopted soon after by the other powers
(Vagts, Princeton 1967, p. 67).
102
on strictly detailed military matters, such as organization,
strength and growth of military forces but also on
industrial, technical and economic developments which had a
direct impact on the military capabilities of other
nations. 31
In the inter-war period, the function of military
intelligence as defined by army doctrine, according to
Hinsley, was to provide:
... comprehensive, long-term intelligence required
for strategie plans and appreciations as weIl as
for organizing and administering the entire
intelligence machine, but that operational
intelligence be provided to commanders by their
own field intelligence staffs. These staffs were
thus expected to control such sources of
intelligence as they could exploit themselves. 32
In practical terms, this meant that the intelligence section
of the Operations oirectorate compiled handbooks on foreign
armies and information on topography, communication systems,
climate, etc., of different countries. Financial restraint
and cornplacency, however, lirnited these studies to only a
few regions. 33
31. Vagts, Princeton 1967, p. 52.
32. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 13.
33. The handbooks were kept up to date and ready for
publication wh~n required but the restriction of these
studies only to certain major countries Ineant, for example,
( that in 1940 there was no handbook on Norway (Haswell,
London 1973, pp. 160-161).
103
Between 1904 and 1935, two critical ideas emerge from the
development of military intelligence and, in turn,
characterized the role of British intelligence operations
against the Axis forces in Greece. First, the function of
the military Intelligence Branch was confined to that of an
advisory department without executive authority. Secondly,
it was the consensus of the Service staffs that this
function was to be strictly focused on matters which
concerned intelligence regarding the military, naval, or air
capabilities of foreign countries. 34 AlI intelligence
matters dealing with political developments were left to the
Foreign Office despite any military significance they May
have had for the Serv.Lces. Hinsley states that:
•.. one reason for their attitude was diffidence
lest they should cross the dividing line between
military and political responsibility. Thus the
Foreign Office, in its insistence on having the
final say 1n the Interpretation of political
information, was inclined to rely on its own
judgment of the political significance of even
military information, but the Services preferred
to disregard the possible military significance of
political developments, and of such political
information as the Foreign Office supplied to
them, rather than be suspected of wishin~ to exert
inflùence in the Foreign Office's field. 5
The confinement of the intelligence branches within the
operations directorates of the Services, a result of the
post-War reorganization, comments Hinsley, not only isolated
the intelligence staffs from each other but it ensured their
34. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 8-9.
35. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 8.
104
analysis had to be transmitted through the service
departments. A further limitation was that the operations
directorates frequently avoided consulting their
intelligence branches. 36 Another important change, which
affected the in~elligence community, came as a result of the
recommendations of a Secret Service Committe~ which gave the
SIS sole responsibility for the conduct of espionage and
henceforth included one section from each of the Service
departments intelligence branche~.37 As a result, the
Service intelligence branches were confined to analytical
functions and had no control over the apparatus that
collected intelligence. This reorganization segregated the
intarpretation and collection of intelligence; it forced the
Service intelligence departments to prepare their analysis
based on sources beyond their control and denied them access
to how their analysis was ultimately interpreted.
In 1936, when the international situation deteriorated and
requests for information about Germany and Italy became
pressing, a greater measure of autonomy was given to the
36. The same attitude was held by the Admiralty despite the
fact that its Intelligence Branch was not placed under
Operations. According to Hinsley (London 1979, Vol. 1, p.
9), it was assumed that by incorporating intelligence within
the operations directorates the Services would make regular
and effective use of specialized intelligence departments.
37. The Secret Service Committee was appointed by the
Cabinet in 1919 to advise the government on the post-war war
arrangements for the intelligence services, its findings and
recommendations were concluded in 1921. (Hinsley, London
( 1979, Vol. 1, p. 17).
105
Intelligence Branch. The demand, furthermore, for more and
comprehensive information on Germany and Italy initiated a
series of administrative changes which culminated in 1939
with the establishment, once again, of a Director of
Military Intelligence. In 1936, the first tentative step in
this direction was taken with the appointment of a Deputy
Directory (DDMI) in the Directory of Operations to head the
Intelligence Branch. Another important development occurred
in 1938 when the Research section of the General Staff GS(R)
headed by John Holland began exploring the possibilities of
employing regular units to conduct guerrilla warfare. This
paralleled the efforts of Major Laurence Grand who in 1938
had been authorized by the Director of SIS, Hugh Sinclair,
to establish a special unit, Section D, under the cover
title of statistical Research Department of the War Office,
for the study of alternative forms of warfare. 38
SignificantIy, the Director of Military Intelligence,
General Henry Pownall, was opposed to Section D as weIl as
to the concept of irregular warfare. 39 Because of Pownell's
opposition, as weIl as objections from other senior
officials, both Section D and GS(R) had to limit their
38. Joseph Holland, Laurence Grand as weIl as Colin Gubbins
had served with the British army in Ireland in 1917 and had
seen the impact of subversive warfare ccnducted by the Irish
against the British authorities. Twenty years later Holland
and Gubbins based their concept of the SOE on the their
experience in Ireland (M.R.D. Foot, "Special Operations/1",
The Fourth Dimension of Warfare, London 1970, pp. 29-30).
39. Nigel West, MI6: British Secret InteJligence Service
operations 1909-45, London 1983, pp. 60-61.
106
activities to writing pamphlets on the advantages of
guerrilla warfare. In 1939, GS(R) was renamed Military
Intelligence (Research) [MI(R)] but its activities in the
fields of sabotage and subversion were severely curtailed
until late in 1940 when MI(R) was merged with section D to
become the Special Operations Executive. 40
After 1936, however, a greater emphasis was placed on the
development of inter-service intelligence organizations to
achieve better coordination, distribution and interpretation
of intelligence. The need for an inter-service approach to
the organization of intelligence reflected a deficiency
which could not be addressed by the existing intelligence
establishments. The SIS, although created to serve the
( intelligence requirements of the Service departments and the
Foreign Office, was confined to the acquisition of
information by means of espionage. This limitation, as weIl
as the narrow interests of the Services and the Foreign
Office, prevented the SIS from developing into a true inter-
service organization. The SIS acquired information for its
customers but it did not provide integrated and
40. The designation of GS(R) to MI(R) brought this
department under the jurisdiction of the DMI. The new title
was the only major change in the function of this
organization (Nigel West, London 1983, p. 61), but Andrew
(Secret Service: The Making of the British Intelligence
Community London 1985, p. 471), indicates that the new title
of MI(R) coincided with the authorization given to Grant by
the Foreign Office to prepare for sabotage and propaganda in
the Czech borderlands after the German army occupied Prague
( in March 1939.
- - - - - - - _._._- .. _--------------------------------------.
107
comprehensive analysis. Military and political intelligence
were segregated regardless of any correlation between the
two thus preventing a global assessment by a single
intelligence department.
i
108
Espionage
Indeed, it was the fear of political entanglement, as weIl
as the negative attitude towards espionage, that had led to
the creation of a Secret Service Bureau in 1909. 41 One of
the major considerations in creating this new organization
was to place as much distance as possible between the
British Government and espionage activity. The Secret
Service Bureau was to act as a buffer between the spy, the
Services and the Foreign Office and was intended to supply
information. It was not a coordinating intelligence body.
The Secret Service Bureau was designed to serve three
functions: to be a screen between the Service departments
and foreign spies, to act as an intermediary between the
Service departments and British agents abroad, to take
charge of counter espionage. 42 To accomplish these tasks,
41. Despite this attitude towards espionage, during the
First World War the Intelligence Corps employed spies and
often competed with the secret services for the recruitment
of new agents (Haswell, London 1973, pp. 128-129).
42. The rational for creating a national secret service in
1909 is not clear. Hinsley (London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 16)
does not offer any explanation why the Secret Service Bureau
was established at this time and the two principal
biographers of the SIS: Nigel West and Christopher Andrew
offer different reasons for the creation of the service.
West (London 1983, p. 4) suggests that the Secret Service
Bureau carne into existence as a result of the criticisrn
levied against the government because of the lack of
adequate intelligence during the Boer War. This had led the
( CID in 1907 to investigated the state of Britain's
intelligence organizations. In 1909, a summary indicating
the poor state of Britain's intelligence services was
109
the Secret Service Bureau had a Home Section, which later
became MI5, and a Foreign section which developed into the
SIS. Originally, the Bureau was to be independent of any
individual departrnent but in 1909 it was placed
administratively under the control of the War Office. 43 A
year later the Bureau was divided; the Home Section rernained
with the War Office and the Foreign section was transferred
to the AdmiraIt y since most of its activities were confined
ta Naval Intelligence. In 1916, the Horne Section becarne
part of the new Military Intelligence Oirectorate and re-
submitted to the CID by Colonel Fraser J. Oavies, former
Military Commissioner of Police in Johannesburg, and shortly
after the CID decided that a Secret Service Bureau be set
up. Andrew (London 1985, p. 53), on the other hand, writes
that in March 1909 R.B. Haldane, the Secretary of State for
War, set up a subcommittee of the CID with a mandate ta
consider: "the nature and extent of foreign espionage that
i~ at present taking place within this country and the
danger to which it May expose us.". According to the
evidence presented to this committee, especially the
examples of espionage conducted by the Germans in Britain
offered by Colonel James Edmonds, the head of MO 5, there
were extensive intelligence networks deployed in Great
Britain. The extent of thcir activities and danger they
posed were greatly exaggerated, states Andrew (London 1985,
pp. 58-59), but it was the fear of foreign espionage which
led to the creation of the Secret Service Bureau later in
1909. Philip Knigtley (The Second Oldest Profession: The
Spy as Bureaucrat. Patriot. Fantasist and Whore, London 1986
pp. 22-23) suggests that the idea of a Secret Service Bureau
had been suggested by General Ewart, the Oirector of
Military operations, because he wanted to obtain agents to
use in Cermany yet have no direct contact with such
activity. Colonel James Edmonds exploited the fear of
foreign spies, in presenting his report to the subcommittee,
in order ta expand his clepartment and acquire more resources
to combat the German espionage networks he believed were
operating in Britain.
43. This went contrary to the recommendations of the
subcommittee of the CID which had suggested that the Secret
Service Bureau be completely separate from the Horne Office,
War Office and AdmiraIt y (CAB/16/8/ERE 9077).
110
designated as MI 5 while the Foreign Section once again
returned to the War Office as MI I(c), but by the end of the
war it had been placed under the Foreign Office.
In Greece, during the First World War, M I(c) espionage
activity was based in Athens in the British Legation under
the cover name of "The Bureau of Inf\>rmation" which, in
turn, was a sub-organization of the "Eastern Mediterranean
special J.ntelligence Bureau" in ~lexandria.44 The French,
on the other hand, maintained a much larger service that was
established in the French Archaeoloqical School. 45 The
orqanization in Athens was divlded into two sections: A
Branch, responsible for collecting information about enemy
activities and B Branch which was charged with counter-
intelligence. In addition, the Commercial Departn!ent of the
British Embassy was responsible for Contraband Intelligence.
The Bureau of Information, writes Compton Mackenzie who
headed the B Branch, was not only under-staffed and under-
funded but could not function efficiently as a sub-branch of
the main orqanization in Alexandria. 46 Despite numerous
reports on the growing importance of Athens as a center of
espionage and the need for a better coordinated system of
44. Compton Mackenzie, Greek Memories, London 1939, pp.
xxii-xxiii.
45. According to Vagts (Princeton 1967, pp. 44-45), the
French Naval Attache played a leadinq role in the Allied
intervention in Greece (1915-1916).
46. Mackenzie, London 1939, p. 3.
111
counter-intelligence, London headquarters refused to
allocate any additional resources. Finally, Mackenzie
writes, there was considerable resistance to the concept of
centralizing and amalgamating aIl British intelligence
effor~s under one organization and he was forced to rely on
French intelligence for both additional office spa ce and
funding. 47
The notion of centralizing the intelligence operations
continued to plague the SIS in similar efforts during the
Inter-war periode According to Hinsley, during the First
World War, the Services preferred to develop their own
espionage systems partly from dissatisfaction with the work
of the Foreign section and partly from the need to have
direct control over espionage networks. 48 In 1921, as a
result of the recommendations of a Secret Service Committee,
the SIS (as it was now called) was given responsibility for
espionage on an inter-service basis. 49 Its function was to
supply information not only to the Services but aiso to the
Home Office, the Colonial Office, the Inàian Office, the Air
Ministry and the Foreign Office. The SIS continued to
remain under the nominal control of the Foreign Office but
it retained a military intelligence title as MI6. In
effect, the organization was designed to collect
47. Mackenzie, London 1939, p. 8.
48. HinsIey, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 16.
49. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 17.
112
information, which was passed on to the Services by their
own representatives at SIS, and did not have responsibility
over evaluation and analysis. These aspects of intelligence
remained the prerogatives of the Services.
During the inter-war period, the SIS was organized into fi;e
sections designated by Roman numerals whose function was to
distribute to the appropriate departments information
collected by the SIS Stations abroad. section l was
responsible for political intelligence; section II supplied
information to the War Office; section III worked with the
AdmiraIt y; section IV dealt with air intelligence; section V
handled security and counter-espionage. The he ad of each
section was commanded by liaison officers from the Foreign
Office and the Service intelligence departments. 50
In 1921, the SIS had twenty-eight Stations abroad located in
British embassies under the cover of Passport Control
Officers (PCO). The PCO system had originated fram the
Military Control Officers' (MCO) network established during
the First World War and was part of MI5's counter-subversion
system. In February of 1919, a Pas sport Control
Subcommittee was set up to review the peace-time transition
of the passport control network. The committee concluded
that unsettled political conditions were likely to prevail
50. Because the sections were primarily concerned with the
distribution of information they were labeled Circulating
Sections (West, London 1983, p. 40).
113
for some time in eastern and central Europe and accordingly
there was a need for a peace-time pas sport control system
whose principal aim would be to: n ••• exclude Boishevik
agents from the United Kingdom ... 11 and gather intelligence
on Bolshevik subversion. 51
In August 1919, the cabinet approved the establishment of a
Passport Control Department at the Foreign Office. The
Foreign Office, however, did not control the new department
and disclaimed any responsibility 'with its ultimate aims'.
Operational control of the new PCO network was given to
MI 1c (SIS) but it was stipulated that PCO's were to be
excluded from intelligence activity.52 It was only two
years later that the Pas sport Control Department became
fully integrated with the SIS and the PCO system came to
provide caver for the SIS Station heads. 53 Another
important advantage for SIS was that PCO system was a source
of income incurred from visa fees. 54 The post-war structure
51. Minutes of Aliens and Nationality Committee, 10 June
1921, PRO T161/501/S9242/1; F .H. Mugliston, "The Visa
System", October 1921, PRO FO 371/10480 N 1747.
52. Ibid.
53. Captain McConville, "The British Intelligence System lt ,
20 June 1921, NARS RG 165, 11013-19; Andrew, London 1985,
pp. 240-241. By the end of 1921 there were twenty-eight
Passport Control Officers working out of British Embassies
and legations in: Antwerp, Athens, Berlin, Brussels,
Bucharest, Budapest, Christina, Copenhagen, Helsinki, Kovno,
Libau, Madrid, Paris, Prague, Reval, Riga, Rome, Rotterdam,
Sofia, Stockholm, Vienna, Warsaw, Zurich, Vladivostock,
Yokohama, Constantinople, Beirut, and New York (PRO T162/76
E7483/1i Andrew, London 1985, p. 284).
54. Andrew, London 1985, p. 240. According to West (London
114
of the PCO network included: a Chief Pas sport Control
Officer, usually the head of the SIS station: a Passport
Control Officeri an Assistant Pas sport Control Officer: an
Examiner, and depending on the size of the station and its
location it would also employ interpreters, clerks,
secretaries and messengers. 55
The use of the PCO system as a cover for SIS officers was to
be a temporary arrangement and one which the Foreign Office
did not regard as compatible with diplomatie activity. As a
result, many SIS officers faced difficulties because their
cover as PCO's placed them in a~ awkward position in most
British embassies. Their status remained unclear and they
were often regarded as an embarrassment by the mission
( diplomats. The Foreign Office was reluctant to grant PCO's
diplomatie credentials but in some cases they were given
consular or honorary-vice consular status. In general,
conditions varied from one embassy to another and depended
upon the attitude of the local ambassador. 56
Under normal conditions SIS officers sent their intelligence
to London in the form of periodic reports written in
1983, pp. 40-41), the Treasury, in part, persuaded Hugh
Sinclair, the new he ad of SIS in 1924, to continue employing
the PCO network as cover for SIS Station chiefs because each
station enjoyed a regular income from the visa fees.
55. West, London 1983, p. 22.
56. West, London, London 1983, p. 41: Andrew, London 1985,
pp. 346-347.
115
longhand or in coded telegrams. The incoming information
was supervised by G officers who were responsible for the
Stations in their geographic regions and passed on the
intelligence gathered to the appropriate liaison officers. 57
The liaison officers had overall control over information
forwarded to the departrnents lhey represented and advised on
priorities for intelligence gathering. 58 This arrangement,
according t0 Hinsley, had its advantages but it also
included some serious drawbacks:
... the SIS received suggestions and requests for
information direct from its various customers, and
it reported selections from its findings direct to
them without interpretation. On the debit side,
with the Foreign Office exercising no day-to-day
control, this meant that the SIS was not a strong
enough organization to settle priorities as
between requests that were made of it, or even to
resist demands for assistance that went beyond its
resources. 59
In the 1920's, for example, the SIS was directed to
57. In the 1920's, there were two G officers, one handled
aIl incorning European intelligence and the other was
responsible for everything else. Ten years later two more G
officers were added. The SIS did not have its own
communications system and had to rely on the Foreign Office.
In 1924, to avoid confusion with Foreign Office traffic, SIS
telegrams had a two or three digit prefix: ex indicating a
personal message to the chief of SIS and eXG representing
general traffic which went to the G officers (West, London
1983, pp. 39-40).
58. In total, the SIS establishment included less than
twenty officers rnost of whom were retired or seconded from
the armed forces. The same type of personnel represented
the Foreign Office who chose a retired Indiar. Army officer
to head the political section in order to distance itself as
far as possible from espionage (Andrew, London 1985, pp.
343-344) •
59. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 18.
116
concentrate its efforts on the Soviet Union but lacking
agents in Russia the SIS was forced to rely on exiled White
Russian groups. Many of these groups exaggerated their own
importance and the strength of the Red ~rmy. As a result,
the SIS did not provide adequate proof that Germany was
failing to keep up with the terms of the Treaty of
Versailles. 60 The concentration on the Soviet Union not
only dissipated the resources of the SIS but the dubious
quality of the infoI111ation collected damaged the credibility
of the organizatian. 61
The response of the he ad of SIS, Hugh Sinclair, to the
criticism of his organization was to suggest ta the Secret
Service ~ommittee in 1925 and again in 1927 that the
( intelligence services (SIS, Ge and CS, MIS, and even the
Special Branch of Sc:otland Yard) be amalgamated into a
single service. He argued that this would avoid costly
duplication and increase the efficiency of the intelligence
services. The suggf~stion was supported by the Foreign
Office but the othe:r members of the committee were opposed
to the merger.. Sorne in the Secret Service Committee,
60. West (London 1983, p. 39), adds that since the First
World War it had bE!(i;m the custom for individual Stations to
focus their activities on countries bordering their station
rather than on the country that they were located in, to
avoid getting into difficulties with the local authorities.
Thus, information about the Soviet union was obtained from
Stations in countries near Russia and fram White Russian
exiles in Paris and London.
( 61. Knigtley, London 1986, pp. 73-75.
117
Hinsley comments, argued that:
... it would be difficult to find a succession of
officers who would he capable of running it, and
no less difficult to settle who would exercise
ministeri31 responsibility for it, and after
taking evidence the Committee decided that as the
relations between the various intelligence bodies
and their customers were more important than those
between the intelligence bodies themselves . . . . 62
The post-war cut back~, furthermore, left the organization
under-manned and ill-equipped to deal with the crises of the
1930's.63 In April 1935, the Cabinet set up an emergency
committee to study Hitler's claim that the German Air force
had achieved parity with that of Great Britain. A mon th
later this committee, among other suggestions, recommended
that the SIS should have its funding increased but the
government failed to act on this suggestion despite a
similar recommendation later in 1935 by the Defence
62. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1 p. 19. At the end of the
First World War the Oirector of Military Intelligence had
proposed that MIS and MI l(c) be amalgamated and placed
under the Foreign Office but staffed with Service officers.
The head of MI l(c), Cumming, opposed this and was supported
by the Foreign Office on the grounds that there was no
relationship between the work of SIS and counter-
intelligence. As early as 1920, winston Churchill had
suggested a similar amalgamation in order to save money but
accepted the fact that it would take time to implement this.
His proposa] was not considered at the Secret Service
Committee meetings in 1921 (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1 pp.
18-19) .
63. In 1919 and 1920, the estimates for the SIS were reduced
from 240,000 pounds to 125,000. In 1921, the expenditures
were reduced to 100,000 and in 1922, the Secret Service
Committee set the amount to 90,000. According te Hinsley,
(London 1979, Vol. l, p. 50), there are no figures available
for the following ten year periode
118
Requirements Sub-Committee (ORC).64 In addition, according
to Nigel West, there was dissatisfaction in Whitehall over
the failure of SIS to provide some warning of the Italian
aggression in Abyssinia. 65 Hugh Sinclair, the head of the
SIS, responded to the failures of the secret service by
blaming the severe under-funding of his department. This,
he stated, had forced the SIS to close down its activities
in several countries which would have been good bases for
gathering information on Italy. After the German occupation
of the Rhineland, Sinclair attempted to get additional
funding but met with little success. Ouring the Austrian
crisis in 1938, however, the SIS was given a modest increase
but after the Munich Aqreement the Government failed tt,
provide any additional funding. 66
(
64. The ORC was set up in November 1933 to report on the
deficiencies in the armed services. Between 1933 to 1935 it
submitted three reports to the Ministerial Comrnittee on
Oisarmament and in 1935 to a Ministerial Committee on
Oefence policy and Requirements. The first report,
cornpleted in March 1934, concluded that Germany was the main
potential enemy. The second report presented in July 1935
indicated that it was imp~dsible to gllarantee peace beyond
January 1939. The third â~d final report included
recommendations for the recrganization of British defences
and armed forces while pointing out that the intelligence
services had failed to provide adequate information on
Germany's naval rearmament and urged the strengthening of
the intelligence establishment (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol.
1, pp. 49-50); also see Stephen Roskill (Hankey Man of
Secrets vol. III 1931-1963, London 1974, p. 192ff.) for an
extensive discussion of the recommendation of the ORC but
excluding the section on the intelligence services.
65. West, London 1983, p. 47; Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1
p. 49.
{ 66. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 51.
119
The continued financial and administrativp restraints
imposed on the SIS coupled with the gr0wing demand for
information on Germany had forced S1nclair to implement
alternative methods in order to increase the flow of
intelligence on Nazi Germany. In 1936, he authorized the
creation of a new secret department, the Z organization,
headed by Claude Dansey. Knowledge of the new department
was confined to Sinclair and Dansey in an effort to bypass
the PCO network because sorne stations had been compromised,
while the security of the entire system was generally
suspect. The purpose of the new organization was to acquire
intelligence on Gerrnany at a minimal cost. For this reason,
Dansey used influential and wealthy acquaintances who had
access to German industry and government. 67 Although the
new organization expanded rapidly, it failed to provide the
volume and quality of intelligence the Services required.
In 1938, the War Office was again complaining that the SIS
was not meeting its urgent need for accurate and factual
information about Germany's military capability while the
Air Ministry, according to Hinsley, dismissed SIS
intelligence as 'normally 80% inaccurate'. Both Services
attributed the failure of the SIS te provide them with
information on the diversion of the limited SIS resources to
the " ... collection and distribution of political speculation
67. Anthony Read and David Fisher, Colonel Z: The Sec~et
Life of a Master of Spies, New York 1984, 172ff.: Andrew,
London 1985, pp. 380-382.
120
about Germany's immediate intentions".68
Overseas, the SIS continued to be deployed in a chain of
foreign sections staffed by intelligence officers with the
cover of Chief Passport Officers. The system as a whole was
hardly adequate to me;t the demands for information in the
period just before the outbreak of the war and was
overwhelmed by the pace of events after the initiation of
hostilities. By 1938 it had become evident to Sinclair, the
head of SIS, that reliance on the PCO system was inadequate
and dangerous. In part, because the PCO was understaffed
and plagued with personnel problems. 69 The other difficulty
faced by Sinclair was that because of under-funding most SIS
stations were concentrated in Europe and were easily
ident~fied by the Germans. 70 One step which Sinclair took
68. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 55-56.
69. The PCO's were recruited from retired Royal Navy
Officers many of whom, according to West (London 1983, p.
66), chose this service because they were not wealthy and
took the opportunity of being based abroad in order to avoid
paying taxes. Andrew (London 1985, p. 408) comments that
the problem of personnel was, in addition to IdCk of
funding, due to the idiosyncrasies of senior SIS officers
such as Dansey who made it a point not to recruit university
graduates. He also places d great deal of the
responsibility for the personnel problem on the Foreign
Office which he states took no interest in the quality of
SIS recruits.
70. The few exceptions were the stations in New York, Buenos
Aires and Istanbul while the Middle East remained without
SIS representation (West, London 1983 p. 65). Before 1938,
the SIS was so strapped for funds that Sinclair was forced
to borrow money from friends and during the Munich crisis
was unable to purchase wireless sets for sorne of his agents
(Andrew, London 1985, p. 408).
121
to improve matters was the establishment of the Z
Organization as a parallel intelligence network but the
effort ended in failure. 71
During and immediately after the First World War, the
attitude towards inter-service coordination was confined
solely to the collection of information. The SIS evolved dS
an inter-service organization but only as far as it
concerned the collection of intelligence; assessment and
interpretation of intelligence remained a prerogative of its
customers.
The same pelicy applied in 1919 to the establishment of the
Government Code and Cypher School (GC and CS). This
organization was created to examine cypher communication
used by foreign governments and to advise the government on
the security of British codes and cyphers. Despite its
designation as an inter-service department, the GC and CS
71. The collapse of the Z Organization came in the wake of
the Venlo incident which led to the capture by the German SO
of Major Richard Stevens, he ad of the The Hague SIS Station
and Captain S. Payne Best, the Z organization representative
in The Hague. At the outbreak of war, it was decided to
me~ge the Z organization with the PCO system in order to
avoid duplication. In the case of the The Hague SIS
Station, this proved disastrous since the station had been
compromised and both Stevens and Best were lured te a bogus
meeting with a dissenting German general at the Outch-German
border town near Venlo and kidnapped by agents of the So.
During their interrogation, both men provided the SO with
considerable information about the SIS and the Z
organization. As a result, the Z organization was
compromised and subsequently disbanded (West, London 1983,
pp. 71-76).
122
was responsible only for breakinq new codes on an inter-
service basis. AlI readable codes and cyphers,
consequently, were passed on to the respective Services or
headquarters of operational commands for analysis and
interpretation. 72 At first, it was placed with the
AdmiraIt y but in 1922 on the recommendations of the Secret
Service Committee, it was like the SIS, transferred to the
Foreign Office. 73 In 1923, the head of SIS was given
responsibility for GC and CS and re-designated Chief of the
Intelligence Service and Director of GC and CS, but the
cryptoanalytical service remained separate from SIS. 74
In the 1920's, it had become apparent that certain types of
specialized intelligence were of interest to more than one
( department and assessment required a cooperative effort.
The direction towards an inter-service and inter-
departmental approach reflected not only the current
dissatisfaction with the intelligence community but the
growing complexity and technical nature of the available
intelligence.
The first inter-departmental body to deal with the
assessment and interpretation of intelligence was the
72. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 22.
73. Unlike the SIS, however, the cost of maintaining this
orqanization came out of the ordinary Foreign Office vote
(Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 20).
(, 74. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 20.
123
Advisory Committee on Trade Question in Time of War (ATB
Committee). It was set up by the CID in 1925 under the
chairmanship of the Foreign Office to: " ..• ensure the
readiness of the administrative machinery for creating
economic pressure on an enemy.". 75 Its activities quic}tly
extended beyond administrative matters to the assessment of
economic intelligence and, according to Hinsley, to the
means of applying econ~~ic 'pressure or economic warfare,.76
In 1929, a second inter-departmental organization was
established, the Industrial Intelligence in Foreign
Countries Sub-Committee (FCI), by the CID to examine
industrial mobilization capabilities of different states. 77
In 1931, it was given a small research staff which evolved
into the Industrial Intelligence Center (IIC) and by 1934
provided information for the ATB and FCI committees. The
other intelligence services continued to collect industrial
intelligence but the IIC had the responsibility for
coordinating this information on behalf of the Service
Departments. 78 The mandate of this organization continued
75. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 30.
76. After 1933 the ATB established a sUb-committee, Economie
Pressure SUb-Committee, to focus on economic warfare
(Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 30).
77. From 1937 the ATB's sub-committee (EP) for economic
warfare became the Sub-Committee on Economie Pressure on
Germany. After 1936 the FCI extended its role as an inter-
departmental body by establishing the Air Targets Sub-
Committee to coordinate information between the defence
departments and departments concerned with air targets
intelligence (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 32).
78. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 31.
124
to expand and by 1939 the IIC supplied and coordinated
economic and industrial intelligence for the Joint
Intelligence and Joint Planning SUb-Committees of the Chiefs
of Staff.
Despite the creation of these committees and the
p~~liferation of sUb-committees, the co-ordination of
British intelligence by a single organization became a
reality only after 1940. 79 Throughout the process, however,
the Foreign Office resisted participation in any
organization destined to control intelligence on an inter-
service basis, yet maintained a monopoly on the assessment
and analysis of political information. On the other hand,
the establishment of these bodies initiated the process
( which led to the development of the assessment and strategie
coordination of intelligence on an inter-service basis.
Once the principle was accepted that the evaluation of
specifie types of iutelligence, beginning with economic and
industrial information, could be made more economical and
efficient by an inter-departmental approach, it cre~ted the
momentum for the coordination of aIl intelligence by a
single body. Hinsley informs us that in November of 1935,
the Deputy Chiefs of Staff recognized the possibilities
offered by such a system and recommended the creation of an
Inter-Service Intelligence Committee. 80 Their
79. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 33.
( 80. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 34. The recommendation
came as a result of a series of discussions by the Deputy
125
recommendation was approved but the suggested Inter-Service
Intelligence Committee existed only on paper. In June 1936,
however, it was replaced by the Joint Intelligence Sub-
Committee (JIC) of the Chiefs of Staff whose function was to
assist the Joint Planning Staff by acting as a conduit
through which the Planners received intelligence contributed
by more than one service. 81
The work of this committee remained peripheral to the
organization of intelligence for the rest af the decade.
The delay was partly caused by inter-departmental rivalry
and the lack of interest of the service intelligence
departments in making use of this organization as weIl as
the lack of a support staff. 82 According to Hinsley, the
Munich crisis created the impetus to solve the problem of
intelligence coordination and forced the Foreign Office ta
send a representative to a JIC meeting. 83 There was,
however, still reluctance by the Foreign Office to accept
Chiefs of Staff and the chairman of the CIO, Maurice Hankey.
It took several years of pressure from the cabinet spcretary
and the Service Chiefs to establish a system of coordinating
intelligence but throughout the process they faced
considerable opposition from the Foreign Office (Andrew,
London 1985, p. 409).
81. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 36.
82. Hinsley (London 1979, Vol. l, p. 38), comments that the
JIC at this time did not play a major role in the
coordination of intelligence. The service intelligence
departments, he adds, did not employ the JIC because the y
felt that it wouid be 'a superfluous and time-consuming
exercise'.
83. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 42.
126
permanent membership in the JIC and its attendance in
November 1938 was prompted by an agenda which included the
preparation of a new European strategie appreciation and the
creation of a Middle East Intelligence Center; a project
cver which the Foreign Office had serious reservations. 84
It was not until the summer of 1939 that the JIC acquired
the status and organization it required to act as an
intelligence coordinating bod~. The reorganization occurred
between June-July 1939 and came as a result of the demands
of the Chiefs of Staff for some mechanism to coordinate
military and political intelligence matters that required
immediate attention. 8S In respanse ta this, the minister
for the Coordination of Defence set up the situation Report
( Center which consisted of representatives of the Service
intelligence departments and of the Foreign Office. After
two months, the C~nter proposed its merger with the JIC and
in July 1939 received approval from the Foreign Office. 86
The mandate and terms of reference of the JIC acquired their
final form and are included by Hinsley as following:
84. The primary fear of the Foreign Office in participating
in an intelligence coordinating system was that it would
105e its monopoly over palitical intelligence (Andrew,
London 1985, p. 410; Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 42).
85. Another factor was the alarrnist intelligence circulated
by the Foreign Office at this time, which later proved to be
wrong, as weIl as the military implications of some of the
information collected which highlighted the lack of
intelligence coordination (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p.
42).
{ 86. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 41-42.
127
(1) The assessment and co-ordination of
intelligence from abroad with the object of
ensuring that any Government action which
might have to be taken should be based on the
most suitable and carefully coordinated
information obtainable.
(2) The co-ordination of any intelligence data
which migh~ be required by the Chiefs of
Staff or the Joint Planning Sub-Committee for
them.
(3) The consideration of any further measures
which might be thought necessary in order to
improve the efficient working of intell~~ence
organization of the country as a whole.
Administr.\tively, the JIC remained a sub-committee
consisting of the three Directors of the service
intelligence departments or their deputies, a counsellor
from the Foreign Office and occasionally they would co-opt
the services of the head of the Industrial Intelligence
Center (IIC).88 Despite the reorganization, the JIC did not
function to its full potential until the summer of 1940 and
it was not until May 1940 that the Directors of SIS and MI5
were included as members. 89 The Directors of the Service
intelligence departments did not attend its meetings on a
87. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 43.
88. In theory, according to Hinsley (London 1979, Vol. 1, p.
36 and pp. 42-43), the JIC had no chairman because the
Service intelligence Directors objected to a service
committee being chaired by the Fo~eign Office and the
Foreign Office had difficulties in nominating someone with
sufficient seniority to a subordinate position. In practice
the meetings of the JIC were chaired by the Foreign Office
representative.
89. Anthony Cave-Brown, "CH The Secret Life of Sir Stuart
.
'"
Menzies, Spyrnaster to winston Churchill, New York 1987, p .
245.
128
regular basis and it was only in February 1940 that aIl
three were present at the same time. As a body it had only
attended one meeting of the Chiefs of staff 90 and until 1940
it was not shown papers prepared by the Joint Planning staff
before these were submitted to the cos.
The difficulty, according to Hinsley, was created by the
rapid increase in the number of intelligence organizations
and the sheer volume of information requiring processing and
sifting to differentiate factu~l from interpretive
intelligence. 91 The fundamental problem, comments Hinsley
was the need:
•.. for two directing bodies within the
intelligence system, one for guiding its
( organizational expansion and pronouncing on
administrative policy, the other for co-
ordinating from day to day, even from hour to
hour, the strategie intelligence appreciations
dnd, when this had inter-Service implications,
the operational inte§~igence of the various
intelligence bodies.
As matters stood in the first year of the war, the JIC had
been given a considerable degree of administrative
responsibility for the creation and organization of new
90. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 93. Interestingly
enough, it was during this meeting (April 1940) that the
Chiefs of Staff discussed the recommendation of the JIC for
the creation of an Inter-Service project Board to coordinate
aIl sabotage and other irregular operations (Hinsley, London
1979, Vol. 1, p. 93 footnote).
91. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 94 and pp. 97-98.
92. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 94.
129
bodies such as the Inter-Service Security and the Inter-
Service project Boards. This combined with its role in
preparing strategie intelligence appreciations and the co-
ordination of intelligence was beyond the eapaeity of the
JIC. Regarding the latter function, the JIC, sinee it did
not have a staff of its own, had to base its evaluations on
information selected by the intelligence departments. As a
result, the JIC's effectiveness as an inter-service
coordinating body was slow to develop and little progress
was made in the co-ordination of intelligence. 93
93. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 94-95.
130
Chapter 3
,
~
The Impact of War on British Intelligence
The critical period in the development of British
intelligence, according to Hinsley, occurred between the
failure in Norway and the Dakar debacle. 1 During this
period, despite the series of failures and the lack of
progress in rnaking the intelligence community more
efficient, modifications took place which eventually led the
intelligence bodies to gain control of their work and have
their appreciations and assessments more readily accepted by
the operational authorities. 2
In April 1940, the Military Coordination committee of the
Cabinet allocated to the War Office's intelligence branch
the responsibility for the coordination of information
regarding German forces in Norway as weIl as the task of
reviewing and revising the entire system of reporting
intelligence to the government. The JIC, although
originally excluded, quickly assumed the responsibiljty for
the reorganization and the preparation of intelligence
summaries as weIl as setting up special meetings with the
1. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 159.
( 2. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 159.
131
Service intelligence departments, SIS, and the Foreign
Office. 3 When winston Churchill became prime minister in
May, he ordered a review of the proposed changes and
directed the Chiefs of Staff to examine the process by which
intelligence was reported to the government and its role in
operational decisions. The Chiefs of Staff, consequently,
recommended that the JIC was: " ... the control body
responsible for producing operational intelligence
appreciations and bringing them to the attention of the
operational authorities.".4 The Chiefs of Staff also added
that the JIC:
•.• take the initiative in issuing, at any time of
day or night, and only to the Prime Minister, the
War Cabinet and the Chiefs of Staff, urgent papers
on any strategie development on which any of its
members wanted to report in light of any
information received from the Foreign Office or
the Service departments. 5
According to HinsIey, these changes came about as a resuit
of the success of the Ge and CS in breaking the Enigma code
used by sorne German units in Norway as weIl as in response
to the defeat of the Norway operation. 6 Unfortunately,
these adjustments were not implemented until after the
collapse of France and even then they were not effected
3. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 159.
4. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 160.
5. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 160.
6. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 160.
132
without additional delays.7 The difficulty originated from
the scale of the modifications since they entailed a
fundamental revision of the relationship between the JIC and
the other intelligence bodies. The recornrnendation that the
JIC should report directly to the Prime Minister, War
Cabinet and the Chiefs of Staff implied that other
intelligence organizations, and even the Foreign Office,
would not be able to report directly to these authorities on
intelligence matters. The JIC, as a result of the new
procedures, decided to extend full membership to the MEW,
SIS and MI5. 8
Churchill's efforts to streamline the work of the
intelligence community sternrned, in part, from the increasing
success of GC and CS in deciphering the Enigma codes as weIl
as his own interest in the value of intelligence.
Churchill, furthermore, decided ta keep the direction of the
war as much as possible in his own hands and access to
intelligence was a necessary element. 9 By August,
Churchill had become dissatisfied with the lack of progress
7. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 160.
8. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 160.
9. Churchill, as weIl as prime minister was also minister of
defence (Martin Gilbert, Finest Hour: Winston Churchill
1939-1941, London 1983, Vol. 6, p. 322). According to Ismay
the Office of the Minister of Defence included approximately
a dozen officers from the military wing of the War Cabinet
Secretariat. Churchill, Ismay adds, did not want to set up
a new ministry but 'a handling machine' (Lord Ismay, The
Memoirs of General Lord Ismay, London 1960,
p. 158).
•
133
in the coordination of intelligence which resulted in a
daily collection of surnmaries and reports which he
complained were too voluminous to be of any use. In
November he expressed his frustration in a minute to the
Secretariat of the War Cabinet:
Please look at this mass of stuff which reaches me
in a single morning, most of it having already
appeared in the Service and FO telegrams. More
and more people must be banking up behind these
different papers, the bulk of which defeats their
purpose. 10
Churchill, in particular, was interested in seeing for
himself the raw data collected and not what the intelligence
services had selected for him. 11 In addition to the changes
outlined by the Chiefs of Staff, Churchill appointed Major
Desmond Morton as his liaison with the intelligence services
with the responsibility of forwarding to the Prime Minister
any intelligence material that Morton deemed important. 12
The appointment of Morton as Churchill's liaison with the
10. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 295.
Il. Gilbert, London 1983, Vol. 6, p. 688.
12. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 295; Gilbert, London
1983, Vol. 6, p. 688. Morton also served as Churchill's
liaison with the Foreign Office, the growing number of
Governments-in-Exile, one of the principal contacts with de
Gaulle's' French National Committee as weIl as with sorne
branches of the intelligence services (John Colville, The
Fringes of Power: 10 Downing street Diaries 1939-1955,
London 1985, p. 759). Morton's position was resented by the
Foreign Office and in particular his role as a go-between
Churchill and de Gaulle. Eden objected to this arrangement
and Morton was used less and less as Churchill's
répresentative with the Free French CE. Barker, Churchill
and Eden at War, London 1978, p. 25 and p. 65).
134
intelligence community was greatly resented by stuart
Menzies, the head of SIS, who felt that Morton's position
undermined the traditiona1 relationship between the Prime
Minister and the head of the Secret Intelligence Service.
Menzies was also greatly alarmed that Morton was included in
the small circle of government officia1s entitled to view
the deciphered Enigrna codes and that Morton might through
indiscretion compromise Ultra (the code name of the
deciphered Enigma transmissions).13 Anthony Cave Brown
claims that Menzies considered offering his resignation but
the fear of a German invasion at this time kept him at his
post. Instead, Menzies reached sorne compromise with
Churchill over the issue of Morton and undertook to provide
daily to the Prime Minister the latest Enigma decrypts. 14
According to Hinsley, Menzies made a daily selection of
Enigma decrypts and other information from GC and CS which
he then forwarded to Churchill. 15 In its modified form this
arrangement prevailed for the duration of the war and helped
establish a good relationship between Churchill and
Menzies. 16
In the inlerim period, however, the coordination of
intelligence was still beyond the capabilities of the JIC.
13. Cave-Brown, New York 1987, p. 292.
14. Cave-Brown, New York 1987, p. 293.
15. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 297.
{ 16. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 298.
135
In November, Churchill even inquired if there was a single
authority or department for the direction of aIl
intelligence but was informed by the Chiefs of Staff that
although the idea of a unified intelligence organization had
certain advantages it also posed other problems and a
drastic overhaul of the intelligence community should not be
" ..• attempted at the very moment when we are fighting for
our lives.".17 Churchill did not relent and in January 1941
announced that he was considering what to do about the
problem of intelligence and security control. 18
Churchill's dissatisfaction with intelligence was indicative
not only of the failure of the JIC ta provide effective co-
ordination and intelligence assessments but aiso because it
produced negligible results about future German
intentions. 19 To compensate for this deficiency a Future
Operations Enemy Section was set up in December 1940 under
JIC administration but it only duplicated the work of the
JIC and by March 1941 was replaced by the Axis Planning
Section (APS) .20 This proved to be a better arrangement and
by May the APS, now renamed the Joint Intelligence Staff
(JIS) , became the inner committee of the JIC. 21 The JIC was
17. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 291.
18. Andrew, London 1985, p. 485.
19. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, pp. 291-294.
20. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 297 and appendix 8 for
its terms of reference and organization.
21. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 298; the JIS included
136
now able to concentrate on guiding intelligence policy and
supervising the administration of the growing number of
inter-service intelligence bodies while the JIS focused on
the coordination, assessment and dissemination of strategie
intelligence. 22 These adjustments also coincided with a
steady increase in both the quantity and quality of
information which enhanced the impact of intelligence on the
future course of the war. 23
During the first phase of hostilities the Directorate of
Military Intelligence (MI) in the War Office acquired the
organizational profile it maintained throughout the war.
Its main responsibility was to provide intelligence to the
Operations Directorate of the War Office and the General
staff whereas any information it forwarded to army commands
concerning enemy formations, according to Hinsley, was in a
secondary or supplementary capacity.24 Field commands after
1940 acquired their own intelligence staffs and from March
1941 they received signal intelligence direct from GC and
cs. The major role of MI regarding operational intelligence
one captain and two commanders from the Royal Navy, one lt.
colonel and one major from the Army, one wing commander and
one Sqdr. Leader from the Royal Air Force, one First
Secretary from the Foreign Office, one Assistant Secretary
and one Principal from the Ministry of Economie Warfare
(Ismay 1960, pp. 160-161).
22. Hinsley, London 1981, Vol. 2, p. 3.
23. Hinsley, London 1981, Vol. 2, p. 3.
24. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 288.
137
was to train intelligence officers for the armies in the
field. 25 In December 1940, the Intelligence Corps became
operational and MI was responsible for the selection,
training and administration of officers chosen for this
task. In September 1939, the Intelligence School was
established and soon after developed into the Intelligence
Training Center and prepared thousands of men and women for
a variety of intelligence roles. 26
Unlike the other intelligence directorates, MI pursued a
policy of administrative consolidation and focussed on enerny
intelligence as its prime function. 27 Although new sections
were created in 1939 to handle specialized intelligence such
as extracting information from mail and telegraphs, by 1940
MI had passed sorne of these tasks to other agencies. On the
other hand, new aspects of military intelligence gathering
were re-organized in new categories or grouped together with
existing sections.
For example, the Combined Services Interrogation Center
25. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, pp. 287-288.
26. The l Corps Depot was the central holding unit for aIl
field intelligence units and personnel. It provided basic
training before candidates went on to specialized training
in field intelligence, security, photographie analysis and
POW interrogation at the Intelligence Training Center. In
September 1939, l Corps included 390 officers and 2,257
other ranks and by the end of the war it comprised 11,000.
(Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 288).
27. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 287.
138
(CSIC) set up in 1939 for the purpose of in~errogating
prisoners was initially part of MI9, the section responsible
for assisting British prisoners to escape, but in December
1941 was established as MI 19. 28 Originally, the function
of MI9 had been the responsibility of Mlia which was set up
in 1917. In the inter-war period littlè thought was given
to the intelligence potential of interrogating prisoners of
war. In 1938, J.C.F. Holland, the prime advocate of
irregu]ar warfare, suggested the use of esr.aped prisoners in
conducting sabotage behind enemy lines and ~n October 1939,
as a result of his efforts along with those of Captain
Rawlins, the JIC recommended the creation of MI9. 29
Initially, MI9 had a mandate for supporting British
prisoners to escape and debriefing them for relevant
( information as weIl as interrogating enemy prisoners. The
department was shortly after divided into two sections: MI9a
which handled interrogations of prisoners of war and MI9b
was made responsible for escape, evasion and gathering
intelligence from British prisoners ~eld by the enemy. In
December 1941, MI9a became a separate department with the
designation of MI 19 while MI9b continued to develop better
technics for evasion and escape as weIl as to collect
intelligence related ta its tasks 30 . Both departments were
28. MI9 continued to work with British prisoners of war
(Hinsley, London 1981, Vol. 2, Appendix 2, p. 652-653).
(M.R.D. Foot and J.M. Langley, MI9: Escape and Evasion 1939-
1945, London 1979, pp. 31-33).
29. Foot and Langley, London 1979, p. 35.
( 30. The revised MI9 was divided into five sub-sections: b
1
139
placed under the command of a Deputy Dire~tor of Military
.; ..... Intelligence (DDMI,PjW) .31 In May 1940, another section
MI3(b) was reorganized and given responsibility for
intelligence regarding occupied Europe 32 while a new
section, MI14, had control over intelligence on Germany and
the German order of battle in occupied Europe. 33
Huwever, the most important addition to the Directorate of
Military Intelligence was the creation of MI8, the section
conc~rned with the supervision of the army's role with
Enigma and the channel through which signal intelligence was
relayed to other branches. 34 In the Spring of 1943, another
post of Deputy Director of Military Intelligence DDMI(Y) was
created to take charge of the Directorate of signaIs and the
work of MI8 which previously had been divided with Sigs.4. 35
responsible for liaison with other services and
interrogation of returned British prisoners as weIl as those
who evaded capture, section d for training, x handled
planning and organization, y had responsibility for codes,
and Z for tools and equipment (Foot and Langley, London
1979, p. 35).
31. Foot and Langley, London 1979, p. 35.
32. MI3 took over responsibility for intelligence on the
Soviet Union, Scandinavia and eastern Europe from MI2
(Hinsley, London 1981, Vol. 2, Appendix 2, p 652).
33. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 287 and Vol. 2,
Appendix 2, p. 652.
34. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 269.
35. The new DDMI(Y) also acted as the War Office
representative on the Y Committee and as the channel between
DMI and Ge and cs. He was, in addition, responsible for
general policy regarding the provision, administration and
allocation of army Y units. Earlier in March 1942, a Deputy
Director of Military Intelligence DDMI(F) had been appointed
140
1
'.
At this critical junction (1939-1940), the SIS deployment
for war relied on an organization based in two parts: the Y
headquarters post~ and the YP division which looked after
the overseas Stat1ons. The Y division consisted of ten
sections which maintained liaison with the Service
intelligence departments and were responsible for counter-
espionage, communications, and finance: section l, political
intelligence; section II, military intelligence; section
III, naval intelligence; section IV, air intelligence;
Section V, counter-espionage; section VI; industrial
intelligence; Section VII, finance; section VIII,
communications, section IX, ciphersi section X, press. 36
For the most part SIS relied for information on its European
stations but after the fall of France most of these, with
the exception of those located in neutral countries, were
closed down. As a result, the iocal points of British
intelligence shifted to the Baltic, Switzerland, the United
States and the Middle East. The Balkan Stations, which had
been considerable sources of intelligence, were also
to serve as MI representative at SIS headquarters. Other
changes at the Directorate of Military Intelligence
included: the creation in July 1943 of MI15 (AA) in charge
of collation and distribution of aIl intelligence on German
anti-aircraft defences and the establishment of MI17 in
April 1943 to function as the secretariat of DMI which
presented to the CIGS the views of MI on matters requiring
Cabinet consideration (Hinsley, London 1981, Vol. 2,
Appendix 2, p. 652-653).
36. West, London 1983, pp. 79-81.
141
evacuated as the military situation in Europe
deteriorated. 37 The occupation of France and the hostile
attitude of the Vichy Government, in turn, severed aIl
overland communications between the surviving SIS stations
and London. 38 Until the SIS could establish new clandestine
networks in Europe, the surviving stations in stockholm,
Geneva, Zurich, Lisbon, Madrid, Tangier and Gibraltar were
reinforced to compensate for the regions now closed to the
SIS. 39
37. West, London, 1983, p. 126.
38. Cave Brown, London 1987, p. 254.
39. West, London, 1983, pp. 81-86.
142
organization of British Intelligence in South Eastern Europe
and the Middle East
In the Middle East and the Balkans, SIS representation was
either non-existent or minimal. Before the war, the Middle
East lacked SIS stations since most of the region had been
under British control and came under the prerogative of the
Security Service. 40 The situation had changed by the end of
June with the establishment of an SIS Station in Cairo,
under the cover narne of the Inter-Services Liaison
Department (ISLD) and the creation of the Inter-Service
Balkan Intelligence Center at Istanbul. 41 Stuart Menzies
sent captain Cuthber~ B. Bowlby RN, his Assistant Chief of
Staff, to set up the new station since the Middle East was
quickly becoming a primary theater of operations. Bowlby
acquired a number of potential double agents from the
Security Service and had access to SIME's (Security
Intelligence Middle East) 42 list of German and Italian
agents. ISLD, furthermore, expanded its representation in
the region by posting its personnel throughout th~ Middle
East usually in the offices established by SIME.
A new source on the Balkan countries for SIS and MI was the
40. West, London, 1983, p. 124.
41. West, London, 1983, p. 127.
42. See below.
143
Inter-Service Balkan Intelligence Center which was set up in
the autumn of 1939 to monitor the likelihood of a possible
German advance through the Balkans and a Russian move
against the Anglo-Iranian oil fields. 43 The main purpose of
the Center, however, was to provide information for the
Commander-in-Chief, Middle East in connection with the
planning of operations. 44 The Balkan Intelligence Center
was located in Istanbul forming part of the Military Attache
staff at Ankara and was made responsible for the collection
of intelligence regarding the Balkans and Turkey.45 The
Center coordinated the activities of the SIS, NID, SIME and
later of the SOE. 46 After December 1939, information
concerning the Balkans was sent by the War Office to the
Balkan Intelligence Center and not the MEIC. 47 Its prime
sources of intelligence came from British Attaches at
Belgrade, Bucharest, Sofia and Athens, as weIl as from press
reports and until their evacuation, SIS agents in the
field. 48
43. Originally, the establishment of the Inter-Service
Balkan Intelligence center came about from British efforts
to arrange an exchange of intelligence with the Turkish
Government. Despite every effort to keep the Center a
secret the Germans knew of its existence within a week
(Hinslev, London 1979. Vol. l, p. 198).
44. FO 371/24884 R 74320.
45. FO 371/24884 R 74320.
46. West, London, 1983, p. 127.
47. FO 371/24884 R 74320, Middle East Intelligence Center
(MEIC) also see below.
48. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 198.
144
The co-ordination of intelligence in the Middle East was
allocated by the CID to the Middle East Intelligence Cen't:.er
(MEIC) in Cairo which was set up in June 1939. The mandate
of the new organization dS described by Hinsley was:
a) to furnish the Commander··in-Chief and
representatives of the Civil Departments in the
Middle East with coordinated intelligence and
to provide the Joint Planning staff in the
Middle East with the intelligence necessary
for the preparation of combined plans;
b) to provide the Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee
in London for the information of HMG with co-
ordinated intelligence in respect of the area
allotted to it. 49
The terms of reference for the organization, writes Hinsley,
were couched in a such a manner that emphasized co-
(
ordination of intelligence rather than interpretation and
assessment which remained under the responsibility of the
respected Service intelligence departments in the Middle
East. 50 In addition, the MEIC was also restricted to the
type of intelligence it was permitted to co-ordinate. The
Foreigr. Office remained aloof from the Center but still
maintained exclusive jurisdiction in the area of political
intelligence. 51
The MEIC, accordingly, was set up as a combined staff of
49. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 191.
50. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 191.
(. 51. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, pp . 191-192.
14~
army, navy and air force offieers but was foreed by
eireumstances to deal with political intelligence.
According to Hinsley, even though the MEIC was depLived of a
diplomatie eomponent, it shortly established a foreign
affairs section and eoordinated diplomatie and military
intelligence in its appreciations. 52 In addition, by the
end of 1939, a Balkan section had been established within
MEIC, although it only received authorization by the JIC in
May 1940 to include the Balkans as part of its area of
responsibility.53
To sorne extent, the MEIC mirrored the function of the JIC in
London but fell short in becoming an integrated intelligence
body since the requirements of the operational comrnands
would not allow their intelligence staffs to merge into a
single unit. 54 The MEIC, however, quickly developed and
established its authority ta receive intelligence from
Enigma decrypts, SIS reports, POW intelligence,
appreciations from Whitehall and from all other intelligence
organizations in the Middle East as well as reports from
British diplomatie, consular and colonial represpntatives. 55
52. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 192.
53. Despite the existence of the Balkan Intelligence Center
at Istanbul.
54. Another factor, Hinsley (London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 194)
states, was the problem of distances and poor
communications. A Middle East JIC was finally set up in
1944.
55. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, pp. 192-193.
146
Because of its rapid expansion, the MEIC was constantly at
1
\ odds with the JIC and the Service departments in London.
The expansion of int~lligence organizations in the Middle
last continued and in December 1939 the new inter-Service
organization, Security Intelligence Middle East (SIME) had
been established and given responsibility for counter-
intelligence and security.56 In April 1940, the Commander-
in-Chief Middle East acquired his own intelligence staff (GS
Int GHQ, ME) under the control of a Deputy Director of
Intelligence. This organization grew rapidly and by 1941 it
included 140 officers. In June, a Brigadier was appointed
oirector of Military Intelligence (DMI) with two DDMI's: one
responsible for signaIs, operational, topographical and POW
intelligence while the other had charge over personnel
security, censorship, publicity and for a short while
certain functions of the SOE. 57
As the war expanded in North Africa and the Balkans in 1940-
1941, the Commander-in-Chief Middle East, Sir Archibald
Wavell, created a special unit, A Force, with the task of
organizing deception against the enemy and as part of its
56. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 192: west, London 1983,
p. 125.
57. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 195. By October 1940
Signal Intelligence in Egypt was organized on an inter-
Service basis with the establishment of the combined Bureau
Middle East (CBME) which included cryptanalysts from the
three services and from GC and CS (Hinsley, London 1979,
(
} Vol. 1, pp. 219-220).
147
cover it undertook to train soldiers in evasion and
escape. 58 In August 1940, MI9 sent M.C.C. Harrison to
organize an escape section within A Force. 59 In September
1941, Harrison was replaced by Colonel A.C. Simmonds who
previously had set up SOE's Greek section in Cairo.
simmonds served in MI9 Middle East until the end of the war
and was able to organize and develop N Section, MI9's unit
in A Force, with considerably less difficulty than
experienced by other new departments in Cairo. According to
M.R.D. Foot and J.M. Langley, Simmonds success was due in
part to:
The fact that Tony Sirnrnonds had been in SOE helped
MI9 in several ways. His having left it endeared
him to MI6, and to PWE. His having been in it gave
him valuable insights .•. into methods of irregular
activity; and provided him with an understanding
of the SOE system, and sorne acquaintances among
the more permanent of SOE's often transitory
staff. On several occasions this led to close and
valuable co-operation in the field between SOE and
MI9. 60
As was the case with the intelligence communi~y in London
and as a result of the Axis occupation of the Balkans and
the German threat to the Middle East, Cairo had become the
base of operations for several intelligence organizations.
In addition to the difficulties involved in coordinating the
intelligence sections of the fighting Services, adjustments
58. Foot and Langley, London 1979, p. 88.
59. Foot and Langley, London 1979, p. 88.
60. Foot and Langley, London 1979, p. 89.
148
had to be made in order to accommodate the activities of
the: SOE, PWE, SIS, MI9, the diplomatie missions, the
governments-in-exile, etc. and later the American OSSo
Caught up within the vortex of intelligence and propaganda
was also the role of the resistance groups in the Balkans
about whom BrItish policy would be divided between the
military nep.ds of the Middle East Theater of Operations and
the post-war considerations of the Foreign Office.
(
149
Economie Warfare, Subversion and Sabotage
With the fall of France in 1940, two critical factors
emerged which characterized the development of British
intelligence in the Second World War: the German occupation
of France and the Low Countries eliminated most SIS stations
in western Europe and, until an invasion could be
contemplated, economic warfare and bombing remained the only
alternatives to offensive land operations. Accordingly, the
role of espionage in Europe was to provide information on
potential targets for air and sabotage efforts. The second
development, providing that there was no invasion, was that
the fall of western Europe shifted the focus of British
strategy to the Mediterranean and the Middle East. Both of
these considerations realigned the dynamics of the
intelligence community ar.d placed greater emphasis on the
development of non-traditional approaches to the conduct of
the war against the Axis powers.
Part of the catalyst in the organization of unorthodox
warfare came from the Ministry of Economie Warfare (MEW),
established in September 1939 by the amalgamation of the
ATB, FCI and IIC in September 1939. The new ministry had
its own intelligence branch which in November 1939 included
two departments: 1) Blockade Intelligence, designed to serve
the day-to-day activities of the ministry and provide
150
information to the contraband control system, 2) Economie
Warfare Intelligence (later renamed the Enemy Branch 61 ),
which was organized to supply intelligence to the Services
and other government agencies not only of the military
capabilities and future intentions of the Axis but of their
vulnerabilities to any type of attack. 62 The relationship
of the new intelligence department to the rest of the
intelligence establishment, however, was not clearly nor
forntally defined and it was sorne time before smooth
collaboration was achieved.
originally, the aim of economic warfare was the destruction
of the enemy's economic and industrial resources and not his
forces in the field. 63 After 1936, the notion of blockade
as the primary weapon of economic warfare was rejected and
according to W.N. Medlicott: "The adoption of the term
economic warfare during the vital period of planning after
1936 introduced a much broader and more positive conception
of the role of economics in a future war.". 64 The driving
force behind this concept was Desmond Morton, the head of
IIC, who believed, writes Medlicott, that:
61. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 223.
62. Hinsley, London 1979. Vol. l, p. 100-101.
63. W. N. Medlicott, 1he Economie Blockade Vol. 1, London
1978, p. 2.
(... 64. Medlicott, London 1978, p. 16 •
151
The underlying assumption was that in a future
total war many civilian elements would have to be
taken into account, not only in defensive, but
also in offensive, operations, and that the
civilian economic ministry, which would come into
existence on the outbreak of war, should be, ~yd
should be regarded as, a fighting department.
The fact that Morton had been a regular officer and an
advocate of economic warfare, according to Medlicott, made
it easier for the Service departments to accept his ideas. 66
Morton, writes Medlicott, was responsible for a genuine
revolution in war planning which enabled the military to
recognize that in certain conditions:
•.. the ultimate ability of a nation to wage war
resided in civilian factors, psychological and
economic, it was necessary and possible to make
use of the advent of new weapons su ch as aviation,
resistance movements, a9d saboteurs to disrupt the
enemy's economic life. 6
Despite Mortin's efforts, the role of the future Ministry
was initially confined to that of supplying information and
in particular to providing the Air Ministry with
intelligence on the selection of suitable economic
65. Medlicott, London 1978, p. 16.
66. Medlicott (London 1978, p. 16) adds, that Morton, as
he ad of the IIC brought his organization into a greater
degree of collaboration with the armed services than that
would have been the case if he had been a civilian. He
became an honorary member of the Joint Intelligence and
Joint Planning Committees of the Chiefs of Staff. Personnel
of the IIC frequently lectured at the staff colleges and
Imperial Defence College, while Morton was often consulted
by the professional staff of the military colleges.
67. Medlicott, London 1978, p. 16.
152
targets. 68 until the collapse of France and the occupation
of western Europe, the primary economic offensive against
Germany w~s blockade. The use of bombing was not permitted
and the roles of sabotage and resistance were only
considered theoretical possibilities. During this period
(September 1939-July 1Q40), the Ministry of Economie Warfare
was also harnpered by limited resources and an inexperienced
staff as weIl as by other organizational difficulties. 69
British strategy prior to 1940 was based on the concept that
Great Britain's contribution to the alliance against Germany
would be based on air, sea, econornic and industrial support,
while the other European Allies provided the bulk of the
land forces. 70 At the end of May 1940, in the shadow of a
68. Medlicott, London 1978, p. 24. According to Hinsley
(London 1979, Vol. 1, p. lC2), collaboration between the
Ministry of Economie Warfare and the Air Ministry was
difficult and it required the intervention of the War
Cabinet Secretariat to establish a reasonable working
relationship.
69. By September 1939, there were four main departments that
comprised the Ministry: Plans, Foreign Relations, Prize and
Intelligence. From 1939 until the end of the war, there
were severai changes and reorganizations but essentially the
MEW was made up of two divisions: the General Branch, which
dealt with the implementation of economic warfare, and the
Intelligence Branch. The organization for the latter was
planned by Morton and subdivideù into two departments:
Blockade Intelligence, responsible to serve the day-to-day
activities of the ministry and provide information ta the
contraband control system, the second department, Economie
Warfare Intelligence, supplied information to the Services
and other government agencies on the enemy's potential for
war and vulnerability to attack (Hinsley, London 1979, Vol.
l, p. 100-101; Medlicott, London 1978, pp. 66-67).
70. J.M.A. Gwyer, Grand Strategy, Vol. III Part l, London
1964, p. 40.
153
French defeat and the onset of military disaster on the
Western Front, Britain's traditional strategy in a general
European war was no longer a realistic option. A memorandum
by the Chiefs of Staff on the strategie alternatives
available after a French defeat suggested blockade and
strategie bombing as weIl as the creation of widespread
rebellions in occupied Europe as part of a new offensive
against Germany.71 This appraisal was based on reports from
MEW which suggested that Germany was already sUffering from
acute shortages and that the situation would become critical
within six to nlne months. 72 By 1941, however, it had
become apparent that the predictions of a pending Gennan
economic collapse were unrealistic and that economic
pressure alone could not defeat Germany. The only other
alternative was the invasion of Europe and the defeat of
Germany's land forces but even with American participation,
which seemed remote at the time, it would be several years
before the Allies could bring their armies to bear in
Europe. 73 In June 1941, the Joint Planning staff in their
71. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. 1, p. 234; Gwyer, Vol. III
Part l, London 1964, pp. 21-22.
72. Gwyer, Vol. III Part l, London 1964,
p. 21.
73. It was assumed that an American expeditionary force
would be relatively small due to lack of shipping and that
when a sufficient force was assembled it would be divided
between the United Kingdorn and the Middle East. Although no
one doubted the impact of American manpower and industrial
strength on the war, it would be sorne time before these
resources could be brought against Germany's forces in
'" Europe and that for the foreseeable future, there would be
no fundamental change in the Allies' strategie position
(Gwyer, Vol. III Part l, London 1964, pp. 38-41).
154
review of the strategie situation concluded:
In areas where German power has become
sufficiently weak, subjugated peoples must rise
against their Nazi overlords. Such rebellions can
only occur once. They must not happen until the
stage is set, until aIl preparations are made, and
until the situation is ripe. The armed forces at
the patriots' disposaI must be sufficient to
destroy the local German forces. The reduction in
German manpower must be sufficient to prevent
their reinforcing affected areas adequately.
By the time these conditions are obtained, we
should have achieved such a degree of air
superiority, combined with naval and military
strength, as to warrant the dispatch of certain
armed forces from the United Kingdom, whether
invasion had been attempted or not.
At the chosen moment in each area, these
patriots will seize such objectives as
headquarters, broadcasting stations, landing
grounds and centers of communication. They will
attack officers, sentries, guards and alarm posts
and where possible, barracks, camps and
airdromes. •. •
The patriots will, however, need the support
( of organized armed forces. For this purpose full
use must be made of the "free" allied contingents
now in our territories. In addition, in most
cases, British armed forces will be required.
In allocating "free" national troops or
British forces to tasks the principle to be
observed will be that "free" national troops will
be used wherever very close co-operation with
patriots is required. British troops will be used
for larger operations and, on completion of their
tasks, will hand over to local forces. 74
The Joint planning staff evolved this concept of a general
uprising from the May 1940 strategie appraisal of the Chiefs
of Staff which called for the use of subversion against the
enemy and advocated a strategie role for resistance
74. Gwyer, Vol. II: Part l, London 1964,
( pp. 42-44.
155
movements in occupied Europe. 75 The fundamental premise of
this strategy was not the creation of guerrilla
organizations for the purpose of sabotage but a general
uprising as widespread as possible and according ta J.M.A.
Gwyer: "The revoIt was to be single, sudden and complete; it
was ta break out everywhere 'at the chosen moment' without
warning or rehearsal.".76
The requirements for an enterprise of the scope and scale
envisaged by the JPS were beyond the resources available at
the time and the mass uprising concept was regarded with
great skepticism by the Chiefs of Staff. 77 The use of
subversion and the creation of secret armies, however, was
not abandoned and became part of the mandate of the Special
operations Executive. 78
75. In part, the Chiefs of Staff based the integration of
subversion with overall strategy on a report drafted by the
MICR) Directorate (just before its integration with SOE).
The report anticipated that the German occupied terri tories
of Europe could rise against the Germans in the future and
surveyed the possibilities for each of these countries as
weIl as the areas (including Germany) that would be
susceptible ta subversion (COS (40), CAB 80j17).
76. Gwyer, Vol. III Part l, London 1964,
p. 44.
77. Gwyer, Vol. III, Part l, London 1964,
pp. 45-48.
78. Gwyer, Vol. III, Part l, London 1964,
p. 48; Sir Colin GUbbins, "Resistance Movements in the War",
Journal of the Royal united Service Institution, Vol 93 (May
1948), p. 211.
156
The Special Operations Executive
In 1940, the use of sabotage and subversion were limited in
scope and as David Stafford writes: "British sabotage and
subversion activities before and during the phoney war ..•
were seen as playing a part within the strategy of economic
warfare, .•. they were given only a low priority, the level
of activity was minimal, and they achieved very little.".79
The German victories in the summer of 1940, however,
provided the irnpetus for the use of subversion as part of an
offensive strategy.
The recornmendation from the Chiefs of staff appraisal of
( strategy in May 1940, to implernent a policy of irregular
warfare and stimulate mass uprisings was followed by a plan
from MI(R) of Military Intelligence to create a new War
Office directorate of irregular warfare and coordinate aIl
such activity.80 Anthony Eden, at the tirne responsible for
the War Office, forwarded the plan to Churchill, always an
advocate of an offensive strategy, who not only approved but
supported the concept of a single service responsible for
aIl irregular warfare operations. Churchill entrusted the
79. David Stafford, Britain and European Resistance 1940~
1945, Toronto and Buffalo 1980, p. 23.
80. M.R.D. Foot, SOE in France: An Account of the Work of
the British Special Operations Executive in France 1940-
1944, London 1966, pp. 7-8.
157
coordination of setting up such a service to M. Hankey who,
after consultation with the Chiefs of Staff and the heads of
the secret services, proposed the establishment of a new
department. 81
According to M.R.D. Foot, the decisive meeting which led to
the creation of the new department took place on 1 July 1940
at the Foreign Office and aft~rwards Halifax recommended to
Churchill the creation of a single service to coordinate aIl
British sabotage, subversion and propaganda activities. 82
There was sorne delay in the implementation of the orders to
set up the new department, caused by the War Office and
other organizations, which sought to take over the new
service. On 16 July, Churchill offered Hugh Dalton 83
81. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, pp. 6-7.
82. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, pp. 7-8; According to
Dalton's diary, in addition to himself, those present were:
Halifax, Hankey, Lord Lloyd, Cadogan, Menzies, Beaurnont-
Nesbitt, Morton, and Jebb. Furthermore, Dalton includes with
this entry that the Foreign Office had thus far opposed the
creation of a department of irregular warfare. Although
those present disagreed with many aspects of the
irnplementation of subversion, they aIl agreed that a new
organization be set up with a sjngle director (The Second
World War Diary of Hugh Dalton, edited by Ben Pimlott,
London 1986, p. 52, entry of 1 July 1940).
83. Dalton lobbied hard to prevent the War Office from
gaining control of the new service. His basic objection was
that Military Intelligence had taken over every clandestine
activity. Also according to his diary, the military were
not capable of handling the functions of the SOE since it
would involve creating chaos and revo]ution as weIl as
dealing with Trade Unionists and Socialists (The Second
World War Diary of Hugh Dalton, London 1986, p. 52, entry of
Monday 1 July 1940). According to Anthony Cave Brown
(London 1987, p. 295), Menzies agreed with the principle
that aIl bodies dedling with subversive activities be placed
in one organization but saw himself as the director of such
158
control of the new organization which was named the Special
operations Executive (SOE).84 The final details concerning
the establishment of the SOE were al"ranged by Neville
Chamberlain on 22 July, at a meeting of the War Cabinet, the
objectives and tasks of the new organization were given
final approval. 85
The terms of reference of the new organization known as the
'SOE Charter' were outlined in a secret paper drafted by
Chamberlain. The document is still classified, but some
excerpts are included in Foot's account of the SOE in
France:
A new organization shall be established forthwith
to co-ordinate aIl action, by way of subversion
( and sabotage, against the enemy overseas .••• This
organization will be known as the Special
Operations Executive .•. it will be provided with
such additional staff as [they] may find
necessary . . . . It will be important that the
general plan for irregular offensive operations
should be in step with the general strategie
conduct of the war ... [Dalton was to keep the
Chiefs of Staff] ... inforrned in general terms of
a new service and argued that this would result in better
coordination between the SOE and MI6 and avoid unnecessary
rivalry. In view of the hostile relations that would
develop between SIS and SOE, Menzies recommendations were
prophetie.
84. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, p. 8. According to
Stafford (stafford Toronto and Buffalo 1980, p. 26),
Churchill invited Dalton on the 17th of July to take
responsibility of the SOE.
85. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, pp. 8-9. It was at
this time that Churchill turned to Dalton and said "Set
Europe Ablaze" (The Second World War Diary of Hugh Dalton,
edited by Ben Pimlott, London 1986, p. 62, entry of Monday
22nd July).
159
his plans, and, in turn, receiv(e] from them the
broad strategie picture. 86
The SOE eventually absorbed aIl the other existing bodies
responsible for sabotage, subversion and propaganda ta the
resentment of the departments that had set them up. These
included MI(R)87, which belonged to Military Intelligence;
section D, which was part of MI6~ and Electra House, set up
by the Foreign Office in 1938 ta examine the use of
propaganda. 88 For the next year, the efforts of the SOE
were directed not sa much against the enemy but against
other departments in a series of bureaucratic battles and
inter-departmental intrigues about the future of irregullar
warfare. The end result was that in Augu~t of 1941, Electra
House (EH), which was designated Special Operations 1 (SOl)
was detached from SOE and became a new secret department,
the Political W~rfare Executive (PWE), responsible for
political warfare and propaganda. The remaining eomponents
of what used to be MI(R) and section 0 were now fused ta
form the SOE proper. 89
The SOE was to function as a secret organization outside the
86. Foot, SOE jn France, London 1966, pp. 8-9.
87. Originally this was GS(R) the research section of the
General staff but in 1939 it was renamed HI(R) and became
nominally part of the Military Intelligence Directorate
(Foot 1966, p. 4).
88. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, pp. 1-2: Stafford,
Toronto and Buffalo, 1980, p. 26.
89. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, p. 10.
160
normal chain of conunand and the normal rules of ministerial
accoun~ability to parliament. 90 To maintain its cover, it
went by a series of names such as: the Inter-Services
Research Bureau, Joint Technical Board, Special Training
Schools Headquarters, NID(Q), MOI (SP), M04 (~n Cairo) and
AllO. Control of the SOE was vested in the Minister of
Economie Warfare, Hugh Dalton, who had the designation of
SO. He had overall responsibility for organization and was
answerable to the Defence Committee of the War Cabinet and
the Prime Minister. 91 Although the SO did not take charge
of day-to-day policy, he had in practice to approve aIl
subversive operations. 92 Direct control of the SOE was
exercised by the executive director (designated CD), first
held by Sir Frank Nelson who was replaced in May 1942 by Sir
(
Charles Hambro and finally by Colin Gubbins in September
1943 who remained as CD to the end of the war.
90. SOE's expenses were covered by other ministries and paid
for out of secret funds outside parliamentary control (Foot,
SOE in France, London 1966, p. 15).
91. According to J.G. Beevor (SOE Recollections and
Reflections 1940-1945, London 1981, p. 62), the SOE did not
have an official relationship with the MEW.
92. Sir Robert Van~ittart was appointed as a political
advisor ta the SO but, for the most part, remained in the
background and was rarely consult~d (Lo~d vansittart, The
Mist Procession, London 1958, p. 550). Dalton also brought
Gladwyn Jebb, his former private secretary wnen he was
Parliamentary Under-Secretary, into the SOE as Chief
Executive Officer (CEO) but Jebb left after Dalton was no
longer in charge of the MEW (The Second World War Diary of
Hugh Dalton, London 1986, p. 60, entry of Wednesday 17 July
(, 1940) .
161
The infrastructure of the SOE was based on country sections
responsible for a specifie territory.93 Their function was
finding and briefing operational control agents,
intelligence, planning and administration. Generally, the
country sections were grouped by theaters of war in three or
four directorates, each in charge of specifie tasks. In
addition, there were separate "subject" directorates of:
finance, signaIs, and supply.94
Originally, the SOE was subdivided into three bran~hes: SOI,
propaganda; S02, operations; and S03, planning. By 1941,
SOI was taken over by the PWE and 503 was absorbed by 802. 95
The SOE, moreover, lacked a centralized bureaucracy. There
was no central registry or a permanent secretary and no one
in charge of the staff and no one who had responsibility for
the smooth running of the organization. 96 Coordination of
SOE's activities evolved out of informaI meetings held by
the CD and the various section heads into a council. By the
end of 1941, the council met routinely every Wednesday, and
93. In some cases, country sections were grouped by regions,
for example: the Americas, Scandinavia, north-west Europe,
south-east Europe and south east Asia (Foot, SOE: The
Special Operations Executive 1940-1946, London 1984, p. 39).
94. Foot, SOE in France, London 1966, p. 18.
95. The SOE was basically divided into two branches:
operations and faeilities (Foot, SOE: The Special Operations
Executive 1940-1946, London 1984, p. 22 and p. 39).
96. In November 1943 a senior civil servant, M.P. Murray was
appointed with the title of DICO to handle administration
(Foot, SOE: The Special Operations Executive 1940-1946,
London 1984, p. 39).
162
occasionally, to discuss policy and future activities. 97
Perhaps the greatest handicap faced by the SOE was the lack
of radio transmjtters and that it had to rely on the SIS not
only for the latter but also for its general communications.
Relations between the two organizations were poor from the
beginning and were considerably aggravated later when the
SOE began to collect intelligence, in addition to its
sabotage activities. Part of the problem arose from the
fact that the SOE took over SIS's sabotage section without
consulting Menzies and from the fear that the violent
activities of the SOE would disrupt the intelligence
gathering efforts of the MI6 networks. Early recriminations
between the two bodies eventually led to a bitter rivalry
constantly fuelled by overlapping in several areas of
intelligence work and competition for resources. 98
The SOE faced a similar situation with the Political Warfare
Executive and relations between the two were particularly
strained since the latter had originally belonged to the
SOE. When the SOE was created, Hugh Dalton had set up SO(l)
as a separate departroent in charge of secret propaganda.
Open propaganda was temporally 1eft with the Ministry of
Information.
97. Foot, SOE: The Special Operations Executive 1940-1946,
London 1984, p. 38.
98. Hinsley, London 1979, Vol. l, p. 278.
163
By November 1940, it had become apparent to Hugh Dalton that
Duff Cooper was not going to give up overt propaganda and
was in fact attempting to gain control of aIl propaganda
activity.99 In December, Dalton formally requested from
Cooper the return of overt propaganda but was informed by
the latter that the status quo should be maintained. 100
Churchill attempted to resolve the conflict between his
ministers by appointing Sir John Anddrson, the Lord
President, to arbitrate but little was accomplished. 101
Lord Beaverbrook was also brought in by Churchill to solve
the problem of jurisdiction over propaganda but he tao
failed ta reconcile the two ministers.
Finally, when Churchill intervened again and replaced Duff
99. Charles Cruickshank, The Fourth Arm: Psychological
Warfare 1938-1945, Oxford 1981, p. 18.
100. Cruickshank (Oxford 1981, p. 18) writes, that the
technicality used by Cooper to gain control of aIl
propaganda was that the Minister of Economie Warfare could
not answer in public for propaganda work, since the SOE was
a secret department, whereas Cooper was forced to a~swer in
Parliament not only for his department but for Dalton's as
weIl.
101. PREM 3/365/7, f. 786. Anderson according to
Cruickshank (Oxford 1981, p. 20), basically recommended the
status quo which left secret propaganda with the SOE and
overt with the MOI as weIl as the creation of a comrnittee to
consist of Cooper, Dalton and Eden in order to coordinate
their staffs and keep each other informed of the propaganda
effort. Day to day coordination was conducted by another
committee (the Executive Committee) consisting of
representatives appointed by the three ministers (FO 898/9,
p. 46; Michael Balfour, Propaganda in War 1939-1945, London
1979, p. 91).
164
Cooper with Brenden Bracken, the problem over control of
propaganda was resolved by the creation of a new
organization, the Political Warfare Executive (PWE) which
was to be coordinated by a ministerial committee composed of
Bracken, Dalton and Eden but in essence it functioned as an
independent entity.102 The new organization, an
amalgamation of SO(1), with certain sections of the BBC and
MOI, came into existence on 11 September 1941 103 and was
made responsible for propaganda in: all enemy and enemy
occupied territory, Vichy France and French North Africa. 104
In the Middle East, the PWE did not direct the propaganda
effort in the Balkans and Italy until the end of 1942, and
when it did assume control of its responsibilities, it ran
into considerable conflict with the SOE. In order to
resolve the differences between the two organizations and
avoid future problems, the tasks of the SOE and PWE were
clear1y divided. The SOE was obliged to hand over to PWE
its radio stations in Cairo and Jerusalem as weIl as its
propaganda staff of four hundred specialists. The SOE,
furthermore, had to use the broadcasting facilities of the
PWE but the latter could not send agents in the field. The
102. Cruickshank, London 1981, p. 24. Shortly after, Bruce
Lockhard, Eden's representative on the Executive committee
was appointed Director-General of PWE (Cruickshank, London
1981, p. 31: Balfour, London 1979, p. 92).
103. FO 898/12.
{
10·1. Cruickshank, London 1981, p. 31.
165
SOE still kept responsibility for: the dissemination of
written propaganda and circulation of rumors, the
influencing of public opinion and the gathering of
information. 105
The first directive issued by the Chiefs of Staff to the SOE
in November 1940 emphasized that subversive operations had
to be planned in relation to strategie policy and contribute
to the military and economic offensive against the Axis.
The strategy outlined by the Chiefs of Staff was based on
the assumption that:
As our forces expand, our policy will be directed
towards exploiting our amphibious power to the
full, with the object of striking with land forces
at outlying enemy positions. By such operations
we shall aim at stretching our enemies, using up
their resources, straining their communications,
and gaining positions from which we can tighten
the blockade, strike deeper at our enemies and
generally support revolt against them .
..• It is not our intention to build up an army
comparable in size with the German army. Our aim,
while build~ng up very powerful air and naval
forces and maintaining our merchant shipping
tonnage, is to create an army which, in addition
to providing for our needs at home and overseas,
will be capable of providing a striking force on
the continent when the morale of the enemy forces
has been cunsiderably weakened. The process of
undermining the strength and spirit of the enemy
arrned forces, especially those in the occupied
territories, should be the constant aim of our
subversive organization.
On a long view, it should be the particular aim of
our subversive organization to prepare the way for
the final stage of the war when, by coordinated
and organised revolts in the occupied countries
105. FO 898/118; Cruickshank, London 1981, p. 37.
166
and by a popular rlslng against the Nazi party
inside Germany, direct and decisive military
operation~ against Germany herself may be
possible. 06
The essence of the first directive by the Chiefs of Staff to
the seE basically reflected the strategie thinking of 1940
and later (June 1941) emerged as the strategy of mass
uprisings put forth by the Joint Planning Staff. In August
1941, Hugh Dalton formulated his own policy for the SOE
which was a modified version of the strategy of a mass
uprising. According to Dalton:
The underground fighters should show sufficient
active resistance to cause constant embarrassment
to the occupying forces, and prevent any reduction
in their numbers . . . . They should do aIl they can
to prepare a widespread underground organization
ready to strike hard later, when we give the
signal. 107
The activities of the SOE in 1941, according to the
recommendations of the Joint Planning Staff, were to focus
on two aspects of subversive operations: a) organization of
subversive propaganda and other subversive activities
ineluding sabotage, b) organization of secret armies. 108
The propaganda element of subversive operations was shortly
106. "Subversive Activities in Relation strategy", cos
( 4 0) 27 ( 0) in CAB 80/56.
107. E.H. Cookridge, Set Europe Ablaze: The Story of Special
Operations in Western Europe 1940-1945, London 1969, p. 37.
108. "Special Operations Executive", 9 August 1941, JP (41)
in CAB 79/13.
167
after taken over by the PWE but the use of sabotage was
viewed as a complement to the bOmbing efforts of the RAF.
The role of secret drmies outlined by the Joint Planning
staff was to be confined to supporting British units in the
field. ln their report on the future efforts of the SOE,
the Joint Planning staff assumed that:
If the British Arrny is to return to the Continent
in the final stages of the war, the assistance of
local patriot forces would be essential at sorne
period of the operations. Our expeditionary force
would be enormously assisted if part of these
local patriot forces were previously secretly
organised and armed, so that they could be
employed effectively in interrupting
communications, attacking airdromes, and other
diversionary operations from the commencement of
our attacks on the Continent. We agree that
secret armies can only operate effectively if
supported by fully equipped forces~ their
organization therefore should be limited to those
areas where our offensive is possible.l0 9
109. "Special Operations Executive", 9 August 1941, JP(41)
in CAB 79/13.
168
Part II
The situation in Greece and the Middle East 1941-1944
'.
c
169
Chapter 4
POlicy and organization of the SOE in Greece
and the Middle East
The concept of revolutionary forces creating secret arrnies
and preparing for a mass uprising against the Axis certainly
reflects the role envisioned by the Joint Planning staff for
resistance organizations in the spring of 1940 but was
rejected as irnpractical shortly after. 1 Hugh Dalton, on the
other hand, the first rninister responsible for the SOE, had
described the role of special operations as one which:
" .•. concerned Trade Unionists and Sccialists in enemy
occupied territories, the creation of Fifth Columns, of
explosions chaos and revolution.".2
In March 1943, the Chiefs of Staff produced a report on the
role of resistance groups which concluded that: " ... the
resistance groups within the enerny lines are likely to paya
relatively big dividend and could make a large contribution
te the enemy's rnilitary defeat.", but the report aiso
indicated that: "unless present delivery facilities were
considerably increased, full value wouid nct be received
1. see above Chapter 3.
2. Hugh Dalton, The Fateful Years Mernoirs 1931-1945, vol. 2,
London 1957, p. 367.
170
from resistance groups at the crucial moment.".3 In the
subsequent directive to the SOE, the Chiefs of Staff
emphasized the coordination of subversive activity with
strategie policy and operational plans but instructed the
SOE to focuss its activities on short term rather th an long
term objectives. These efforts, according to the cos
directive, should concentrate on the sabotage of vital enemy
points and the use of partisan groups to divert German
forces from critieal theaters of operations. In Greece (in
1943), the SOE was to give precedence to guerrilla
activities over sabotage in order to create a diversion in
support of the Allied offensive in ~he central
Mediterranean. 4
In April 1943, Lord Selborne, the new minister responsible
for SOE, continued to advocate the strategy of secret armies
and reported to the Chiefs of Staff that:
.•. the tide of resistance is mounting
steadily ..• sabotage 1s widespread and to a
large extent under SOE control (and) provided
that adequate supplies can be furnished, support
of a very effective kind can be g1ven to regular
military operations. 5
The SOE, however, could not even get enough supplies to
3. GUbbins, "SOE and Regular and Irregular War", The Fourth
Dimension of Warfare, London 1970-1974, p. 90.
4. "Special Operations Executive Directive for 1943", CAB
80/68.
(
5. Gubbins, "SOE and Regular and Irregular War", p. 91.
171
support its basic operations in occupied Europe let alone
prepare for a mass uprising. The Chiefs of Staff partly
cornpromised on the concept of creating secret armies and
agreed that a full scale rebellion could be irnplernented but
it had to be delayed until the right mornent. 6 The SOE,
consequently, had to keep pace with the rapidly expanding
resistance rnovernents and coordinate their efforts with
immediate strategie objectives.
Prior to 1941, subversion and sabotage aetivities in Greeee
and the Balkans were the responsibility of MI(R) and
section 0. 7 Essentially, the activities of both
organizations overlapped but according to Bickham Sweet-
Eseott: " ... it was generally understood that MI(R) would be
responsible only for operations carried out by troops in
uniform .... 8 The implication, states Sweet-Escott, was that
MI(R) would not be deployed in neutral countries but in
practice they were forced to operate in non-belligerent
states whieh led to confusion and friction. 9
The activities of Section 0 in Greece, initially, focussed
6. GUbbins, "SOE and Regular and Irregular War", pp. 90-91:
"Special Operations Directive for 1943", CAB 80/68.
7. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean Sea, Appendix 1.
8. Sweet-Eseott, Baker Street lrregular, London 1962, p. 27.
9. Sweet-Escott, Baker street Irregular, London, 1962, p.
27.
172
on using that country as a base of subversive operations
against the Italians in Albania. In May 1940, Arthur
Goodwill was sent to Athens to initiate such operations and
set up an office in the British Legation. Goodwill's
activities and those of section D were kept secret from the
Greek Government since the latter was afraid of provoking
the Italians and would have objected to British clandestine
operations in Greece. 10 Goodwill, managed to open an office
for section D but between the limi ted support of the British
diplomats in Athens and the efficiency of the Greek police
little was accomplished against the Italians in Albania. 11
Indeed, one of the first operatives of section D, Nicholas
Hammond, arrived in Greece on the 7th of June 1940 for
subversive operations in Albania and was refused admission
into Greece by the local authorities because they suspected
the true nature of his visit. 12
After the Italian attack against Greece, the Greek
10. Sweet-Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1962, p.
25.
11. The organization set up in the British legation, under
the auspices of section D, was made up of five British
business men and called the Apostles. In June, lan Pirie
was sent to Athen~ ta act as an assistant to the head of the
Apostles H.J. Sinclair. In August, pirie was placed in
charge of Greek operations and continued in this capacity at
SOE headquarters in cairo after the Axis occupation of
Greece (Richard Clogg, "The Special Operations Executive in
Greece", Greece in the 1940's: A Nation in Crisis, ed. J.O.
Iatrides, Hanover and London, p. 110).
12. Nicholas Hammond, Venture into Greece: With the
Guerillas 1943-1944, London 1983, p. 13.
173
Government was less reticent about receiving British
support, but still in secret, for the Metaxas regime did not
wish to antagonize Germany.13 In addition to formaI
contacts between Greek and British military representatives,
the forerunners of SOE, HI(R) and section D, began
preparations for the organization of clandestine networks in
anticipation of a German occupation of Greece. 14 The plans
of MI(R) were implemented in cooperation with the Greek
General staff 15 but the activities of section D were kept
secret from the Greek authorities,16 since it involved the
organization of underground cells staffed by Greek subjects
13. Part of the inducement for the Greeks accepting the
presence of British intelligence representatives was their
role in organizing secret meetings between British and Greek
military authorities (Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular,
London 1962, pp. 61-62).
14. Sweet Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1962, pp.
60-62; Hall:mond, London 1983, p. 13; Report on SOE
Activities in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea,
Appendix l, "origin and Constitution of SOE", p. 1.
15. Although this did not prevent HI(R) from attempting to
make contact with groups hostile to the Metaxas regirne. In
the summer of 1940, MI(R) send an agent to Krete in the hope
of making contact with General Emmanouil Mandakas, a leading
opponent of Metaxas, in order to prepare for a possible
rebellion in Krete in the event that the Greek Government
gave in to Axis pressure. Unfortunately, the agent was
caught which created an embarrassing situation for the
British diplomats in Athens (Clogg, "The Special Operations
Executive in Greece", Hanover and London 1981, p. 110.)
16. According to Clogg, these preparations were concealed
from the Greek General Staff partly because of security and
partly because the post-occupation plans of the British may
have undermined the w~ll of the Greek military to fight
since it implied that the defeat of Greece was inevitable
(Clogg, "The Special Operations executive in Greece",
Hanover and London 1981, p. 111).
174
hostile to the Government as weIl as the monarchy.17
According to post-war aeeounts, the use of Communists and
Republieans by the SOE ean be attributed to their
willingness and ability to funetion underground. In
contrast, those loyal to the Greek Government and to the
King were not interested because they believed in an
ultimate Axis victory or they sympathized with the regimes
of Germany and Italy. C.M. Woodhous~, a main participant in
the SOE's role in Greece and one of the principal historians
of that period, claims that: " ... the right wing and the
monarchists were slower than their opponents in deciding to
resist the occupation, and were therefore of little use to
the Allies until it was too late.".18 Nicholas Hammond, an
17. AlI the preparations maèe by MI(R) and the Greek General
Staff amounted to very little, in terms of organizing an
effective number of underground groups, as a result of the
total collapse of Greece in April 1941 (Report on SOE
Activities in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea,
Appendix l, "Orig in and Constitution of SOE", p. 1).
However, the agents of MI(R) and section 0 managed to
purchase substantial quantities of small arms, ammunition,
grenades and incendiary bombs and hide them in the British
Consulate in Athens. In addition, sabotage kits were
manufactured out of four gallon petrol cans which included:
explosives, a saboteur's hand-book translated into Greek,
100 pounds in Greek currency, two pistols and ammunition,
and a few knuckle busters. At the same time, as Many as
three to four hundred potential saboteurs were trained
(Clogg, "The Special Operation:~ Executive in Greece",
Hanover and London 1981, pp. 110-111.)
18 Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 37. In his
second book, The Struggle for Greece 1941-1949 (London 1976,
p. 29), however, Woodhouse emphasizes that the SOE recruited
cashiered republican officers since: " ... such officers were
readily available ... and were perhaps thought not to be so
dangerous politically as the Communists.".
175
earlier member of SOE and section D, states that the
rationale behind the policy of using Communists and
Republicans as agents before Gre9ce's entry into the war:
" ... was that the Greek King and the Government, headed by
General Metaxas, who had been trained as an officer in
Germany, would side with the Germans, who had cleverly
remained neutral and were disregarding the war of their
ally, Italy with Greece.". 19 According to Richard Clogg,
many senior Venizelist officers became willing agents of the
SOE in the fall-winter of 1940-1941 because the Metaxas
regime had refused them permission to f~ght the Italians.
Clogg writes that these men were: "Almost by definition pro-
British, and with British contacts going back to 1916, this
group of officers was eager to contribute ta the war effort
but condemned by Metaxas' vindictiveness to kicking its
heels in Athens.".20
On the other hand, according to the Report on SOE Activities
in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean, composed on the
27th of May 1945, SOE dealings with left-wing organizations
was set on the premise that: "Subversive activities must be
based on a political concept. Effective sabotdge and or
guerrillas (sic) can only thrive if a revolutionary
atmosphere has been created previously through political
19. Hammond, London 1983, pp. 13-14.
20. Clogg, "The Special Operations Executive in Greece",
Hanover and London 1981, p. Il.
176
organizations .... 21 The second appendix of this report,
indeed the entire document was written after the war and
with the benefit of hindsight, by an anonymous author who
further states:
The fact that resistance Thovements and eventually
guerlrilla warfare had to be built on left-wing
political elements was weIl known to aIl
concerned, and accepted in the SOE directives of
the Chief-of staff for 1943 and by the Prime
Minister in his directives on our policy to
Greec:e. 22
The initial strategy of forming secret armies inspired by
revolutionary zeal, accordingly, continued to influence SOE
policy towards resistance throughout the war. 23 Within this
context, it was not unusual for Section D in 1940, and later
( for the SOE, to turn ta the more radical elements in Greece
for their recruits. Equally relevant, is the fact that for
many Greek nationals ernployment by the secret service of a
21. ReQort on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, p. 21.
22. ReQort on SOE Activities in Greece and th~ Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives", p. 5.
23. J.M.A. Gwyer, Grand Strategy, vol. 3 Part l, London
1964, p. 48. Sorne of the main proponents of the secret
armies concept ,ft'ithin the SOE, according ta David Stafford
(Britain and European Resistance 1940-1945: A Survey of the
Special operations Executive. with Documents, Toronto and
Buffalo 1983, p. 30), were Gladwyn Jebb and George Taylor.
The concept was also adopted by Colin Gubbins who became the
Executive Director of the SOE in 1943. Gubtins was
particularly impressed by the Pales and the Czechs who had
organized secret. armies and he believed that these could
serve as a model for other countries in occupied Europe
(Sweet Escott, Daker street Irregular, London 1962, pp. 47-
48) .
177
foreign power while Greece was neutral could be construed as
an act of treason. At least this would have been the case
up until the German attack against Greece. The Communists
and many Republicans did not consider the monarchy and the
Metaxas regime as the legal representatives of the Greek
state and welcomed support from British services to organize
an underground that could eventually be used to achieve
their own political ends.
In 1941, Section D had established contacts with several
individuals and groups and had organized two clandestine
cells in Greecei one group composed of conservative
Republicans under Zannes in the North and one made up of
more liberal Republicans and left-wing indlviduals under
Colonel E. Bakirdzis. 24 The Bakirdzis cell was established
by section D through Elli Koundouriotis~ the granddaughter
of a famous Greek admiraI, who had contacts with Republican
officers. With her help representatives of section D
were able to recruit: Colonel E. Bakirdzis, Ch.
Koutsogiannopoulos, D. Bardopoulos and Ilia Degiannis as
weIl as sorne others. 25 Both groups did not get much of an
opportunity to get organized before the German invasion
forced the British to withdraw from Greece.
24. Report on SOE A~tivities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix I, "Origin and Constitution of SOE,
p. 2; C.M. Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 92.
25. Phoivos N. Grigoriadis, Germanoi Katoxi Andistasis vol.
5, Athens 1973, p. 217.
178
After the German attack, SOE's activities were limited to
carrying out a number of demolitions by a group sent from
Egypt, led by Peter Fleming and the destruction of several
bridges near Thebes by another SOE officer, David Pawson. 26
As the front was collapsing, SOE representatives in Greece
were desperately attempting to equip ~'heir embryonic cells
with radios and explosives but were only able to organize a
few small groups. The speed of the German advance only
permitted the most rudimentary plans for the organization of
clandestine networks. According to Sweet-Escott, the SOE
managed to "bully" seven wireless transmitters from MI6 but
of these only one, left by David Pawson to Bakirdzis, ever
made contact with the SOE in Cairo. 27 with the exception of
Prometheus, the code name used by Bakirdzis 28 , aIl other
information concerning Greece tame from escaped British
soldiers and Greeks who managed to leave the country.29
26. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
64.
27. Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", British POlicy
towards Wartime Yugoslavia and Greece, ed. P. Auty and R.
Clogg, London 1975, p. 7.
2e. The Zannas group gave up sabotage and focussed on "A
Force work, (Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the
Islands of the Aegean Sea, Appendix l, "Origin and
Constitution of SOE", p. 2).
29. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
96; Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", p. 8; C.M.
Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 36.
179
organization of the SOE in Cairo
The organization of SOE activities in Greece after 1941 was
based in Cairo, Smyrna and Istanbul. The occupation of
Greece, however, drastically changed the purpose of
intelligence operations in that country and re-defined the
division between lntelligence and subversion. In sorne
instances, responsibility for intelligence and covprt
operation overlapped and throuyhout the period jurisdiction
over sabotage and espionage activities created considerable
friction amongst the British intelligence services operating
in Greece.
Normally, directives concerning SOE activities were the
prerogative of the War Cabinet or the Defence Committee and
issued through the Minister of Economie Warfare. Directives
on operational matters were given by the Chiefs of Staff in
London and later by the Combined Chiefs of Staff in
Washington or the Joint Chiefs in London and by the
Commanders-in-Chief of a theater of war. 30 In effect,
although the SOE was under the organizational and political
control of the Minister of Economie Warfare, it functioned
under the operational directives of the Chiefs of staff. 31
30. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives".
31. Gubbins, "Resistance Movements in the War",
p. 212; Beevor, London 1981, p. 64. In their first
general ~irective to the SOE (November 1940), the
180
In the case of Greece, which fell within the jurisdiction of
the Middle East Theater of Operations, directives came from
the Commander-in-Chief Middle East. 32 The head of SOE in
Cairo was responsible to London headquarters in ensuring
that SOE operations were in accordance with policy and
complied with the directives of the Commander-in-Chief
Middle East. 33 Liaison with other services was maintained
through a sub-committee of the Middle East Defence Committee
but in September ]943 the system was changed and a new
organization known as the Balkan operations sub-Committee
was set up to control special operations under the
jurisdiction of Middle East Commando Participation included
representatives of GHQ, SOE, the Minister of State, the
Ambassadors to Gn~ece and Yugoslavia and from other
organizations as required. 34
Chiefs of Staff outlined the direction and procedures
to be follüwed. In part one of this document, the Chiefs
of Staff stated that the JPS, the Director of Combined
Operations, and the Air Staff coordinate subversive
activities with the SOE. In addition, weekly meetings
between the SOE and the Strategical Section of the JPS were
organized in order to cûmbine SOE activity with overall
strategy ("Subversive Activities in Relation to Strategy",
25 November 1940, COS (40)27(0) in CAB 80/56; also see
chapter 3).
32. It was not until the autumn of 1943, however, that the
SOE (Cairo) was brought under the direct control of the
Commander-in-Chief Middle East (Woodhouse, Apple of Discord,
London 1948, pp. 44-45; Henry Mait'and Wilson, Eight Years
Overseas, London 1948, pp. 164-165, 169).
33. Report on SOE Activities in Greece a~d the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, IIDirectives", p. 2.
34. Originally, it was known as the special Operations
Committee (SOC) but its membership was increased when it was
181
The function of the committee was to decide policy, settle
differences between the numerous other intelligence services
operating in Cairo and keeping up ta date with the progress
of operations. 35 The details of secret work and execution
of covert operations remained the prerogative of the SOE.
Although control of clandestine activities in the Balkans
was vested in the Balkan Operationn Sub-committee, the final
decision in operational matters rested with the Commander-
in-Chief Middle East. 36 The Greek Government-in-Exile was
kept informed of SOE activities in Greece by the
establishment in 1942 of the Anglo-Greek Committee which
consisted of representatives from SOE, the Minister of State
and the Greek Government officiaIs in Cairo. In practice,
however, the SOE provided very little information ta the
Anglo-Greek Committee about their activities in Greece since
they could not or would not trust the security of any
intelligence lmparted to the Greek Government-in-E:ile. 37
In March 1943, the Greek Government came to Cairo and the
Anglo-Greek Committee was dissolved. 38 After this change
named the Balkan Operations Sub-committee (Report on SOE
Activities in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea,
Appendix II, "Directives", p. 2).
35. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives" , p. 2.
36. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives", p. 2.
37. Woodhouse, A2ple of piscord, London 1948, p. 47.
'38. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives", p. 3 •
182
the British Ambassador to the Greek Government-in-Exile
provided political guidance required by SOE on any matter
regarding Greece. 39
From the beginning, the SOE presence in Cairo had provoked
considerable suspicion and criticism from GHQ and from the
older intelligence serves. Also there existed considerable
friction between SO(l) and 50(2). Bickham 5weet-Escot~
comments that most of it stemmed from inter-service rivalry
and jealousy.40 Relations between SO(1) and SO(2) had been
poor from the foundation of the SOE and particularly
stralned in the Middle East since the latter had established
an embryonic propaganda unit. 41 Although SO(1) planned and
organized secret propaganda, its distribution was the
responsibility of 50(2). In practice, however, SOE(2) did
not have enough officers to conduct its own tasks as weIl as
the work of SO(1). When SO(I) wanted to send their own
operatives in the field, 50(2) agreed but insisted that they
be attached to the SO(2) missions and communicate with SO(1)
through SO(2) channels. 42 These arrangements, according to
Cruickshank, were viewed by 80(1), as a threat to its
39. ReQort on 50E Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean 5ea, Appendix II, "Directives", p. 3.
40. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
73.
41. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
76.
42. FO 898/9, pp. 59-62.
183
organization and therefore it planned for its own overseas
staff. 43 In fact, Cruickshank clting a Foreign Office
document the: Preliminary Organization of the PWE, states
that far from acting as if they belonged ta a single
organization:
... the two branches [50(1) and 50(2] behaved
exactly as if they were rival organizations and
the skill and enthusiasm with which they conducted
their demarcation battle would have delighted many
latter-day trade unionists. It would certainly
have delighted their common enemy, had he known
what they were up to. 44
Another point of friction, between the SOE and GHQ ME was
over the control of propaganda in the Middle East and the
Balkans. In the fall of 1940, 50(1), the propaganda section
of the special Operations Executive in Cairo, although
ultimately responsible to Dalton, was under the direction of
the Commander-in-Chief Middle East. 45 The Balkan section,
however, was directed by the head of 50(1) in Istanbul,
William Bailey. As the situation in the Balkans
deteriorated in the winter of 1941, control of the 50(1)
representative in Athens was transferred from Istanbul to
cairo. 46 In the meantime, Wavell, th~ Commander-in-Chief of
the Middle East, was attempting to place 50(1) propaganda
43. Cruickshank, Oxford 1981, p. 31.
44. Cruickshank, Oxford 1981, p. 31; FO 898/9, p. 53.
45. FO 898/133 R 74320.
46. FO 898/133 R 74320; Sweet Escott, Baker street
Irregular, London 1962, p. 61.
184
activities under his direct control and treat the two
branches of the SOE in Cairo as two separate entities. 47
Dalton's struggle to keep control of the SOE in Cairo hit
another obstacle in May 1941. It had been agreed by Hugh
Dalton and General Wavell, that the SOE would remain under
Dalton's control but would operate under the direction of
the Commander-in-Chief, Middle East. 48 In a memorandum of
10 May 1941, Brigadier Dorman Smith of GHQ Middle East,
stated that the control and direction of the Commander-in-
Chief over the SOE was ta be exercised by "order and
instructions" issued by the B.G.s. 49 , while SOE activities
and operations such as sabotage, propaganda, would be placed
under the control of the D.D.M.I. (0) .50
Dalton responded to this direct encroachment by writing to
Wavell and insisting that the SOE be regarded as a single
organization. Dalton was careful to add that:
l have always recognized that the Middle East has
its own special and complicated problems and that,
in consequence, SOE would have, so to speak, to he
grafted on to an ey.isting machine. Moreover, l
have always gladly accepted the fact that all
subversive actjvities in your command should be
under your general direction, sa as ta ensure that
47. FO 898/133 R 74320.
48. Letter from Hugh Dalton to General Wavell 5/1/41 and
Wavell's reply 3/2/41, FO 899/113 R 74320.
49. Brigadier General Staff.
50. FO 898/113 R 74320.
185
they do not run counter to any military plans.
But this is surely a very different thing from
placing my whole organization ynder the direct
orders of your general staff. 5
He did not, however, offer any practical solution to the
problem. Relations between the SOE and the other
departments of Middle East command continued to deteriorate
and were further aggravated by the British defeat in Greece.
In the aftermath of the British withdrawal fro~ the Balkans
the competition for supplies and personnel strained
relations between the SOE and the other services; the latter
had failed to achieve any significant results during the
Greek campaign, for that matter neither did any other
service except the Navy particularly distinguish itself.
One explanation for this attitude is that opposition to the
SOE was typical to the establishment 0f a new service.
According to Colin Gubbins:
To anyone who has studied the Russian Revolution
or, nearer to home, the Sinn Fein insurrection, or
the Palestine rising, or the Spanish civil War,
the crippling effect of subversive and para-
rnilitary warfare on regular forces was obvious.
Yet these carnpaigns, or nationalist risings, were
not studied at any of the higher colleges of war;
they were irregular and not really deemed worthy
of serious attentio~. This was the root of SOE
problems. In rnany ways the circurnstances of SOE's
initial existence reflected very closely the early
years of the formation of the Royal Air Force. It
too had been the target of vicious attacks from
the War Office and the AdmiraIt y as to the need
for this third independent arme The RAF survived
as SOE survived, by a series (sic) of chance!52
51. FO 898/133 R 74320.
52. Gubbins, "SOE and Regular and Irregular War" 1
p. 86.
186
Gubbins adds that another difficulty arose from the fact
that the existence of the SOE was kept secret and knowledge
of the organization was limited to a small circle.
Accordingly it was always difficult for SOE personnel, in
dealing with other services, to acquire equipment or other
support since on each occasion they had to explain their
position and function, while no effort was made to educate
regular forces on the role and value of the organization.
Gubbins attributes this problem to the classification of
subversive organizations as intelligence units, because the
idea of creating such bodies originated in a special
intelligence section of the War Office and once labelled
with the name intelligence their existence had to be kept
secret. 53
The hostility towards the SOE is also reflected in the
memoirs of Oliver Lyttelton, at the time the Minister of
state in Cairo who, upon assuming his new post, wrote that:
l also found chaos in the field oi subversive
activities and propaganda. l was disturbed, in
particular, by the lack of security, waste of
public funds and ineffectiveness of SOE (Special
Operations Executive), a body largely staffed by
army offic~rs.54
53. Gubbins, "SOE and Regular and Irregular War", pp. 104-
105.
( 54. Oliver Lyttelton, Viscount Chandos, The Memoirs of Lord
Chandos, London 1962, p. 239.
187
Lyttelton's accusations, according to Sweet-Escott, were not
based on any hard evidence and were not substantiated by a
subsequent investigation of the SOE. 55
The detractJrs of SOE within GHQ Middle East, furthermore,
intensified their efforts against the ne\~ service by a
campaign of accusations and allegations of incompetence and
corruption. 56 These accusations were based on hear~ay and
rumor but they had the affect of undermining the
relationship of the SOE with the Services. After discussing
the situation with General Auchinleck, the new Commander-in-
Chief Middle East, Sir Frank Nelson, the head of SOE,
decided to investigate the situation in Cairo. Regardless
of the fact that most of the evidence was based on gossip,
Nelson felt that an investigation was one means of restoring
the lost confidence of the services. 57 Nelson, accompanied
by Sweet-Escott, later one of the principal historians of
the SOE, failed to find conclusive evidence of any wrong
doing but implemented a reorganization of SOE Cairo on the
grounds that the present executive staff had lost the
55. Sweet-Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London p. 75 note
1.
51=\· ~ .. :~~t. Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1962, pp.
74-75.
57. Lyttelton 1962, p. 239, Sweet Escott, Baker street
Irregular, p. 74.
188
confidence of the military and intelligence services. 58
Thus began a tradition, which was to last until the end of
the war, that every August the head of SOE Cairo would be
sacked followed by a general purge of the headquarters
staff. 59
As a result of Nelson's re-organization the heads of 50(1)
and 50(2), as weIl as their immediate subordinates, were
replaced and both departments were placed under the cornrnand
of Terrence Maxwell. Shortly after, the PWE was created
which removed the control of propaganda from the SOE. In
Cairo, covert propaganda activity was placed under the
control of a single organization, the Oirectorate of special
Propaganda, which amalgamated the propaganda efforts of
SO(l) and SO(2).60 Another change, which came in the
aftermath of the re-organization of the SOE in Cairo, was
the incorporation of G(R) with SO(2). G(R) was the Middle
East section of MI(R) but when MI(R) was taken over by SOE,
G(R) remained under the direct control of GHQ Middle East.
G(R) consisted of two sections: one of central Asia experts
and of the Caucuses, and a second section of guerrilla
warfare experts who had ta ken part in commando and other
par-military operations in Abyssinia. 61 According to Sweet-
58. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
75.
59. Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", p. 18.
60. FO 989/133 R 74320.
61. ~he merger did not include the central Asia experts in
189
Escott, who was the assistant to the head of SOE Cairo at
that time, the amalgamation took place at the suggestion of
GHQ Middle East and was in reality an attempt by the
military to take over the Special Operations Executive in
cairo. 62
This merger would have a significant impact on the SOE in
the Middle East and SOE operations in the Balkans. The
tendency of the professional officers, that became part of
the SOE, was to consider subversive activities only in
relation to the strategie considerations of GHQ Middle East
and not take into account the political ramifications of
working with resistance organizations whose goals were not
always in conformity with British foreign policy. Despite
the compromise, mentioned above, there remained sorne degree
of friction between the SOE headquarters in London and the
Middle East commando The arrangement was based on the
principle that SOE Cairo would continue to receive
directives on policy from the Minister of Economie Warfare
but for actual operations it would be responsible to the
commander-in-Chief. 63
the first section of G(R) (Sweet Escott, Baker Street
Irregular, London 1962, pp. 77-78).
62. Sweet Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1962, p.
78.
63. Sweet Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1962, pp.
78-79.
190
At this critical phase of the development of the SOE in the
Middle East, another radical organizationai change further
complicated the role of the SOE in its relationship to
resistance organizations in the Balkans. After the
amalgamation of the G(R) and SO(2), Maxwell, the new he ad of
the SOE in cairo, broke up the ernbryonic country sections
which were responsible for aIl SOE activity in their given
regions and in their place sub-divided the organization into
four directorates: Special Operations, Policy and Agents,
special Propaganda and Finance and Administration. 64
Special Operations was responsible for para-military
activity and accordingly was placed under the professional
soldiers of what used to be G(R). The Policy and Agents
Directorat~ was to occupy itself with political action and
deal with agents in the field. 65
In Sweet-Escott's assessment, the system set up by Maxwell
effectively segregated the SOE in Cairo in two separate
parts so that one section had little knowledge of what the
other was doing. 66 The operations directorate planned and
organized paramilitary efforts, in conjunction with
guerrilla groups in Greece and the Balkans, oblivious to the
64. Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", p. 18: Richard
Clogg, "The Special Operations Executive in Greece", Greece
in the 1940'5: A Nation in Crisis, Hanover and London 1981,
p. 113.
65. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, p.
79: "SOE in the Balkans", p. 18.
66. Sweet-Escott, "BOE in the Balkans", p. 18.
191
political impact of these actions or their effect on British
foreign policy. Whereas the POlicy ana Agents Directorate
was well informed and cognoscente about the situation in
Greece as weIl as the political character of the various
resistance groups coming to life in the aftermath of the
Axis occupation. 67
A year later, after the second purge of SOE headquarters in
Cairo, the system reverted back to the country section
organization. 68 Sweet-Escott comments that: "The whole
history of SOE elsewhere showed that the functional system
of August 1941 was a fundamental mistake.".69 Unfortunately,
the first SOE team to be parachuted into Greece in October
1942 went in without any briefing from the policy and Agents
Directorate, and the explanation for this over-sight,
according ta Sweet-Escott is: " ... simply because this was
supposed to be an operational matter and therefore not their
concern.".70 The implication here is that the complications
that arose later with the Foreign Office over the Greek
resistance organizations resulted from organizational mis-
---------------------
67. Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", p. 18.
68. Throughout this period, and for the duration of the
occupation of Greece, the island of Krete and Greece were
managed separately and the heads of both sections reported
to the Balkan Department (D.M. Candit, Case study in
Guerrilla War: Greece During World War II, washington D.C.
1961) .
69. Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans", p. 19.
70. Sw'eet-Escott, "S0E in the Balkans", p. 18.
192
management in Cairo. This simplistic interpretation of
British policy towards the Greek resistance is somewhat
naive and does not take into account the fact that the SOE
was supposed to work with any group or organization prepared
to fight the occupation forces; preferably with groups who
were willing to support the Greek King and Government, but
subject to operationai necessity the SOE had to cooperate
with any organization that was willing to cause damage to
the Axis forces in Greece. 71
Woodhouse, who parachuted with the Harling Mission 72 and was
the only member of the team slated te remain in Greece after
the destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct, has claimed
that he did not receive any information about the political
situation rRgarding the Greek resistance. Ole Smith, has
chaiienged W~odhouse's account on the following grounds. He
writes, that Woodhouse had insisted on meeting with P.
Kanellopoulos, a Greek politician, who had recentIy left
Greece and hôd given the Cairo SOE a full report on the
political affiliations of the newly establiEhed EAM-ELAS
organizations. Aiso present at this meeting was Ian Pirie,
the head of the Greek section in the SOE. smith finds it
71. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II, "Directives", p. 5; G"llbbins,
"SOE and Regular and Irregular War", p. 93.
72. The role of the Harling Mission is criticai to the study
of the development of the Greek cesistance and there are
several references to its activities in Greece. A detail
account is aiso included in chapter 7.
i
193
incredible that neither Kanellopoulos nor pirie would have
informed Woodhouse of the political conditions he was to
encounter in Greece. smith bases his informètion on
Kanellopoulos' diary which does refer to the visit of
Woodhouse and Pirie. 73 Secondly, Kanellopoulos co~ents in
his diary (28/9/42) about Woudhouse's pending trip to Greece
and that he (Kanellopoulos) should do everything he can to
help him. 74 One has to wonder that if Woodho. le,
Kanellopoulos and pi rie did not talk about the situation in
Greece what else could they have discussed?
In fairness to Bickham Sweet-Escott, he was in Cairo for
only a short period of time as Maxwell's assistant but was
not present when the Harling Mission was sent to Greece.
Furthermore, Sweet-Escott mentions in his memoirs that SOE
Cairo was aware of the political ramifications of
subordinating SOE special operations to the discretion of
GHQ Middle East and the compromise that was affected with
the military left the SOE to:
••• continue to obtain directives on policy from
the minister in London •••• But for our actual
operatjons we would be responsible to the
Commanders-in-Chief on the spot, and would thus
take no action which we were not called upon to
take by the Cornmanders-in-Chief or which had not
73. Ole Smith "Ta Apomnemonevmata ton Bretanon syndesmCln",
Praktika tou Diethnous Istorikou Synedriou: l Ellada 1936-
1944 Diktatoria Katohi Andistasi, ed. Hagen F1eischer and N.
Svoronos, Athens 1989, p. 608.
74. Panagioti~ Kane11opoulos, Imerologio: 31 Martiou 1942-4
{ 1anouriou 1945, Athens 1977, 28 September 1942, p. 143.
194
been approved by them. 75
These agreemEnts and compromises, however, could not
overcome sorne of the more glaring deficiencies that plagued
the SOE in Cairo during its first phase of development. In
a revealing study of British guerrilla operations in Greece,
D.M. Condit, points out that the establishment and
organization of the SOE in the Middle East evo]ved in a
haphazard and erratic manner. In the beginning, Condit
states, the activities of the Cairo SOE were not coordinated
with the military chain of command and the organization was
not given clear political directives regarding British
policy towards occupied Greece. As the nurnber of Greek
resistance groups and consequently the level of SOE activity
esca" Ited, the headquarters in Cairo k~pt undergoing
frequent organizational changes in order to keep up with the
rapid growth. The organizational problems, in turn,
decreased its efficiency and further aggravated relations
between the administrative staff and its officers in
occupied Greece. 76 At one point, SOE Cairo lost aIl record
of its representatives in Greece, which increased the
strained relations between the agents in the field vith the
administrative staff responsible for coordinating their
75. Sweet Escott, Baker street Irregular, London 1962, pp.
78-79.
76. D.M. Condit, Case Study in Guerrilla War: Greece During
World War II, Special Warfare Research Division, special
Operations Research Office, Washington 1961, pp. 14-15.
195
activities in Greece. Compounding these difficulties was a
lack of adequately trained personnel not only for field
oper.ations but for individuals to administer and coordinate
subversive and guerrilla warfare activities. 77 Although the
SOE would ultimately overcome these deficiencies their
impact in the interim period had a profound affect upon the
outcome of the political situation in Greece.
(
" 77. Condit, Washington 1961, pp. 14-15.
196
The Greek Government-in-Exile and British Policy
The death of Metaxas in January 1941 left King George II in
control of the Greek state, but the Greek monarch failed to
use ~hi~ opportunity to dismantle the dictatorship, instead
he appointed Alexandros Koryzis, the Governor of the
National Bank, as Metaxas' replacement. Sir Michael
Palairet, Wdterlow's successor, urged the King to take
provisional control of the Government, rather than appoint a
nonentity figure-head, because he feared that the death of
Metaxas would cause internal dissensions. Metaxas, Palairet
commented, was: "unfortunately irreplaceable.".78 The King,
however, was reluctant to take such a step. Koryzis became
President of the Council and control of the army was left to
the Commander-in-Chief, General Papagos. The Greek general
was a known anglophile and even before the death of Metaxas
had made his pro-Allied views known to the British Military
Attache in Athens, who reported that Papagos: tI • • •
definitely considered himself and Greece as being our allies
in all except word.".79
The military situation, however, deteriorated rapidly within
a matter of weeks followed by the near collapse of the Greek
Government. Koryz i.s took his own 1 i fe on 18 April 1941 and
78. Koliopoulos, Oxford 1977, p. 214; FO 371/29862.
79. "Greek Military Situation", FO 371/24884 R 74320.
197
the King appointed a new Premier, Emmanouil Tsouderos and
within a few days (23 April 1941) the remnants ot the
British Expeditionary Force, the King and his Government
were evacuated to Krete. This, however, proved to be only a
temporary refuge and once again the Royal Navy t!d to rescue
the British forces, the King and his ministers a1,1d take them
to Egypt. From this point on, the Greek Government was a
Government-in-Exile under circumstances that would impede
its credibility with the general population of occupied
Greece. Primarily 1 because in the hectic weeks bef,:\re the
collapse King George II had failed to establish a na~ional
Government that might have enjoyed the confidence of ~is
people through the dark years of occupation. Instead, with
the exception of Tsouderos, he surrounded himself by a
camarilla of ex-Metaxas ministers and sorne Venizelists who
hardly qualified as representatives of the Greek people.
While other members of the Greek political and military
leadership who remained in occupied Greece either
collaborated with the Axis powers, as was the case with
General Tsolakoglou who on his own initiative had
surrendered the Greek forces in Albania, or remained on the
sidelines following the lead of General Papagos. 8D
ao. Papagos requested that he should be relieved of his
command and put on the retired liste According to
Koliopoulos (Oxford 1977, p. 292), the reason given for
Papagos' resignation was that no one should be left in a
high position who might make terms with the Germans. The
Foreign Office, however, interpreted the resignation of
Papagos and the dismissal of the Greek General Headquarters
as an indication of the Greek Government's lack of trust in
f1 the General (Koliopoulos, Oxford p. 292; FO 371/29820 R
4615) •
19B
The King and his ministers went to Egypt and then ac the end
of June to South Africa. They reached London on 22
September 1941. The Greek Cabinet which arrived in England
was small alld comprised the following ministers: 'l'souderos,
President of the council and Minister for Foreign Affairs
and Finance; General Nikolaidis, Minister for Air;
Dirnetratos, Minister of Labour. AdmiraI Sakellariou,
Minister of Marine and Commander-in-Chief of the armed
forces, remained with the fleet in the Middle East. In
addition to the ministers, the Government-in-Exile included:
the Governor of the National Bank of Greece, Varvaressos;
the Depu~y Governor, Manzavinos and the Minister for
Shipping, Theophanidis. Initially, the King and his
ministers were stationed in London with only an
administrative headquarters representing the Greek Minister
for War waintained in Cairo. Greek forces in the Middle
East, however, were placed under the command of British
military authorities. 81 The Government-in-Exile contained
no outstanding personalities, with the exception of
Tsouderos, who had been Governor of the National Bank of
Greece until he was removed from his post by Metaxas, and
AdmiraI Sakellariou, who had managed to evacuate part of the
Greek fleet to Alexandria. 82
81. FO 371/29816 R 74220.
..,-, 82. The Greek fleet that survived included: one old ~ruiser,
nine destroyers, one torpedo boat, five submarines and one
Depot and Repair Ship. In addition to the fleet sorne land
199
Initially, the Foreigu Office suggested that the Greek King
and his Government remain in Cairo, at least until the
Battle of Krete was over but reconsidered this option since
it appeared that North Africa might turn into a theater of
war and the Egyptian Government had refused to allow the
Greek Government to stay on in Cairo. 83 Finally, it was
agreed that it was more convenient to have the Greek monarch
in England and London became the base of the exiled
government, as had been the case with aIl the other exiled
governments.
From a practical perspective, London was the better option
since it was only in the B=itish capital that King George II
would have dir~ct access to Churchill and ether members of
the British Government and thus be in a better position to
look after his interests as weIl as those of the Greek
state. London, however, offered one drawback, it isolated
the King from almost any contact with other Greeks who
continued to make their way to the Middle East throughout
the occupation and could have given him a realistic picture
of the political situation in Greece. According to Hagen
Fleischer, the King and his government had to contend with
forces had been evacuatea or made their way to Egypt along
with nine hundred Air Force personnel of whom two hundred
were pilots (FO 371/29816 R 74220) •
83. procopis Papastratis, British Policy towards Greece
During the Second World War 1941-1944, Cambridge 1984, pp.
6-7.
200
more than the problem of distance, they had to deal with the
perception of many in Greec~ who saw them as little
different from the puppet regime of Tsolakoglou. 84 Yet had
the King remained in Greece he would surely have been
labelle~ as a collaborator. At the same time, the
government created by the occupation authorities made every
effort to disassociate itself from the rnon~rchy and the
Metaxas regime; first to ingratiate thernselves with the
occupation authorities and to blarne the defeat of Greece on
the pro-British policy and sentiments of the King and
Metaxas. This may have had the (,pposite effect, as the
Greek Governrnent-in-Exile was certainly more acceptable than
those who favoured collaboration with the hated Italian
occupation. 85
The Greek Government-in-Exile made every effort, at least in
form if not in substance, to distance itself from the
Metaxas regirne but was reluctant to affect any
constitutional changes. The King and Tsouderos did not
consider the constitution the prirnary pre-occupation of the
government, the main consideration was to fight the war and
liberate Greece. According to Tsouderos, the current
84. Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 178-179; Lincoln MacVeagh,
Ambassador MacVeagh Reports: Greece, 1933-1947, ed. John O.
Iatrides, Princeton 1980, Passim.
85. King George II has been accused of many things but as
far it can be determined from the extant sources his
departure from Greece was not considered an act of
cowardice.
--------_._-_. -- ------------------ _ . ._-- ----------------------
201
constitutional arrangement was necessary during the
prosecution of the war and only after liberation would the
King and the Governrnent introduce constitutional changes. 86
The policy of the Greek Government as outlined by Tsouderos
was: the organization of the Greek forces in the Middle
East; tlle Greek claims to northern Epiros, the Dodekanese
and Cyprus; an adjustment of the frontier with Bulgaria; the
re-adjustment of the Greek frontier with Yugoslavia and the
right of massive Greek immigration to and settlement in the
Italian colonies of north Africa; if Turkey were to follow a
hostile policy towards Britain, Greece should demand the
accession of eastern Thrake and demand that Istanbul be
turned into a free state with Greece participating in its
administration. 87
Despite this, a~cording to Papastratis, pressure from the
Foreign Office ultimately forced Tsouderos, in order to pre-
empt an outright British demand, to recomrnend to the King
the reinstatement of the Greek constitution. 88 Fleischer
infers that Tsouderos was disturbed by the reports reaching
the Middle Eapt trom prominent Greek politicians indicating
a preference for a post-war republican government.
Tsouderos' reaction was to appeal to the British and ask
86. Tsouderos, Logoi, p. 73; FO 371/33167 R 1362: Fleischer,
Athens 1988, p. 179.
87. Papastratis, Cambridge 1984, pp. 8-9.
88. Papastratis, Cambridge 1984, pp. 25-26: Fleischer,
Athens 188, p. 181-183.
202
them to intervene and make it clear to the Greek politicians
that the King had the full support of the British Government
not only for the present but also after liberation. 89 The
British Government was reluctant ta interfere in the affairs
of an Ally 3nd suggested that the Greek Government issue
sorne type of declaration regarding ~he post-war political
situation in Greece. 90 The King issued a Constitutional Act
ending the Metaxas regime in October and four months later,
in February 1942, George II signed a new Constitutional Act
revoking Metaxas' decrees of 4 August 1936 and re-
establishing the constitution of 1911. 91 It is not evident
from the extant sources whether this was the result of
British pressure, or a means to placate the resurgent
republican sentiments of the Greek political parties or
simply the fact that, as Tsouderos had pointed out, on 25
January 1942 the death of Metaxas brought the dictatorship
to an end. 92
89. Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 182-183.
90. FO 371/33160, p. SOi Fleischer (Athens 1988, p. 183)
suggests that the British Government was prepared ta support
the Greek King on condition that aIl the vestiges of the
Metaxas regime were abandoned and it is only after the King
dismissed aIl the ministers who had served under the
dictatorship that the British gave their f~ll support.
91. The constitution of 1911 was based on that of 1864 when
Prince George of Denmark became King George l of Greece. In
1927, after the abolition of the monarchy, the constitution
was again revised but in 1935, with the restoration of
George II, the constitutiop of 1911 was re-instated. In
1936 Metaxas, with the support of the King, suspended eight
articles of the constitution and set up the dictatorship.
92. FO 371/33160, p. 59ff.: GAK. E 13.
203
The lack of popular support for the Greek monarchy in Greece
l€lt the King in a position of weakness when dealing in
matters of Greek foreign policy and territorial claims. The
problem for the Greek Government-in-Exile was further
complicated by the fact that aIl Greek political leaders,
with a few exceptions, focussed their attention on the
constitutional question while Greek territorial interests
took second place. 93 This affected not only questions of
foreign policy but created a political vacuum in occupied
Greece which left the road open for the Communists to
dominate the resistance movement. Indeed, the first
approach by the KKE to the Greek Republican parties to forro
a common front with the aim of organizing resistance, was
not only negative, but the leaders of the these
organizations suggested that ~t might even be preferable to
exploit the anti-monarchist line of the Tsolakoglou regime
which the puppet government was advocating through the Axis
controlled press 94
93. On 30 March 1942 the leaders of the pre-war political
parties, with the exception of Tsaldaris, the head of the
Royalist wing of the Populist Party and P. Kanellopoulos,
signed an agreement which stated that the constitutional
problem would be addressed after the war by a referendum and
in the interests of national unit y they would support the
establishment of a republic (Tsouderos, Ellinikes Anomalies
stin Mesi Anatoli, Athens 1945, pp. 47-48; Fleischer, Athens
1988, pp. 159-160).
94. Hadzis, Athens 1982, pp. 107-108: Zaousis, Part B (1),
Athens 1987, p. 34.
,
204
The leaders of the Greek political parties were cbsessed
with the problem of the monarchy and considered the
establishment of resistance organizations as premature or as
an unnecessary hardship for the Greek people who hdd already
fulfilled their dut Y to the Allies during the campaigns of
1940-1941. 95 As a result, the King and his Government were
under constant attack not only from their opponents in
Greece, but also from many of those living in exile who
questioned the right of the King and his ministers to
represent the Greek nation. Under those condi~ions it was
extremely difficult for the Greek Government-in-Exile to
pursue a policy of reclaiming Greek territory, and later try
to try to organize a resistance movernent that, because of
the political climate in Greese, would be beyond their
control and ultim?tely be used to oppose the monarchy.
Moreover, the first major problem for the Greek Government
was not opposition but the growing famine in Greece and it
had to focuss its energies to persuading the British to lift
the blockade if only temporarily.96 The crisis placed the
Greek Government-in-Exile in the horns of a dilemma. It had
to balance its response to the famine between the need to
95. Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 157-159; J. Petropoulos,
"Traditional Political Parties of Greece During the Axis
Occupation", J.O. Iatrides (ed.) Greece in the 1940's: A
Nation in Crisis, Hanover and London 1981, pp. 27-28.
96. The famine took a greater toll of life than the war of
1940-1941, aIl the bombings, casüalties from resistance
activity and the victims of reprisaIs exacted by the Axis
forces (Fleischer, Athens ~988, p. 194).
205
support the policy of blockade and, at the same time, it had
to take into account that the starvation of thousands of
Greek nationals would have profound moral and political
ramifications. Tsouderos understood the need for the
strategy of blockade as a measure of war and one means of
defeating the enemy.97 However, the question was one of
degree; depriving the occupation forces from external food
supplies was one thing, accepting a full scale famine was
entirely different. Tsouderos bombarded the British
Government with appeals and memoranda desperately pleading
the lifting of the blockade but the interests of the Greek
Government-in-Exile had very little impact on the British. 98
The British Government did authorize the shipment of grain
from Turkey but the amounts were negligible and it had
almost no affect on the food crisis that developed in the
winter. 99 According to Ilias Venezis, in the winter of
97. Tsouderos, Episitismos 1941-44: Mesi Anatoli, Athens
1948, p. 3; On the reaction to the famine by the Greek
Government-in-Exile see: GAK File A6-A17; BI-B4; E1-E3.
98. As early as June 1941 Tsouderos began to argue that the
blockade would have serious implications for Greece. He
accepted the policy of denying the enemy any supplies of
food but he pointed out that the situation in Greece would
become desperate and that a way around the problem was to
supply Greece through the International Red Cross or even
simply by sending food secretly and unofficially (Emmanouil
Tsouderos, 0 Episitismos 1941-1944, Athens 1946, pp. 17-18
and passim). Fleischer (Athens 1988, P. 206 note 58)
suggests that Tsouderos has received a great deal of
criticism for his role in the crisis but, for the most part,
he has been blamed for the delays of food shipments from
Turkey caused by R. Raphael, the Greek Amb~ssador in
Istanbul.
99. Another possible source of supply acceptable to the
British was Russia but the German invasion in 1941
eliminated that option (papastratis, Cambridge 1984, pp.
206
1941, the British Ambassador had assured the Greek Premier,
Alexander Koryzis, that in the event of the occupation of
Greece the British would permit the importation of 30,000
tones of grain per month. After the collapse of Greece the
British, failed to honor this agreement. 100
For the British the dilemma had other implications. Lifting
the blockade for Greece would set a precedent for other
hardship countries in occupied Europe. 10l Another
consideration, was that food shortages could have had the
affect of inciting the population to a greater degree of
resistance against the occupation forces. The role of the
blockade, writes Medlicott, was to weaken the Axis by
draining their manpower: "By maintaining the health of Axis-
occupied territory the Allies would be providing ample
115-116) .
100. Why, and if, the Bri~ishAmbassador made such a promise
knowing full weIl the policy of blockade is not known, the
matter of 30,000 tones of grain per month is mentioned by l.
Venezis (Archiepiskopos Damaskinos, Athens 1981, p. 110
note) and supported by Fleischer (Athens 1988, p. 204).
Before the war Creece annually imported 400,000 - 500,000
tones of grain but the problem was compounded by a poor
harvest in 1941 and the additional burden of feeding the
British Expeditionary Force. Just before the collapse of
Greece the Greek Government had purchased over 350,000 tones
of grain from abroad but most of these supplies had been
consumed (Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 204). According to
Peter Hoffmann (tlRoncalli in the Second World War: Peace
Initiatives, the Greek Famine and the Persecution of the
Jews", Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 40, no. 1,
January 1989, p. 78), a shipment of 47,000 tones of grain
from Australia which was to have replaced what the British
forces had confiscated and consumed in Greece was prevented
from reaching Greece.
101. Cab 65/25 WM (42) 5.
207
resources of extra manpower for Axis economy, in addition to
diverting shipping and supplies tram Allied users."
Medl icott adds: "The Axis Governments would also be spared
the dangers of pestilence and revolution in the occupied
areas; this would reduce the need for occupation forces, and
one more deterrent against future conquest. Il .102 According
to Hugh Dalton, the Minister of Economie Warfare, if there
was a famine it would he the responsibility of the Germans:
The plain truth is that there will be no famine in
any part of the Enslaved Area, unless either the
Gerrnans snatch away food which is there now, or
refuse to allow food which is not far away to be
moved to where it is most needed. The
responsibility for local famine, if such should
occur, will be German and not British. 103
In his memoirs Dalton has stated that in the field of
economic warfare he was against aIl moderation and when
Churchill also gave him responsibility for the SOE he
assumed this role with determination: " ..• when the Prime
Minister gave me additional powers, to carry on subversion
102. Medlicott, London 1959, p. 254. Hondros (Occupation
and Resistance: The Greek Agony 1941-44, New York 1983, pp.
75-77) writes that as food rations rose and fell:
103. Dalton, London 1957, Vol. 2, p. 354. " •.. political
agitation against the Axis followed inversely. Under these
conditions, the Axis powers were am,dous to cooperate with
the relief mission, and they did not hfnder the flow of
relief. I l . A joint SOE/PWE analysis of the Greek resistance
a year and one half later (April 1943) reached the opposite
conclusion, that famine as opposed to food shortages
hampered vitality and impaired resistance. The report also
indicated that the arrivaI of food shipments actually helped
to instigate resistance activity and increase faith in the
Allies ("Jcint SOE/PWE Survey of Resistance in occupied
Europe, FO 898/97 R 74320).
2
20R
and sabotage and psycho1ogica1 warfare, l was extremist
here, too, eager to go aIl lengths.".104
The famine caught the attention of the world press and the
added pressure of the international community threatened to
affect adverse1y wor1d opinion against Gre~t Britain. 105
Ultimately, the War Cabinet relented and lifted the
b1ockade, but on1y after strong signs of American
disapproval. 106 In the interim period, thousands starved to
death while the British grapp1ed with moral di1emmas and the
impact of starvation on subversive warfare. While the
British Government debated whether death by starvation of a
substantial number of these people was necessary to the war
effort 107 , these same Greeks risked the death penalty from
the occupation authorities by hiding British soldiers who
had managed to escape or had avoided capture and shared with
104. Dalton, London 1957, Vol. 2, pp. 325-326.
105. Cab 65/25 WH (42) 5.
106. Th. Saloutsos, The Greeks in the United states,
Cambridge, Mass. 1964, pp. 345ff. and p. 432; Medlicott,
London 1978, Part Il, pp. 258-259; John L, Hondros, New York
1983, p. 73.
107. Fleischer (Athens 1988, pp. 194-216) takes the view
that the Briti~h dragged their feet in deciding to lift the
blockade and refused to allow the passage of 350,000 tones
of grain purchased by the Greek Government before the
,)ccupation. Peter Hoffmann (ltRoncalli in the Second World
~ar: Peace Initiatives, the Greek Famine and the Persecution
of the Jews", Journal of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 4 0,
no. 1, January 1989, pp. 74-99) in a recent study has
outlined the difficulties and obstacles faced by Angelo
Roncalli, the apostolic delegate, ir. ~rying to convince the
British to lift their blockade to alleviate the food crisis
in Greece.
209
them what little food they had. 108
Concurrent with the problem of the blockade, was the attempt
by the Greek Government-in-Exile to irnplement a foreign
pOlicy based on a post-war political alliance with Britain
which would be instrumental in addressing Greek territorial
dernands. On 29 September 1941, Tsouderos proposed to
Alexander Cadogan, the Permanent Under Secretary of the
Foreign Office, a Greek-British alliance and offered the
British naval and air bases in Greece. Cadogan responded
favorably to the Greek proposaI but assurned that such an
agreement would also involve Greek territorial claims. 109
For this reason Warner, the head of the Southern Departrnent,
( was reluctant to endorse an alliance which included any
post-war territorial revisions in the Balkans and the
eastern Aegean. He proposed, instead, a military alliance
along the same lines as that concluded with the Government
of Norway and suggested that the question of British bases
and Greek territorial claims could be discussed later on
without making any formaI commitrnents.
Warner's view wa5 shared by others in the Foreign Office who
108. Tlds was cited as another consideration in favour of
lifting the blockade (Cab 65/25 WM (42) 5).
109. FO 371/29817 R 8810. From his first meetings with
Churchill and Eden, Tsouderos had brought up the subject of
Greek territorial clairns but both avoideù given the G~eek
Prime Minister any cornrnitrnents and side stepped the proposaI
of an Anglo-Greek alliance (Papastratis, Athens 1984, p.
16) .
210
feared that Tsouderos was aiming at establishing, with
British support, a greater Greece that would dominate the
eastern Mç·diterranean. Dixon, of the Southern Department,
not only agreed with Warner's concerns about the
implications of a post-war alliance with the Greek
Government but suggested that Turkey was far better suited
to play a pivotaI role in the Near East than Greece. 110 As
far as the issue of bases was concerned, the Foreign Office
was inclined towards a policy that would lead to a post-war
Balkan alliance which could also have included British and
even American military bases. Towards this end, the Greek
and Yugoslavian governments were encouraged by the British
to conclude an alliance on 15 January 1941 which aimed at
forming a Balkan union. 111 O~ 25 November 1941, Eden met
with Tsouderos and proposed the formation of an Anglo-Greek
military alliance and pointed out that any territorial and
political agreements would have to be considered only after
110. FO 371/29817 R 8810. Papastratis ("Diplomatika
paraskinia tis Ipographis tis Stratiotikis symphonias
Vretanias-Elladas stis 9 Martiou 1941" Mnimon (Athens) 1879,
p. 176 note 5: cambridge 1984, pp. 16-17) also comments that
the objections of the Foreign Office were a reaction te
Tsouderos' requests for Greek territorial claims and border
adjustments in northern Greece. Greek territorial demands
included: the acquisition of northern Epiros (part of
southern Albania), the restoration of the Dodekanese and
Cyprus as weIl as frontier adjustments between Greece and
Yugoslavia and Bulgaria see: E. Tsouderos, Diplomatika
Paraskinia, Athens ]950, p. 116; The Greek White Book,
London 1941, Introduction. For the basis of the Greek
claims to northern Epiros see: V.P. Papadakis, Diplomatiki
Istoria tou Ellinikou Polemou, Athens 1956, pp. 221-22:
111. Papastratis, "Diplomatika Paraskinia", p. 177 note 7;
Tsouderos, Diplomatika Paraskinia, Athens 1950, p. 188.
211
the end of the war. Tsouderos had little choice but to
accept Eden's offer and after receiving the King's agreement
a military alliance was concluded on 9 March 1942. 112
Another matter whi~h was of considerable interest to the
British Government was the disposition of the Greek merchant
marjne f]eet. The use of the Greek ships was a vital
concern to the British since more than eighty percent of the
Greek merchant marine operated from London and was chartered
to the Ministry of War Transport. Sorne of the Greek owners
wished to transfer their operations to New York and the
Greek Minister of Marine had travelled to the united states
in order to open an office. The Ministry of War
Transportation, however, was opposed to this move and was
anxious to keep control of the Greek merchant fleet in
112. The aim of the alliance was the liberation and
independence of Greece. The main articles included: the
Greek armed forces would fall under the command of the
Middle East Theater of Operations, which would also be
responsible for their organization and direction; Greek
unit~ would be recognized as a separate force and commanded
by Greek officers who would be responsible for discipline
and promotions: Middle East Command, however, reserved the
right to appoint a Brjtish officer as Commander-in-Chief of
the Greek army: certain Greek ndval vessels were placed
under the direct authority of the Royal Navy and the
remainder would work closely with the British navy: the
Hellenic Royal Air Force a~though to be designated as a
separate Allied force, its pilots, for practical reasons,
would be enlisted as members of the volunteer arm of the
RAF: aIl matters of discipline and courts marshal would
remain the responsibility of the Greek Government and be
treated under Greek military law. other articles dealt with
training, supply and finance of the Greek armed forces
(Tsouderos, Diplomatika Paraskinia, Athens 1950, pp. 164-
167; papastratis, Mnimon, Athens 1979, pp. 178-179).
212
London. 113 According to Papastratis, the Greek Government-
in-Exile failed ta use this to their advantage because they
needed the whole-hearted support of the British Government
and could not afford to alienate Churchill or the Foreign
Office. 114 However such a transfer of the Greek merchant
marine fleet to New York would hardly have afforded the
Greek Government-in Exile any leverage to use in its
territorial discussions with the British especially after
the united states became a belligerent in December 1941.
Finally it must be kept in mind that the Greek Government-
in-Exile was confronted with a number of major issues some
of which like the famine was of crucial importance to
occupied Greece but none of which could be adequately
explained or even communicated to Greece itself. This lack
of contact at best gave the impresRion of impotency on the
part of the Greek Government-in-Exile and at worse displayed
indifference to the fate of those living in occupied Greece.
British Policy towards Greece 1941-1943
The British Government began by supporting an exiled King
and his Gcvernment in the expectation that he would be
received back after the end of hostilities and only then
113. Papastratis, Cambridge 1984, p. 11.
114. Papastratis, Cambridge 1984, p. 11.
2~3
demands for constitutional change could be addressed in an
orderly manner and through free elections. British policy:
... could not have been based on any other assumption but
such a poJicy of moderation and common sense assumed a
higher level of political education and restraint than
was the ~ase in the prÏïgminantly peasant countries of
Yugoslavla and Greece.
Prior to the war, neither of these countries had popular or
democratic governments and during the occupation the "Le ft"
underground in both states gained control of the resistance
leaving the British little choice except to cooperate, due
to military necessity, with the Communist resistance
organizations. Llewellyn Woodward attempts to explain the
contradiction between British policy towards Greece with
that of Yugoslavia by suggesting that, had the Greek
resistance produced a leader such as Tito, the British
Government might have followed a similar path in both
countries. 116 Woodward modifies his comments by also
suggesting that had Belgrade been as accessible as Athens,
British policy towards Yugoslavia rnight have been quite
different.
In concluding his introduction on British foreign policy
towards Greece, Woodward states that the British Government
115. Llewellyn Woodward, the official historian of British
foreign policy during the war (British Foreign Policy in the
Second World War 5 Vols., London 1971, Vol. III, p. 383).
116. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 383.
214
was " ... compelled, in Greece, to carry through their policy
to the end .... 117 The use of force in December 1944, he
comments, was acceptable to the majority of the ureek nation
and that British interference prevented an even more
devastating civil war. 118 There is no method of determining
whether the majority of the Greek people approved or
disaprroved of the British using force ta quell the December
uprising, but it did not resolve the political cri sis that
precipitated the conflict. Two years later, the country's
political cri sis led to a more destructive civil war (1946-
1949) and left Greece in economic and political ruine
British policy in Greece, between the beginning of the Axis
occupation and liberation, was characterized by two basic
factors: a) that the Greek King and his Government were the
legitimate representatives of the Hellenic state, b) Great
Britain could neither sanction nor impose any political
change during the war. Within these criteria, British
policy in south eastern Europe was adapted and stretched to
accommodate the Greek resistance groups in order to allow
them to play a useful military part in the overall efforts
of the Middle Eastern Theater of Operations in the
Mediterranean. C.M. Woodhouse in his first book, Apple of
Discord, defines British policy towards Greece as taking
shape in an ad hoc manner and excludes the notion that the
117. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 383.
'. 118. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 384.
215
British Governrnent rnaintained any fixed policy:
There was no such thing as HMG's policy towards
Greece, in the sense of a fixed set of objectives
laid down in advance. British foreign policy has
never been sornething that is laid down in advance,
to be achieved regardless of what rnay happen
between its formulation and its executioni it is
rather an ernergent character which can gradually
be detected arnongst the welter of ad hoc
discussion. 119
As far as the British Governrnent's support of the Greek
rnonarchy was concerned, Woodhouse explains this as a
cornrnitment to the person of King George II of the Hellenes.
The motives for Britain's loyalty to the Greek King,
Woodhouse writes:
.•• sprang hardly at aIl from the consideration
that the restoration of the King would ensure the
friendship of ~reecÇ towards England, because as a
matter of plain fact almost any Greek Government
that was not communist would be friendly to
Englandi the y sprung almost entirely from
gratitude and loyalty to the man who had stood
with us when everything seemed lost. 120
A better question surely is whether the British had any
other choice. The King and the Gre\~k Government-in-Exile
were the internationally accepted representatives of the
Greek state. Consequently, British denial of the legality
of the Greek Governrnent would have given sorne credibility to
the puppet regirne in Athens.
119. Woodhouse, APple of Discord, London 1948, p. 49.
120. Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 50.
216
During the course of the occupation, 1941-1944, British
policy alternatives in Greece fell between military
expediency, using resistance groups to hamper and cause
damage to the Axis forces in Greece and thus indirectly
support the war effort in North Africa, and a political
agenda which strove to keep post-war Greece in the British
sphere of influence. To ensure the latter, the Foreign
Office remained steadfast to the King of Greece. In
addition, Churchill maintained a sense of gratitude to
George II of the Hellenes for his alliance to Great Britain
in 1941,121 but he was less disposed to maintaining the
Greek monarchy than preserving an orderly transition from
occupation to liberation. In a staternent to Rex Leeper, the
British Ambassador to the Greek Government, Churchill
outlined his policy regarding the Greek rnonarchy:
The King is the servant of h1S people. He rnakes
no claim to rule thern. He submits himself freely
to the judgernent of the people as soon as normal
conditions are restored. He places himself and
his Royal House entirely at the disposition of the
Greek nation. Once the German invader has been
driven out, Greece can be a republic or a
rnonarchy, entirely as the people wish. 122
The basic underlying factor which influenced British foreign
policy was that the Greek monarchy represented legitimacy.
121. Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War: Closing the
Ring, Vol. 5, London 1951, p. 458 and p. 465.
122. Churchill, Closing the Ring, Vol. 5, London 1951, p.
466.
217
Churchill, from the beginning of the German hegemony over
Europe had resolved that during the war Great Britain would
resist any changes that altered the internaI political
structures of the occupied stat~s.123 He was resolute in
this policy and only gave way in the face of new realities,
as was the case in Yugoslavia, France and Poland, but where
possible Churchill remained steadfast to the concept of
legitimate authority. within these parameters, however, the
British Government had to pursue a military strategy which
in sorne theaters of operations required the cooperation of
resistance groups to work with para-military organizations
such as the SOE. In these circumstances, it was necessary
to ignore temporarily the overall guidelines of British
policy in order to satisfy military expediency.
Accordingly, throughout the war, the perceived usefulness of
resistance organizations to military strategy had to compete
witil Lhe poljcy objectives set by the Foreign Office.
During the first phase of the war (1939-1942), when victory
seemed distant, the Foreign Office did not press its
concerns over the potential friction between short term
military objectives and long-term political questions. The
Foreign Office, comments Gladwyn Jebb, tended to view the
SOE: " ... as a joke and then as a menace . . . . ", whereas the
staff of the Special operations Executive considered the
123. Henri Michel, The Shadow War: Resistance in Europe
1939-1945, trans. Richard Barry, London 1972, pp. 53-54;
Stafford Toronto and Buffalo 1980, pp. 33-34.
218
Foreign Office: " .•. as a collection of timorous officiaIs
unaware of the supreme necessity of 'getting on with the
war,.".124
In early 1942, an agreement was reached between the Foreign
Office and the special operations Executive outlining th~
role of SOE operations within the framework of British
foreign policy. The basis of the agreement, defining the
collaboration of the SOE with the Foreign Office, was set
forth in a memorandum written by Gladwyn Jebb and approved
by Sir Alexander Cadogan, the Permanent Under-Secretary of
the Foreign Office, and became operative on 23 May 1942:
Memorandum on Foreign Office-SOE Agreement
Ca) To promote disaffection and, if possible, revoIt
in aIl enemy and enemy-occupied countries.
(b) Tc hamper the enemy's war effort by sabotage and
partisan warfare in these areas.
(c) To combat enemy interests and Fifth Column
activities by unacknowledgeable means in any
other part of the world where SOE may be
permitted to do so.
(3) SOE would have to obtain the Secretary of
state's prior agreement to any of their
operations likely to affect foreign policy. For
their part the Foreign Office would make
available to SOE aIl information affecting, or
likely to have a bearing upon l SOE operations
and plans.
(4) The degree of interest taken by the Foreign
Office in SOE's activities varies in different
areas. Thus in enemy and enemy-occupied
terri tories SOE will work under the directives
of the chiefs of staff or the responsible
commander-in-chief. AlI acts of sabotage and
the creation of disaffection against the enemy
can, and in general, be undertaken on the
124. Gladwyn Jebb (Lord), The Memoirs of Lord Gladwyn,
London 1972, p. 103 and pp. 105-106.
219
initiative of SOE though they will have to keep
the FO informed by periodical reports of any
developments of political significance. If,
however, any organization in touch with SOE is
found to be in a position to exercise political
influence in the country SOE will at once
consult the FO and chiefs of staff as to the
line ta be adopted by SOE in its dealings with
any su ch organization.
(5) As the FO have a special interest in unoccupied
France and its unoccupied terri tories SOE agrees
not to conduct operation~ in them except with FO
consent.
(6) In Allied countries SOE interests are chiefly
the recruitment of agents and co-operation with
governments concerned in subversive operations.
Provided the Allied authorities are in agreement
with SOE about these the FO need not be
consulted about recruitment though they should
be kept informed on general lines of co-
operation in subversive matters. The Sbme
applies in regard to SOE relations with exiled
Allied governments 125
Despite this agreement, relations between the Foreign Office
continued to deteriorate throughout the course of the war
and particularly in the Balkans where SOE activities ran
counter to the interests of the Foreign Office. 126 SOE
involvement with the Greek resistance groups meant
supporting organizations who were diametrically opposed to
the Greek monarchy and the Government-in-Exile. In the view
of the Foreign Office, the build-up of a strong Greek
Government was far more important: " ••• than the ephemeral
damage which could be done by acts of sabotage .•• ".127
125. Beevor, London 1981, pp. 69-70.
126. Stafford, Toronto and Buffalo 1980, pp. 77-88.
127. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 391.
220
In 1943, the Foreign Office analysis of the usefulness of
the Greek resistance organizations between 1941 to 1943,
concluded that the value of subversive activity was liroited
since the British could not threaten the Axis position in
Greece. After the surrender of Italy, the Foreign Office
would take the position that Greece had ceased to be an
important strategie region and once again cast strong doubts
on the value of sabotage or guerrilla warfare, particularly
when these activities went contrary to British policy
towards Greece. 128 The concerns of the Foreign Office,
however, were not shared by the Chiefs of Staff who were
convinced " ... that the SOE operations in Greece were of
great importance, and that no political considerations
should hamper or reduce the good work being done by the
guerrilla bands .... 129 By this time, however, the fears of
the Foreign Office, as will be indicated in chapter seven,
were also fuelled by the personal bias of its
representatives in Cairo. For the most part, British policy
in Greece was based on a compromise attempting to balance
short-term military gains with long-term political
objectives. 130 The military aspect, however, remained
foremost in SOE strategy towards Greece. In 1943, despite
128. For a discussion on the relations betwecn the Foreign
Office and the SOE see: Richard Clogg, "pearls from Swine",
British Wartime policy towards wartime Resistance in
Yugoslavia and Greece, ed. Phyllis Audy and Richard Clogg,
London 1975, pp. 177-201.
129. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 391.
130. Woodward, London 1971, Vol. III, p. 389.
221
the suspicions of the Foreign Office regarding SOE's
associat~r,n with the left-wing resistance organization EAM-
ELAS and the agreement of May 1942, Churchill's directive to
the SOE on British policy towards Greece conceded the
predominate role of military objectives:
In view of operational importance attached to
subversive activities in Greece, there can be no
question of SOE refusing to have dealings with a
given group merely on the grounds that political
sentiments of that group are opposed to the King
and Government (of Greece), but subject to special
operational necessity SOE should always veer in
the direction of. groups willlng to support the
King and Government and furthermore impress on
such other groups as may be anti-monarchical the
fact ~hat the King and Government in10ys the
fullest support of HMG Government. 3
This did not mean that military n~cessity over-ruled
political considerations, it merely stated that the first
priority for the SOE was to work with groups loyal to the
King but also accept the need to cooperate with
organizations that were anti-monarchical. At the same time,
every effort had to be made by the British Government to
support the Greek Government-in-Exile and the King. The
SOE, however, had from the beginning accepted the notion
that resistance and subversive activities had to be based on
131. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix II(A), "Extract from Minutes of
Commanders-in-Chief Tenth Meeting, 10/4/43", p. 2; Woodward,
Vol. III, London 1971, p. 392. According to Gubbins ("SOE
Regular and Irregular War", pp. 92-93), at the time that
Churchill issued this directive the Allies were planing the
invasion of Sicily and were in the process of instigating
one of the greatest diversionary actions during the war.
Also see: Charles Cruickshank, Deception in World War II,
f Oxford 1979, p. 54-59.
222
revolutionary concepts and according to the Report on SOE
Activities in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea:
"Effective sabotage or guerrilla action can only thrive if a
revolutionary atmosphere has ~een created previously through
political organizations or other channels .... 132 In Greece,
the Communists and Republicans had been identified by the
SOE as the revolutionaries who would establish the
foundation for a resistance movernent. The fact that this
ran counter to British foreign policy which supported the
King of Greece was not an oversight, but considered by the
SOE a necessity of war. The existence of the SOE and its
work with the resistance placed the British in the awkward
position of arming left-wing and Republican groups opposed
to the monarchy while at the sarne time supporting the return
of the Greek King. To paper over these differences an
attempt was made to address the problem in an indirect
manner. Every effort was made to make the Greek Governrnent-
in-Exile more representative by including liberal
politicians with a following in Greece and reconciling them
with the monarchy while remaining steadfast to the policy of
supporting the King. Ultimately, this strategy failed. The
Greek resistance lacked a prominent leader such as Tito
which could have given the British the opportunity to follow
a similar policy in Greece as they did in Yugoslavia. In
the absence of such a leading personality and a fragmented
132. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix III, "Greek Situation", p. 7.
223
resistance movement, the British had little reason to change
their policy regarding the Greek monarchy and the
Government-in-Exile. On the other hand, the partisan groups
set their own agenda and expected that after liberation they
would decide on the constitution of their country.133
133. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix III, "Greek Situation", p. 7.
224
Chapter 5
The Occupation of Greece
After the conclusion of Operation Mercury, Hitler assigned
Greece to the Italian sphere of influence and was content
that the Italians control most of the Greek peninsula and a
great percentage of the islands. 1 The primary reasons for
this decision were his promise to Mussolini that Greece came
within the Italian hegemony and Hitler was anxious to
transfer the bulk of the Twelfth Army to the Russian front
to take part in Operation Barbarossa. 2
For the purpose of securing the German lines of
communication in the Balkans and maintaining control over
st.rategically important regions, OKW set up a series of
limited occupation zones in Greece. The Germans kept
control over: west and central Makedonia, including
Thessaloniki and a strip of territory in eastern Thrake
bordering on Turkey; the northern Aegean islands of
Mitilini, Limnos, Chios and Skyros: the islands of Krete,
Kythera and Melos; the islands of the Saronic Gulf; the
southern coast of Athens and the port of Piraeus. The rest
1. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, no. 510, p. 796.
2. DGFP, Series D, Vol XII, Directive 29 and 31.
225
of Greece was turned over to the Italians except for eastern
Makedonia and western Thrake which were occupied by
Bulgaria. However, Athens also fell under Italian control,
the German Cornrnanding General for Southern Greece maintained
his headquarters in the Greek capital and it aIse served as
the location of other German services which forced the
Italians to share control of the entire city with the
Germans. 3
In July 1941, the German Army command structure in Greece
consisted of Twelfth Army Headquarters in Thessaloniki, with
Field Marshall List functioning as both Twelfth Army
Commander and Armed rorces Commander, South East. In the
latter capacity, List was the supreme German military
authority in the Balkans and answerable directly to Hitler.
His responsibilities included the preparation and direction
of the defence of the region against attack, prevention of
internaI unrest, maintenance of the security of German
supply routes through the Balkans and the military
administration of the German occupied areas. 4
Essentially, the German command structure in Greece was
3. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, "Directive 31", no. 609, pp.
988-989.
4. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, "Directive 31", no. 609, pp.
988-989; "German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans
1941-1944", Werld War II German Military Studies, Vol. 13,
( Part IV: "The Mediterranean Theatre", New York 1979,
pp. 15-16.
226
divided in two, one designated: Commanding General Salonika-
Aegean, which included the city and surrounding region of
Thessaloniki, as weIl as the islands of Limnos, Mitilini,
Chios and Skyrosi and the other, Commanding General Southern
Greece, under whose authority fell: Athens, Krete, Kythera,
Antikythera and Melos. In addition, the German navy and air
force were represented by: AdmiraI South-East and Air Force
Commander Balkans. In turn, these were subordinated to the
Commander of Armed Forces South East, with the exception of
certain aspects of occupation control which came under the
jurisdiction of the Plenipotentiary of the Reich. Later
this office was supplemented by the Special Plenipotentiary
of the Reich for Politics and Economics. 5
.'
The German order of battle in Greece consisted of the XVIII
Corps6, with headquarters near Athens which deployed the 6th
Mountain Division in Attikai the 5th Mountain Division in
Kretei the 164th Infantry Division in Thessaloniki and the
5. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, "Directive 31", no. 609, pp.
988-989. In 1943 these offices were combined under the
control of H. Neubacher.
6. In sharp contrast to the troops that they replaced, half
the men in these units were over the age for infantry
service. This was particularly evident amongst the platoon
leaders and non-commissioned officers. The combat
experience of many of the company and regimental commanders
was limited to the First World War. In addition, the
divisions lacked their full complement of motor transport
and logistical services ("German Antiguerrilla operations in
the Balkans, 1941-1944", World War German Military Studies,
Vol. 13, Part IV: "The Mediterranean Theatre", Vol. 13, New
York 1979, p. 16).
227
Aegean islands 7 • In mid August, the 6th Mountain Division
was transferred and replaced by the 713th Infantry Division.
In late October the 5th Mountain Division was transferred to
Germany and its tasks were taken over by the mu ch weaker
164th and 713th Divisions from the Athens - Attika region,
which were disbandea to form the Krete Fortress Division (by
the end of August 1942 this unit was transferred to North
Africa and its duties were taken over by 22nd Airborne
Division).8
The Italians, as the main occupation power, maintained one
army, the Eleventh, with eleven divisions in Greece and one
stationed in the Dodekanese. The commander of the Eleventh
( Army, consequently, was elevated to the status of Armed
Forces Commander, Greece. The Bulgarians brought one army
to occupy Thrake and eastern Makedonia which later was
replaced by a so called provisional "Aegean Corps". Both
the Italian and Bulgarian occupation forces, however, were
ineffective in maintaining control over their respective
regions. The Italians were viewed by the Greeks with
contempt, since they had been 50 resoundingly beaten a few
months earlier by the Greek army in Albania. The Bulgarians
quickly earned the enmity of the population by implementing
7. The 125th Infantry Regiment was deployed separately in
Thessaloniki.
8. "German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans, 1941-
( 1944", World War German Military Studies, Vol. 13, Part IV:
"The Mediterranean Theatre", New York 1979, pp. 29-30.
228
a policy of Bulgarization and in sorne instances whole-sale
massacres. 9
As the war in Russia grew more difficult for the Germans and
despite the increasing partisan activity in Yugoslavia, the
German High Cornmand was forced ta transfer additianal forces
fram the Balkans as weIl as from Germany ta the eastern
front. In late October, List was forced ta relinqujsh his
command because of ill health and was replaced by Lieutenant
General Walter Kuntze while in early December the XVIII
Mountain Corps was transferred from the Balkans ta Germany
for re-deployment. To make up for these losses the German
commander of South East was forced to rely more and more on
Bulgarian and Italian forces which were not as effective in
dealing with the growing partisan activity.l0
On 8 August 1942 General Kuntze was replaced by General
Alexander Loehr, a Luftwaffe officer, as Armed Forces
Commander, South East and charged with suppressing the
growing guerrilla mavement in the Balkans. In December, as
a result of increasing partisan activity and the inability
of the other Axis forces ta maintain control over the Balkan
countryside Loehr was upgraded to Commander-in-Chief, South
9. On the Bulgarian occupation see Fleischer, Athens 1988,
pp. 90-101.
- 10. I/German AntiGuerrilla Operations in the Balkans, 1941-
1944", World War German Military Studies, Vol. 13, Part IV,
"The Mediterranean Theatre", New York 1979, p. 17.
,
229
East and his forces to that of an army group (Army Group E).
Although Loehr still only commanded one army the new
designation May have been prompted by the desire to have the
German commander attain equal status with his Italian
counterpart. 11
The breakdown of the responsibilities of Army Group E in
Greece included:
German Military Administration in Greece:
A) The Commander of the Thessaloniki - Aegean Sea
region, with headquarters at Thessaloniki was
responsible for northern Greece.
B} The Commander of South Eastern Greece, with
headquarters in Athens was responsible for
( central Greece, Attika and the Peloponnese.
C) Commander of Fortress Krete.
D) The Naval Commander of the Aegean Sea was
responsible for naval warfare and sea
communications in the southern Mediterranean.
E) The Luftwaffe Commander, with headquarters in
Athens was responsible for air operations in
the eastern Mediterranean and subject to the
control of Luftwaffe Air fleet Command 2 in
Italy.
F) The Commander of Luftwaffe Southeast, with
headquarters in Athens was in charge of air
force gLound forces and air defence in Greece,
also under the command of Luftwaffe 2 in
Italy.12
other military and political agencies included were: the
German Embassy, the German Special Plenipotentiary for
11. "German AntiGuerrilla Operations in the Balkans, 1941-
1944", World War German Military Studies. Vol. 13, Part IV:
"'l'he Mediterranean Theatre", New York 1979, p. 35.
( 12. NARS, MS No. P-003, Wilhelm Speidel, Report on Greece
(1942-1944), transe and ed. H. Heitmann, pp. 7-9.
230
Economies, rail transport, signal communications, passport
control, radio monitor service, propaganda and press
offices. Most of these organizations were located in Athens
which was also the home of Italian and Bulgarian military
and political agencies. In addition, Athens was the base
for the SS and Gestapo organizations in Greece as weIl as
the center of Axis military and political intelligence and
counter-intelligence.
As a result of the Allied landings in North Africa and
increasing guerrilla activities in Greece, OKW had to
transfer the 11th Luftwaffe Field Division to Attika,
although it was originally intended to relieve the 22nd
Airborne Division in Krete. 13 Despite efforts to use other
Axis forces against the partisans it becalae increasingly
obvious that more German units were required in order to
de fend the Balkans. In March 1943, the Ist Mountain
Division and l04th Light Division were transferred to Greece
and formed the XXII Mountain Corps in order to suppress the
activities of the Greek guerriIIa bands in central and
northern Greece. Shortlyafter (June), in response to
growing fears of an AIlied invasion of southern Greece, the
LXVIII Corps was also created which included the 1st Panzer
Division, the 117th Light Division (forrnally 717 Infantry
Division) as weIl as the recently transferred 11th Luftwaffe
13. The Commander of Fortress Krete reported dir~ctly to
Arrny Group E.
231
Field Division, and charged with the defence of the
peloponnese. 14
In addition to the transfer and creation of new army
formations, the uncertainty about an Allied offensive in
Greece prornpted Hitler to again reform the command structure
in Greece. The Command of Armed Forces South East was
placed under Field Marshal Maximilian von Weichs and shifted
to Belgrade, with the designation of Army Group Twelve. The
Commander-in-Chief Armed Forces, S0uth East reported
directly to Hitler and was made responsible for aIl civil
and military affairs in this region and aIl the commands in
Greece were, in turn, subordinated to him. Loehr remained
in charge of Arrny Group E and although answerable ta 12th
t
Army Group he continued to be responsible for aIl tactical
operations in the southern Balkans and Greece. The
Commander of Southern Greece was given responsibility for
the rear areas which included, primarily, the supervision of
the Greek Governrnent, the civil service and securing
supplies for the German Armed Forces: tactical control over
counter-insurgency operations against the partisans was
transferred to Army Group E. In aIl other matters the
Commander of Southern Greece reported to the Military
Commander Rear Areas Southeast at OKW. 15
14. Samuel W., Mitchum, Hitler's Legions: The German Army
Order of Battle e World War II, New York 1985, pp. 333, 327,
346, 328. The Ist Panzer Division was again transferred to
the Russian Front at the end of the sumrner.
{
15. H.R. Trevor-Roper, Hitler's War Directives 1939-1945,
232
Organization of Southern Greece Command
The headquarters of this command was located in Athens along
with the other German and Italian military and civil
authorities. The tasks allocated to this organization were:
A) To represent the interests of the Wehrmacht as
an advance representative of the Cornrnander-in-
Chief in relation with: German political
agencies, the Italian army of occupation,
and the Greek Governrnent.
B) To safeguard the unified interests of the
Wehrmacht against the individual aspirations of
the three branches of the Wehrmacht and act as
the external representative of the German armed
forces.
C) To be responsible for supplies and
transportation.
D) To be responsible for the maintenance of law
and order.
E) To maintain jurisdiction over the population. 16
Southern Greece Command was sub-divided into district
commands including: the German City Kommandantura Athens,
the German Piraeus District Command as weIl as separate
commands responsible for individual islands. The srnaller
local commands (Ortskornrnandaturen) were usually administered
by a lieutenant but reported djrectly to Southeastern Greece
Headquarters. 17
London 1964, "Directive 47", pp. 204-209; Hondros, pp. 58-
59; NARS, MS No. P-003, Wilhelm Speidel, ~port on Greece
(1942-1944), transe and ed. H. Heitmann, p. 44.
16. NARS, MS No. P-003, Wilhelm Speidel, Report on Greece
(1942-1944), transe and ed. by H. Heitmann, pp. 11-12.
17. NARS, M 351-2A, civil Affairs Handbook, Greece Section
233
In matters of security the role of 50utheastern Greece
Command was limited, except for one unit of plain clothes
military police who were subordinated to the military
commander for supply matters and could be used by him fClr
special duties. They were responsible for matters of
political and economic affairs as weIl as investigations of
crimes against the Wehrmacht. In this capacity the plain
clothes military police undertook not only investigations
but made arrests and preliminary interrogations. Matters
dealing with subversion, intelligence, counter-intelligence
and propaganda were the prerogative of the 55, 50 and
Gestapo. Although the senior S5 and police officer was
( nominally subordinated to the Commander of Southeastern
Greece, in practice, he functioned independently of the
military authorities. 55 forces in Greece included one 55
police mountain infantry regiment and one artillery
battalion. The tasks of the 5S in Greece were to:
a) Maintain security along supply and
transportation routes against attacks by
guerrillas or enemy commandos. After two
months, however, the army assumed
responsibility for this function.
b) Implement action against guerrilla forces,
under the direction of the Commander-in-Chief
of the 55, in sectors assigned by the military
headquarters. In unassigned areas senior 55
officers could operate independently.
c) Have responsibility for counter-insurgency
operations. Planning and military operations
against guerrilla forces was the prerogative of
2A: "Government and Administration - German Military
Government", p. 14.
234
the Commander-in-Chief, Army Group E. The SS
was also given control over the province of
Boetia, which was designated as a combat zone
and shortly after the SS expanded their
activities to the Peloponnese.
d) Have control over the organization,
improvement, training and supervision of the
Greek police force. The Wehrmacht only had the
right to limit the numerical strength of the
Greek police units since this could affect the
security of the German army of occupation.
e) have responsibility for the methods used to
maintain law and order either with SS forces or
through the Greek police. 18
Although the Waffen SS were under the jurisdiction of Army
Group E, and the SS in Greece was subordinated to the
Comnlander of Southern Greece, in matters of police work and
methods the SS was entirely independent of the military
authorities and reported directly to Himmler's headquarters
in Berlin. Furthermore, the SS mainta1ned an independent
headquarters in Athens as weIl as offices in every Greek
prefecture. The SD performed the same duties as in Germany
but knowledge of their activities was kept secret from the
German military commanders in Greece. 19 In 1943, the SS was
reinforced with the addition of the 18th SS Police Motorized
Infantry Regiment 20 and took control of the Greek security
forces raised by the puppet Government of Rallis. 21
18. NARS, MS No. P-003, Wilhelm Speidel, Report on Greece
(1942-1944), transe and ed. H. Heitmann, pp. 43-45.
19. NARS, MS No. P-003, Wilhelm Speidel, Report on Greece
(1942-1944), trans •• and ed. H. Heitmann, pp. 44-45.
20. By this time the SS included: 1st SS Police Regiment,
2nd SS Police Regiment, the 1st and 2nd Police Motorized
Infantry Regiments.
21. See Chapter 7.
235
The Germans, however, because of their limited forces in
Greece, as well as Hitler's award of Greece to Mussolini,
were forced to rely on the Italian arrny to maintain control
over the countrys1de while concentrating their '~its in the
main r.ities and other strategie locations. The Italians for
their part were not able to secure the areas of Greece under
their control which combined with the brutality of the
occupation encouraged the Greeks to form guerrilla bands in
the mountains. Accordingly, a vicious cycle began from the
first months of occupation. The presence of the Italians
offended most Greeks and the fact that the Germans turned
most of the country over to them earned the Germans the
( enmity of the population. since the Germans had little hope
of gaining any support from the Greeks they had to rely on
terror and brutality to keep them under control.
As a result, the occupation of Greece was not only
oppressive but harsh which, in turn, left little choice for
many individuals but to join the resistance and strike back
at the hated enemies. At the same time, the German counter-
intelligence and propaganda organizations operating in the
main cities of Greece had to adjust their strategies to cope
with a hostile population. Part of that policy was to use
fear and intimidation and appeal to the extreme elements in
Greek society to attract agents and double agents in order
(
-------- --------- -- --------------- -- -- ---- -----------------_._-------
236
to penetrate the resistance organizations in the cities and
towns.
1
237
The German Intelligence services in Greece
German intelligence fell into two categories - the work of
military intelligence (Abwehr), the American equivalent of
G-2, and p0litical intelligence which carne under the control
of the Gestapo and So. The Abwehr was an autonomous agency
attached ta OKW and was responsible for the acquisition of
mllitary intelligence, counter-sabotage, monitoring of enemy
radio signaIs, liaison with the diplomatie service, control
of military attaches, collection of information from spies
and counter-espionage. 22
( At each military command the Abwehr maintained an
intelligence section (Abwehrstelle abbreviated as AST)
headed by an IC who looked after intelligence and a
subordinate A/O officer responsible for internaI security as
weIl as liaison with the police and SS authorities.
Cooperation with the latter organizations was necessary
because the Abwehr lacked executive authority to effect
arrests. 23 At army and arrny group levels the intelligence
22. "The Int~lligence Service of the Armed Forces High
Command" , World War II German Military Studies, Vol. 4, Part
III: "Command structure", New York 1979, MS T-] 01, Annex 3,
pp. 6-12.
23. World War II German Military Studies, Part III: Command
Structures: "The Intell igence Service of the Armed Forces
High Command", MS No. T-I01, N.Y. 1979, Annex 3, pp. 6-12;
( Lauran Paine, German Military Intelligence: The Abwehr, New
York 1984, pp. 10-15.
r
1
238
officer held the more formal title of lC/AO, (the AO stood
for Abwehroffizier) since he controlled Abwehr troops and
commands at the front. 24 In the Abwehr section of each
military command, the A/O or the 03 officer 25 was
subordinate to the IC but below the level of Army Group and
Army there was little separation between the duties of these
officers. 26
The Abwehr, however, had to compete with the numerous
security and intelligence agencies that were the products of
the Nazi Party and Government. Accordingly, there was
considerable duplication and rivalry amongst the German
intelligence departments but in sorne theaters of operations
the activities of these organizations assumed a certain
24. At an army group the IC/AO held the rank of colonel or
lieutenant colonel. He was usually assisted by a staff of
thirteen officers and eighteen non-commissioned officers.
The intelligence section was divided into five groups: Group
l, was headed by the le/AO himself with the assistance of
the 03; Group II, directed àll the Abwehr units; Group III,
was responsible for censorship; Group IV, controlled the
secret field police; Group V, was in charge of propaganda
(David Khan, Hitler's Spies: German Military Intelligence in
World War II, New York 1978, p. 403).
25. At army group headquarters the 03 was usu~lly a rank
lower than the IC and in the staff structure was labelled as
third assistant adjutant (03 Ordonnanzoffizier) (Kahn, New
York 1978, p. 403).
26. According to the Report on the Military Service of Kurt
Waldheim, (The International Commission of Military
Historians [unpublished manuscript), p. 40) the he ad of the
Abwehr intelligence section at army or army group level was
occasionally refcrred as IC/AO. The report also states that
the AO exercised a certain degree of autonomy since he
reported to Wehrmacht Supreme Command/Foreign/Counter-
intelligence (OKW/Ausl./Abwer).
239
degree of specialization. In Greece, military intelligence
on enerny operations and tactics was coordinated by the le in
Arrny Group E while information dealing with guerrilla
rnovements and organization of counter-insurgency operations
fell under the control of the AO.
The Gestapo, on the other hand, was responsible for internaI
security, subversion, propaganda, infiltration of
underground cells and counter-intelligence against espionage
networks, particularly in the main cities and towns. To
accomplish these tasks the Gestapo had representatives in
every Greek Government office and agency. Gestapo agents
attempted to exploit the political, social, national and
( even personal susceptibilities of the general population and
in particular of influential individuals as a means of
disseminating German propaganda and attracting potential
recruits.
Some individuals for one reason or another ended up as
Gestapo agents while others served as the vehicles of German
propaganda without realizing it. The Gestapo office in
Makedonia issued passports to such individuals enabling them
to reach Turkey and from there to the Middle East, whereupon
they operated as spies or were used to spread rumors and
false reports to the Greek comnunity of Egypt and through it
to the Greek forces in the Middle East. 27 Some Gestapo
27. GAK ES no. l, Capta in P. Rogakos, p. 2.
--- - -- -----------------------------------
240
agents not only managed to infiltrate the Greek Government-
in-Exile and its armed forces but also found employment with
the British intelligence services.
The success of the Gestapo in the Middle East was recorded
by one Greek intelligence officer, captain Panagiotis
Rogakos, who reported that in one case when several Greek
officers in Cairo were court marshalled the verdict of the
court was made known a few hours later on the German
controlled radio in Athens. Another example, was the
appointment of Colonel Baipaktaris as General Secretary of
the Greek Ministry of Defence which was announced on the
German radio in Athens and Berlin. 28 In 1942, a German
agent, Bachaouer, went to Egypt under the false name of
Papadopoulos and attempted to subvert officers and soldiers
of the Greek armed forces in the Middle East. According to
Rogakos, the Bachaouer mission was in response to the
Tsigantes operation in Greece organized by the SOE. 29
The policy of the Gestapo was to focuss its efforts on
individuals who belonged to the extreme ends of the Greek
political spectrum. For this reason, at the beginning of
the occupation, the Gestapo accepted the release of Greek
Communists from detention centers if they claimed Bulgarian
28. GAK E8 no. l, Capta in P. Rogakos, p. 2.
29. GAK E8 no. l, capta in P. Rogakos, p. 3. On the
Tsigantes operation see chapter 6.
241
nationality. In this manner the Bulgarian consulate in
Athens was used as a front to release the Communists and
every attempt was made to keep track of them through the
Bulgarians. Rogakos cites the example of Tsimas, who he
asserts, was a Bulgarian from Kastoria by the name of
Tsimov. Accordingly, Tsimov was released from Akronafplia
under the name of Tsimas, through the intervention of the
Bulgarian consul and with the full knowledge of the Gestapo,
eventually he became an important member of the Greek
Communist Party and a political commissar in ELAS. 30
Another Greek Communist, Rizopoulos, served as a double
agent between the Gestapo and EAM and ini tiated the
propaganda that the Greek army in the Middle East was
(
fanatically royalist and its sole purpose was to be used
against the Greek people. 31 In the summer of 1942, Andreas
Tsipas, the temporary General Secretary of the Greek
Communist Pc. rty and one of the founding members of EAM, was
an agent of the Bulgarians. According to D. Benetatos,
after the creation of EAM in September 1941 Tsipas
disappeared. Before he vanished, Benetatos claims, he may
have been instrumental in arranging for the arrest of L.
Apostolos, a member of the Central Committee of the Greek
Communist Party and another founding member of EAM. 32
30. GAK E8 no. 1, Captain P. Rogakos, pp. 3-4.
31. GAK ES no. 1, Captain P. Rogakos, pp. 3-4.
(, 32. D. Benetatos, 10 Chroniko tis Sklavias 1941-1944, Athens
1966, p. 50. Benetatos further adds that after Apostolos'
242
At the other end of the political spectrum the Gestapo kept
a careful watch over the Greek officer corps, particularly
the activities of the Military Historical Committee. This
group consisted of fifty members and pad the overt purpose
of finding employment for Greek officers in the civil
service. Its real purpose, however, was the organization of
a secret cell called Lavda-Pate whose objective was to
infiltrate and gain control of the Greek armed forces in the
Middle East. Since most of the officers in the Historical
Committee had been proteges or supporters of the Metaxas
regime they feared that after the war they would be
displaced by officers who were either Venizelists or had
served in the Middle East.
According to Rogakos, Lavda-Pate later on created the X
(pronounced CHI in Greek) Organization, an extreme right-
wing group, which maintained ties with OVRA, the Italian
counter inLelligence agency, and through it had links with
the Gestapo.33 The German security services also uSùd other
extreme right-wing splinter groups to infiltrate their
agents in the Middles East such as the fascist EEE (Ethniki
Enosis Ellados) and ESPO (Ethniki Sosialistiki Patriotiki
Organosis), whose members were anXiOti5 to establish networks
arrest the Greek Communist Party changed its attitude
towards EAM and went contrary to the original aims of the
organization.
33. GAK E8 no. l, captain P. Rogakos, pp. 407.
i
243
within the Greek armed forces in order to use them for their
own purposes in the post-war periode These groups did not
survive very long and after they were broken up sorne of
their memLers became willing Gestapo agents. 34
In addition to using Greek organizations, in some cases even
creating them, the Gestapo also operated agents through the
Italian and Bulgarian intelligence services with or without
the knowledge of their allies. The basic strategy of the
German security and counter-intelligence services was not
only to counter the efforts of the Allied intelligence
agencies in Greece, but to sow disunity amongst the Greek
population and thus frustrate any movement towards the
( creation of a unified resistance organization. In 1942, the
latter became a greater priority for the Gestapo and the
Germans shifted their propaganda activities from an anti-
British campaign and focussed instead on the dangers of
Communism. This was indeed more effective since by early
1943 the left-wing led E~-ELAS was becoming the predominant
resistance organization with an expanding base of popular
support which threatened not only the occupation forces but
the Greek conservatives, Royalists and Republicans alike. 35
34. On 22 September 1~~42 the office of ESPO was blown up by
a young anti-Nazi, Km;tas Perrikos, and a month later the
offices of EEE followE~d the same fate (Hor.dros, New York
1983, pp. 79-80).
{
35. See Chapter 7.
------------ -----------------------------------,.
244
The Reaction to the Occupation
In the first days of the occupation the German army behaved
with almost extreme courtesy towards the general public.
German soldiers paid for anything they bought and were
particularly weIl mannered in encounters with Greek
officers. Hitler, on the recommendation of Field Marshal
List and Altenburg, the Reich Plenipotentiary, had ordered
the immediate release of aIl Greek officers and other ranks
who had been taken as prisoners of war. 36 In fact, during
the course of the German invasion of Greece, Hitler had
instructed the Wehrmacht to treat every captured Greek
officer with milltary courtesy and permit them to retain
their personal swords.
The Government of Tsalakoglau, created by the Axis,
attempted ta be as accommadating as possible and believed
that Hitler could be prevailed upon to keep out the
Italians. One of Altenburg's first reports from Greece was
to pass on a message of thanks from the Greek Government,
supported by telegrams fram medical and prafessional
associations, with the request that Hitler tdke Greece under
his protection. 37 Symbolic gestures ~ade by the Germans
su ch as maintaining the Greek flag on public buildings and
36. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, no. 463, p. 722.
37. DGFP, Series D, Vol. XII, no. 463, p. 722.
1
245
the honor guard at the tornb of the unknown soldier made a
positive impression during the first weeks of the
occupation.
However, as Fleischer has pointed out, i~ is extremely
difficlllt to determine the attitude of the general public
towards the Germans. According to the Nazi press, the
Wehrmacht was greeted with flowers and overwhelming
enthusiasm, while the Greek underground press contends thût
from the beginning the population showed its hatred and
animosity towards the Nazis. 38 Between these two extremes,
Fleischer writes, it is almost impossible to analyze the
sentiments of the average Greek. Initially, the onset of
( the German occupation, found a population that was war-weary
and numb and one who felt Greece had fulfilled her dut Y to
the Allied cause. 39 Between the entry of the German troops
in Athens and the end of the Battle of Krete most people,
with the exception of opportunists and some old supporters
of King Konstantine, maintained an attitude towards the
Germans that was passive and one of resignation. 40 After
the Battle of Krete and the entry of the Italians in Greece,
the public attitude towards the Germans hardened and quickly
turned into hatred.
38. Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 117-118.
39. Ch. Zalokostas, Tc Chronikc tis Sklavias, Athens [no
date] p. 14, Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 118.
(, 40. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 118.
246
Just as the early positive gestures of the Wehrmacht had,
possibly, nullifi~d Greek attitudes towards the new order,
small acts of symbolic oppression coupled w.tth the presence
of the despised Italians brought home the notion that the
Germans were not likely to treat the Greeks. with any measure
of respect and honor. 41 Simple irritants ~ùch as the
Germans indulging themselves in numerous baths and wasting
water to wash their automobiles, despite a chronic water
shortage, to more crude acts of confiscating automobiles,
villas and other accommodations quickly changed people's
attitudes. 42 German domination and insensitivity was also
reflected by the double food standard in restaurants, which
permitted German soldiers to have access to meat, beer and
other rare commodities denied to the Greeks.
41. In a report to King George II, Prince Peter stated that
the Germans, unlike the Italians, initially were not hated.
On the contrary, a large part of the population, especially
the upper class, sympathized and even admired Germany (FO
371/37216 R 3924). Fleischer (Athens 1988, p. 118, note 7)
also points out that half the faculty ~f the University of
Athens and four fifths of the faculty of the Polytechnical
School had studied in Germany.
42. The Germans confiscated numerous houses and apartments
in Athens as ~eli as in other parts of Greece. In most
cases they simply gave the unfortunate owners a receipt from
the Wehrmacht. In other cases, they requisitioned part of a
house and relegated the previous occupants ta a few small
rooms. Most of the time the Germans aiso took possession of
aIl the furniture but occasionally they either paid a small
sum or allowed the individual to take with him part of his
furnishings (Ch. Christidis, Chronia Katochis 1941-1944,
Athens 1971, p. 5).
247
In addition to the imposition of a curfew,43 Greek
househo1ds were forced to keep their shutters closed day and
night despite the oppressive heat of the surnrner. 44
Furthermore, the Wehrmacht in Greece purchased everything
with fresh1y printed occupation currency that immediate1y
became worthless. 45 At the peak of the famine, that gripped
Athens in the winter of 1941-1942, German soldiers were
perrnitted to send food to their farnilies in Germany, while
the occupation authorities requisitioned foodstuffs in
quantities that exceeded their needs and sold the surplus at
prohibitive prices. 46 The occupation authorities took over
aIl the means of transportation and communication as weIl as
irnposing a strict press censorship. The former was
particularly significant since not only did it inconvenience
the general public but the confiscation of aIl public and
rnost private transport made it alrnost impossible to supply
Athens with foodstuffs from the islands and the
countryside. 47
43. Athenians were not perrnitted out doors after 10:00 P.M.
(Benetatos, Athens 1963 p. 28
44. Ch. Christidis, Athens 1971, p. 5-6; Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 121.
45. Christidis, Athens 1971, p. 10; Fleischer, Athens 1988,
p. 121.
46. Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Greece: Laws of
Occupation. Analysis of Government ProposaIs for Redress,
New York 1973, p. 190.
{ 47. Benetatos, Athens 1963, p. 27
248
The Greeks showed where their sympathies lay by their
attitude towards British prisoners of war. Whenever the
Germans transported these prisoners through the streets of
Athens people cheered the British and gave them cigarettes
and food; from a population that now faced extreme
deprivation of all such items these were not merely symbolic
gestures. Attitudes, on both sides hardened considerably
during the Battle of Krete and by the end of May two young
men climbed up to the Akropolis and took down the German
flag. 48
This act, though non-violent and symbolic, caused the
Germans to over-react and indicate that the occupation
authorities were more than prepared to use brutal force
against anyone who challenged their authority. On 31 May
1941, the German authorities issued a proclamation which
clearly indicated the oppressive and absolute nature of the
occupation yet it attempted to shift the blarne for the new
policies on the Greek population. According ta this decree,
the harsh policies that the Germans adopted were based on
the recent attitudes and reactions of the Athenians towards
the occupation forces and from this point on a curfew was
48. Particularly irritating for the Germans was that the
taking down of the German flag was hailed by the allied
radio networks as a major symbolic act of resistance for aIl
of occupied Europe (Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 119-120).
The individuals who took down the German flag were two
students: Manoles Glezos and Apostolos Santas (O.
Gatopoulos, Istoria tis Katochis, Athens 1949, Vol. A, p.
131) •
249
,
set for 10:00 P.M. other regulations followed which
\
illustrated the frustrations of the Germans and the course
of action they intended to follow:
1) During the night of 30-31 March the German flag
was taken down by the action of unknown
culprits. There are investigations going on.
The guilty parties and their accomplices will
be punished by death.
2) The press and public opinion from aIl levels of
society still indicate their support of the
British who have been forced from the European
continent.
3) The events in Krete, which according to
international law clearly indicated the mis-
treatment ~f German prisoners of war, not only
are they not condemned but are described with
approval.
4) Towards captured British sOldiers, despite 'the
disapproval of the occupation authorities,
there are displays of sympathy, gifts of
flowers, fruit, cigarettes, etc. These actions
are tolerated by the Greek police, against whom
( the occupation authorities will use every
available means at their disposaI.
5) The attitude of the public towards the German
forces is becoming less friendly.
6) The ill feelings of the public (towards the
Germans) are without reason sinee the
occupation authorities have not exercised the
full measure of their rights permitted to them
to suppress (the public).
7) AlI articles in Athens are sold at a
significantly higher priee to German soldiers
than to Greeks.
The German occupation authorities have until this
point displayed a benevolent attitude towards the
Greek nation. If every order of the German armed
forces is not obeyed this will result
regretfully, in severe repercussions. 49
The taking down of the Gennan flag and similar acts of
symbolic resistance were essentially benign. The response
49. vradini, 31 March 1941: Quoted from Christidis (Athens
1971, p. 56): Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 120.
250
of the occupation authorities, however, escalated in
harshness and acted as a catalyst for more organized and
violent acts of defiance which in one year led to the
creation of guerrilla bands in the Greek mountains.
251
The Early Resistance Movements
By the end of the summer, the combination of the encroaching
famine and the increasing brutality of the occupation forces
resulting from srnall, but essentially insignificant, acts of
defiance provided additional incentives for the Greeks to
commit acts of violence against the Germans and Italians. 50
Clearly a mood of defiance was developing but the Greek
Government-in-Exile was reluctant to take advantage of this
and as far as organized resistance was concerned remained on
the sidelines until it was forced to react to events. The
obvious leaders of a Greek Government sponsored resistance
were the veterans of the Albanian campaign, but the officers
(
who had led the victorious Greek armies against the Italians
also bided their time and were slow to react to events as a
professional body.
The term officer corps in the decade before and the four
years during the occupation encompasses the professional
50. On 19 June 1942 Archbishop Damaskinos met with
Altenburg, the Reich Plenipotentiary. The Archbishop wanted
to protest the recent executions by the Germans of hostages
killed as an act of reprisai. The Greek cleric pointed out
to Altenburg that it ','as unjust to kill individuais who were
innocent in order to exact reprisaIs for acts of sabotage
committee by unknown parties. The Greek people, Ddmaskinos
added, expected better treatment from the Germans. They
believed that Germany would protect Greece from the despised
ItaIia~s and were prepared to accept a German occupation.
But after the executions and reprisaIs the Greek people,
even the Germanphiles, looked upon the German occupation
forces with hatred (Venezis, Athens 1981, pp. 195-197).
252
element of active officers, including those who had been
purged from the armed forces before the war. It should be
noted that collectively these two broad divisions - serving
officers and those forcibly retired - did not represent a
monolithic body but defined the officer corps in a technical
sense. 51 The professional officers of the Greek armed
forces who had served during the campaigns of 1940-1941
formed a distinct group and, to a degree, identified with
the established social and political order. 52 The officers
who were purged in the thirties were those who had followed
Venizelos and opposed the restoration of the monarchy and
they aise represented a distinct group.53 After 1936 they
continued to oppose the monarchy but also represented the
core of the anti-Metaxas forces. Because of their hostility
to the dictatorship and the King, many were deliberately not
51. Andre Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps
in the Resistance" Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora, Vol.
XI, no. 3, (Fall 1984), p. 69.
52. In April 1940, the number of permanent officers reached
4,980. Later, because of the war, 300 senior cadets from
the military academy were prematurely graduated, 50 warrent-
officers were also advanced to the ranK of second
lieutenant, which increased the number of officers to 5,180.
In addition, the Greek armed forces included 10,000 reserve
officers and 1,150 Ipoaxiomatikoi CA. Papagos, 9 Ellinikos
stratos kai i pros Paraskevi tou, Athens 1945, p. 412);
Archigeion stratou Diefthnisis stratou, "1 pros Polemou
proparaskevi tou Ellinikou stratou 1923-1940", Athens 1969,
passim.
53. By the beginning of the war 4,500 professional officers
had been purged from the armed forces and were placed in the
category of permanent reserve officers. During th~~ \t'ar
3,000 of these were recalled to active service but
approximately 1,500, most of whom were of higher rank, were
excluded (Andre Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer
Corps", p. 71 and notes 7 and 8).
253
recalled. to active service during the war. Some of these
became willing agents of the British intelligence services
and after the collapse of Greece had formed the first
clandestine group that established radio contact with the
SOE in Cairo.
At the beginning of the occupation there were approximately
4,391 professional and 8,700 reserve officers. 54 The
initial reaction of these officers to the occupation, as far
as it can be determined, was one of resignation. Initially,
some Greek officers participated individually in several
underground groups that were formed in the autumn and winter
of 1941-1942. Later many officers joined or helped to
establish various resistance groups while others escaped
from Greece to fight with the forces of the Greek
Government-in-Exile, but it must be underlined that they did
these things as individuals and not as a corporate body.
One major difficulty was that the Greek Government did not
leave any instructions to the military regarding the
organization of resistance. At the same time, a good
54. As a body the professional active officers suffered a
much higher casualty rate than the ordinary soldiers or the
reserve officers. According to established figures,
casualties amongst professional officers reached 6.9% dead
and 9% wounded. In contrast, the rate for the reserve
officers was 1.7% dead (figures not available for wounded)
while for the permanent reserve officers (those who had been
forced to retire) recalled to active dut Y the rate was 1.1%
de ad and 1.8~ wounded. The lower casualty rate among this
group was due to the reluctance of the Metaxas regime to
( place them in command of combat units (Andre Gerolymatos,
"The Role of the Greek Officer Corps", pp. 70-71).
254
percentage of the senior officers believed that opposition
to the Axis was futile since they assumed that Germany
because of her superior weapons and forces, would win the
war, at least this was the perception until the Battle of
stalingrad in 1942. 55
Another obstacle was that no one in Athens represented the
wishes of the Greek Government-in-Exile to maintain contact
with the officer ~orps. The question is did the Greek
Government-in-Exile des ire to organize a resistance
movement? The reply from the extant sources is initially
no. According to the British Ambassador to the Greek
Government-in-Exile, M. Palairet, Tsouderos and the King
were more anxious to consolidate their power against the
encroachments from the Venizelist and anti-monarchist exiles
than with the formation of resistance. 56 In 1940, the
former commander of the Greek forces in Krete, General
Christos Kitsios, returned to Athens and in the name of the
King advised Greek officers that it was the monarch's wish
that they should avoid getting involved with politics as
weIl as to make sure that the younger officers do
likewise. 57 John Hondros interprets 'involvement with
55. K. Pyromaglou, "Ta Tagmata Asphalias", Istoriki
Epitheoresis", p. 539. Aiso see: K. Bakopoulos, l Omeria
ton Pende Andistratigon, Athens 1948, pp. 26-27.
56. FO 371/29909 R 8414; FO 371/29842 R 10894.
57. K. Pyromaglou, 0 Georgios Kartalis kai i Epochi tou
1934-1957: Tomos A 1934-1944, Athens 1965, p. 140. Edmund
Myers, (Greek Entanglement, Gloucester 1985, p. 103) who led
the first British sabotage mission in Greece, writes that:
i
255
pOlitics' to mean that the King and his Government were
against the idea of resistance. 58 Ultimately, the Greek
Government-in-Exile was not so much opposed to attacking the
enemy within Greece, but rejected the concept of mass
resistance which meant that the Greek population would have
had to sustain terrible casualties since in 1941-1942 there
was little hope of British support for any type of uprising
in Greece.
As has been indicated previously,59 the SOE strategists had
assumed from the beginning that resistance against the J.xis
had to be based on the idea of guerrilla forces inspired by
revolutionary fervor and not the secret armies of patriots
( originally envisaged by the Chiefs of Staff. Although the
secret armies strategy was not adopted by the British
Government it became transformed into the idea of guerrilla
forces and adopted as part of the raison d' etre of the SOE.
The very concept of revolutionary upheaval, however, was an
anathema to the Greek Government-in-Exile as weIl as the
establishment in Greece. Ultimately, the Greek Government-
"There were indications that the majority of influential
Royalist officers had been ordered by the Greek Government-
in-Exile to remain in Athens, to have nothing to do with the
Republican resistance movements and to await the return of
the Royalist Government.... Arc~bishop Damaskinos concluded
that the Government-in-Exile's neglect of its supporters
allowed the Communists to seize the initiative and by the
time the government reacted to the problem it was too late
(FO 371/37206 R 10450).
58. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 101.
{
" 59. See Chapter 4.
---------- -- --- --- -- --------
256
in-Exile had to assume that as the legitimate authority it
would have to accept responsibility for the consequences of
the occupation of Greece. A resistance movement would lead,
as was the case, to considerable reprisaIs and the
devastation of the country and to what purpose? The British
in 1941-1942 were not in a position to attempt an invasion
of the Greek mainland, they were barely holding their ground
in North Africa.
During the first year of the occupation the defeat of the
Axis was a remote possibility. For aIl intents and purposes
the Greek Government-in-Exile and their supporters in Greece
had to accept, at 'the very least, a long occupation period
and a possible Geman victory. Bath would have dire
consequences for Greece. The instigation of a mass
resistance, in any case, was beyond the capabilities of the
Greek Government-i,ll-Exile ta control. It also had the
potential of devastating th~ country. Britain on her own
could not support the Greek army in 1941 let alone arm and
supply a large resistance organization in Greece. Although
the situation changed in late 1942, the King and his
ministers had ta assume that their priorities were ta keep
the country intact sa that if, and when, the Allies won the
war, they could return and re-establish the political and
social statu~ qu060. Ironically, the puppet governrnents of
60. Fleischer (Athens 1988, pp. 179-181) suggests that the
means of accomplishing this was the return of the King after
the war and that the Tsouderos Government from th~ very
beginning of its existence in exile attempted to exclude
257
occupied Greece essentia11y adopted a similar po1icy. From
l
....
the regime of Tso1akoglou to the last occupdtion government
of 1. Rallis the main objectives of these regimes were to
prevent the disintegration of the country and majntain the
pre-war social and political fabric of Greece. 61 Both the
puppet regimes and the Greek Government-in-Exi1e assumed
that the officer corps would be instrumental in
accornplishing these ends.
The Tsolakoglou regime attempted to control the officer
corps by maintaining a ministry of defence despite the fa ct
from the government aIl those who opposed the monarchy.
Hondros (New York 1983, p. 101) states that the aim of the
Government-in-Exi1e was to use the officer corps in order to
.( support the monarchy in the post-war period. Pyromaglou (Q
Georgios Kartalis kai i Epochi tou 1934-1957:, Athens 1965,
pp. 140-141) also maintains that the Government-in-Exile had
the express purpose of reimposing the pre-war political
system and finds 1ittle difference between the puppet
governments and that of Tsouderos and the King. On 6
November 1941, Alexander Sakellariou (Enas Navarchos
Thimatai, Athens 1971, p. 392) the Vice Premier and
Commander-in-Chief of the Greek fleet, warned Tscuderos that
the Greek nation considered the Government-in-Exile nothing
more than the continuation of the 4th of Augùst regime.
61. G. Tsolakog1ou, Apomnemonevmata, Athens 1959, passim; K.
Logothetopoulos, Idou i Alitheia, Athens 1948, passim; 1.
Ra11is, 0 Ioannis Rallis Omilei ek tou Tafou, Athens 1947,
passim; N. Louvaris, "Golgothas en os Ethnous", Ethnikos
Keryx, 2/4/1950 - 11/6/1950, passim. According to Woodhouse
(~e of Discord, London 1948, p. 27), Tsolakoglou was
convinced that the Axis were going to win the war and that
Greece had to make the most out of a bad situation. The
motives of the second puppet prime minister,
Logothetopoulos, were expectations of a profitable career,
while those of the last puppet prime minister, 1. Rallis
were to keep Greece under control in the wake of the German
withdrawal and hand over the country te the Greek
Government-in-Exile thus preventing chaos and a possjble
cemmunist take over.
258
that the occupation authorities did not permit the existence
of armed forces. 62 ostensibly the purpose of the ministry
was to support the de~obilized Greek officers economically
and employ sorne of them in the Red Cross as weIl as to
supervise the distribution of food. Naturally these
officers were either Royalists or had been foilowers of the
Metaxas regime. Equally significant was the arrivaI in the
Middle East of hundreds of Greek officers who came to offer
their services to the arrned forces of the Greek Governrnent-
in-Exile. Sorne were Royalists while others had been
Venizelists who had lost their commissions during the purges
of the 1930's. The tendency of the ministry of defence of
the Greek Governrnent-in-Exile was to employ officers who had
royalist and conservative credentials. In sorne cases,
"reformed" Venizelist officers were re-adrnitted into the
Greek army but despite their new found allegiance to the
monarchy their presence caused considerable resentment
arnongst the Royalist officers and eventually led to several
mutinies in the Middle East. 63
62. The ministry of defence was headed by Greek generals
many of whom were the heroes of the Albanian campaign and
exercised considerable influence over the senior, and ta a
lesser extent, the younger officers. Pyromaglou (0 Georgios
Kartales kai i Epochi tau 1934-1957, Vol. A, Athens 1965,
pp. 140-144) contends that the purpose of the rninistry of
defence under the puppet governrnents was to maintain control
of the officer corps in arder to preserve the infrastructure
of the Metaxas dictatorship and even suggests that the
Tsolakoglou government entertained the idea of creating a
mercenary force to support the Axis against the Allies.
63. See: E. Tsouderos, Ellinikes Anomalies sti Mesi Anatoli,
Athens 1945, passim; Hagen Fleischer, "The Anomalies in the
Greek Middle East Forces, 1941-1944", Journal of the
Hellenic Diaspora, Vol. V, No. 3, Fall 1978, pp. 5-36.
259
By 1943, the resistance was dominated either by the
Communists or by those who were opposed to the monarchy and
expected to bring about a radical reforrn of the political
and social institutions of Greece in the post-war era. The
officer corps had net only maintained its two broad
divisions - Reyalist and Venizelists - but the younger
officers either found tt.eir way to the Middle East or began
to join the resistance groups that started to develop in
early 1942. Both trends disrupted the chain of command and
control that senior officers exercised over their junior
colleagues and weakened the cohesiveness of the officer
corps. Indeed, the monarchist-republican schism was re-
established in the Greek armed forces in the Middle East as
a result of the arrivaI of hundreds of officers who fled
from Greece and braught with thern the political divisions of
the pasto In Greece itself the officer corps, as weIl as
the rest of the country, was diverted into pro and anti-Ieft
coalitions which quickly took on the labels of cornmunist or
nationalist.
The injtial policy of the Greek Government-in-Exile was ta
avoid the organization of a mass based resistance and
instead encourage its followers, particularly those in the
officer corps, to focus on espionage and sabotage as a means
of continuing the struggle in occupied Greece. Another
f
1
260
consideration, that had important consequences for the
future, was the access to and control of information
concerning the situation in Greece by the British and Greek
authorities in the Mindle East. Information about Greece,
in the first year of the occupatiun, came essentially from
three sources: a) Allied sOldiers, who avoided capture or
had escaped and made their way to the Middle Easti b) Greek
politicians, businessmen, professionals and officers who
either were wanted by the occupation authorities or wished
to fight and decided to join the forces raised by the Greek
Government-in Exilei c) information transm~tted by the
clandestine groups organized by MI6 and SOE. The last two
sources only yielded results from the Prometheus group that
had made radio contact with SOE Cairo, while the MI6
contacts were only fully developed almost a year after the
occupation of Greece. 64 Since the contacts of MI6 had been
with individuals and groups of the Metaxas regime, hence
with the Royalist camp, and the aim of the Secret
Intelligence Service was the gathering of information they
directed their agents in Greece to create espionage networks
and not partisan armies.
After the Germans completed their invasion of Greece the
units of the Weh1~acht remained static and thus produced
very little radio traffic and most of it of minor
importance. Accordingly, the code breakers at Bletchley !nd
64. See chapter 6.
261
caire had very little to werk with and SIS had te rely on
the traditional means of espionage to collect information
about the Axis in Greece. 65 Durinq the three and one-half
years of the occupation intelligence was required on the
Axis order of battle in Greece and the Aegean islands,
information concerninq German and Italian shipping,
particularly on convoys to North Africa. By the end of
1942, however, intelligence on the Greek resistance
organizations was becominq increasinqly important and after
1943 it attained equal priority with the German armed
forces. 66
Espionage networks required quiet and unobtrusive
organizations that did Ilot bring attention t.o themsel ves and
remained as secret as possible not only from the occupation
authorities but from the qeneral population. It was not,
consequently, compatible with the type of organizations and
activities that the SOE wanted ta implement in Greece. 67
65. On the use of Ultra during the battles of Greece and
Krete see chapter 1.
66. At least this was the case with the SOE. It is not
clear from the extant sources if the SIS required its agents
to focus also on other types of intelligence. According to
Nigel Clive (A Greek Experience 1943-1948, London 1985, p.
25), who was sent to Greece in 1943 and attached to the SOE
mission with EDES as the SIS representative, his tasks were
to concentrate exclusively on military intelligence in order
to compensate ~or the little work done in this area, he was
told by the SIS in cairo, by the operatives of the Special
Operations Executive. In addition, Clive was instructed to
stay clear of political involvement and avoid dealing with
this aspect of intelligence work.
67. In the Spring of 1942, the JIC had expressed concern
that SOE operations might alert enemy authorities and thus
------- - .. -------------------------------------....
262
Resistance meant guerrilla warfare, mass sabotage and
considerable publicity to arouse the general population and
enlist its support. AlI these activities were in total
contrast to the nature of intelligence work. The situation
became even more complicated as the strategie importance of
Greece declined after 1942 while the rate of growth of the
resistance organizations increased in inverse order.
Furthermore, the groups and agents that were affiliated with
MI6 evolved into small espionage cells and were concentrated
in the main cities. Those associated with the SOE and
resistance activities, for the most part, were based in the
mountains and directed their activities in organizing
guerrilla warfare against the Axis, although many also
concentrated on intelligence work. A good number of the SIS
groups were loyal to the Greek Government-in-Exile or were
prepared to accept that political change should occur only
in the post-war period while the others were either
controlled by the Communists or subscribed to the republican
cause and were intent on preventing the return of the King.
According to Woodhouse:
... during the occupation, a high proportion of
Greek agents of the British authorities were
nearer to the left than the right in political
sympathy, and anti-monarchist in the
constitutional controversy. The reason was
fortuitous: the right wing and the monarchists
were slower than their opponents in deciding to
hamper the collection of intelligence. For this reason the
JIC recommended that the SOE maintain close cooperation with
the SIS and Combined operations (Hinsley, New York 1981,
Vol. 2, p. 14).
263
resist the occupation, and therefgie little use to
the Allies until it was too late.
What Woodhouse fails to mention, however, is that his
definition of who or what was useful to the Allies is based
on the interpretation of the SOE and as a member of that
Organization, and one of its most spectacular
representatives in Greece, it is only natural that he pays
seant attention to the work of any rival organizations.
Indeed, Woodpouse dismisses the Committee of the Six
Colonels, MI6's contact in Greece, as a group whir.h:
'plotted global strategy from Athens in 1942-43'. Earlier
in his account, Woodhouse begrudgingly states that:
Although the formation of the committee (of the
six colonels) was a brave step to take before the
battle of El Alamein, and as such it won the
official recognition of the Greek and British
Governments, no guerrilla unit ever owed anything
to it; its value was confined to the initial
gesture and the collection of intelligence. 69
Yet the Committee of Six Colonels helped organize several
clandestine organizations in Athens which contributed a
great deal to the Allies, perhaps of more value than the
civil war that intermittently went on and off between the
resistance organizations in the mountains. One of its
members, Spiliotopoulos, on the recommendation of the Greek
and British governments, assumed control of Athens aCter the
6B. Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 37.
A
•
69. Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 30.
264
German withdrawal. 70
Woodhouse, however, views the situation in occupied Greece
from the prism of an SOE agent who spent nearly all his time
in the mountains with the Greek partisans and, as such, he
evaluates the resistance in its relationship to guerrilla
warfare. His first account of the period between 1941-1944,
the Apple of Discord, published in 1948 and written during
the Greek civil war (1946-1948), is based on his own
recollections and whatever documentation he employed came
from the SOE. 71 In later publications, Woodhouse revised
his interpretation of that period of Greek history and,
although the significance of the Special Operations
Executive and the groups that it was affiliated with in
Greece is not diminished, his treatment of other
organizations is more balanced. In his autobiography
Woodhouse described a meeting he had with two of the six
colonels and, vnlike in his first account, he describes the
incompatibility between the aims of the SOE and the
Colonels:
AlI they wanted to do was to make staff plans for
the rapid mobilization of a new army and the end
of the occupation, in arder to join in the final
defeat of the Germans.
70. On the formation and activities of the Committee of Six
Colonels see chapter 6.
71. Woodhouse, APple of Discord, London 1948, pasoim.
.. , Woodhouse's accounts of the Greek resistance are aiso
discussed in the introduction.
265
Whether their plans were realistic, they bore no
relation ta what we were trying ta do. The most
that l could hope from the Colonels was that they
should send junior officers to the mountains. l
pointed this out to them, but they were non-
committal. Later l learned that Papagos, the
former Chief of the General Staff, had advised
against it . . . . SA the whole of the Greek
establ1shment seemed to be against us. 70
It ~s clear from the accounts of Woodhouse and the limited
number of SOE files available at the Public Record Office
that the principal interest of the SOE was the
im~lementation of guerrilla warfare. Even though the SOE
intelligence missions in Greece achieved considerable
results, as will be indicated in chapter six, the primary
concern of the Special Operations Executive remained the
development of resistance armies in the Greek mountains.
70. C.M. Woodhouse, The Autobiography of C.M. Woodhouse:
Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 58.
266
"To Andartiko": The Road tmrJards Partisan Warfare 73
The development of armed resistance in the Greek mountains
was characterized by two factors: the reliance of the SOE on
the Greek Left and the Republicans, in order to fulfill its
mission, and the willingness of these political groups to
organize partisan warfare in the mountains. Both accepted
the concept of resistance because it offered the possibility
of ultimately gaining control of the Greek state and
preventing the return of the monarchy. In the beginning,
however, opposition against the Axis was spontaneous and
disorganized. Hundreds of small groups materialized over
night and attempted to engage in small acts of defiance
whether by sabotage, assisting Allied soldiers to escape or
simply by writing graffiti on public buildings. The
enthusiasm of these first groups and individuals quickly
died down either as a result of instant reprisaIs by the
73. The term Andartiko is roughly equivalent to armed
resistance while andartes is often associated with partisan
or guerrilla. Fleischer (Athens 1988, p. 221, note 1)
pre fers the term andartes since it is a term synonyrnous with
the traditional name of those who fought against the
ottomans in the Greek War of Independence. He aiso explains
that while the adjective partisan suggests sorneone who goes
to the forests an Andartes is one who goes up ta the
mountain. The word andarte is aiso found in British
documents after 1942 and in the post-war memoirs of SOE
officers. According to Fleischer, it is rarely used by the
German occupation authorities. In English usage, however,
partisan is no longer exclusively employed to describe
Tito's forces but is a term assaciated with indigenous
irregular forces and is interchangeable with guerrilla (H.W.
Fowler, A Dictionary of English Usage, Second Edition, ed.
Sir Ernest Gowers, Oxford 1983, "Partisan", p. 439).
267
occupation authorities or by the apathy which was brought on
by the famine in the fall and winter of 1941-1942.
Although the notion of organized resistance was not
considered a viable option by the officer corps or the Greek
Government-in-Exile it offered new opportunities for their
opponents. The Communists reacted quickly to the idea of
mass resistance and eventually guerrilla warfare. They
viewed such activity not only as an end to itself but
identified the creation of a resistance movement as a means
of also carrying forward policies that were aimed at
addressing the social, economic and political future of
Greece.
(
In the beginning of the occupation the Grcek Communist Party
was in disarray but quickly managed to reorganize. 74 In
74. The difficulties of the Greek Communists were compounded
by the Italian invasion of Greece. The General Secretary of
the KKE, Zachariadis who was at the time in prison,
published a letter on 1 October in the government controlled
Communist newspaper (Rizospastis) stating that the Cornmunist
Party was prepared to accept the direction of the Metaxas
r~gime ln maintaining Greek independence. On the 31st of
O~tober, Zachariadis published a second letter which called
on every one to support the government unconditionally in
the war with Italy (Akropolis 2.11.40: Rizospastis 25.10.43:
Saranda Chronia tou KKE 1918-1958 [place of publication
unknown 1958], p. 744: Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 130-131).
The policy adopted by Zachariadis, despite the German-Soviet
Pact (on the directives of the Comintern to the KKE see
Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 132-133) was supported by the
majority of the irnprisoned Communists and members of the
Central Cornrnittee at Akronafplia. In fact just prior to
Zachariadis' letter the Cornmunist inmates of Akronafplia
appealed to Metaxas for their release so that they could
fight at the Albanian front (Rizospastis 28.10.45; KKE
( Episima Keirnena, Vol. 4, pp. 14-15). The remnants of the
Central Cornmittee still at large, however, declared
---------------- --------------------------- --------------------------------------------
..
268
addition to its remarkable resilience, despite the
successful efforts of the Greek security services in
imprisoning its leadership and penetrating most of its
primary organizations, the KKE was given a new lease on life
by the occupation. It benefitted from the uncertainty of
the Greek authorities in the last days before the arrivaI of
the German ar.my as to what to do with the exiled and
imprisoned Communists and after the arrival of the Axis some
important KKE managed to gain their freedorn by pleading
Bulgarian nationality.75
In April 1941, there were 2,000 Communists in special
Zachariadis' letter false and contrary to Communist
ideology. The Italian-Greek conflict they claimed had
nothing to do with the protection of Greece but only served
the interests of the British (RKE Episima Keimena, Vol. 4,
pp. 24-36). The policy of the RKE became further confused
when a month later Zachariadis published a third letter
reversing his earlier endorsement of the Metaxas regime and
stated that the KKE's support was based on the understanding
that the war had an anti-fascist character but after the
Greek army crossed the Albanian frontier it became fascist
in nature and served British imperialistic interests (KKE
Episima Keim~na, Vol. 4, pp. 22-23). After 1949 (and the
split of the KKE) the Central Committee of the KKE concluded
that Zachariadis' decision to support the Greek Government
in 1940 had exceeded the policy guidelines of the Comintern
(Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 133).
75. Twenty-seven inmates of Akronafplia prison, called the
Marxist University by the Communists, found their freedom by
the intervention of the German security services acting
through the Bulgarian Embassy. They idelltified themselves
as BUlgarian and were released. Many of these were
instrumental in the creation of EAM-ELAS and played a key
role in the resistance (Fleischer 1988, p. 142; Bartziotas,
Ethniki Andistasi kai Dekemvris 1944, Athens 19B3, p. 74).
Sorne agreed to work for the Bulgarian security services who
acted as a front for the Gestapo, or sorne such as Andreas
Tsipas may have been Bulgarian agents aIl along (see above
chapter 5).
269
prisons and in internaI exile on several remote islands. 76
In May, one hundred and ninety of these escaped from
Pholegandros and Kimolos along with three members of the
original Central Committee of the KKE: Petros Rousos, Chrysa
Hadzivasiliou and Karagkitsis-Simo and reached Athens on 20
May 1941. 77 The remaining ten reached Rrete just before the
German assaul t against the islalld accompanied by two other
members of the Central Committee: Stergio Anastasiadis and
Miltiadis porphyrogenis. 78 According to Fleischer, the
Bulgarians believed that the release of Communists of Slavo-
Makedonian origin would enable them to use these individuals
as propagandists fer the Bulgarization of eastern Makedonia
and Thrake. The communists once they were released knew how
precarious their newly found freedom was and quickly went
76. A.L. Zaousis, Athens 1987, p. 23; P. Ioannidis,
Anamniseis: Provlemata tis Politikis tou KKE stin Ethniki
Andistasi 1940-1945, Athens 1979, p. 505. The Communists
were kept in the following prisons and islands: Akronafplia
600: Agio Stratis 230; Anaphi 220; Aigina 170; Pholegandros
130; and another 500 in various prisons in the Peleponnese;
Rimolo 36; G~vdos 30; Asvestochori 17, Rerkyra 10: and
another 30 in los, Siphnos, Pylos and Amorgos.
77. In this case Raiti Zevgos, who spoke a little French and
German while hiding the tact that they were Communists,
convinced the Gertllan authorities on the island that the y
were exiled because they had opposed the Metaxas regime.
The Greek commandant of the island aiso helped by not
referring to his inmates as Communists. Accordingly, the
Germans permitted the exiles to make use of small boat and
depart from the island (Raiti Zevgos, Me ton Gianni Zevgo
sto Epanastatiko, Athens 1980, pp. 197-199).
78. According to B.G. Bartziotas (Athens 1983, p. 74),
during the same peziod seventeen others escaped from other
islands, sorne of whom wouid play key roles in the
resistance: Markos Vafeiadis and Metsos Vladas. In the next
two years, adds Bartziotas four hundred more managed to
escape and reestablish contact with the KKE.
270
underground. When the Greek s~curity service realized what
was taking place they protested to the occupation
authorities that they were freeing Communists but by the
time the Germans reversed their decision it was too late. 79
Consequently, the release of sorne of the mernbers of the
Central Committee enabled the KKE by the end of sumrner to
reorganize itself. An important factor in the
reorganizaticn of the party was that the Centrdl Committee
and Politibureau was now taken over by the recent exiles
who, it was argued, had remained uncontaminated by the
machinations of Manniadakis and the Greek security service.
There was no doubt that these cadres were politically pure
and had no relationship with the pre-war central cornmittees,
both of WhlCh were suspected of having been infiltrated by
the pOlice. 80 The organizational difficulties were resolved
with the sixth and seventh plenums of the Central Committee.
At the Sixth plenum the Central Committee declared that the
war not only involved a conflict against the Soviet Union
but the imposition of fascism in general and a danger to aIl
other democracies. It was proclaimed, furthermore, that a
strong Communist Party was essential ta victory and called
upon the Greek nation and aIl other parties and
79. Fleischer, 1988, pp. 142-143; Ioannidis, Athen~ 1979, p.
506.
80. Th. H3dzis, l Nikephora Epanastasi pou Chathike:
Ethnikoapeleftherotikos Agonas 41-45, Vol. A, p. 121-122 and
note 5.
271
organizations to forro a national liberation front. 81
During the seventh plenum, the central theme of the KKE was
the creation of a national front to take the form of an
organized resistance and oppose with aIl its might the
occupation forces. Again it was emphasized that a strong
and well organized Communist Party would be in a position to
lead such a struggle and help establish a democratic system
in Greec~ and guarantee that: " ... sovereignty would be based
on the will of the people.".82 According ta Th. Hadzis, on
both occasions, the Central Committee ignored the existence
of the armed bands that were forming in the mountains.
Hadzis explains that although the Central Cornrnittee was
aware that the resistance would have ta take on a military
character, and that this would be the decisive factor, the
organization lacked experience; it had to guide the party
from general strikes and small struggles to armed
resistance. 83 The policy of the KKE was first and foremost
the organization with other groups of a strong political
base and only after that had been accomplished would it
proceed to the establishment of armed resistance. But the
first attempts by the KKE to enlist the support of the
81. According to Hadzis (Athens 1982 Vol. A, pp. 118-119),
those present represented the reorganized Central Committee
of the KKE. The old Central Committee dissolved itself eKRE
Episema Keimena 1940-1945, Vol. 5, pp. 58-59).
82. KKE Episerna Keimena 1940-1945, Vol. 5, pp. 76-81.
83. Hadzis, Athens 1979, Vol. A, p. 150.
272
Republicans met with failure and had the same results with
the leaders of the Populists. 84 ultimately, the KKE had to
rely on the smaller parties in order to form a national
coalition.
On 27 September 1941, consequently, the Communists in
conjunction with the Greek Socialist and Agrarian parties
(SKE, ELO, AKE)85 established the National Liberation Front
(EAM) and invited aIl other political factions, parties and
every other interested group to join them in a common
organization to work against the enemy.86 The principal
aims of EAM were:
a) the liberation of the nation from foreign
yoke and the achievement of total independence;
b) the creation of a provisional government by
EAM, after the expulsion of the foreign
conquerors, whose sole aim will be to hold
elections in order to establish a constituent
assembly that will give the people the right to
determine the constitution which will govern
them: c) the entrenchment of right of the
84. In early September Hadzis and Kostas Vidalis met with
General Gonatas, one of the leading Republican officers and
brought up the subject of resistance the latter not only
opposed the concept but threatened the representatives of
the KKE personally and stated that he wouid violently oppose
them. (Hadzis, Athens 1979, Vol. A, pp. 152-153).
85. SKE (Socialist Party of Greece): ELO (Union of Popular
Oemocracy); AKE (Agrarian Party of Greece).
86. The first step towards forming a common front was ta ken
by the Greek labour unions who, with the support of the
Communists formed the National Workers' Liberation Front
(EEAM) on 16 July 1941. In a~dition, to its role of looking
after the needs of labour during the occupation, EEAM aiso
proposed the creation of a common front to instigate
resistance (Avgi 13 July 1960: KKE Episima Keimena 1940-
1945, Vol. 5, pp. 66-67: Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 146).
273
people to chose the form of government they
decide upon and to protect this from any
attempted counter-activity or from anyone who
will propose solutio~~ that will go ag3inst the
will of the people as well as attempt to
annihilate ~~ and aIl the organizations that
make it up.
The traditional pre-war political parties for different
reasons declined to join EAM. According to Fleischer, the
conservative Fopulist Party refused any cooperation with the
Left while the Liberal Party did not participate because
they believed it was premature to consider the establishment
of organized resistance and feared the consequences of
reprisals and executions that would befall on the nation.
Instead, the Liberals proposed to the other political
parties the creation of a common front with the aim of
preventing the return of the monarchy and the dictatorship
after liberation. 88 Despite the refusal of the traditional
political parties to join, EAM developed rapidly and
established a strong political organization which enabled it
to create a large following.
It took longer to create partisan groups in the mountains.
Hewever, by concentrating on the establishment of a nation
wide political infrastructure EAM not enly gained the
87. Benetatos, Athens 1966, pp. 51-52. For the entire
constitution of EAM see: To Chroniko teu Agona st' Al~ata
st' Armata: Istoria tis Ethnikis Andistasis, Athens 1964,
pp. 104-105; KKE Episirna Keirnena 1940-1945, Vol. 5,
p. 83-85.
88. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 147.
274
support of a substantial segment of the population but later
was also in a position to maintain an almost absolute
control over its armed wing ELAS. Joining EAH did not
require any particular sacrifice except to belong to the
organization and accept it as the common resistance front.
Under these terms EAM acquired thousands and ultimately
hundreds of thousands of members who by the simple act of
becoming members could believe themselves to be fighting the
occupation authorities.
George siantos an important member of the KKE, who after his
escape in September, took over as the secretary89 of the
Greek Communist Party concentrated on first building a
political structure that would give the KKE and EAM control
over Athens and the main urban centers. 90 Consequently, it
89. At the eigth plenum Siantos was elected General
Secretary of the KKE. When news of this decision reached
the KKE cadres in Akronafplia they protested the election
and pointed out that Zachariades despite the fact that he
was in prison was still the General Secretary. Instead,
they recommended that Siantos be appointed Secretary of the
central Committee in place of Nefoulidis who was also
incarcerated. The recommendation was accepted and Siantos
although he was effectively the head of the KKE had to use
the title of Secretary and relinquished the leadership of
the party after the release of Zachariadis in 1945 (KKE
Episema Keimena 1940-1945, Vol. 5, pp. 90-91; Ioannidis,
Athens 1979 p. 89 and p. 508).
90. In the post war period, and especially in the aftermath
of the defeat of the December 1944 uprising, the failure of
the party to concentra te on creating a large partisan arrny
along Tito's model led to a bitter controversy and according
to Hondros (New York 1983, p. 112) a schism within the KKE.
Dominique Eudes Kapetanios: Partisans and civil War in
Greece 1943-1946, New York and London 1972, pp. 23-28), in
particular, places the blame on the policies of Siantos who
ignored the strong recommendations of Tsimas and
Velouy~iotis to focus on a full scale partisan war instead
275
was only in February of 1942 that the KKE sent agents into
the mountains to organize an arrned resistance and on 10
April the first guerrilla bands were officially approved. 91
A month latter (22 May 1942), Aris Veloukhiotis organized
the first unit of ELAS. 92 Although Veloukhiotis started
with fifteen men and his actions were originally limited to
of trying to achieve power by controlling the urban centers.
Hondras (New York 1983, pp. 112-113) argues that this
interpretation of the conflicts within the KKE and EAM is
over simplified and adds that according te Partsialidis
there were no differences between the party over an urban
versus a guerrilla based resistance rather the KKE was
determined to build a broad political base before it
initiated a partisan war.
91. According to Hadzis (Athens 1982, pp. 272-273) who
becarne the political officer of the Central Committee of
ELAS, the decision to proceed with the creation of arrned
bands was taken after EAM and the KKE had exhausted every
effort to enlist the cooperation of senior Greek officers.
Thus during a meeting on 2 February 1942, EAM decided that
it would initiate the armed struggle against the occupation
forces by establishing its own units in the mountains. It
was agreed by those present (1. Polydoros, A. Tsirnas,
Hadzis, and Kostsakis), and afterwards approved by Siantos,
that the narne of the organization would be the Greek Popular
Liberation Arrny (ELAS) and that the organization would corne
under EAMi the Central Committee of ELAS would receive its
direction from the Central Cornmittee of EAM.
92. Aris Veloukhiotis was the nom de guerre adopted by
Athanasios Klaras. Klaras was arrested by the Metaxas
security service and with the agreement of Zahariadis
(according to his brother, B. Klaras, 0 Adelfos mou 0 Aris,
Athens 1984, pp. 112-113) signed the infamous declaraticn of
repentance in order to assist the Communist Party which was
disintegrating thanks to the successful efforts of
Maniadakis. Klaras was not able to substantiate this and
during the occupation, no one carne forward to back his
claim. Zahariadis himself was shipped off to Dachau and
after the war, denounced Klaras. As a result, he was viewed
with suspicion by the KKE Central Cornmittee. According ta
Benetatos (Athens 1966, pp. 83-84), the Central Committee of
EAM had not yet made up its mind whether to initiate
guerrilla warfare when Klaras, on his own initiative, formed
his band which was recognized after the facto
276
central Greece, he and Tsimas turned ELAS by 1943 into a
major guerrilla force.
In the beginning, however, Veloukhiotis was instructed to
avoid any action that would bring reprisaIs upon the local
population and ELAS even went so far as to make contact with
the Germans to assure them that its attacks were directed
against the Italians. 93 The acronym ELAS wh en pronounced
meant Greece, which gave that organization a powerful
propaganda tool and every effort was made to associate it
with the revolutionary bands and heroes that had fought the
ottomans during the Greek War of Independence. Both EAM and
ELAS confined their propaganda to patriotic and simple
slogans that aimed to equate their organizations with
national pride and Greek history.
Almost at the same time as the creation of EAM, on 9
September 1941, a group of Venizelist officers established a
republican resistance organization which they named EDES
(National Democratic 94 Greek League) and they also could not
attract the support of the established political parties.
Indeed, their own party, refused any kind of cooperation or
93. Fleischer, "Pos Evlepe to KKE tin Andistasi", Andi, 3
May 1975, p. 13; Contacts between the Germans and the Greek
Resistance", Greece in the 1940's: A Nation in Crisis, (ed.)
J.O. Iatrides, Hanover and London 1981, p. 56.
94. In Greek democratic also means republican. Anûther
translation of EDES would therefore be: National Republican
Greek League.
277
support. 95 The founding members of this organization, as
weIl as its main cadres, c~me from the discharged officers
of the 1930'5. Unlike EAM, EDES had specifie political and
socialist aims which included not only the provision that
the organization would prevent, by any means f the return of
the monarchy but outlined a detailed programme of economic
and political reforrns. 96 These reforms included: the
purging of the entire governrnental apparatus, the armed
forces, professional organizations as weIl as programmes to
alleviate hunger and establish social justice. In addition,
every new member of EDES had to swear unquestioned loyalty
order without doubt or hesitation. According to K.
Pyromaglou, who became the General Secretary of EDES, the
Republican League was created to fill the political gap
between the position of the Greek Communists and the
traditional political parties. It did, however, accomplish
this because the organization failed ta gain the support of
the principal leaders of the republican cause and
consequently EDES was unable ta establish a solid political
95. K. Pyromaglou, l Ethniki Andistasis: EAM-ELAS-EDES-EKKA,
Athens 1975, pp. 314-315.
96. The following were listed as the primary goals of EDES:
1) To establish in Greece the basis of a dernocratic
political system of a socialist nature; 2) To prevent by any
means the return of the King of Greece and his mob of the
4th of August dictatorial regirne, impose en those criminals
the severest penalties such as the confiscation of their
.'
property as weIl as the properties of their relatives and
J their associates during the period of the tyranny.
'278
base in the cities. 97
The nominal he ad of EDES was General N. Plastiras, an old
Republican officer who helped to topple the governrnent in
1922 B'-, well as the monarchy and one of the main
cr,.lspirators of the abortive 1935 coup. Plastiras, however,
had escaped from Greece in 1935 and found political asylum
in France, where he remained until the end of the
occupation. The actual driving force and initiative for the
creation of EDES came from Colonel Napoleon Zervas and a
handful of Republican officers. Zervas, unlike Plastiras,
lacked credibility amongst republican circles and needed
Plastiras' name to legitimize EOES. In addition to his
reputation as a gambler and womanizer, Zervas had
participated in numerous conspiracies from 1916 until his
expulsion from the Greek army in 1935.
Why Plastiras allowed his name to become associated with
EDES remains unknown. 98 Pyromaglou in his account of the
Greek resistance and his participation with EDES states that
he received instructions from Plastiras on 9 september 1941
to return to Greece and work with the latter's followers
towards establishing a democratic and socialist
97. Pyromaglou, Athens 1975, pp. 305-306. Pyromaglou
(Athens 1975, p. 315) adds, that the political parties not
only did not support EDES but attempted to destroy the
organization until he and the rest of the membership went to
the mountains on 23 July 1942.
98. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 152.
279
organization. Upon his arrivaI in Athens (23 September
1941) Pyromaglou, through the intervention of Gonatas and
Stamatopoulos, met with Zervas and shortly after agreed to
become the General Secretary of a five man governing
committee created in October to direct EDES. 99 According to
Pyromaglou, Plastiras' reputation remained high; as long as
he abstained from active politics he was the defender of the
republican cause. The moment he became associated with
EOES, which was identified as a political organization,
Plastiras ceased to be a non-partisan statesman and was
viewed as a political opponent. 100
Thus making Plastiras the leader of the EOES was a mistake;
many of his supporters refused to join and either actively
worked against it or created their own organizations. 101
These organizations: EKKA, AAA, YBE and many others,
however, did not survive and were either disbanded, absorbed
or destroyed bv ELAS, while the remnants found their way to
EOES and in some instances joined the Greek Security
Battalions raised by the Germans in the spring of 1943.
Consequently, because of the reluctance of many of the
Republican leaders to acknowledge or support EOES it failed
99. The committee in addition to Pyromaglou included: V.
Petropoulos, who served as chairman; Zervas, 1. Demakisi Th.
Koudouriotis (Benetatos, Athens 1966 p. 80; Fleischer,
Athens 1988, pp. 154-155).
100. Pyromaglou, Athens 1975, pp. 314-315.
101. Benetatos, Athens 1966, pp. 53-54.
280
to establish a political wing and a corresponding popular
base, as was the case with EAM. EDES, although a political
committee existed in Athens, essentially became a guerrilla
band and in time it even lost its republican-socialist
complexion. 102
After the establishment of EAM and EDES, and later of ELAS,
the special operations Executive through its radio contact
with Prometheus became aware of the different resistance
organizations and groups that were forming and made several
attempts to establish contact and provide support for their
activities. Radio contact with Prometheus, however, was
only established in the late fall of 1941 because the latter
did not have the necessary code book with which it could
pass on its messages to Cairo. The code book arrived
sometime in November 1941, but it was not until the early
spring that Cairo was satisfied that Prometheus was
legitimate and not under Axis control. 103 On 3 March 1942
SOE Cairo instructed Prometheus to provide protection for
agents that would shortly be arriving in Greece by parachute
as weIl as secure safe places for the weapons and explosives
that would be dropped by airplanes. In addition, Cairo
ordered Prometheus to begin the process of recruiting
102. See Chapter 7.
103. The code book was delivered by an SOE agent, Gerasimos
Alexatos, (Istorikon Archion Ethnikis Andistasis, Vol. l, p.
56, ed. K. Pyromaglou, Athens n.d., hereafter cited IAEA;
Andreas Kedros, l EJliniki Andistasi 1940-44, Athens 1981,
p. 126).
281
individuals and their families and start preparations for
partisan warfare. 104
In April, Gerasimos Alexatos, an agent of the SOE 105 ,
arrived in Athens from the Middle East with considerable
funds and equipment ta help in the organization of
subversion and guerrilla warfare operations. Alexandros
Levidis 106 , a Greek officer who had organized an escape
network for MI9 and SOE, arranged a meeting between Alexatos
and several senior Greek officers who represented different
Republican groups in Athens as weIl as a representative from
EAM. According to Levidis, Bakirdzis and Psaros agreed to
participate in organizing guerriIIa bands and assured
Alexatos that Zervas and Sarafis would aiso take part.
Vendiris, on the other hand, who represented the more senior
Republican officers, refused outright and insisted that such
activity was both premature and would have negative
consequences. Aleko seferiadis 107 , an associate of
prometheus 108 , proposed the creation of guerriIIa bands to
be led by Republican officers and appealed to those present
to encourage such candidates to join EAM. 109
104. IAEA, Vol. 4, p. 46.
105. Aiso see Chapter 6.
106. On the Levidis organization see Chapter 6.
107. He was the cousin of the poet Seferis (Woodhouse,
Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 29).
108. Hadzis, Vol. 1, Athens 1982, p. 373.
109. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 26.
282
AIl those present, however, insisted that they would
terminate all contact with Cairo llO if they were asked to
cooperate witil EAM. In addition, they refused to authorize
any Republican officers to join EAM. Levidis, on the other
hand, attempted in vain to persuade them that because EAM
was controlled by the KKE it was to their interests that any
future armed forces of that organization should be placed
under the direction of Republican officers. As matters
stood, he argued, their refusal would not hinder EAM from
organizing guerrilla forces but if Republican officers led
these units it would minimize the influence of the Greek
Communist Party. III A few days later Levidis set up another
meeting for Alexatos this time with Zervas, Pyromaglou and
Koutsogiannopoulos, the new leader of Prometheus. They
agreed to organize guerrilla activity in the mountains and
even set up areas of responsibility for each organization
that would be led by those present. Zervas accepted to
concentrate his actions in Epiros and western Greecei Psaros
undertook jurisdiction over central Greece. Sarafis was
given Thessalia and Bakirdzis, who had lost all interest in
espionage and underground work in Athens, assumed that all
the partisan forces would be placed under his cornmand. 112
110. The implication in the Greek sources is that contact
with Cairo meant the SOE.
111. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 23 ff.
112. L. Spais, Peninda Chronia Stratiotis, Athens 1970, p.
225; IAEA, Vol. 4, p. 35; Pyromaglou, 0 Kartalis kai i
283
It was further agreed that Alexatos would report aIl this to
Cairo and afterwards he would divide the 2,000 gold
sovereigns he had brought amongst those who had agreed te
set up guerrilla bands. Ten days latter Levidis made
contact with Alexatos and the latter informed him that Cairo
had instructed him to divide the funds between EAM and EDES
- there was to be no support for any other organization. 113
Shortly after, Levidis was informed by MI6 that he was net
to involve himself with guerrilla activities and concentrate
on the transportation of British soldiers to the Middle
East. 114
It was not coincidental that it was during this period that
Aris Veloukhiotis had received formaI permission to
establish the first ELAS band in central Greece. The SOE in
Cairo had instructed Alexatos to turn over his supply of
gold sovereigns to EDES and EAM; this division, however, did
not please Zervas who felt cheated by the British and
assumed that they now were favouring EAM. Alexatos,
meanwhile began to fear for his life and sought refuge with
Epochi tou, Athens 1965, p. 150; Fleischer, Athens 1988, p.
241.
113. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 27. Fleischer (Athens 1988 p.
241 note 74) who interviewed Levidis, suggests that the
British were not prepared to severe contact with EAM and
that is why they decided te support only EDES and EAM and
exclude these who refused te cooperate with the Left.
114. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 30.
284
the KKE and according to post war accounts his reports to
Cairo began to down play Zervas and advocated support for
EAM-ELAS. He rernained with the KKE for four rnonths and
supplied them with money and a wireless set which enabled
the KKE to establish direct contact with Cairo and acquire
arms and ~upplies for ELAS.
According to Fleischer, Cairo finally ordered Prometheus to
end aIl contact with Zervas whom they no longer considered
trustworthy. Koutsogiannopoulos, the leader of Prometheus,
however decided that after aIl the preparations that had
been made to organize EDES as a partisan force it would hdve
been counter productive to cut off Zervas and leave the
field to ELAS. Instead, he threatened that unless Zervas
went to the mountains and organized guerrilla warfare he
would declare hirn a traitor and a swindler on the BBC,
Zervas accordingly left Athens on 23 July 1942. 117
It must be kept in mind that the arrangements that were made
by the SOE for the organization of guerrilla warfare took
115. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 241.
116 Alexatos not only brought 7,100 gold sovereigns to the
KKE but turned over to them at least one wireless set and
helped them repair a second (Ioannidis, Athens 1979, pp.
124-125 and p. 513 note 40).
117. Fleischer (Athens 19d8, p. 242, notes 76, 77 and 78),
bases his account of this episode on a series of articles
published in the newspaper Akropolis by both Zervas and
Koutsogiannopoulos: Report on SOE Activities in Greece and
the Islands of the Aeq~an Sea, Cairo 27/6/45, p. 53.
285
place before the arrivaI of the Harling Mission and even
earlier than the abortive effort by the Greek Governrnent-in-
Exile to set up a committee to coordinate aIl resistance
activity through the efforts of I. TSigantes. 118 When
Woodhouse, the only mernber of the Harling team who was to
remain after the destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct,
landed in Greece in October 1942, he irnmediately set out to
find Seferiades, who was present at the meeting that Levidis
had organized. 119 This certainly offers a direct link
between the SOE arrangements of April 1942 with the plans
for guerrilla warfare in the fall of 1942.
In the summer of 1942, both ELAS and EDES, although
numerically small and possessed with only primitive arms,
initiated sporadic attacks against the Italians. The SOE in
cairo, as indicated above, was fully aware of the political
situation in Greece and its relationship to the resistance.
Through Prometheus, they were in contact with EDES and EAM-
ELAS and thanks to the trânsmitter left behind by Alexatos,
they also had a direct link with the KKE. Before the
battles of El Alamein and Stalingrad, "Set Europe Ablaze"
was the catchword in Whitehall and the raison d'etre of the
SOE. Conse~uently, any organization, whatever its politic~l
11B. See chapter six.
119. According to Woodhouse (Sotl1ething Ventured, London
1982, p. 29 and 33), Seferiadis was captured by the rtalians
on his way to meet up with the Harling Mission. Woodhouse
had also met Seferiadis in Cairo.
286
outlook, was a welcome addition to the subversive war the
Special Operations Executive was planning against the Axis
in Europe.
As will be indicated in chapter six the SOE as weIl as the
other intelligence services were equally aware of the
expanding underground in Athens and its potential for
sabotage and subversive operations. Yet, as far as the SOE
was concerned the guerrilla war aspect of the resistance
remained the first p~iority. The prospect of partisan
groups engaging in future ongoing clashes with the
occupation authorities certainly fired the imagination of
the SOE planners in Cairo without regard for the political
consequences of supporting organizations whose very ethos
went against the post-war policies of the British and Greek
governments.
For the SOE, the military and political situation in Greece
was viewed from the perspective of the mountain, a factor
which is reflected by all the post-war memoirs of the main
participants and secondary literature produced on the Greek
resistance. The other resistance, the l'Secret War" as its
main Greex protagonists have called it, has largely been
excluded from the annals of Greek resistance literature.
"The Secret War" took place in basements and dark alleys in
Athens and in other urbaD centers. It was fought by men and
women in constant terror of their lives while encoding and
287
decoding radio signaIs from cairo or collecting military
information in the midst of the occupation authorities.
Perhaps it lacked the romanticism of the mountain war f but
it played a significant role in the history of the
occupation and made a major contribution to the war in the
Middle East.
,
j
a
288
Part III
Covert Operations and Guerrilla Warfare 1941-1944
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Chapter 6
1
Covert Operations 1941-1944
During the first year of the occupation, the British
intelligence services reacted to events in Greece and were
slow to establish their own priorities. As the situation
unfolded in the fall and winter of 1941-1942, the British
were faced with three not necessarily compatible options.
The first, was necessitated by the large number of Allied
soldiers who had either avoided capture or had escaped from
internment and found asylum with a sympathetic Greek
l population. Consequently, the British were forced to deal
with this situation and make sorne attempt to bring those men
out of Greece. In the process, they stumbled into a means
of establishing espionage networks by recruiting individuals
in Greece, who had inadvertently become participants in
clandestine activities by giving refuge to British and
Allied troops.
The second option came about as a result of the need to
create espionage networks in Athens, and in other urban
areas, to spy on the Axis forces, particularly on their
shipping. Slnce the war in North Africa was not going weIl
l for the British , information that would enable the Royal
290
Navy to choke off the Africa Corps' supply line from Piraeus
l and Krete was of critical importance. As mentioned above,
the speed of the German conquest of Greece had not afforded
~he British intelligence services much of an opportunity to
establish espionage networks before they pulled out of the
coun~ry. In addition, most of the few that were organized
belonged to the SOE, whose primary goal was the organization
of guerrilJa warfare and not espionage. The latter
activity, represented the third option available to the
British, and proved not only incompatible with e~ ionage but
created considerable difficulties with the Foreign Office as
weIl as with the Greek Government-in-Exiie.
As will be indicated below, the British attempted to
accomplish aIl three objectives; not with a definite set
of priorities and over aIl co-ordination of their
intelligence services in Greece but rather developed an ad
hoc approach to exploit situations as they unfolded.
Consequently, without specifie guidelines, each intelligence
service pursued its own aims and often in direct competition
with other intülligence agencies in the Middle East. For
example, although it was not the SOE's task to collect
intelligence it quickly became obvious that its missions in
Greece, in the course of their subversive and guerrilla
activities, acquired much useful information. However,
officers and agents of the SOE were trained in subversive
operations and not in intelligence work, but despite this
291
they were often required to set up intelligence networks.
1 The requests came from GHQ Middle East, which occasionillly
needed intelligence on the Axis forces in Greece and had to
rely on the SOE because it had established secret missions
ahead of the other British intelligence organjzations. By
the third year of the occupation of Greece and the islands
of the Aegean, the SOE had deployed eighty-two missions
which included six hundred and eleven British personnel and
four thousand Greeks. The lack of training in intelligence
work not oDly expased SOE personnel to unnecessary risks,
but the information gathered frorn these missions and
fOlvarded ta the Midcle East, although considerdble in
quantity if not in quality, reached such proportions that by
1944 the Cairo headquarters of the SOE was no longer able to
1 cape with the volume. 1
The intelli1cnce operations discussed in this anJ the next
chapter offer sorne examples of the ad hoc approach adopted
by the British which led ta both espionage and other covert
activities in the Greek cities and the organization of
guerrilla warfare in the mountains. They illustrate the
difficulties that arase not only from attempting ta
implement espionage, sabotage and guerrilla operations by
individual British intelligence services, but also the
inability ta coordinate these activities by a single agency.
1. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean, Appendix X.
292
On the operational level, lack of clear directives not only
fostered competition arnongst the intelligence services, for
agents and resources, but jurisdictional overlapping often
brought about disastrous results.
Sorne of these difficulties are illustrated by one of the
first intelligence operations to Greece which lasted from
November 1941 to January 1942. It was organized as a joint
MI9-S0E mission but it was the Special Operations Executive
which provided the main contacts in Greece. 2 The objectives
of this operation was to gather information and conduct
sabotage for the SOE, and facilitate the escape of British
soldiers and Greek nationals to the Middle East on behalf of
MI9. As it turned out, these activities were not only
incompatible but the attempt to bring together these divérse
objectives led to disaster which had a profound impact upon
the development of the Greek resistance and the SOE.
The operation began on 14 November 1941, when a submarine
(VML 3) disembarked an M19 te am led by John Atkinson and
Harry Grammatikakis at the island of Antiparos. 3 Atkinson
2. Richard Clogg, "The Special operations Executive in
Greece" , Greece in the 1940's: A Nation in Crisis, ed. John
o. Iatrides, Hanover and London 1981, p. 114.
3. According to Foot and Langley (London 1979, p. 92),
Atkinson's first narne was not John but they only provide the
initiaIs of G.D. The secondaLY Greek sources, covering this
particular episode, aIl use the narne of John (see:
Alexandros Zaousis, oi Dyo Ochthes 1939: mia Prospathia gia
Ethniki Syrnphiosi, Part B (1), p. 73; Dimitris GatopouJos,
{ lstoria tjs Katochis, Athens 1949, pp. 207-216: G.B.
Ioannidis, Ellines kai Xenoi Rataskopoi stin Ellada, Athens
293
had himself been ~ prisoner of war aft~: the British
l withdrawal from Greece in April but had managed ta esc~pe
with the help of Alexander Zannas, the head of the Greck Red
---------------
1952, pp. 22-40. The sources dealing with Atkinson and his
activities at Antiparos are not in agreement concerning his
raIe in Greece, or even the period of time he spent therc.
According to the accounts listed above, Atkinson arrived in
Greeee in October 1941 and was eaptured Dy the Italians ln
January 1942. The British accounts refer ta Atkinson's
presence in Greeee and his capture but do not provide ~ny
additional details. Foot and t.angley (London 1979, p. 92)
state that Atkinson's mission was to assist British soldlcrs
to escape from Greece and almost aIl the members of the tcam
were eaptured in January 1942. In addition, the submarlnc
Triumph sent to facilitate the rescue was lost at Antiparos.
According to Roskill (The War at Sea, Vol. 3, London 1954,
p. 443), the submarine Triumph was sunk by a mine on the
14th of January 1942 in the Gulf of Athens (presumably the
Saronic Gulf), whereas Janes Fighting Shiê (New York 194~»)
lists the submarine lost on the 16th of January 1942 in th~
Aegean. Bickham Sweet-Escott (Baker street rrreg~lgr,
London 1965, p. 119), on the other hand, suggests that this
event took place in the spring of 1942 and its purpose was
1 to make contact with Greeks w~lling to work for the British.
He aiso adds that the group was brought to Antiparos by
submarine but he does not indicate that it was lost. In a
later account, Sweet Escott ("SOE in the Balkans", p. 8)
refers to a sir.gle British officer who was captured dt
Antiparos in February 1942. Woodhouse (Apple of Discor~,
London 1948) writes about the capture of a British officer
at Antiparos but does not provide any other information.
The Greek references listed above derive their facts from
~he account of Alexander Zannas, (1 Katochi: Anamniseis~
Epistoles, Athens 1964, p. 74ff.), although they provide
sorne aspects not covered by Zannas. The most reliable
source for this episode is provided by AdmiraI panagiotis E.
Konstas (1 ElIas 1940-1950: ai Polemikai, Politikai kai
Diplomatikai Anamniseis tau, tis Dekaetias 1940-1950, Athens
i955, pp. 244-246), the head of the Greek secret service in
Cajro. Konstas bases his account not only from his own
recollection of the event but on the transcripts of the
post-war trial of the collaborators on the Island of SIlOS,
where Atkinson and the rest of his team stood trial for
espionage by the Italian authorities and as sueh had the
benefit of consulting the Italian dûcuments coneerning this
event. Another reliable source, although it only provides a
brief reference to the Atkinson affair, is the Istorikon
Archeion Ethnikis Andistaseos, (ed. K. Pyromaglou, Vol. 2,
l Athens n.d., pp. 38-39).
294
Cross, and made his way by Kaiki 4 to Alexandria. 5 Shortly
after his arrivaI, he volunteered to work for section N of
MI9. Atkinson was in charge of the base that was
established at Antiparos and Grammatikakis was responsible
for espionage and escape operations.
From Antiparos, they attempted to establish escape routes.
for British soldiers and Greeks ta the Middle East. In tbis
endeavor, Atkinson made contact with those who assisted in
his own escape and with their support he organized the
~scape routes. By coming into contact with these groups,
Atkinson became one of the few links between the rudirnentary
underground groups forming in Athens and British
intelligence in Cairo. In late October or early November,
A~kinson went to Athens and made contact with Al~xander
Zannas and through him acquired access to other clandestine
organizations which initially were set up to help escaped
British soldiers but by now were getting involved with
espionage and sabotage. 6 During the course of the meeting,
Zannas informed Atkinson about the various sabotage
activities accompli3hed by sorne groups, and made a strong
4. A Kaiki is a srnall motor powered fishing boat.
5. Zannas, Athens 1964, p. 73.
6. According to Zannas (Athens 1964, p. 74), Atkinson
arrived by submarine at Euboia and made his way on foot ta
Athens. He was able to reach Zannas through a rnutual
friend, P. Sifnaios. Zannas and Atkinson met at the home of
sifnaios were Atkinson was staying and where he had found
refuge in the course of his escape in April.
295
appeal for British support regarding the famine that was
1 ravaging Greece and in particular th~ population of Athens
and Piraeus. Atkinson, with Zannas' pelp set up an escape
route which ran from Athens to Anabysos, then to Antiparos
and afterwards by submarine to Egypt. 7 Indeed, shortly
after, twenty-two British and five Creeks were able to leavc
Greece by that route. During their discussion, however,
Zannas noticed that Atkinson made notes of everything
discussed, including the names of those involved with
clandestine activities. When Zannas objected to this,
Atkinson promised that he would later destroy his papers. 8
Zannas, in addition to his role in assisting British
soldiers, was involved with supporting other individuals
participating with sabotage work and was in contact with
l ne~ly formed groups concerned with intelligence gathering. 9
As a rnember of Athenian society, Zannas was able to use his
influence and position to support these groups as weIl as
recruit other prominent individuals to work agdinst the
7. Zannas, Athens 1964, pp. 78-79.
8. Zannas, Athens 1964, p. 77.
9. Zannas' role in the underground rnovement was that of a
link between several groups involved with espionage and
sabotage. As the he ad of the Greek Red Cross he was under
constant surveillance and could only be involved indirectly.
He had direct access to Evert, the commander of the Athenian
Police and ta the Archbishop of Athens, bath of whom aided
and abated Many of the different clandestine groups set up
in Athens. Zannas' brother, Sotirios, had been an agent of
section D in 1940-1941 but was forced to leave Greece
because of h~s involvement with the Maleas organization,
~nother group that hid and assisted British soldiers to
escape to the Middle East (Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 20).
296
occupation forces. lO
It is not r.ertain why Atkinson became involved with the
collection of intelligence and shortly after w~th sabotage
or if indeed it was part of his orders. His first
breakthrough carne when he acquired the services of an
Italian Sergeant, Bero Likeri, who was part of the Italian
garrison at Paros. Likeri was able to give Atkinson and his
group advance warning of any Italian or German search
parttes on t~e island as weIl as provide information
concerning the garrison on the island of Paros. 11 Atkir.son,
with the help of the Zannas group and through contacts with
local fishermen and small ship owners, aIl anxious to do
c something against the occupying forces, was able to
establish an intelligence network which provided information
about Axis ndval movements in and out of the Kycladis
islands. 12
10. In the summer of 1941, Zannas purchased four bombs from
a Cornmunist organization (for 280,000 drachmas) which he
turned over to Nikos Nikolaidis and stavros Margaritis.
Both of these men had found employrnent at the Elefsina
airpol't which was used by the German air force and wished to
try their hand at s,abotage. After they acqt.lired the bombs,
they planted the first two in German aircrafts bound for
Krete or North Africa am 1 set them to exp Iode one hour after
the planes were in the air. The third bomb, however,
exploded on the qround n~xt to a loaded bomber which caused
the destruction of several aircraft (Zannas, Athens 1964,
pp. 76-77).
11. At Antiparos, Atkinson was able to operate from the
summer home of a Greek lawyer, Spyros Tsavellas (Ioannidis,
Athens 1952, p. 23).
12. Ioannidis, Athens 1952, p. 24; Zaousis, Athens 1987, 73-
( 74.
297
1 His early success, according to one account, made him
anxious to expand his activities and he agreed ta attempt
the destruction of two German tankers which had arrivcd ~t
the island nf Milos. 1 ) In November 1941, Atkinson with the
assistance of a local fishing boat captai1, Anypfandis, and
two of his men arrived in Milos and planted explosive
charges against the hulls of the ships. In the early hours
of the morning, the explosives went off and bath ships were
sunk. 14 The destruction of the German ships increased
Atkinson's prestige with the islanders 15 and attracted more
volunteers ta help with information and escape work, but the
increasing level of activity also attracted the attention of
the Italian garrison at Paros.
)
In early January 1942, the Italians sent a patrol to
Antiparos and despite warnings from Likeri to leave quickly,
Atkinson delayed his departure from the island. 16 On the
13. Zaousis, Athens 1987, p. 73.
14. According ta Spyro Kotsis, Midas 614, Athens 1970, p.
127, the explosives were timed ta go off at 9:00 A.M. At
that time the ships were usually five hundred meters from
the harbo~ and according to Atkinson's calculation they
would sink in deeper water.
15. Fortunately, for the population of Milos the German and
Italian authorities assumed the attack against the ships was
the work of British commandos and did not exact retribution
against the inhabitants of the island (Ioannidis, Athens
1952, p. 26; Kotsis, Athens 1976, p. 127).
16. In the version provided by Zannas (Athens, pp. 78-80),
Atkinson had left Antiparos and returned from Egypt by
submarine in mid December 1941 in arder to organize the
escape of another group of twenty British and four Greeks.
198
6th of January, the Italians surrounded the house where
Atkinson was staying and attcr a gun battle, during which
one Italian officer was killed and Atkinson wounded, the
entire group was taken prisoner. 17 To rnake rnatters worse,
the Italians aisa captured: Atkinson's code book, a Iist of
current and potential agents, indicated by. their initiaIs, a
seventeen page report of possible contacts in Athens
prepared by the Greek Embassy in Cairo, ten thousand dollars
and five hundred pounds, hi~ nates from the meeting with
Zannas and a diary of his activities in Greece. 18
During the subsequent interrogation by the Italian security
service, Atkinson broke down and provided his captors with
the narnes on the list as weIl as any other contacts he had
1
The group in Athens had already transported the twenty-four
escapees to Anabyso and Iater to Antiparos, just in time to
be re-captured by the Italians. Shortly after f the British
subrnar.ine was aiso sunk.
17. According to Ioannidis (Athens 1952, p. 26), Atkinson
and his associates were betrayed because someone affiliated
with the group was disenchanted over a failed affair with a
woman and inforroed the Italians as an act of revenge.
Ketsis (Athens 1976, p. 127), on the other hand, suggests
that it was the activities of the group which attracted the
attention of the Italian garrison. This is aiso
corroborated by Konstas (Athens 1955, p. 246), who states
that according ta the evidence produced in the post-war
trial of the collaboratars at Syros, the presence of the
group at Antiparos becarne known te the Italians by "an
unfortunate incident" and by the incredible carelessness of
Atkinson, who at one point was fishing by dropping hand
grenades in the sea.
18. Konstas, Athens 1955, p. 246; Zannas, Athens 1964, p.
80, Kotsis, Athens 1976, p. 128; Zaousis, Athens 1987, p.
74; Sweet-Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London 1965, p.
119.
299
made and with whom he had worked. 19 The impact of
1 Atkinson's disclosures was a severe b10w to the Athenian
underground groups and to those who had been involved with
Atklnson's network in the Kyc1adis. 20 As a result of
Atkinson's confession, at least fifty individuals were
arrested by the Ita1ians, including sorne of the most
prorninent Athenians who were involved with the undergrourd
or who had given refuge to Atkinson in the course of his
first escape. Many others, 5uch as Pandgiotis
Kanellopoulos, were forced to go into hiding and leave the
country in order to avoid arrest. 21
The arrests and subsequent trials astonished the Athenians
almost as rnuch as the fact that those apprehended were
1 involved with espionage. 22 This represented the first major
19. Konstas, Athens 1955, pp. 246-247; Zannas, Athens 1964,
p. 81; Kotsis, Athens 1976, p. 128; Zaousis, Athens 1987, p.
74.
20. Many received long prison sentences but Atkinson and his
irnmediate associates were condemned to death and executed
sorne months later.
21. Others included: Captain Theodoros Koundouriotis, the
son of one of Greece's most famous admirals and one of those
who had helped set up the Bakirdzis cell: Leon Polymenakos,
a distinguished physician and Kanellopoulos' doctori
panagiotis Klapeas, a well known lawyer: two senior
officers, Aristidis Pallis and Basilis Angelopoulos (Kotsis,
Athens 1976, pp. 128-129). In addition to Kanellopoulos,
Col. Bakirdzis was mentioned in Atkinson's papers and he too
had to leave Greece and was succeeded by a naval officer,
Charalambos Koutsogiannopoulos with the code name of
Prometheus II (zaousis, Athens 1987, p. 75).
22. Christidis, Athens 1971, p. 258, 27 April 1942.
Atkinson and those implicated with hirn were tried in
February 1943 (the trial lasted from 9th to the 17th of
Ff:bruary). Atkinson along with Arvanitopoulos, Tzavellds,
300
success of Italian counter-intelligence and a significant
set back for the Athenian underground, particularly of those
groups made up of individuals loyal to the Greek Government-
in-Exile or, at any rate, those opposed to revolutionary
change. Even some who styled themselves as the Republican
membcrs of these organizations represented the more
conservative wjng of the Greek Liberal Party and although
not royalist in sentiment, they would have accepted a
constitutional arrangement that included the Greek King. In
their absence, control of the Athenian underground passed to
less weIl known individuals with little influence over
public opinion and also to more radical elements who either
belonged to the Left or were extreme opponents of the
monarchy.
In the critical period between 1941-1942, when the
resistance was being organized, the absence of moderates
such as Panagiotis Kanellopoulos, one of the few pre-war
politicians willing to participate in a resistance movement
and prepared to accept the Greek Government-in-Exile, left
the initiative to the Greek Communists and the more radical
Republicans. 23 The response of the Greek political leaders
and two others closely affiliated with the group were
executed on 24 February 1943 (Konstas, Athens 1955, p. 247).
23. According to Zaousis (Athens 1987, p. 85), Kanellopoulos
had excpllent contact with the officer corps and was in a
good position ta get Greek officers to participate in a
resistance organization. Hagen Fleischer (stema kai
Svastika: l Ellada tis Katochis kai Adistasis 1941-1944,
Athens 1988, p. 161) writes that Kanellopoulos had
established links with Greek Republican officers such as
JOl
to the occupation was at best passive and in sorne cases
1 outright defeatist. The leaders of the Liberal and
Conservative parties, as weIl as of the factions that
existed wlthin the organizations, viewed the possibilitics
of resistance as premature and did not éntirely trust the
military leadership to conduet such an endeavor. 24 The
leaders of the smaller parties either believed in an
ultimate Axis vietory or preferred to follow the lead of the
Communists in the creation of the National Liberation Front
(EAM) •
For the SOE in cairo, the disaster at Antiparos aggravated
the tensions whieh existed between the professiûnal soldiers
that made up the Operations Directorate, who were
l responsible for the Atkinson mission, and the members of the
Poiitieai Directorate, whose agents Atkinson had betrayed to
the Italians. From this point on, relations between two the
departments got worse and the Political Directorate made it
a point of withholding information about its agents and
organizations from its colleagues in operations. 25 The
Bakirdzis, Saratis, and Psaros as weIl as with monarchists
in order to organize a resistance movement. At the same
time Kanellopoulos refused to eooperate with EAM since he
opposed the creation of large organizations and preferred
the establishment of a number of small weIl organized
groups.
24. For an analysis of the attitudes of the Greek politieal
leaders see: Hagen Fleischer, Athen3 1988, pp. 155-161; K.
Pyromaglou, l Ethniki Adistasis: EAM-ELAS-EKKA, Athens 1975,
pp. 215-221.
25. Sir John stevens, British wartime Policy towards
Yugoslavia and Greece, pp. 216-217.
302
situation improved somewhat, after the two directorates were
l dissolved and the SOE in cairo was once again organized into
country sections in August of 1942. Unfortunately, the
first British mission into occupied Greece (the Harling
Mission) left Cairo without any briefing from the experts of
what had been the Political Directarate, thanks in part ta
the self impased isolation of the two SOE departments. 26
In early 1942, the Prometheus group underwent a major
reorganization because Bakirdzis had to leave Greece
following the Atkinson disclosures. 27 His successors, who
operated under the code name of Prometheus II, were accepted
by SOE Cairo in March 1942 but the new organization was
largely composed of anti-monarchical and left-wing oriented
members. 28 Bakirdzis, although labelled as the "red
colonel", and later a member of ELAS, was less inclined to
hold extreme views. 29
26. According to Bickham Sweet-Escott ("SOE in the Balkans",
p. 18), none of the Greek experts of the Political
oirectorate were asked to brief the Harling Mission because
it was supposed to be an operational matter and therefore
not their concern, also see Chapter 7.
27. Until the arrivaI of its code book, the Prometheus group
had concentrated on minor acts of sabotage such as placing
explosives in German automobiles (IAEA, Vol. 1, pp. 56-57).
28. The new leadership of Prometheus included: Charalambos
Koutsiogiannopoulos, Dimitris Bardopoulos and Ilias
Degiannis. AlI three were dismissed from the armed forces
for their part in the republican coup of 1935 (Zaousis,
Athens 1987, p. 76).
29. During the December uprising in 1944 Bakirdzis was
commander of the ELAS forces in Makedonia and this was one
of the few regions that remained tranquil during the
303
1 The first major activity undertaken by the Prometheus group
was during the period of June - July 1942, when it receivcd
orders from GHQ Middle East, through the SOE in Cairo, to
mount an aIl out sabotage campaign in Athens in order tu
cause as much delay as possible to the Axis forces and
supplies reaching the Africa Corps from Greece. As a
result, the Prometheus organization succeeded in sinking one
tanker and one cargo ship loaded with ammunition just before
both ships were to sail to Libya. Shortly after, Prometheus
managed to damage seriously two more tankers and two
additional cargo ships, putting them out of commission for
severa! weeks. 30
1 Later in the year, Prornetheus II was instructed by SOE to
acquire information on eight np.w German submarines statiened
at Piraeus. Prometheus II had contact with Psalidakis, a
naval engineer who was ernpleyed as a draftsrnan by the
Gerrnans. Psalidakis managed to steal sorne documents from
the German naval base at Piraeus and pass thern on te
Prometheus II. 31 Shortly aftenlards Prornetheus II was able
to transmit to Caire that the eight new subrnarines were
French which had been turned over te the Gerrnans by the
rebellion of the Left.
30. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix IV.
31. K. Bastias, Bradini 17 - 21 April 1945, "Prornetheus".
304
Vichy government. 32
other clandestine groups formed on their own and sought out
to establish contact with the British and the Greek
intelligence services in the Middle East. In the beginning
the se groups were organized spontaneously to assist British
soldiers left in Greece and it was this experience that had
initiated them in clandestine work. Hundreds of people in
Greece took enorrnous risks by hiding British soldiers and in
the early stages of occupation it provided a ~eans of
opposlng the Axis forces. 33
Several such groups formed escape organizations. One of the
,1 most successful was the Bouboulina network established by
Lela Karagiannis. 34 In addition to employing her own
32. Psalidakis acquired the documents in a rather simple
manner. He noticed that four new German officers had been
holding meetings with the senior base officers in a
particular room. After one of these meetings, he persuaded
the guard to let him enter the room on the pretext that he
had to get the place ready for the next meeting. Since
Psalidakis was weIl known by the personnel of the base the
guard did not find his request unusual. Once inside,
Psalidakis was able to take the appropriate documents by
hiding them in a loaf of bread. The Germans quickly
realized that the documents were missing and ordered aIl the
Greek personnel of the base to be searched. When it came to
Psalidakis' turn, the base commander excused him on the
grounds that he was a loyal employee (zaousis, Athens 1987,
p. 77).
33. See chapter 5.
34. As was the case with many Athenians in the early da ys of
the occupation Karagiannis was moved by the plight of Allied
soldiers desperately trying to avoid capture. One afternoon
(10 May 1941) she noticed from her balcony a young man
1 holding onto a lamppost. At first, the man appeared to be
drunk but upon closer examination she ascertained that he
JO~
family, Karagiannis recruited hundreds of individuals who
1 helped to feed, hide and transpo~t Allied soldiers who had
either been trapped in Greece or had managed to escape from
detention. Karagiannis named her organization Bouboulina,
after a heroine of the Greek War of Independence and by June
1941 she was recruited by the SOE. 35 In October, however,
Karagiannis was arrested by the Italians but after sevep
rnonths of detention she and her husband were released. 36
was British and possibly injured. He was given away by his
height and blond haire As it turned out, the young man was
an Australian soldier named John Wilson who hact becn hiding
but was now attempting to find medical assistance becausc
his wound had become infected. Karagiannis took the man in
and from this point she became an active member of the
underground. Through Wilson she discovered the whcreabout
of other Allied soldiers and established a network of saie
houses to hide them until arrangements could be made to gct
them out o~ Greece. Within a short time, her organization
was responsible for over one hundred and fifty Allied
1 soldiers and it was no mean feat to feed and look Rf ter all
these men during the course of the famine. She sold aIl of
her jewelry and with the proceeds purchased a small boat
which she used to send the first group to Alexandria. Upon
his return the capta in of the boat, Ilias Chrysinis, brought
back gold sovereigns, arms and a radio transmitter
(Zalokostas, Athens [no date), pp. 21-27; Document from
Nephele Papagiannis, Athens [no date], p. 2).
35. Ioannidis, Athens 1952, p. 231.
36. Papagiannis, Athens [no date], p. 3. A major problem
that many such as Karagiannis had to face was that the
soldiers they kept in hiding would often get restless and
venture out. On one occasion John Wilson, who had made a
habit of frequenting bars and taverns, got drunk at a local
tavern and began singing in English. Almost immediately he
attracted the attention of two German officers who proceeded
to arrest him. After interrogation anà torture wilson
provided the German authorities with the names of
Karagiannis's children, as those responsible for hiding him.
Later, however, he ~enied this and they were freed. Another
British soldier, Henry Lawrence, who had been captured
betrayed Karagiannis and her husband to the authorities.
Fortunately, Karagiannis was able to maye aIl the soldiers
to new safe houses and the Italian authorities were not able
to prove anything against her. After seven ~onths she was
306
l As was the case with similar groups, Karagianni~ expanded
the aetivities of her organization te include espionage and
sabotage sinee by this time there were few Allied troops to
eare for. Using her earlier contacts and experienee in
clandestine work she was able to gain aecess to various Axis
agencies through individuals she had recruited. In
addition, she managed to get the services of àissatisfied
Italians as weIl as German anti-Nazi officers employed by
the various occupation authorities. 37 Thé latter proved
partieulaTly use fuI since they supplied her with the Italian
and German lists of eollaborators who were used by the Axis
seeurity services ta entrap unsuspecting individuals into
thinking they were being approached by representatives of
British intelligence organizations. The collaborators would
pretend to affer safe passage to the Middle East and those
who accepted were afterwards arrested. This was
specifically aimed at Greek officers in an effort to prevent
them from joining the Greek armed forces in Egypt and
Palestine or any of the resistance groups. The occupation
autharities by trapping them had a convenient excuse to
blackmail them or if they failed to cooperate they would be
thrown in prison. 38 In addition, she was able to warn the
l~leased but while in prison she gained valuable contacts
and learned a great deal more about clandestine work
(Zalokostas, Athens [no date), p. 27).
37. Papagiannis, Athens [no date], pp. 5-6.
38. Zalokostas, Athens [no date], pp. 29-30.
307
British that the German security services had smuggled a
1 team of Greek speaking Bulgarians ta Egypt with the purpose
of infiltrating the Greek armed forces in the Middle East as
weIl as the Allied intelligence services. 39
with the aid of these contacts, as well as with a network of
agents, Karagiannis was able ta provide considerable
information on Axis shipping, which resulted in the
destruction of several German and Italian ships.40 One of
her agents, Chris Jecchinis, was able ta get access ta the
naval facilities at the harbor of Salamis island and report
on German shipping. His uncle was a sanitary engineer and a
resident of the island. Using this contact, Jecchinis
arranged ta get a pass ta visit his uncle and shortly after
1 acquired a job delivering newspapers. with this caver,
Jecchinis was able to travel ta the island on a daily basis
and keep track of German ships and, in particular,
submarines. Through his daily visits Jecchinis collected
information on German naval activity on the island and his
efforts led to the destruction of several ships and
39. Five Bulgarians had reached Cairo with fake identity
papers posing as former Greek officers and thanks ta the
information provided by Karagiannis, three of them were
arrested (Zalokostas, Athens [no date), p. 30; Papagiannis,
Athens [no date), pp. 6-7).
40. Papagiannis, Athens [no date), pp. 6-7. She also
discovered that German soldiers on leave were obliged ta
visit the Parthenon and arranged with the caretakers of the
ancient temple to note the insignia of the troops; in this
manner she could report on the movements of German
divisions going through Athens (Zalokostas, Athens [no
l date), p. 29).
308
submarines. 41 Eventually, Jecchinis managed to smuggle a
camera and take photographs of the defence instillations
but, shortly after, Karagiannis ordered him to leave Athens
and join one of the British military missions in the
Mountains. Accorciing to Jecchinis, Karagiannis sent him
away because she was convinced that the Germans were closing
in on her organizatioll and she feared that if he was
arrested he would not be able to withstand the torture and
consequently divulge everything he knew. 42
In the summer of 1943, Karagiannis was instructed ta get in
touch with Dertilis, the commander of the Security
Battalions, the Greek forces organized by the puppet
governrnent of I. Rallis and armed by the Gerrnans. Rer
orders were to convince Dertilis that if the Allies
atternpted a landing in Greece to turn the security
Battalions against the Gerrnans. Dertjlis agreed on
condition that after the war his cooperation would be taken
into account by the Greek Government. 43
Unfortunately, her transrnitter had broken down and she sent
Dertilis' message through the Apollo organization. A few
41. Chris Jecchinis, Beyond Olyrnpus: The Thrillinq story of
the 'Train-busters' in Nazi-occupied Greece, London 1960,
pp. 31-32.
42. Jecchinis, London 1960, pp. 32-41.
43. Pdpagiannis, Athens [no date], pp. 7-8; Kotsis, Athens
1976, pp. 266-267.
309
days later, however, the Gestapo discovered Apollo's
1 transmitter and arrested sorne of its members. In the
process, they came across Karagiannis' message to Calro and
the corresponding reply. After a series of additional
arrests and interrogations, the Germans were able to close
in on Karagiannis and she was arrested by the SS on 11 July
1944. Despite considerable physical and psychological
torture, Karagiannis did not break down and thus was aLle to
save most of her fdmily and associates. On 7 Septembcr
1944, she along with sixty-five men and five women was
executed by machine gun fire. 44
In the beginning, the efforts of MI6, SOE and MI9 were
plagued with organizational difficulties and lack of
1 equipment, as well as trained operatives in the field and
competent officers with an expertise in secret work.
Slowly, however, contact was established with several
groups; in sorne cases MI6 was sought out by the groups
thernselves, and by the autumn of 1942 Greek espionage
networks were reporting on Axis military activity in Greece.
One of the more successful of these networks was organized
by Alexandros Levidis. Levidis was a pro-Venizelist naval
officer who was forced to leave the Greek navy in 1932. At
the beginning of the occupation, he was determined to carry
44. Papagiannis, Athens (no date], pp. 7-10. Tragically,
this was one of the last executions by the Germans in Athens
J (Kotsis, Athens 1975, p. 267-268).
310
on the war against the Germans and Italians but had no
contacts with the British and the Greek intelligence
services in the Middle East. His anly resort was to help
hide British saldiers and assist them in escaping from
Greece, not only ta participate in the war against the Axis
but aiso as he states:
Such an endeavor was not only a debt owed
to an ally, whose people had supported us, but if
successfuI, it would have been appreciated by
Great Britain and provided another reason for her
energetic support of Greece after the war. 45
He began with the assistance of several retired officers
such as himself and after raising money and acquiring safe
houses, started to callect British soldiers hiding out in
1 the homes of Greek families. The name of the organization
was Maleas and in a short time d~veloped a string of safe
houses as weIl as a considerable list of families with the
resources ta care for British soldiers. At first, everyone
was willing to help but as the occupation authorities
tightened their grip on the country and imposed a death
sentence for anyone hidinq Allied soldiers people became
less enthusiastic. Another important factor was the
scarcity of food and soaring priees, which made the feeding
of extra guests a considerable, if not impossible, burden on
the average Greek family. In time, Levidis and his friends,
as weIl as other organized groups, had to step in and take
45. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 16.
311
over the hiding and feeding of British soldiers from
1 families that no longer had the meallS to look after them.
For Levidis, the opportunity to play a greater role in tllC
underground came when he was contacted by a British agent in
October 1941. His activities had become known by the
intelligence services in the Middle East and an agent was
sent to help him organize an escape and intelligence
network. The agent, who used the name of Kriekoukias,
handed Levidis a letter from Noel Rees, head of the MI6
branch at smyrna. 46 The letter contained a list of families
who were hiding British soldiers and Rees asked Levidis if
he would be willing to help them escape to Turkey.
1 Rees, however, did not provide any financial support or any
suggestion as to how these men would be transported and on
which part of the Turkish coastline the y could disembark.
In addition, Rees inquired if Levidis was interested in
establishing an intelligence network to supply MI6 with
information on the Axis military and naval movements.
Again, according to Levidis, there was no support offered
for these activities. For his part, Levidis informed
Kriekoykias that he was willing to work for the Allied
intelligence services but he was apprehensive at the
haphazard manner with which the initial contact had taken
place and the fa ct that an MI6 agent would be carrying a
~ 46. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 16.
~
312
1ist of narnes and if ~aught would jeopardize dozens of
l lives. 47
A little later Levidis was contacted by a representative of
the Greek intelligence service in Cairo and received the
same offer from thern; once again he replied that he was
willing to do what he could, but requested the delivery of a
wireless radio as weIl as funds, weapons, etc. 48 In
November, Levidis received another letter this time from the
head of MI9 in Smyrna, Michael Parish, but unlike the
previous contact with British intelligence, the letter only
instructed him to get in touch with an agent named Trypanis.
This contact led Levidis to another British agent,
Lieutenant Colonel Macaskie 49 , who, in turn, brought him in
contact with a group called Daskalos set up by E. Tsellos
and Th. Koundouriotis. 50 Levidis was instructed by Macaskie
47. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 17.
48. A radio finally arrived a year later (Levidis, Athens
1975, p. 18).
49. It is not clear to which intelligence organization
Macaskie was attached. He was taken prisoner by the Germans
in the 1941 campaign in Greece, escaped to the Middle East
and had returned to Greece in the autumn of 1941. In
December, he was recaptured by the Italians and again
managed to escape. He was recaptured and escaped several
more times; tried in Athens and condemned to death but was
saved by the Italian armistice in 1943. He was hidden by
the Archbishop of Athens, returned to the Middle East and
parachuted into Greece in 1944. In 1947, Macaskie became
The Times correspondent in Athens (Woodhouse, Apple of
Discord, London 1948, p. 38, p. 232 note).
J 50. Epameinondas Tsellos was a retired office~ and had been
a minister in the government prior to the Metaxas
313
ta take over the information gathering part of that
1 organization and forward any relevant intelligence ta Smyrna
by whatever means possible, until the arrivaI of a wireless
set for which Macaskie would arrange once he returncd to the
Middle East. Before his departure, Macaskie gave Levidis
800,000 drachmas (approximately the equivalent of fort y
paunds) ta help with the expenses of his organization but
most of the money was actually used to pay for Mar.askie's
transportation. Unfortunately for Levidis, Macaskie was
captured by the Italians on the island of Kea, while
Koundouriotis was also arrested and Tsellos was forced ta
leave Greece because their names had been on Atkinson's
list. 51
dictatorship. He was a close associate of Kanellopoulos and
1 together they attempted to organize an espionage cclI in
Athens (Kanellopoulos, Athens 1964, pp. ))-)4). In October
1941, Tsellos made contact wlth Andreas Eleftheriou ~nd a
month later with Spyros Melios, both agents of MI6. He was
aiso to be contacted by John Atkinson but the latter was
arrested. Although Tsellos' name was also on Atklnson's
list it was misspelled when translated (instead of Tsellos
it read Gelo~) and he was able to avoid capture. After the
departure of Kanellopoulos, Tsellos remained the principle
link between the Committee of six Colonels and the Greek
Government-in-Exile. He attempted, along wlth ~nd in part
against Tsigantes, (see below) to organize a committee to
coordinate aIl resistance activity in Greece but the effort
ended in failure. He left Greece in arder ta report on the
situ~tion regarding the resistance and was to return with
new instructions concerning the coordination of the
resistance movement but remained in Cairo (Kotsls, Athens
1975, pp. 92-97). The espionage network that he had
organized was taken over by the Committee of six Colonels
and continued ta operate under the name of Orneras (llomer)
until liberation (Kanellopoulos, Athens 1964, p. 43 note).
51. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 19. Levidis was also
implicated since Atkinson carried a letter from sotiris
Zannas, who hau been a member of Maleas before being forced
1 to leave for the Middle East. The letter fortunately was
addressed to Alexander and it did not include a last name.
,
314
l Just before Christmas, Levidis was summoned to the Hotel
Plaza by the Consul of Finland at Konstantinople. 52 Levidis
was apprehensive because the hotel was under German control
and afraid that it may have been a trap. By this time,
however, the state of his organization was near collapse
from lack of funds and frorn low morale due to the failure of
establishing contact with the Middle East; Levidis had
little choice and decided to take a chance. At the hotel he
was quickly reassured because the Consul of Finland gave him
one hundred and thirty pounds and inforrned him that he will
soon receive instructions. 53
, A few days later Levidis, was contacted by another
representative of MI6 and told to turn over half the money
to an organization in Thessalonlki, Y.B.E. 54 and keep the
other for the expenses of his group. As a result, the
Maleas organization was able to increase its support of
The Italians assumed it was intended for Alexander Zannas,
the brother of sotiris (Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 21).
52. Unfortunately, Levidis does not offer any explanation as
to why the Finish council was in Athens. No doubt if the
council was cooperating with British intelligence or had
become an operative for a particular service he must have
found sorne pretext to visjt Athens.
53. The Consul of Finland was shortly afterwards arrested by
the Germans, while attempting to cross into Turkey from
Thrake (Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 22-23).
54. Yperaspistai Voreiou Ellados (Defenders of Northern
Greece), later renamed Panellinikos Apeleftherotiki
Organosis (PAO) Panhellenic Liberation Organization.
315
British soldiers in hiding and expand its espionage
1 activities. At the same time,this organization like many
others, also acted as a conduit to bring British and Greek
agents from the Middle East into Greece.
Levidis used sorne of the funds to purchase a small motor
boat to smuggle British soldiers to Turkey as weIl as to
send reports and receive supplies from the MI9 and MI6
stations in Izmir. Oddly enough, the Maleas organization
did not have a transmitter nor would it get one until much
later. 55 Contact by boat, however, provided Levidis with
thirty gold sovereigns per month which he used to maintain
his British guests and support the other activities of
Maleas. The amount was mode st but, comments Levidis, the
1 British kept the sums low on purpose; they were not so much
interested in maintaining the comfort of their soldiers in
Greece as they were in getting them out as quickly as
possible. 56
Despite the on-going link with the MI9 and MI6 stations in
Izmir, Levidis was not asked to provide any political
intelligence regarding the situation in Greece until the
summer of 1942. 57 His one foray jnto the area of armed
55. The Maleas organization established contact with Omeras,
another espionage network in Athens, and was able to use
their transmitter (Levidis, Athens 19/5, p. 31).
56. Levidis, Athens 1975, pp. 23-24.
1 57. In the S'lmmer of 1942, two Greek agents were sent to
gather intelligence on the political situation and Levidis
316
.,
'Ji
resistance was quickly discouraged, and he was told to
concentrate on the rescue of British soldiers. Levidis
writes that the MI9 and MI6 Stations in Izmir were not
interested in the organization of guerrilla bands, despite
the far~ that they were housed in the British consulate
building with the SOE station. His explanation is that MI9
and MI6, at least their representatives in Izmir, did not
wish to have the Maleas organization participate in any
activity that carne under the jurisdiction of another
intelligence agency regardless of any positive impact this
would have. 58
, The tendency towùrds specialization of intelligence activity
was further highlighted when, in October 1942, Levidis was
instructed to divide Maleas into two separate organizations.
Maleas 1, was to focuss on intelligence gathering and report
ta MI6, while the other, Maleas 2, was to continue with
getting individuals out of Greece and remain with MI9.
Levidis gave control of the first ta E. Balasakis, while he
continued to lead the escape operations. Shortly after
this, they received two radio transmitters and beqan to
function independently of each other. 59
(Athens 1975, p. 31) made arrangements for them to meet with
sorne of the Republican leaders.
58. Levidis, Athens 1975, pp. 29-30. Regardless of this,
Levidis came into contact with the Midas team, led by I.
Tsigantes, which arrived in Greece in August 1942 and
provided them with logistical support (Levidis, Athens 1975,
pp. 32-33).
59. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 35.
317
1 By January 1943, however, the Italian security service was
closing in on Levidis and he decided to make his escape to
Turkey. On 25 January he arrived in Turkey and spent the
next several days being debriefed by representatives of MI9
and MI6. Several days later, Levidis was transported to
Cairo and made liaison officer between the Greek and British
intelligence services. 60 In this new capacity, Levidis carne
face to face with the political rpalities that governcd ~he
relations between the Greek Government-in-Exile and the
British Intelligence services with regards to the resistance
in Greece. Levidis assumed that his new position would give
him the opportunity to have sorne influence over the
coordination of the Greek resistance groups and sorne say in
1 the direction of the British military missions in Greece. 61
He quickly discovered, however, that the Anglo-Greek
Committee, which in theory was supposed to coordinate and
direct aIl resistance activity, was in practice left in the
dark concerning the Greek resistance groups and the British
military missions. In fact, the role of the Angla-Greek
Committee was relegated to providing general information ta
the press, supplied te it by the British intelligence
services, essentially for propaganda purposes. Despite aIl
his efforts Levidis could not get any details concerning the
60. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 49 and p. 52.
1 61. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 52.
318
tasks of the British military missions nor any specifie
information about the guerrilla bands in the Greek
mountains. The Anglo-Greek Committee was only informed
about operations in general terms and always after the
fact. 62
In addition, Levidis carne to the conclusion that the
personnel of the British intelligence services and embassy
officiaIs in Cairo, dealing with Greek affairs, were divided
between those who supported the left-wing and Republican
groups and those who favored the continuation of the Greek
monarchy after liberation. The justification for support of
ELAS, uc~ording to Levidis, was originally based on the
notion tha~ the Communists were more likely to organize
resistance, and later it was accepted that since ELAS
controlled the regions which dominated the Thessaloniki-
Athens communications link, the British had little choice
but to support th~ Left. These views were reinforced by the
reports of Edmund Myers, the head of the British Military
Mission in the Greek mountains, and prevailed, Levidis
concludes, until the rnutinies of the Greek armed forces in
the Middle East. Afterwards, the attitude of the
intelligence servIces, under considerable pressure from the
Foreign Office, changed and they began ta dawn-play the role
of EAM-ELAS in the resistance while increasing their support
of EDES. Accarding ta Levidis, this was too Iate, since
62. Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 53.
319
ELAS, with the support of the British had become 50 powertul
1 that it ignored the directions of Allied Beadquarters Middle
East and pursued its own policies; these had little in
common with the war effort and were directed at gaining
control of Greece after liberation. 63
These perceptions of the policies of the British
intelligence services were echoed by Rigas Rigopoulos,
another leader of a major espionage network. As was the
case with Levidis, Rigopoulos was determined to participate
in the war against the Axis after the occupation of Greece.
He began his clandestine activities in the fall of 1941 and
after considerable efforts, with several of his friends he
set up an espionage ring with the purpose of collecting
1 intelligence on Axis shipping. The choice of this
particular type of intelligence was determined partly by the
fact that Rigopoulos assurned that naval information would be
most useful to the Allies and partly from convenience, since
most of his contacts and associates were employed in the
maritime industry and port facilities of Piraeus. 64
The main problem faced by Rigopoulos and his group was how
to make contact with the British intelligence services in
Cairo. For several months he made discreet inquiries and
63. Levidis, Athens 1975, pp. 56-57.
64. Regas D. Rigopoulos, Mystikos Polernos, EJ_lada- M.
Anatoli: Giro apo to Istoriko tis Yperesias 5-165, Athens
1 1973, p. 55.
320
finally met Kostas Perrikos, the leader of PEAN, another of
1
t the many leaders of the underground groups that had forrned
in the autumn of 1941. 65 perrikos did not have a
transmitter but allegedly had contact with a guerri11a group
in the mountains ~hat maintained radio link with one of the
British intelligence ser~ices in the Middle East. Through
this means Rigopoulos was able to pass information to
perrikos who, in turn, rnanaged to get it to the guerri1la
group in the rnountains and from there to the Middle East. 66
The arrangement was not satisfactory since it caused
considerable delay in transmitting information. Rigopoulos
continued to look for someone who could get his group a
radio transmitter or who could assist him in getting to the
Middle East in order to acquire one directly from the
British.
In the spring of 1942, Rigopoulos, through rnutual friends,
was able to acquire the services of Nikos Paliatseas, a
wireless operator. 67 Paliatseas had been a memb~r of an
espionage ring that was uncovered by the German security
service but had rnanaged to escape and also salvage the
65. PEAN published an underground newspaper and later
engaged in sabotage which included the destruction of the
headquarters of ESPO, the Greek Nazi party.
66. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 55.
67. Paliatseas was a wireless operator in the Greek ai~
force before the capitulation of the Greek arrned forces in
•
April 1941. He decided to rernain in Atnens and volunteered
to work for the British (Zaousis, Athens 1987, p. 80).
321
transmitter. with the help of Paliatseas, Rigopoulos was
1 able to establish radio contact with Cairo and shortly after
met with an SOE courier sent to organize a better system of
communications with the new espionage ]roup, now namcd:
"Service 5-165".68 The courier, Menegatos, informed
Rigopoulos that there were two motor boats available for
carrying supplies and bulky reports as weIl as a certain
amount of financiai support which Rigopouios turned down.
In addition, Menegatos warned Rigopoulos ta be extremely
careful in dealing with the British intelligence services
since there was considerable rivalry between them and they
went to great lengths ta withhold information from each
other. In the event that Rigopoulos had to escape ta
Turkey, he was to trust no one he met from the British or
1 Greek intelligence services until he made contact with a
British colonel code named: "Hadzis", the head of the
intelligence organization in Konstantinople responsible for
Service 5-165. 69
Rigopoulos and his associates quickly established an
effective espionage organization in Greece. Thanks to a
network of contacts in the offices of the Axis controlled
Greek merchant marine and the port facilities of Piraeus,
Service 5-165 was able to notify the British in Cairo at
least twenty-four hours before the departure of an Axis ship
68. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, pp. 71-73.
1 69. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, pp. 76-77.
322
or convoy, as weIl as provide details of the cargo and the
ultimate destination. 70 Over the next year the information
network of Service 5-165 extended to other Greek ports and
also included intelligence on German fortifications as weIl
as troop movements in and out of Greece. 71 During the
course of its existence, Service 5-165 was responsible for
the sinking of fifty-five Axis ships, in addition to the
valuable intelligence it provided to the British
intelligence services. 72 By the Spring of 1943, however,
the activities of Rigopoulos' group had been compromised
with the arrest of Manegatos, the SOE courier. Despite the
very careful security measures that Rigopoulos had adopted,
several members of his organization were quickly picked up
by the Gestapo and with the Rrrest of Paliatseas, the radio
1 operator, it became imperative for Rigopoulos to leave
Greece. After several abortive attempts Rigopoulos finally
found passage on a motor boat that was taking a group to
Turkey. Rigopoulos upon his arrivaI in Izmir, (July 1943),
requested from the British consulate to meet the British
70. One of the princip?l agents of Service 5-165 was
Alexandros Kaires, who served as a civilian employee in the
offices of the German transportation command attached to the
Headquarters of Southern Greece (Kaufmannischer Angestelltet
am Leitender Pionierfuhrer beim Befehlshaber
Sudgriechenland). In this capacity, Kaires was able to
acquire considerable intelligence on Axis shipping as weIl
on transportation, including the signal communications code
used by German airplanes and ships to identify each other
(Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 84 and p. 138; Zaousis, Athens
1987, Part B, pp. 79-80).
71. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 106.
72. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 125.
323
colonel with the code name of "Hadzis". He was informed
,
j that there was no one by that name and that it had been u5cd
as a means of confusing the Axis security services.
Instead, he was told that he had to report to British
intelligence in Cairo (SOE) and was given passage as weIl as
an escort to Egypt. 73
In Cairo, after Rigopoulos was debriefed, he was informed
that there was no possibility of returning to Greece and
that Service 5-165 had to be closed down. According to his
post-war account of the history of Service 5--165, Rigopoulos
contends that the SOE refused to allow him to return to
Greece because he and his associates were opposed to EAM-
ELAs. 74 Because of his outstanding service and his family
l connections, Rigopoulos was temporarily employed as a
personal assistant to the Greek premier, Tsouderos, during
which he had the opportunity to observe first hand the
relations between the Greek Government-in-Exile and the SOE.
At best, writes Rigopoulos, this was an uneasy relationship
and Tsouderos was powerless to influence the policies of the
Special Operations Executive towards the Greek resistance.
In fact, Tsouderos went to great lengths to hide from the
SOE that Rigopoulos, who was considered to be hostile to
that organization, was working for the Greek Premier. 75 The
73. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p_ 240.
74. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, pp. 236-240.
1 75. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 245. After the death of
Metaxas in January 1941, the SOE in Athens believed that
324
pro-left and pro-republican po1icies of the SOE, according
to Rigopoulos and as Levidis had discovered a few months
earlier, were based on the premise that revolutionary
organizations because of their experience in functioning
underground were best equipped for resistance activity.76
Another aspect, however, involved the personal biases o( the
men responsible for supplying the SOE with information about
the situation in Greece.
The MI6 and MI9 stations in Smyrna (Izmir) were able to get
sorne idea of the situation in Greece through the debriefing
of Allied soldiers who had managed to escape from Greece.
since the majority of these men were given refuge and
assisted in leaving Greece by groups and individuals
deterrnined ta continue fighting, they were a potential
source of recruits for the British intelligence
organizations in Cairo. For the SOE, the main source of
information on occupied Greece was Prometheus, and after the
fall of 1941, direct contact was established between SOE in
Izmir and Greece by G. Alexatos (code name Odysseus) .77
this was a good opportunity to broaden the Greek Government
but met with strong objections from the King. After the
suicide of Koryzis, SOE agents attempted ta maneuver General
Alexander Mazarakis into the position of premier. According
to Clogg ("The Special operations Executive in Greece",
Hanover and London 1981, p. 112), Tsouderos became aware of
the SOE intrigues and this was the underlying motive for his
resentment of the Special operations Executive during the
occupation.
76. Rigopoulos, Athens 1973, p. 245.
( 77. Gerassimos Alexatos, although a key figure in the
development of espionage, sabotage and guerrilla activity
325
Alexatos made several visits to occupied Greece at the
request of David Pawson, the head of the SOE in Izmir. His
job was to maintain contact with the espionage and sabotage
groups working for the SOE in Greece and supply them with
funds as weIl as equipment and weapons.
It was thanks to Alexatos that Prometheus II received a cod~
book and he was also responsible for establishing contact
for the SOE with EAM. 78 An interesting aspect to this was
that both Pawson and Alexatos were sympathetic to EAM as
well as to the Republican groups but quite hostile to the
Greek King and his Government. 79 To what extent this
organizations in Greece remains a mystery. It is not clear
when he was recruited by the SOE but it was before the
occupation (Clogg, "The Special operations Executive in
Greece", p. 113). According to Fleischer (Athens 1988, pp.
240-241), Alexatos was a smuggler with considerable
experience getting in and out of Greece as weIl as other
countries in the Middle East. Between 1941-1942 he brought
into Greece funds and instructions for several groups
working for different British intelligence services. It is
evident from one source (Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 29) that
Alexatos was sympathetic to the left and of considerable
assistance ta both EAM and the KKE. In August 1943, Andreas
Tsimas travelled to Cairo as part of a guerrilla delegation
and used the opportunity to look for Alexatos but ta no
avail. He concluded that Alexatos was terminated
(Fleischer, Athens 198, p. 241 note 75). Odysseus,
however, survived and the reason for his disapoearance was
that he resumed his career in srnuggling which continued
after the war (Michael Ward, Greek Assignrnents: 1943 SOE -
1948 UNSCOB, (private publication) Athens 1990, pp. 132-
133) •
78. According ta the Report on SOE Activities in Greece and
the Islands of the Aegean SEA, "Appendix VIII" the SOE
maintained daily contact with the political headquarters of
EAM, EDES and EKKA.
79. Clogg, "The Special Operations Executive in Greece", p.
l 112; Levidis, Athens 1975, p. 29. Levidis also cornments
that Pawson, as weIl as most of the members of Izmir
326
influenced the SOE headquarters in cairo is not certain but,
.... as the experience of Levidis and Rigopoulos had indicated,
Pawson was not interested in reports that cast EAM in a
un favorable light. 80
According to G.H.N. Seton Watson, the information that both
Pawson and Pirie, the SOE Greek expert in Cairo, received
from Greece indicated that: " •.. preparation for resistance
or acts of resistance, were the work of the Left, of
Venizelists or of Communists.".81 To sorne extent, the
information collected and passed on was selective and
occasionally colored by the bias of the individual SOE
officer. It can also be argued that an equal number of
reports from Greece warned of the danger posed by EAM, and
described the resistance activity of organizations that were
prepared to accept the Governrnent-in-Exile and deaJ. with the
constitutional problem after the war. Another problem,
however, ernerged as the flew of information increased
drarnatically after 1943. Durin~ the last year of the
occupation, the amount of information received from Greece
was overwhelming, and by October 1944 there were over three
station, were syrnpathetic to the Greek Left and supporters
of the British Labor party, although he points eut that this
did not rnean that they were favorable to communism.
80. In September 1943 Pawson was taken prisoner during the
British operation in the Dodekanese (Clogg, "The special
Operations Executive in Greece", p. 107).
81. G.H.N. Seaton Watson, "Afterward", British Pelicy
towards wartime Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece, ed.
Phyllis Auty and Richard Clogg, London 1975, p. 289.
--------------------.----.------------------------------------------------------------------~
327
hundred and fifty bags of unscreened files at SOE
headquarters in Cairo. These files represented intelligence
fr.:,.n:
a) SignaIs from the field which at the peak period
in 1944 reached approximately 400 per month.
b) Written reports sent out from Greece by the
BLO's and agents.
c) Verbal reports from the BLO's and agents
exfiltrated to Cairo.
d) Captured enemy documents, plans, drawings and
photographs. 82
Although the primary function of the SOE was guerrilla
warfare and subversion, it had quickly developed an
intelligence profile in Greece supplementing and even
surpassing the efforts of MI6. As the SOE sources of
information expanded, General Headquarters Middle East made
new demands on the SOE for intelligence and at its request
established networks in the:
a) Peloponnese, five missions were deployed
covering the entire peninsula with espionage
organizations in aIl the major towns such as
Corinth and Patras.
b) Athens, five espionage networks were
established of which one, Apollo, employed over
eight hundred agents.
c) Salonica, five missions were set up but
they did not produce significant results until
August 1944.
d) Ionian Islands, three missions were organized
which became active in the spring of 1944.
e) Crete, during the course of the occupation
between five to eight missions operated on the
island from as early as 1942.
f) Aegean Islands, eight missions were organized
82. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix X".
328
but becarne active in early 1944. 83
The sheer volume of information reaching Cairo,
consequently, necessitated filtering and a system of
classification which established the following priorities
for intelligence:
1) Military, rnovernents and strength of Axis
formations and defences.
2) Political, types of organizations and their
leaders as weIl as the strength of opinion of
their followers.
3) Naval, ship rnovernents and harbor activities.
4) Air, nurnber, type of aireraft, arrivaIs and
departures, airdrornes and other types of air
force installations.
5) Social and Economic, conditions of living,
currents of public opinion, cost of living and
the state of the econorny.
6) Counter-intelligence, information on the Axis
security services and on enemy agents sent to
the Middle East. 84
Under these conditions there was considerable scope for
subjective selection of the intelligence gathered by the
agent in the field or by the SOE Cairo headquarters staff in
Caire. Compounding these difficulties was the lack of
training in intelligence york by SOE personnel, both in the
field and at the Cairo headquarters. According to the
Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean:
83. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, " Appendix X".
84. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
( the Aegean Sea, "Appendix X".
329
Officers and agents sent into the field were
trained in subversive work but not in intelligence
and with very few exceptions had ta improvis~ und
draw on their imagination in the many cases where
they were asked by GHQ to set up intelligence
networks. Such information when received in cairo
was invariably passed on to ISLD who were
responsible for its distribution ta all
departments concerned. 85
Accordingly, intelligence from Greece went through three
stages of selection: a) by the agent in the field, b) at 80E
headquarters in Cairo, and c) by MI6 before the information
was forwarded ta other agencies and departments.
Information regarding Axis troop movements, instillations,
defences and shipping was fairly straight forward, but
intelligence on political sUbjects, ta a great extent, was
filtered according to the interests of the agent, departrnent
or organization in Cairo. This type of int8lligence assumed
greater significance as the occupation was nearing its end
and the British were making plans ta return ta the Greek
mainland. consequently, apart from espionage on the Axis,
the information received from the missions became
increasingly important ta SIME which was able to build up a
fairly accurate picture of the situation and personalities
in Greece. By the beginning of 1944, SIME attached one of
its officers ta the SOE headquarters in cairo ~Yhose dut Y was
ta collect and collate aIl relevant intelligence from the
field and according to the anonymous SOE report, at least in
85. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
l _the Aegean Sea, "Appendix X".
330
one region of Greece, the comprehensive nature of the
intelligence accumulated reach such proportions that: "It is
no overstatement to say that in the case of Crete the
information available at SOE headquarters covered every
inhabitant who mattered in the iSland.".86
In contrast ta the experience of the SOE with Greek agents
who opposed the Greek monarchy and the Government-in-Exile,
the few operatives of MI6 who are known were either
sympathetic to King George Il or not concerned about the
constitutional issue. As was the case with the SOE,
potential Greek agents on their own initiative made contact
with the Secret Intelligence Service. Part of the reason
they made contact with MI6 instead of the SOE was
accidentaI, and partly because Greek Royalists, and those
not opposed to the dictatorship, had developed closer ties
with representatives of the British Foreign Office, such as
consuls and ambassadors, and the se led them to MI6.
A good example of this is the espionage organization KODROS,
which was set up by Panagiotis Lykourezos and reported to
the MI6 stations in Istanbul and Cairo. Lykourezos was a
career naval officer who left the navy in the 1930's to
pursue his interests in trade and shipping. In 1939, he was
the r~presentative of the German controlled Scoda Works in
86. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix X".
)3 l
Athens but in the fall of 1940 he was reactivated in the
Greek navy. Lykourezos came from a royalist background with
good family connections to the ruling elite. At the same
time, his wife's family had close ties with the leading
republican circles in Athens. After the occupation of
Greece, Lykourezos decided to participate in resistance
activity but could not bring himself to join EAM or any of
the other anti-monarchist organizations that were forming in
the fall-winter of 1941-1942. 87
Ultimately, he decided to form his own espionage network and
continue the struggle. 88 He was confident that with his
contacts in the shipping industry and with Scoda he was in a
position to provide valuable assistance to the Allies. The
main problem, as faced by many others, was how to get in
contact with the British intelligence services.
Fortunately, for Lykourezos his wife, Rosa-Liza, had
relatives in switzerland and using the pretext that their
child required medical attention not available in Athens, he
managed to get her a pass to travel to Geneva in June 1942.
In Geneva, Rosa-Liza was able, with the help of the Greek
Ambassador, to get in touch with the he ad of the MI6
87. Panagiotis Lykourezos, Mystiki Organosis Kodros:
Chroniko apo tin Ethniki Andistasi, Athens n.d., pp. 52-54.
88. Lykourezos (Athens n.d., p. 34) had the opportunity of
escaping from Greece with the fleet, but then realized that
there were more than enough good naval officers available
and his services would be more valuable if he stayed in
Athens.
332
station, and after several weeks of training and debriefing
she returned to Athens with crystals for a radio transmitter
and a code book. 89
within a matter of weeks, Lykourezos recruited several
former Greek officers and organized his network which he
named KODROS. Although lacking any experience in
intelligence work he quickly adapted to a clandestine
existence. He organized KODROS into foùr departments, and
for security reasons, each totally independent of the other.
The first department, military intelligence, was in turn,
sub-divided into four sections which collected information
on the Axis transportation, military, naval and air force
uni ts. The second department, cor'centrated on pol i tical
intelligence while the third, W~~ organized to coordinate,
prioritize and transmit the information collected. The
fourth, was responsible for the procurement of safe houses
which accommodated the radio opera tors and their
transmitters. 90
Between the fall of 1942 to October 1944, the KODROS network
developed into an effective espionage organization which
provided the British with considerable information on German
89. Lykourezos, Athens n.d., pp. 44-48. The radio
transmitter was brought to Athens in October by the owner of
one of the many small fishing boats that travelled back and
forth secretly between Greece and the Middle East (Ibid. p.
64) •
90. Lykourezos, Athens n.d., pp. 78-80.
)33
and Italian shipping in Greece. The highlight of KODROS'
efforts came on 6 October 1943 when Lykourezos was able to
in~orm British naval intelligence, through MI6, that a
German convoy had departed Piraeus and was heading for the
island of Leros in the Dodekanese archipelago, which had
just been liberated by the British. 91 Although Leros was
ultimately re-captured by the Germans, on this occasion the
British, thanks to the information provided by KODROS, were
able to sink the German ships.92
Although a great deal of the information that organizations
such as KODROS provided was also acquired thraugh the Enigma
decrypts, the espionage groups in Greece not only served to
confirm intelligence already available but occasionally
filled the gap when Enigma intelligence was not forthcoming.
In this instance Enigma had not given advance notice of the
convoy's departure from Piraeus. According ta Hinsley, part
of the British decision to hold on to Leros and Samos, after
the failure to retain some of the other islands of the
91. Lykourezos acquired this information from General
Vendiris who, in turn, was given the information by a Greek
ofticer. The officer, was passing by a print shop when
someone tossed him a small packed which contained a
declaration to the inhabitants of Leros that the Germans had
come to liberate them from the British. It seems that in
preparation of the attack against Leros the Germans had
taken over a Greek print shop and kept the employees
confined until the convoy had departed. One of them,
however, recognized the Greek otficer and threw towards him
the small package containing the information (Lykourezos,
Athens n.d., pp. 96-97).
92. Ly::ourezos, Athens n.d., pp. 100-104; Konstas, Athens
1955, p. 415.
334
Dodekanese, was influenced by the destruction of the German
convoy that was headed for Lero:.;. 93 The KODROS group was
congratulated by the Commander-in-Chief of the British
Mediterranean Fleet and after the war Lykourezos was thanked
personally by AdmiraI cunningham. 94
KODROS aiso served as the main link between the Greek
political leaders in Athens and the British and Greek
Government-in-Exile in Cairo and London. Lykourezos,
however, was convinced that his reports on the political
situation, regarding the resistance in Greece, were largely
ignored. The situation changed by the end of 1943 and
Lykourezos was now asked to provide information on the
organization of EAM-ELAS and EDES as weIl as maps of the
areas under their control. 95
Perhaps the most remarkable of aIl the clandestine networks
organized in Greece, during the occupation, was set up by
Ioannis Peltekis, code name Apollo.96 Peltekis had served
as an officer in the Greek army during the Albanian
campaign. 97 After the occupation he was recruited by the
93. Hinsley, Vol . .3, New York 1984, p. 126.
94. Lykourezos, Athens n.d., pp. 104-105; Konstas, Athens
1955, p. 415.
95. Lykourezos, Athens n.d., p. 122.
96. Apollo was the name of the organization but the radio
code name was Yvonne ("Report on Organization Yvonne",
Peltekis File No. l, Benaki Museum).
97. "Confidential Report", 29 June 1945, Peltekis File No.
335
Prometheus organization and in January 1943 acted as the
contact between Woodhouse and Prometheus II, when the former
went to Athens to meet with the Six Colonels and
representatives of the EAM Central Committee. 9B According
to Thdnases Hadzis, a mernber of the Central Committee of
EAM, Peltekis served as an informaI liaison between
Prometheus and the National Liberation Front. 99 Almost at
the same time, Peltekis joined another clandestine group,
Ethniki Drasis, formed in the first year of the occupation.
It was not uncommon for those who participated in
clandestine activities in the cities to belong to more than
one group. One important draw back, was that most of these
networks were formed by individuals who knew each other and
the danger of arrest was very high if one organization was
compromised which also included members of another group.
Ethniki Drasis, however, could not survive the political
divisions of its members and shortly after, one faction led
by Peltekis, left the organization to form a center-left
group.IOO Unfortunately, the Peltekis group was broken up
by the Axis security services and Peltekis was forced to
l, Benaki Museum.
98. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, pp. 58-60.
99. Hadzis, Athens 1982, Vol. l, p. 373.
100. Ethniki Drasis was formed by a staunch Royalist,
Siphnaios. Despite this it also attracted Republicans and
even Greek leftists (Zaousis, Athens 1987, Meros B (1), p.
65) .
336
flee to the Middle East. In Cairo, he was recruited by the
SOE and agreed to return to Greece in order to set up a
network of agents, as weIl as attempt to rescue Prometheus
II who had been arrested by the Germans. 101
In February, he arrived by boat on the island of Euboia and
with the help of local fishermen made his way to Piraeus.
Peltekis accomplished the escape of Prometheus by bribing a
clerk, ta place before the German Commandant an order for
his release. The Commandant habitually would sign a pile of
pape~s placed before him each day without paying too mu ch
attention ta what was included in these documents. By the
time the Germans realized what had happened, Peltekis had
smuggl~d Prometheus II out of Greece to the Middle East. 102
(
Within two months, Peltekis organized one of the largest
espionage and sabotage groups in Greece. At the height of
its operations, the Apollo network employed over five
hundred and fifty agents in either sabotage or intelligence
activities. The organization was divided into six
departments: administration, liaison, transportation,
intelligence, underground press, and sabotage. These, in
turn, were sub-divided into individual sections responsible
for specifie tasks. The administration department included:
101. Confidential Report", 29 June 1945, Peltekis File No.
l, p. 67, Benaki r1useum.
102. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 60.
337
the secretariat, codes, communicatjons, support personnel
and security. The intelligence department was responsible
for espionage work, which was undertaken by separate
sections specializing in: military, naval, air and police
information. The press department produced any necessary
documentation required, while transportation looked after
smuggling individuals in and out of Greece. The sabotage
unit was organized into five teams and coordinated, as were
aIl the other sections, by the liaison department. 103
During the length of its operational existence (February
1943 - April 1945), Apollo was responsible for the sabotage
of 58 ships (approximately 56,000 tons and over one hundred
German casualties): the destruction of several ammunition
dumps and at least 27 locomotives, as well as one complete
train carrying oil and ammunition. 104 In addition to
smuggling British and American pilot~ out of Greece, the
Apollo organization managed to arrange for the escape of a
considerable number of senior Italian officers after the
Italian surrender, and ( ~ the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires
in the spring of 1944.
However, it was in espionage that Apollo achieved its
greatest success. Peltekis managed ta acquire the
103. "Report on Organizdtion Yvonne" Force 133, Peltekis
File No. l, p. 156, Benaki Museum.
104. "Confidential Report", Peltekis File No. l, p. 67a,
Benaki Museum.
338
dimensions of a new German secret weapon which turned out to
be the V2 rocket and was also able to supply the SOE
information on German progress with atomic energy.105
However, the large size of the organization made it
susceptible to detection by the German security services.
In the spring of 1944, Peltekis had returned to Cairo for a
short visit but in his absence sorne sections of Apollo were
penetrated and several of his key agents arrested.
The Apollo organization attempted to maintain the identity
and activities of its members secret from one another, but
it was inevitable that some continued to maintain social as
weIl as professionai contact. Part of the difficulty lay
with the fact that the agents of Apollo were recruited by
Peltekis who, in turn, had to rely on the contacts of his
members to acquire additional personnel. Under the
circurnstances, most individuals could only recornmend those
they knew weIl and after they were recruited continued to
maintain their eariier relationships. In March 1944, the
head of one of the naval intelligence sections, Alexandros
Ioannidis, was arrested by the SS. His downfall came as a
result of his friendship with Andreas Diamandouros, a half
Greek half Austrian who was employed as an agent and
translator by the Germans. Oiamandouros became aware of
Ioannidis' activities and turned him over to the SS. After
105. IAEA, vol. 2, pp. 30-31; Woodhouse, Something Ventured,
London 1982, p. 80.
---------------------------------------------------------,
his arrest Ioannidis broke down and supplied the Germans
with the names of other section leaders, many of whom could
not stand the torture inflicted by the SS and provided
additional information to the Germans. 106 In this manner,
the SS and Gestapo were able to round up a few more of
Apollo's agents and continue a process of relentless
interrogations and arrests until September of 1944 when they
managed to capture seventy-one members of the organization.
Upon his return to Athens in June, Peltekis reorganized
Apollo and sent to the Middle East any of his agents who
could be exposed as a result of the earlier arrests, but his
organization had already suffered considerable damage. l07
However, the greatest threat to Peltekis and Apollo did not
corne from the German securi~y services but from the conflict
between the SOE and the Foreign Office. In the summer of
1944, malicious rumors generated by members of the Greek
Government-in-Exile accused Peltekis of using sorne of the
funds supplied by SO'i: to support EArl and the KKE .108 The
Foreign Office seized upon this in arder te launch another
attack against the SOE. On 16 August 1944, a telegram from
the Charge d'Affaires, of the British Embassy in Cairo, to
106. "Chronologiki Seira ton SyJ l ipsion: Efthina i ton
Synergaton kai Symperasrnata", Peltekis File Nn. 1, p. 78,
Benaki Museum.
107. Report on Organization Yvonne", Peltekis File No. l, p.
156 , Benaki Museum.
108. "Confidential Report", Peltekis File No. l, Benaki
Museum, pp. 67a - 67b.
340
the Foreign Office reported that the SOE had ~ent 5,000
sovereigns to Apollo and he had turned over sorne of these
funds to EAM. The telegram further charged that Peltekis
had even approachpd Papandreou, the Greek premier in 1944,
and suggested that he and M. Svolos forro an EAM government.
The British Embassy also repor~ed that Papandreou was
bitterly complaining that although the SOE was sending such
large amounts of funds to EAM, very little support in
comparison, was going to the Greek Government. 109 Finally,
the Charge d'Affaires accused the SOE of mounting sabotage
operations of doubtful usefulness which, in view of the near
end af the occupation of Greece, led to unnecessary
reprisaIs. 110 Churchill who happened to see the Foreign
Office telegram, describing the charges against Pelteki3 by
the Greek Government, was indignant and ordered an official
inquiry.111 Peltekis was forced to return to Caira and face
charges of supporting the Greek Communists. Lord Selborne,
the he ad of the SOE, wrote to Churchill and explained that
the Apollo organization had provided exemplarily service and
that the 5,000 sovereigns were a routine payment to the
organization for four months arrears of funds. He also
reminded Churchill of sorne of the accomplishments of Apollo
and informed him that the organization had received a
109. FO 371/43691 74200.
110. FO 371/43691 74200.
111. Clogg, "The Special Operations executive in Greece", p.
105; FO 371/43691 74200.
341
commendation from the Admiralty.ll~ Oespite this, a court
of inquiry was set up to review the entire affaira Ouring
the course of the inquiry, the British Embassy declined to
give evidence and Peltekis was not only exonerated but was
awarded the OSO.113
The consequences for the Apollo organization were
devastating. Peltekis was absent from Athens at a critical
time, since in September the German security services picked
up a few more key mernbers of his group. This was followed
by the arrest of seventy-one of his agents of whom fifty-
nine were shot. 114 Although the intensification of the
hostilities between the Foreign Office and the SOE will be
examined in the next chapter, it is interesting to note that
Peltekls was one of many who were sirnply caught in the
middle of a war of jurisdiction and policy between the
officiaIs of Special Operations Executive and Foreign
112. FO 371/43691 74200.
113. "Confidential Report", Peltekis File No. 1, Benaki
Museum, p. 67b; Woodhouse, Sornething Ventured, London 1982,
p. 80. Ward, Athens 1990, pp. 92-93. Clogg ("The Special
Operations Executive in Greece", p. 104) adds that Peltekis
was cross-exarnined together with a large nurnber of British
and Greek witnesses but the court was not perrnitted to calI
up witnesses from the Greek GovernmenL-in-Exile. Rex
Leeper, the Britisn Ambassador to the Greek Government,
refused for hirnself or any of his staff to testify.
'14. Clogg, "The Special Operations Executlve in Greece", p.
105. According to Woodhouse (Something Ventured, London
1982, p. 80), despite being cleared of any charges by the
court of inquiry, Peltekis continued to be viewed with
suspicion by the Foreign Office and the Greek Governrnent-in-
Exile.
342
Office. The SOE, however, had as a matter of operational
policy supported the KKE and EAM. As was indicated above,
the Cairo SOE had dispatched Gerassirnos Alexatos to Athens
in the spring of 1942 with funds and radio transmitters,
part of which he turned over to EDES and the rest to EAM.
Richard Clogg states that the Greek Government-in-Exile and
the British Embassy in cairo accused Peltekis of being a
double agent or working for EAM. He dismisses these
accusations and, at the same time, cites evidence 115 that
the Apollo group was, on the contrary, providing infJrmation
unfavorable to EAM. 116 Considering the earlier sutport of
EAM by the SOE, it is not improbable that Peltekis ~hile
continuing to forward political intelligence, was acting as
one of the main contacts between the National Liberation
Front and the Special Operations Executive in Cairo. It was
unfortunate for him that he was singled out as the main
culprit in what rnay have been the continuation of SOE policy
in 1944.
Despite the set backs suffered by the Apollo organization in
the early fall of 1944, it was able to play a major role in
the counter-scorch operations implemented by the SOE. These
operations had been planned in February 1944 and a mission
of three SOE officers was dispatched to Attika near the
115. FO 371/43691, R 12844 in Clogg, "The Special Operations
Executive in Greece, p. 105 note 7.
116. Clogg, "The Special Operations Executive in Greece",
pp. 103-105.
343
Marathon Dam. The purpose of the mission was to prevent the
destruction of the dam in the aftermath of a German
withdrawal. With the cooperation of the Greek engineers
employed by the GE'rmans to work on the dam, one of the SOE
agents, undercover as a wood contractor, was infiltrated
inside the installation and was able to provide SOE
headquarters in Cairo with detailed reports on the German
sabotage plans as weIl as the type of detonators being usüd
on the demolition charges. As a result of this information,
SOE Cairo arranged for the construction of exact dummy
replicas which were to he substituted at an opportune
moment. Unfortunately, in June, the Germans carried out one
of their periodic drives in the Attika area in response to
recent guerrilla activity, and quite by chance stumbled upon
the SOE base. They managed to capture the wireless operator
as weIl as a considerable amount of stores and equipment; as
a result, the remainder of the SOE team was forced to
abandon their mission. 117 This episode, on a small scale,
represents the difficulties involved in attempting to
conduct both guerrilla warfare as weIl as espionage and
sabotage under the control of one organization, in this case
the SOE. On the other hand, these difficulties were further
compounded when the coordination required the cooperation of
more than one British intelligence agency.
117. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix VIII".
344
In August, the SOE once again attempted to organize a
counter-scorch operation, particularly since by the end of
the summer the Germans were giving every indication of an
immanent withdrawal. Accordingly, aIl SOE missions in the
field were given special instructions on how to deal with
the problem of German sabotage in their respective areas.
The Athens - Piraeus area, which included one third of the
population of Greece and accounted for eighty percent of the
major public and industrial targets, was given special
priority and made the responsibility of the Apollo
organization. AlI secret groups were brought under the
control of Apollo and a committee was set up to supervise
counter-scorch operations and allocate tasks to the
different organizations. In turn, aIl these activities
were coordinated with the local Greek authorities by Lt.
Col. Sheppard, who had arrived in Athens in connection with
Operation Mana. 118
Despite the serious losses suffered during this period by
the Apollo organization, it undertook the most important
operations in preventing German sabotage of Greek
instillations. In September, members of Apollo destroyed
eight hundred and fort y cases of explosives intended for
demolitions in the Athens - Piraeus area. Throughout
118. Mana was the operational name for the return to Greece
of the Greek Government-in-Exile with the British army and
plans for organization of relief. Report on SOE Activities
in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea, "Appendix
VIII".
345
september, the organization provided SOE Cairo with complete
and detailed information of German intentions, intelligence
on favorable places for airborne landings, the location of
sea and land minefields, as weIl as information on defenccs
and daily meteorological bulletins. In October, the Apollo
group undertook ta prevent the Germans from employing block-
ships to deny the Allies the use of Pireaus, by sinking
these ships across the entrances of the harbor. On 10
October, sorne of Apollo's agents were able to place charges
on a large floating dock and capsize the dock as weIl as a
destroyer within it in shallow water, preventing the Germans
from towing them near the entrance of the harbor. On Il
October an Apollo team also managed to sink the heavily
guarded 88 John Knudsen, thus depriving the Germans of their
largest block-ship barely twenty-four hours before its
intended use. 119
The counter-scorch operations undertaken by the Apollo
organization were the last acts of one of the most
remarkable organizations in occupied Greece. During the
course of its existence, the Apollo network earned the
respect not only of the SOE but of the NID organization in
Cairo which concluded that:
The repor~s originated by this organization were
almost invariably accu rate and considerable
reliance came to be pldced upon them. They were
119. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix VIII".
346
95% (accurate) about shipping movements and were
very valuable in assessing the enemy's intentions
.
i covering the evacuation of rnost of Crete and the
Greek rnainland. 120
To this appreciation of Apollo, SOE headquarters in London
added: " ... movements of ships were notified almost daily.
In several cases: the composition, course and speed of
convoys have been signaled even before they departed.".121
From the beginning of 1942 to 1943, the number of British
and Greek operatives in Athens had increased considerably.
Many of these were the graduates of the SOE school in
Palestine. The school had originally been set up in 1940 on
Mount Carmel and was listed as Military E3tablishment
102. 122 In September 1941, it received the first fifty
Greek recruits to be trained for subversive and espionage
operations in Greece. This was at the request of the newly
created Hellenic Intelligence Service in cairo (N.I.P.S.)
which was organized in early August 1941. The Greek secret
service established formaI links with the British
intelligence and security services particularly with ISLD,
the SIS coyer organization in the Middle East. 123
120. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, Appendix VIII".
121. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix VIII".
122. Bickham Sweet-Escott, Baker Street Irregular, London
1965, p. 171.
123. Konstas, Athens 1955, p. 186.
347
The head of the newly formed Hellenic Intelligence service,
Captain Panagiotis Konstas, before embarking on any
ambitious operations, decided to have a core of trained
agents and thus had sent fifty volunteers to the special
school at Mount Carmel. Secondly, he dispatched two teams
to Greece in order to survey the political situation and the
disposition of enemy forces, especially their counter-
intelligence services. 124 On 19 October 1941, the first
team, code name Hellas and composed entirely of Greek
personnel, reached Athens by the overland and sea route from
cairo to Izmir and then to Attika. The Second team, code
name Fleshpots, made up of Greek and British personnel
arrived in Athens by submarine on the evening of the 13
October. The principal tasks of these missions were to
acquire information on the following:
il) The attitude of the Greek political leaders
towards tne King and the constitutional
issue.
b) Gather intellig~nce concerning the activities
of the liberal and anti-monarvhical forces
and in particular on their leaders.
c) Attempt ta gauge the attitude of the population
towards the 4th of August regime, the puppet
government and the King and the Government-
in-Exile.
d) Information on any underground organizations
with emphasis on those that were loyal to the
King.
e) The economic situation in Greece.
f) To determine the quantity and exact location of
military supplies that had been hidden by the
Greek army before the occupation.
g) Information on the police and gendarmerie.
124. Konstas, Athens 1955, p. 195.
348
h) To make a ~~st of potential targets for
sabotage. 1
The teams returned to Cairo on the 20th and 24th of November
respectively. The information they brought back was
surnrnarized by Captain Konstas, the head of the Hellenic
Intelligence Service, in a mernorandum to King George II. On
the whole, according to Konstas, these reports painted a
bleak picture for the rnonarchy and the Greek-Government-in
Exile:
a) Almost aIl the political leadership in Greece,
including the pro-royalist populists, were
opposed to the monarchy and in particular to
George II. They blamed the King for the
Metaxas dictatorship, the exclusion of the
Venizelists officers from the Albanian
front and considered the King responsible for
( the defeat of Greece by the Axis.
b) The population resented the regime of
Tsolakoglou but found the government of
Tsouderos equally unacceptable. They
considered the Greek-Governrnent-in-Exile a
continuation of the dictatorship because it
contained personalities that had been closely
affiliated with Metaxas.
c) The activities of the Greek National Socialist
Party were essentially focussed on
disserninating propaganda against the King and
blaming him and Metaxas for Greece siding with
the British instead of the victorious Axis.
The other political parties abstained from any
collaboration with the occupation forces or
with the Tsolakoglou government.
d) The Tsolakoglou regime was divided into three
factions: the first was led by Logothetopoulos,
whose members believed in an ultirnate Axis
victory and advocated complete cooperation with
the Germans; the serond, was led by General
Bakos, was made up of senior Greek officers who
accepted that a certain degree of cooperation
with the Axis was necessary in order to
( 125. Konstas, Athens 1955, pp. 195-196.
349
preserve as much of Greece as possible, since
they also assumed that the Germans would win
the war; the third, was led by Tsolakoglou
himself who essentially attempted to
reconcile the policies and ambitions of the
other two.
e) The Greek economy had essentially collapsed.
Furthermore, the country was facing such severe
shortages of food that a famine was not only
inevitable but would devastate the population
of Athens and other cities.
f) The situation of the military in Greece was
very poor. AlI officers and men of the Greek
armed forces were disarmed, with the exception
of the Guarà of Honour at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier who along with the police
forces and gendarmerie were permitted to carry
side arroSe However, considerable weapons had
been hidden in central and northern Greec~ but
there was no interest on the part of Greek
officers to lead a guerrilla war in the
mountains. In addition to the hardships the
military had to endure under the occupation,
the senior officers felt that Greece had done
her dut Y by righting in 1940-1941.
Furthermore, the Tsolakoglou government
attempts to maintain good relations with these
by providing them with employment and food. The
younger ones, however, are eager to participate
in a resistance or make their way to the Middle
East to fight with the forces of the Greek
Government-in-Exile, despite the orders of the
puppet government which has decreed that any
officer, civil servant or anyone who leaves
Greece forfeits his pension, property while
his family will be punished.
g) The strength of Axis forces in Greece are
estimated at 230,000-260,000; of these 160,000
are Italian, 30,000-40,00 Bulgarian and 40,000-
50,000 German. In addition, the Germans are
transporting reinforcements to the ~frica Corps
from Greece and using Athenian hospitals ana
clinics for the treatment of their wounded
from the North African and Russian fronts.
h) The propaganda activity of the Axis is having
little impact on the Greek population and even
those few who supported the new order have lost
faith in the Axis as result of the Bulgarian
massacres in Macedonia and Thrake and German
atrocities in Krete. 126
126. Konstas, Athens 1955, pp. 200-209.
350
In addition to the memorandum, Konstas included a set of
recommendations not only to enhance the image of the King
and the government but to gain control of the ernerging
underground in Athens and corresponding resistance movement
in Greece. He strongly suggested that the governrnent set up
a committee in Athens composed of Greek officers trained in
subversion and sabotage in the Middle East. Those selected
had to be loyal to the King and that such a cornmittee
undertake the organization of aIl resistance in occupied
Greece. He recornrnended that aIl BBC radio broadcasts to
Greece be monitored not only by the British services but
also by agencies of the Greek Governrnent-in-Exile. That a
consistent information campaign be irnplernented to advocate
support for the monarchy and a determined effort be made to
make known to the international press the atrocities
comrnitted by the BUlgarians and Germans. He aiso
ernphasized, that the British authorities in cairo take steps
to restrain one of their intelligence services 127 from
meddling in internaI Greek affairs, since he foresaw that
this could cause division arnongst the Greeks in the mainland
as weIl as those in the Middle East. Finally, Konstas urged
the Greek Governrnent-in-Exile to send another tearn to
Athens, in order to monitor the situation in Greece and
provide additional information on the poiiticai and
127. The reference here is to one branch of the Special
( Operations Executive in Cairo.
351
resistance organizations. According to Konstas, there was
no reply to the memorandum or any action taken on the
recommendations he had made. 128
The Greek Government-in-Exile, however, made one attempt at
coordinating the underground organizations and resistance
groups but that ended in failure. The effort collapsed
partly from the carelessness of the officer in charge of the
operation, but also from the desire of the SOE to establish
exclusive control over the Greek resistance. The Greek
Government-in-Exile had established contact, through MI6,
with a group of Greek officers known as the Committee of six
Colonels, who were planning ta coordinate resistance and
sabotage activity in Greece. The committee, formed by
General spiliotopoulos, had contacts with most of the senior
Greek officers who had fought in the Albanian campaign as
weIl as with P. Kanellopoulos.1 29
In the spring of 1942, Lhe Committee had, through the
efforts of E. Tsellos, a close associate of Kanellopoulos,
obtained radio transmitters and established contact with the
Greek Government-in-Exile. 130 Kanellopoulos, who had by
128. Konstas, Athens 1955, pp. 209-213.
129. The committee included colonels: Th. Tsakalotos, K,
Spiliotopou1os, Eust. Lioses, st. Kitrilakis, K. Dovas, and
Philippidis (Th. Tsakalotos, 40 Chronia stratiotis tis
Ellados: Istorikai Anamneseis pas Ekerdisame tous Agonas
1940- 1949, Tomos A, Athens 1960, p. 369.
130. Tsakalotos, Athens 1960, p. 371.
352
this time joined the government, believed that the Committee
( of Six Colonels could provi~e the ~est means of coordinating
resistance and guerrilla warfare in Greece and proposed the
creation of an Action Committee based in Athens and led by
the Colonels. At about this time (July 1942), the SOE was
planning a sabotage mission to block the Isthmus of Korinth
and destroy a bridge in Lamia. Although it was not common
practice to notify the Greek Government-in-Exile of their
plans, regarding operations in Greece, the SOE this time
required the use of a Greek officer and informed
Kanellopoulos of the proposed mission. 131
Kanellopoulos not only agreed to loan the SOE a Greek
officer, Ioannis Tsigantes, but saw this as an opportunity
to establish an organization to coordinate the resistance
under the direct control of the Greek Government-in-Exile.
The Anglo-Greek Committee accepted the proposaI of
Kanellopoulos and agreed that the Tsigantes mission would
get in touch with the colonels in order to set them up as
the coordinating committee for the resistance. 132
Kanellopoulos had serious concerns over the isoldtion ot the
Greek Government-in-Exile. He confided in his diary that
the British intelligence services controlled aIl access to
the underground groups in Greece and were basing their
131. Kanellopoulos, Imeroloqio, 8/5/1943.
132. FO 371/37201 R. 74220: Kanellopoulos, Imerologio,
8/5/1943.
353
estimates of the situation there upon reports from Greek and
British agents. 133 The Greek Government, consequently, had
no independent means of ascertaining what was going on in
Greece with regards to resistance and the development of
secret organizations. 134 He believed that by cooperating
with the SOE, by agreeing to the use of a Greek officer for
the proposed mission, he could establish a relationship of
trust between the Greek Government and the British
intelligence services. 135 Three months later,
Kanellopoulos' efforts had bore fruit and the Anglo-Greek
Committee was set up to oversee and direct aIl intelligence
and guerrilla warfare operations in Greece. For several
months, the committee was kept informed about most
intelligence and resistance ~ctivity in Greece, including
the establishment of a British Military Mission in the Greek
mountains 136 , but after the resignation of Kanellopoulos
from the Greek Government, the effectiveness of the
committee diminished and it became a propaganda outlet for
the SOE. 137
133. Kanellopoulos, Imerologio, 8/5/1943.
134. Kanellopoulos (Imerologio, 9/5/1943) also adds that
information from the intelligence groups in Greece although
transmitted by Greek agents was received and interpreted by
SOE personnel in Cairo, an arrangement that he hope to
change in the near future.
135. Kanellopoulos, Imerologio, 8/5/1943.
136. See Chapter 7.
137. See Chapter 7 .
..
'
354
The te am assembled by the Cairo SOE included: I. Tsigantes,
who was placed in charge of the operation and eleven other
officers and enlisted men trained for sabotage and
espionage. Its code name was MIDAS 614. The mission was
divided into several groups, each with a specifie task to
accomplish in Greece. One team was to block the Isthmus of
Korinth, another to destroy a bridge near Lamia and another
was co bring supplies to an alleged resistance group in the
southern Peloponnese called Ph.E.T.E (Philiki Etairia
Stratou Eleftheroseos), who the SOE believed had over 3,000
members. A fourth team was to organize the transport of
Allied troops that had evaded capture, while the rest of the
mission along with Tsigantes was to go to Athens and: assist
in the creation of a center of resistance coordination;
f. provide information concerning the food crisis, on the Axis
forces and their intelligence and counter-intellige~ce
services; organize sabotage and other subversive
activities. 138
The operation was ta be a combined effort by the SOE, MI6,
MI5 and the Hellenic Intelligence Service. Although aIl the
members of the team were Greek, they represented different
intelligence agencies stationed in the Middle East. 139 They
were transported to the Peloponnese aboard the submarine
138. GAK, "Apostoli Gama", No. 4; Kotsis, Athens 1976, pp.
28-30.
139. GAK, "Apostoli Gama", No. 4: Kotsis, Athens 1976, p.
28.
355
Proteus and reached Mani on 1 August 1942. There they hid
in a cave for ten days while one member of the team,
Regakos, attempted to make contact with the Pil.E.T.E. only
to discover that it did not existe His efforts to find the
phantom organization, as weIl as attempting to secure a
means of transportation to Athens, alerted the Italian
authorities and they only managed to leave the region just
ahead of the Italian security forces. On the 12th of
August, Tsigantes divided his team into two sections and
each made its way to Piraeus by separate boats. Upon
reaching Piraeus they travelled to Athens individually or in
groups of two or three. 140 Tsigantes had decided to trust
the owner of the boat dnd left behind one of the radio
transmitters and most of the explosives. AlI the mernbers of
MIDAS 614 found accommodation in the homes of Ïamily or
friends, but they had to keep on changing locations to avoid
detection by the occupation authorities.
The situation, however, started to go wrong almost from the
beginning of their presence in Athens. The boat upon which
Tsigantes had left a good portion of their supplies was
seized by the Italidns and to make matters worse the second
group, along with the only other radio, failed to make
contact. However, eight days later the boat arrived along
with the rest of the MIDAS team. Tsigantes, consequently,
began to make contact with old associates and aiso started
140. Kotsis, Athens 1976, pp. 32-37.
356
to set up groups with the purpose of collecting intelligence
on the Axis forces in Greece. But his main preoccupation
was to organize a center to coordinate and direct the
resistance.
The first two priorities for MIDAS 614, however, were to
destroy the bridge at Karyon near Lamja (central Thessalia)
and disrupt the only rail link between Athens and
Thessaloniki, as weIl as block the Korinth Canal. Tsigantes
dispatched Kotsis to survey the bridge, but after close
examination the latter reported that the bridge was too
narrow and weIl defended; its destruction would only result
in a minimal delay since repairs could be affected quickly.
Kotsis, on the other hand, reported that the Gorgopotamos
( viaduct presented a much better target since it was 215
meters in length and supported by six piers, four of stone
but two made of steel. Tsigantes agreed with Kotsis and
recommended to SOE headquarters in Cairo the destruction of
the Gorgopotamos viaduct and requested supplies of
appropriate demolition explosives. In the meantime, he
organized, with the help of D. Psaros, a team of former
Greek officers who would undertake to attack the garrison of
the bridge while the explosives were set. 141 However, this
is as far as MIDAS got in organizing the destruction of the
bridge, as well as coordinate the resistance movement. Very
shortly, the SOE dispatched a British team to Greece which
( 141. Kotsis, Athens 1976, p. 56-57.
357
undertook the destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct and
took over the effort to direct the development of guerrilla
warfare. 142
From this point on the plans for both the direction of the
underground in Athens and the organization of resistance, as
envisaged by the Greek Government-in-Exile and the 50E, went
in opposite directions. Kanellopoulos wanted to establish
an organization in Athens that would coordinate aIl major
sabotage activity in Greece and control the creation and
deployment of guerrilla bands. From the perspective of
Kanellopoulos, this essentially had been one of the key
objectives of Tsigantes' mission; to set up such an
organization made up of Greek officers loyal to the Greek
Government-in-Exile and moderate in political outlook.
A significant act of sabotage such as the destruction of a
major communications link, like the Gorgopotamos viaduct,
would have given Kanellopoulos' prospective organization
tremendous political and moral authority in occupied Greece.
Instead, the credit for this accomplishment went to the two
organizations whose policies went contrary not only to the
142. The death of Tsigantes also rneant that the first
attempt to block the Korinth Canal, code named Thurgoland,
did not materialize. A second SOE team, cornrnanded by Lt.
Cdr. Cumberledge, code narned Locksmith, rnanaged to penetra te
the canal and succeeded in laying sorne mines, which had been
especially designed for this operation, but they failed to
explode. Unfortunately, Cumberledge and three rnembers of
his team were arrested upon their return to the island of
Paros. The four were then brought to Athens and later sent
to Germany where they were shot in May 1945.
358
Greek Government-in-Exile but to the British Foreign Office.
Indeed, the arrivaI of the Harling Mission represents a
critical turning point of the evolution of the resistance
movement in Greeee, sinee its very sueeess proved that a
guerrilla war was not only possible but credible.
(
)~9
Chapter 7
Guerrilla Warfare operations 1942-1944
The success of the Harling Mission in destroying the
Gorgopotamos viaduct acted as a catalyst for the expansion
of the Greek guerrilla bands that had been formed in the
mountains in the summer of 1942. The cooperation of British
commandos with ELAS and EDES elevated an obscure Greek
Communist, Aris Veloukhiotis, and a cashiered Greek colonel,
Napoleon Zervas, into the status of partisan leaùers who
enjoyed the support of the British Government and the
Allies, thus enabling both of them ta expand their forces at
the expense of other groups that were acceptable to the
Greek Government-in-Exile. Furthermore, it conferred on
bath of their organizations a degree of legitimacy which was
used to a much greater effect by EAM-ELAS thdn by EDES.
Although the participation of the SOE in the Greek guerrilla
movement did not by itself enable the Greek Left and
Republican forces ta gain control of the resistance it
provided these organizations with the initial stimulus.
More significantly, the establishment of the British
Military Mission (BMM) represented a major shift of SOE
policy regarding covert operations in Greece. Despite the
1
360
success achieved by the espionage and sabotage networks it
was decided to give aIl out support to guerrilln warfare.
According to the anonymous author of the Report on SOE
Activi~ies in GreeCE and the Islands of the Aegean Sea,
guerrilla warfare was to take precedence over the
intelligence groups: " ... even to the extent of prejudicing
the activities of the secret groups.". The anonymous writer
further comments: "In view of the results achieved by the
secret groups despite such lack of support and help, can it
be considcred that a different policy would have yielded
higher dividends?".l Indeed the clandestine organizations
in Greece contributed significantly ta the Allied war effort
without creating the political problems and entanglements
. which would result from the guerrilla movement.
~
.
The SOE, however was set up to instigate sabotage and
guerrilla warfare and not espionage, the latter activity was
the prerogative of the SIS and it regarded any intrusion
into this field with considerable hostility and suspicion.
There was also the fear by SIS and the JIC that SOE's
sabotage activities could alert the enemy and endanger the
collection of intelligence by agents of the Secret
Intelligence Service. In March 1942, these fears were given
greater urgency when, despite the objections of the head of
SIS, the SOE acquired its own communications and codes.
1. Report ~n SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean Sea, "General Remarks", p. 23.
361
Prior to this date the SOE had to pass its information
through the SIS communication network which had enabled it
to monitor the activities of the SOE in the ficld. 2
As a new organization, however, the SOE was more vulnerable
to attack than the much older SIS which enjoyed the sympathy
and support of the Foreign Office, the JIC and the Service
intelligence branches. Furthermore, in a period (1940-1942)
of limited resources and manpower the SOE had to bcgin to
fulfill its mandate or face absorption by the SIS. For
example, in an effort to end the bickering between the two
organizations the Joint Planners and the JIC issued a report
in May which recommended that the SIS and SOE be amalgamated
into a joint service under the direction of the Chiefs of
Staff. 3 The recommendation was not adopted and both
organizations made sorne effort to improve relations between
themselves but it served notice that unless the SOE began to
bring results there would have been little reason to
maintain its existence. Providing intelligence, especially
in regions where the SIS ha~ lost its pre-war networks was
useful, despite the friction it caused with the Special
Intelligence Service, but it was not a substitute for
subversion and particularly guerrilla warfare, the raison d'
etre of the SOE The possibilities offered by the Greek
resistance organizations developing in the mountains and the
2. Hinsley, New York 1981, Vol. 2, p. 16.
3. Hinsley, New York 1981, Vol. 2, p. 14.
362
partisans in Yugoslavia provided the SOB with an opportunity
to fulfill its raIe as the "Fourth Arro".
It is within this context that the SOE shifted its focus
from intelligence and sabotage to providing much greater
support for ELAS and EDES. For these organizations
cooperation wlth the SOE enabled them to capitalize on their
part in the Gorsopotamos operation, in what was billed as
the tirst major aG~ of resistance in occupied Europe, and
later to become recognized as Aliied [orees. This
recognition, also fostered by the establishment of the
Harling team as a permanent military mission in the Greek
mountains, implied British acceptance of organizations which
opposed the Greek Governrnent-in-Exile and the monarchy. As
was indicated in the previous chapter the SOE was quite well
informed about the emerging resistance organizations in
Greece and had shown a clear bias towards groups that were
hostile to the Greek Government-in-Exile for reasons already
discussed. Consequently, the end result of the expansion of
EAM-ELAS and EDES not only deprived needed resources from
the underground groups but divided the Greek guerrilla
movement into two hostile camps which in the auturnn of 1943
led to a full scale civil war.
The sequence of events, however, which led to this outcome
began with the Gorgopotamos operation. Rernarkably both
{ Myers and Woodhouse, the key figures of the Harling team,
----------- ... --- -- - - .. - - ---------
J6J
have stated that when they parachuted into Greece the y had
no knowledge whatsoever of Lhe political situation regarding
the resistance organizations. According to the conventional
explanation the Harling Mission was not briefed before
departure and besides, with the exception of Woodhouse and
one other member, the entire team was to be evacuated after
the destruction of the viaduct. However the SOE
organization in cairo was divided into separate and very
secret compartments and each had no idea of what the other
was doing. This was the rEsult of the first major
reorganization of the SOE from country sections into
distinct departments which left operations under the control
of professional soldiers from GR and cut off f~om the rest
of the SOE. The other departments included the political
directorate staffed by civilians who handled agents in the
field and who had developed expert knowledge on the Balkans.
Bickham Sweet-Escott contends that the two directorates
rarely spoke to each other and that is why none of the Greek
experts were asked to brief Myers and Woodhouse. 4
In the case of Tsigantes and the Harling Mission it is
4. Bickham Sweet-Escott, "SOE in the Balkans" 1 p. 18. The
SOE in Cairo reverted back to country sections in the fall
of 1942 but it was in the rniddle of reorgdnization when the
Harling Mission was sent to Greece. Another factor in the
frosty relations between the two directorates was the
disaster of the Atkinson mission at Antiparos. Although
implernented by officers from GR, it had the affect of
disrupting intelligence operations under the control of the
civilian rnembers of the SOE (Sir John stevens, British
Policy towards wartirne Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece,
London 1975, pp. 216-217).
364
conceivable, although not certain, that each was handled by
a different SOE departrnent and that the one responsible for
the Harling team, the operations Directorate, was ill
informed about the situation in Greece. According to
Woodhouse:
Our briefing in cairo was more haphazard than our
equipping. SOE was a strange organization, whose
only consistent feature was t"",t it was
drastically purged every August. The purge for
1942 had just been completed. Rusturn Buildings
contained rnany sections, sorne of which knew a
great deal about the Balkans, sorne full of
intelligence, sorne expert in clandestine
operations, but security was so intense that they
seldom spoke to each other.
Many years later l learned that there were experts
in SOE who were well-informed about the left-wing
resistance in Greece: the Communist Party of
Greece (KKE), the National Liberation Front (EAM) ,
the National Popular Liberation Army (ELAS), and
other names and initials were aIl familiar to
them. But l never met those experts, and learned
nothing about EAM, ELAS or the KKE until l
encountered them myself a few weeks later. 5
Woodhouse's protestations of innocence, however, are
contradicted by his own account. According to his
autobiography, he went to great lengths to verify that the
destruction of the ùorgopotamos viaduct was a legitimate
requirement of Allied policy. For this purpose he met with
General de Guingand, Montgomery's Chief of Staff, who
confirmed that the Harling Mission was part of British
strategy and later he met with Kanellopoulos, the Deputy
Prime Minister of the Greek Government, to ensure that the
5. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 28.
Jb5
latter was aware of what the British were doing in Greece. 6
Woodhouse does not explain why he, a junior officer in the
British army, felt it necessary to inform a representativc
of the Greek Government of SOE plans in Greece. It also
betrays a far more intimate knowledge of Greek affairs and
individuals than Woodhouse otherwise intimidates.
Another important consideration, is that what was known
about the situation in Greece by the Operations Directorate
of the Cairo SOE, regarding the organization of guerrilla
bands, was based on information from Prometheus 7 and in the
fall of 1942 by Colonel Bakirdzis. The latter had just
escaped from Athens and had made his way to Cairo.
Woodhouse adds that Bakirdzis: " ... supplied SOE with
extraordinary information about the resistance, sorne of
which was allowed to be published in the press What
was extraordinary about it was that most of it was entirely
imaginary.".8 Yet according to Myers and Woodhouse it was
upon the recommendation of Prometheus II that the British
6. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 30.
7. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean Sea, Appendix III, "Greek Situation", p. 60.
According to George Taylor (British policy towards Wartime
Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece, London 1975, p. 219),
Most of what the Operations Directorate knew about the
situation Greece came from Prometheus and this had
considerable influence upon SOE headquarters in Cairo.
Although the political section of the SOE had amassed
considerable intelligence about Greek organizations and
individuals, this informatio.l was not distributed to other
departments and to headquarters.
8. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 24.
366
te am was dispatched to Greeee. 9 Aeeording to Myers, on 4
September 1942 the SOE had informed Prometheus II that:
... General Alexander, Commander-in-Chief, Middle
East Forces, considered it vital to destroy the
railway line between Salonica and Athens,
inquiring if any of the bands of andartes with
which he "'as in contact in the mountains would
blow up the Papadia viaduct. Prometheus was told
that we were prepared to drop the necessary
explosives on to the nearest band in the Mount
Giona area. He was to inforrn us quickly if he
considered this job feasible.
On 21st September ~he reply was reeeived. This
stated that in order to carry out successful
sabotage of any of the viaducts in the Giona area
the local andartes would require the assistance of
a party of British parachutist, including a least
two sabotage experts with the necessary
explosives, which would have to be dropped by
night between 28th and 3rd Octoher. Sorne patriots
under a lawyer called Sepheriades would be waiting
for them near Giona. 10
( 9. Myers, Greek Entanglement, Gloucester 1985, p. 18:
Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, pp. 24-25.
10. It is not clear from Myers (Greek Entanglement,
Gloucester 1985, pp. 17-19) who exactly was responsible for
the plan to disrupt rail communications between Thessaloniki
and Athens. Woodhouse, in his first account of the Greek
resistance (Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 99; passim).
only makes indirect references to the Harling Operation.
In his second study (The struggle for Greece, 1941-1949,
London 1976, p. 26) he simply states that the purpose of the
mission was to support the British advance from El Alamein.
In his autobiography, something Ventured (London 1982, p.
22), Woodhouse states that the operation was a special
request by the Commander-in-Chief, General Alexander l and
that it was particularly important to the SOE since this was
the first time it had been asked to mount a specifie
operation in the Balkans. There is no reference in
Alexander's memoirs (Field-Marshal Earl Alexander of Tunis,
The Alexander Memoirs 1940-1945, London 1962) for such a
request. It should also be kept in mind that disrupting
Axis communications between North Africa and Greece was
nothing new and that one of the primary tasks of MIDAS 614
was to block the Korinth Canal and destroy the Karyon bridge
near Lamia in order to cut the rail link between
Thessaloniki and Athens.
3G7
Neither woodhouse nor Myers make any reference to the MIDAS
mission nor to EAM-ELAS, despite the fact that their first
contact was to be with Tsigantes' associates in addition to
Sepheriades, the representative of Prometheus II. Richard
Clogg, in his analysis of the relations between the Foreign
Office and the SOE has demonstrated that not only both
organizations were aware ot EAM-ELAS but that the Foreign
Office was not particuiarly concerned by EAM's left-wing
credentials or its connection to the Greek Communist
Party. Il The absence of references to EAM-ELAS and the KKB
in the briefing of the Harling Mission, Clogg attributes to
the organizational difficulties of the SOE in Cairo. 12
Another important element to the situation was the arrivaI
of Colonel Keeble as the Chief of Staff to Lord Glenconnor,
the new director of SOE Cairo. Keeble is described as a man
of extraordinary energy who very quickly established direct
control over aIl SOE operations in the Balkans. 13
Consequently, the shift of control of operations in Greece
from Tsigantes to Myers and Woodhouse may have been a result
of Keeble's efforts to keep matters in British hands and, by
~xtension, under his direct supervision. Certainly the
11. Clogg, "Pearls From swine", pp. 171-173.
12. Clogg, "Pearls from Swine", p. 171.
13. According to Bickham Sweet-Escott (Baker street
Irreqular, London 1965, p. 170), Keeble by October 1943 had
established eighty different missions in the Balkans.
368
destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct enabled Keeble to
claim the lion's share of the credit and use it to expand
the SOE as weIl as lia personal empire". 14 Keeble also
maintained that he reported directly to London, concerning
SOE operations, and did not tolerate any interference from
either Headquarters Middle East or the Foreign Office
representatives in cairo. 15
Underlying these considerations, was the concept accepted by
the SOE planners that revolutionary forces, represented in
Greece by Communist and Republican groups were best suited
for guerrilla warfare and subversive activities. certain
events in Greece during the first year of the occupation had
( given considerable credence to this theory. The arrest of
Atkinson, and his subsequent revelations about the
underground forming in Athens, eliminated from the scene aIl
those who not only would have provided credible leadership
for the resistance but were prepared to accept the political
status guo, at least until after liberation. This left the
underground in the hands of men and women who had little
political influence and since most of the party leaders
refused to participate in a resistance movement, it gave the
left-wing organizations the opportunity to fill the vacuum
and establish a high profile in opposing the Axis. As a
14. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 29.
( 15. Bickham Sweet-Escott, Baker street Irreqular, London
1965, p. 170.
369
result, by the fall of 1942 it appeared to the SOE planners
in cairo that their assumptions had been correct since the
resistance organizations which had formed in Greece and with
which they had contact were either left-wing or Republican
in political orientation.
On the basis of these factors SOE Cairo decided to send a
British team to implement the first major sabotage action in
Greece and do it in conjunction with the Republican
guerrilla band of Zervas. Accordingly, Tsigantes, in
response to his request for additional supplies of
explosives, was informed to wait for an airplane drop on one
of three possible dates: 15, 16 or 17th of September in the
area of Giona (southern Thessalia). Tsigantes entrusted the
mission to Andreas Metalas, one of Psaros' men, but on
neither occasion was there any sign of a British plane. On
1 October Metalas gave the agreed signal but instead of
supplies a team of SOE personnel landed by parachute. 16 When
Metalas inquired about the explosive charges to block the
Korinth Canal, he assumed that this was the purpose of the
British team, Woodhouse had no idea what the man was talking
about. 17 He informed Metalas that they were expecting two
16. Kotsis, Athens 1975, p. 59.
17. Woodhouse (Something Ventured, London 1982, pp. 32-33;
Struggle for Greece, London 1976, p. 26; Apple of Discord,
London 1948, passim) does not directly refer to his first
discussion with Metalas. He only mentions meeting a young
Greek 0fficer who belonged to the organization of Psaros.
Myers (Greek Entanglement, Goucester 1985, pp. 42-43),
mentions that the Woodhouse team had come across "an
independent agent of ours" who was very disappointed that
370
other teams te join them and fired signal flares to make
contact with them but to no avail. Metalas with the help of
sorne of the local villagers hid the British party in a cave
while ~ search was made for the rest of their supplies which
had been dropped separately.1B
Chris Woodhouse, the second in command of the Harling
Mission, expected to meet Sepheriadis, the representative of
Prometheus II, but he was not present. 19 However as he was
unable to rnake radio contact with Cairo so he instructed
Metalas to go back to Athens and transmit a message through
Tsigantes' set. 20 A second SOE tearn, led by Edmund Myers,
the commander of the mission, was to land further north with
the purpose of meeting with Zervas' band but was dropped in
the wrong place while the third team was forced to turn back
and only joined the Harling Mission at the end of october. 21
Woodhouse's group joined up with Myers more than a week
later but neither team was able to find Zervas or make radio
instead of the supplies he was expecting, to destroy the
Korinth Canal, he found the British team. Zaousis (Athens
1987, p. 128) who discussed the episode with Marinos, the
only Greek mernber of the Harling Mission, states that the
latter assured him that neither Woodhouse nor Myers had any
idea of any cooperation with the Tsigantes team. Zaousis'
conclusion is that something had go ne wrong between
Tsigantes and the British intelligence services.
18. Kotsis, Athens 1975, pp. 60-61; Woodhouse, Something
Ventured, London 1982, p. 32.
19. Woodhouse, Sornething Ventured, London 1982, p. 29.
20. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 33.
i. 2l. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, pp . 40-41.
371
contact with Cairo.
The objective of the Harling Mission was to destroy one of
the main bridges in southern Thessalia and thus disrupt the
Thessaloniki - Athens rail link. The operation was ta
coincide with the British breakthrough at El Alamein and
disrupt the supplies reaching the Africa Corps through
Piraeus. After the mission was accomplished, the entire
team was to be evacuated by submarine, with the exception of
Woodhouse and Marinos, the only Greek member of the team,
who were to remain behind and act as liaison between SOE
Cairo and EDES. What exactly was Woodhouse to accomplish in
Greece, in addition to serving as liaison between Zervas and
SOE Cairo, is nat clear. According to his own account, he
was planning to jain the SAS when he was suddenly asked if
he wished to be dropped by parachute in occupied Greece. 22
It took Woodhouse over five weeks to locate Zervas and along
the way he heard about ELAS which had given refuge to the
third SOE team upon its return to Greece on 30 October. On
10 November Woodhouse finally reached Zervas' headquarters
and two days later they set out to join Myers and undertake
the destruction of the viaduct. 23 On the return journey,
they came across Aris Veloukhiotis who also agreed to jain
in the operation despite the fact that, according to
22. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 29.
23. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, pp. 40-41.
372
Woodhouse, EAM did not permit ELAS to engage in any full
scale confrontations with the enerny.24
Eight days later, and after almost two months of delays, the
Harling team with the assistance of EDES and ELAS destroyed
the Gorgopotamos Viaduct on the evening of 25 November 1942.
Unfortunately, the last act of the Battle of El Alamein had
begun a month earlier on the evening of the 23-24 October.
By 7 November the Africa Corps was in full retreat and on
the 9th the Allies successfully invaded French North Africa.
A week and one half later the 8th Army had pushed the
Gerrnans almost six hundred miles west and on the 23rd of
Novernber Montgomery halted his advance in order to regroup
his forces. The Gorgopotarnos operation, consequently, had
little impact upon the war in North Africa. Weeks before
the Harling team destroyed the viaduct, Rommel's supplies
had been arriving to Africa from Italy and Sicily.25 The
destruction of Gorgopotamos, however, provided excellent
propaganda material for the Allies who used the success of
this operation to demonstrate that the resistance was
fighting back in occupied Europe. It also elevated the
status of the SOE in Cairo and with it the future
possibilities of guerrilla warfare in Greece. 26
24. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 43. This
is disputed by Hadzis (Vol l, Athens 1982, p. 377) who
argues that the central cornrnittees of the KKE, EAM and ELAS
were more than willing to cooperate with the British.
25. OKW Diaries, Band II, p. 141.
26. Over the next two years the SOE established eighty
373
In contrast, the activities of the underground groups in the
cities were largely overlooked and seldom achieved
recognition outside of Greece. For example, on 22 September
1942 the resistance group PEAN had blown up the headquarters
of ESPO, the embryonic Greek Nazi organization, killing its
leader and wounding several German officers. As a result,
ESPO did not recover from the destruction of its
headquarters building in downtown Athens and even though
this was not as spectacular as the Gorgopotamos operation it
ensured that Greek styled National Socialism would not
develop in Greece. 27
Although it has remained a minor foot note in the
historiography of the Greek resistance 28 , in the fall of
missions in Greece with a corresponding personnel of six
hundred and eleven officers and other ranks. During the
same period the SOE' intelligence activity was carried out
by six hundred British and three thousand Greek agents.
Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of t~Q
Aegean Seq, p. 7 and p. 17.
27. The primary purpose of ESPO, in addition to extolling
the virtues of National Socialism, was to recruit soldiers
for a Greek legion to fight on the Russian front (Kodros,
Athens 1981, Vol. A, p. 228; IAEA, Vol. l, p. 60).
28. References to PEAN are found in sorne of the major
studies of the Greek resistance but in most cases they are
relegated to one sentence, short paragraph or a footnote.
Woodhouse's Apple of Discord (London 1948, p. 31) contains
the only mention of PEAN in aIl the authors accounts, while
there are no references in Myers or in any of the papers
included in: Greece in the 1940's: A Nation in crisis
(Hanover and London 1981), British policy towards wartime
Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece London 1975). Hondros
(New York 1983, p. 79), mentions the destruction of ESPO but
does not refer ta PEAN. There are more numerous references
to PEAN in Greek studies of the resistance but with few
374
1942 this act of sabotage executed in broad daylight in the
heart of the German and Italian occupation signaled to the
population of Greece that resistance was not only possible
but could be conducted under the very noses of the Axis.
The destruction of ESPO not only startled the Axis but also
unsettled the Communists who viewed it as a provocation and
contrary to the principles of mass resistance. 29 More
significantly, PEAN was a moderate organization which looked
to Kanellopoulos as its leader and proved that the mode ra tes
were capable of effective resistance. Clearly, the
emergence of a resistance movement under the control of
moderates with ties to the Greek Government-in-Exile would
have limited the extent of the influence of the SOE upon
counter-insurgency operations in Greece.
Consequently, the impact of the Gargapotamos operation must
be viewed in political rather than in military terms. By
eclipsing the activitjes of the Greek underground in the
cities and highlighting the importance of the BMM it ensured
that the focus of the resistance would be the armed bands in
the mountains. Within this context the attempt of Tsigantes
to set up a center to coordinate the resistance, in the fall
of 1942, led into a subtle struggle between the SOE and
exceptions most confine their treatment of PEAN to passing
remarks, for sorne examples see: Zaousis, Athens 1987, vol B
(1), pp. 60-64; IAEA, Vol. 1, pp. 59-61, and Fleischer,
Athens 1988, pp. 359-360.
29. Zevgos, Athens 1980, p. 206.
17~
Kanellopoulos. These events were linked with ),anellopoulos
personally sinee it is not clear whether the G-eek
Government-in-Exile had adopted a poliey of fc~ming an
organization to coordinate the resistanee. A(cording to
Venezis, the Greek Premier Tsouderos, deeline'l any
involvement regarding the Tsigantes mission ald his
activities in Greece, which he claimed were 1 ireeted by the
British and Kanellopoulos, nor did he sanctj~n the
establishment of an organization to control the
resistance. 30
In the beginning, the SOE had agreed to the request of
Kanellopoulos that Tsigantes, in addition to his other
objectives, attempt to organize the (ornrnittee of six
Colonels as weIl as other key indiv~duals into a body that
would direct subversive activitier in the cities and
initiate a guerrilla war in the mountains. The focus of
such an organization was to b~ on sabotage, espionage and
guerrilla warfare. Towards chis end, accordinq to one
account, Tsigantes met witn as many as three hundred
different people indivifually or in groups, including:
politicians, officers and others who were involved with the
underground, 31 Yet le took only rudimentary precautions and
maintained a fairl' active social life. 32 This recklessness
30. Venezis, Ath~Ds 1981, p. 279.
31. Zaousis, Athens 1987, Meros B, p. 127.
32. According to Zalokostas (Athens n. d., p. 72),
Tsigantes, had no concept of clandestine work and did not
376
made him a liability not only to his associates but aiso to
many of the key figures with whom he was to work, and who
were involved with the underground. They were consequently
reluctant to risk their lives by coming into contact with
him.
In the early autumn, Tsigantes met with Tsakalotos, one of
the six Colonels, and proposed that the latter organize a
meeting with the other colonels so that he could turn over
the 12,000 gold sovereigns he brought from Cairo. In a
second meeting, Tsakalotos informed Tsigantes that the
Committee of six Colonels refused to meet with him on the
grounds that his notoriety would result in betrayal. 33
Tsigantes was bitterly disappointed, but continued his
search for individuals to organize a center for the
resistance. Having failed to achieve anything with
representatives of the officer corps Tsigantes then turned
to the leaders of the political parties.
At first he, attempted to convince the political leaders of
the pre-war parties that it was dangerous to leave the
development of resistance under the control of the
operate discreetly, on the contrary he caused considerable
commotion wherever he went.
33. Zaousis, Athens 1987, Meros B, p. 126. Tsakalotos
(Athens 1960, p. 372.) proposed that since the Tsigantes
mission would soon become known ta the occupation
authorities, it was prudent for the Committee of six
Colonels to pretend not to associate with Tsigantes and
after thinys quieted down they could begin again.
Communists. When this failed he was forced to a flirtation
with the Socialists 34 and through them with EAM 35 and the
KKE. 36 Sometime in the early fall he had a violent
confrontation with Tsellos, Kanellopoulos' representative ln
Athens, since the latter was instructed by the Committee ot
six Colonels to end aIl contact with Tsigantes. 37 Becau~~e
of the quarrel, Tsellos fled to Cairo thus severing an
important contact for Kanellopoulas with the underground.
Early in 1943 Tsigantes attempted to form a national council
of resistance with Archbishop Damaskinos as the president
along with the participation of Venizelist leaders such as:
Papandreou, Mylonas, Tsatsos and Stephanopoulos but could
not find a credible Royalist to establish a politically
balanced organization. 38 Damaskinos and the others agrccd
34. Fleischer, Athens 1988, p. 302; Benetatos, Athens 1963,
pp. 104-105; Hadzis (Athens 1982, Vol. A, p. 341) states
that Tsigantes was trying ta convince the non-Communist
member organizations to leave EAM in an attempt to isolatc
the KKE.
35. EAM and the KKE ~'ere weIl informed about Tsigantes'
activities in Athens and received copies of his reports to
Cairo from a member of the MIDAS team (Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 302).
36. Tsigantes maintained these contacts through the ELD and
SKE, both of whom had direct association with EAM and the
Greek Communists. According to Fleischer (Athens 1988, p.
302), Tsigantes used sorne of the funds he brought to support
the SKE and when that organization split, a majority of its
members remained with EAM. Afterwards, there were
accusations that it was caused by the: "Golden Machinations"
(referring to the gold sovereigns) of Tsigantes. Fleischer
states that it is not clear jf this was the case.
37. From Minister of state Cairo to Foreign Office 23
February 1943, FO 371/37201 R 74220.
,-
38. Venezis, Athens 1981, p. 279; Gatopoulos, Athens [new
edition, n.d.J, p. 354, 1. Tsatsos, Phylla Katochis, Athens
378
to participate in such an endeavor but the effort collapsed
with the death of Tsigantes. 39 This deviation from clearly
military objectives, as it concerned resistance activity, to
politicaJ discussion with leaders of the Greek parties was
beyond the scope of what Kanellopoulos had expected from
Tsigantes. As far as Kanellopoulos was concerned, if
Tsigantes could not set up an organization to coordinate the
resistance he should not have taken any other initiatives
without consulting him. 40
Tsigantes' activities in Athens took place between 10 August
1942 until 15 January 1943, when he was killed by the
Italians. 41 Ouring this period, probably in the early fall,
1965, pp. 66-67; Fleischer, Athens 1988, pp. 302-303.
39. Venezis, Athens 1981, p. 281.
40. Kanellopoulos, Imerologio, 9/5/1943.
41. On 15 January 1943, an anonymous woman telephoned the
Italian authorities and informed them of the exact location
oi Tsigantes' hideout. The Italians surrounded the building
and began a search of every apartment. Although Tsigantes
could have easily passed through the Italians guarding the
area with his policeman's pass, given to him by Evert, the
head of the Athenian police departrnent and a rnernber of the
resistance, he decided to rernain long enough to burn his
papers. Unfortunately, just as he was about to leave the
smoke from the papers aroused the attention of the Italians
and in the ensuing gun battle Tsigantes was killed.
According to Kanellopoulos (Imerologio, 15/1/1943), Onlya
handful of people were aware of Tsigantes' safe houses and
of those only three or four knew that he was going to that
particular one on the 15th of January. It is certain that
sorneone close to TsiganteD betrayed him and there are
several theories concerning who was the traitor. One,
ascertains that Tsigantes was turned in by a wornen, as a
result of jealousy and others suspected that he was betrayed
by an extreme Republican or monarchist. An inquiry after
the war suggested that one of the British intelligence
organizations orchestrated the demise of Tsigantes but
379
he lost the confidence of the SOE and began to exceed his
orders from Kanellopoulos. This also coincides with thü
arrivaI of Bakirdzis in Cairo, Tsigantes failure to win the
support of the Colonels, his quarrel with Tsellos and an
almost violent confrontation with the SOE representativü on
his team, Aristedls Giannakopoulos. According to
Tsakalotos, Tsigantes considered having Giannakopoulos
executed although he does not report why he was willing to
take su ch drastic action. 42 No doubt, Giannakopoulos
reported directly ta SOE Cairo and we can surmise that thüse
reports were not support ive of Tsigantes' efforts.
Especially, since Tsigantes had failed to rally any support
from either the Royalist or Republican officers towards
organizing a center for the resistance. Part of the problem
was that Tsigantes' recent allegiance ta the King was
resented by the Venizelists and suspected by the
Royalists. 43 This, as weIl as his recklessness, made it
impossible for him to gain the trust or support of not only
the Six Colonels but of any senior Greek officer or
political leader. 44
offered no explanation as ta its motives (Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 304).
42. Tsakalotos, Athens 1960, p. 374.
43. Zaousis, Athens 1987, Meros B, p. 126; Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 302.
44. Tsigantes' lack of discretion was evident even before he
departed from Cairo. According to Kaneilopouios
(Imerologio, 8/5/1943), on the eve of the mission ta Greece
Tsigantes and sorne of the other members of his team were
celebrating their departure for Greece in Haifa. More
seriously, the objectives as weIl as the mission had become
380
In cairo, the reports of TS1gdntes, and after his death,
those of his followers, supplernented by the reports of Myers
and Woodhouse 45 concerning the Colonels must have made a
strong impression because by February 1943 British Foreign
office officiaIs in Cairo and London had developed serious
doubts about the Colonels. According to the Minister of
State in cairo, Lord Moyne, the Colonels were not a group
divided into rnoderate Royalists and Republicans as
Kanellopoulos believed but represented the extrerne right.
Moyne aiso added that if:
... this cornmittee was the only Greek body through
which British views are trnnsmitted and British
officers are directly associated with it, we run
serious risk of His Majesty's Governrnent being
accused by other Greek parties of backing the
extrerne right wing elernents to the exclusion of
aIl others. 46
Under the circurnstances, Moyne stated, it was not possible
to support the idea of a center but sinee the Anglo-Greek
Cornmittee was about to meet on the 26th of February to
discuss the Colonels he required guidance. The Foreign
Office suggested that it was most likely that the idea of a
cornmittee to coordinate the resistancé would have to be
common knowledge amongst many individuals in Cairo.
45. On the views of Woodhouse concerning the Six Colonels
see Chapter 5.
46. From Minister of State Cairo to Foreign Office, 23
February 1943, FO 371/37201 R 74220.
381
abandoned but recommended that Moyne should delay such a
proposaI until more information was acquired and to avoid
alienating Kanellopoulos. 47 A report on the situation by
Lord Glenconnor provided three alternatives:
a) To insist on a broadening of the Greek clement
of the Center hy converting it into a Nation~l
Council on whi,h as many factions and parties
as possible ara represented including the
Colonels.
b) That Tsellos be expelled from the Government
and the six Colonels replaced by more moderate
Greeks who will be better able to assist us in
our work of co-ordinating and directing aIl
political parties and military groups including
representatives of the Colonels, should they
subsequently prove willing.
c) Using SOE personnel only in Greece as
representatives of the Anglo Greek Committee. 48
Glenconnor, however, dismissed the first option stating that
it would be unacceptable to the Colonels and lead to serious
problems between them and the British representatives in
Greece. 49 Essentially he left only two alternatives of
which one, the dismissal of Tsellos was impossible, since it
would have led to the resignation of Kanellopoulos, while
the other left the SOE responsible for directing the Greek
resistance movement. Ultimately, both the Minister of state
in Cairo and the Foreign Office accepted the last
47. Foreign Office ta Minister of State Cairo, 24 February
1943, FO 371/37201 R 74220.
48. FO 371/37201 R 74220 (Telegram from Lord Glenconnor ta
Minister of State Cairo) .
49. FO 371/37201 R 74220 (Telegram from Lord Glenconnor to
Minister of state Cairo) .
382
alternative as the only feasible compromise. ~he role of
the Colonels was relegated to that of an intelligence
organization under the guidance of the Anglo-Greek
Committee. 50 The failure of Tsigantes and the repercussions
of his activities in Greece also enabled the SOE to
downgrade the influence of the Anglo-Greek Committee.
According to Kanellopoulos, the accusations and counter-
accusations of the pro-EAM elernents in Cairo and in Greece
as weIl as those from the extreme Republicans against
Tsellos and himself eliminated any possibility of the
British cooperating with agencies of the Greek Government in
rnatters concerning the resistance. 51
The failure to find a reasonable coordinating body, the
ambitions of the guerrillas and the desire of the SOE to
control the resistance, created the situation in which the
British agents with access to the guerrillas had actually no
contact with the Greek Government-in-Exile, recognized by
the Allies as the only legitimate gover.lrnent of Greece. As
a result, for the duration of the occupdtion, the SOE rarely
coordinated its activities in Greece with the Hellenic
Governrnent. The overt consideration was to maintain
absolute security about sec~et and guerrilla operations in
Greece but other factors emerge which reveal that security
50. FO 371/37201 R 74220.
r 51. Particularly with the Hellenic Intelligence Service.
1 (Kanellopoulos, Imerologio, 5/8/1943).
383
was not the only reason why the Greek Government-in-Exile
was kept in the dark about the Greek resistance
organizations. To a great extent, this policy was
influenced by the desire to find a useful role for the
special Operations Executive in the war against the Axis and
later supplemented by the negative reports of Greek and
British agents in Greece concerning the Colonels and
Tsigantes. The former came from the ranks of those who
opposed the monarchy or had been cashiered from the army dnd
disfranchised politically by the Royalists. The Prometheus
group, the main SOE organization in Athens, is a notable
example. Prometheus II was anxious to gain exclusive
British support for EDES and thus give the Republicans
control of the resistance. Until 1943, Prometheus II was
considered to be one of the most important contacts between
the BMM and the underground in Athens. In mid January it
was Prometheus II who arranged for Woodhouse ta travel to
the Greek capital and meet with the Colonels. It must be
kept in mind that up to this point Woodhouse had only come
into contact with the armed bands of Zervas and
Veloukhiotis, neither of whom had any love for the King or
supported the Greek Government-in-Exile. His meeting with
representativcs from the Colonels left a poor impression and
no doubt influenced his reports to Cairo.
Yet despite the subsequent revelations in Cairo, about the
six Colonels and Gleconnor's recommendations in February, it
384
is evident that Keeble had decided much earlier ta map out a
significant raIe for the BMM in Greece. According ta George
Taylor, following the success of the destruction of the
Gorgopotamos viaduct, Keeble persuaded the Chiefs of Staff
in Cairo to keep the Harling Mission in Greece and organize
a general uprising to coincide with the invasion of
Sicily.52 Although the establishment of a permanent mission
in the Greek mountains amounted to a new SOE policy with
respect to the resistance movement in Greece, Keeble
initiated this change en~irely on his own. SOE headquarters
in London may have acc~pted Keeble's decision because it was
imperative for the organization to demonstrate its
usefulness in the field of guerrilla warfare. The Foreign
Office, which should have been informed about this new
development, was kept in the dark until the end of February
1943 but at this time they were more concerned with the
activities of Tsigantes in Athens. 53
As a result of Keeble's efforts, Myers was instructed that
52. Keeble was given permission to keep the Harling team in
Greeee in March 1943 (Taylor, British Policy towards Wartime
Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greeee, p. 219).
53. Aeeording to Clogg ("Pearls from Swine", p. 170 and pp.
176-177), the Foreign Office elaimed that it was only in
Mareh 1943 that the y were informed the by SOE that a British
Military Mission had been established in Greece although
~lexander Cadogan, the Permanent Underseeretary, was at
least aware of the Harling team as early as November 1941.
Furthermore, the Foreign Office had reeeived a eopy of a
telegram from Lord Glenconnor on 24 February 1943 which
ineluded a recommendation that the SOE tearn in Greece act as
the only representatives of the Anglo-Greek Committee (FO
371/37201 74220).
385
the Harling Mission was constituted as the British Military
Mission and directed to coordinate and expand the Greek
guerrilla bands. 54 Woodhouse writes that his original
orders from Keeble were to establish himself in Athens as a
permanent liaison with the BMM and the resistance groups
whom Keeble assumed would come under the control of the six
Colonels. To Woodhouse: " ... this belonged to a world of
fantasy.", but he agreed to undertake an ~xploratory visit
to Athens although he was convinced that to stay in the city
permanently wouid have been suicidal. 55
It is probable that Woodhouse and Myers had already accepted
the notion that the Greek resistance would have to be
directed from the mountains. For any SOE agent, let alone
anyone with distinctly Anglo Saxon features, Athens was a
city rife with double agents, collaborators and traitors who
had either infiltrated or had knowledge of the major
underground groups and individuais associated with thern.
Woodhouse was by no means deterred by the thought of danger,
he often took risks and was not afraid to take greater
54. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, pp. 53-54;
Myers, Gloucester 1985, pp. 97-98; Taylor, British wartirne
Policy towards Yugoslavia and Greece, p. 219. Originally
the team, with the exception of Woodhouse, was to be
evacuated by submarine. Unfortunately, the craft was
required for other operational duties and although Myers and
his group arrived at the designated location the submarine
never showed up (J.G. Beevor, SOE: Recollections and
Reflections 1940-194~, London 1981, p. 98). This gave
Keeble the tjme he needed to keep the team in Greece on a
permanent basis.
55. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 54.
386
chances, rather he believed that the guerrilla war was the
prime objective of the resistance and that it had to be
directed fram the mountains. This also reflects the nature
of ungentlemanly warfare as ellvisioned by the early SOE
planners, a war based on hit and run tactics by men in
uniform not a war of spies and double agents. It must aiso
be kept in mind that neither Woodhouse nor any other member
of the Harling Mission had been trained in espionage or
clandestine operations.
Their recent success in destroying the Gorgopotamos viaduct
and contact with EDES and ELAS certainly was a clear
indication of the possibilities of a guerrilla war in the
mountains. In his second account of the Greek resistance
Woodhouse states that the Gargopotamos operation:
In its military eantext, it showed for the first
time in occupied Europe that guerrilla's, with the
support of allied officers, could earry out a
major taetieal operation eo-ordinated with allied
strategie plans. It stimulated ambitious plans
for developing resistance, primarily in Greece but
also elsewhere. Therp was equally a gredt
stimulus to Greek morale. 56
Although Wooùhouse reported that the Six Colonels were
preparing to forro the guerrillas into an army after the
collapse of Italy, he dismissed their usefulness as far as
the resistance was eoncerned but stated that they would
prove valuable after the occupation. In the same report,
56. Woodhouse, The Struggle for Greeee, London 1976, p. 26.
•
387
com1ng in the wake of his visit to Athens, Woodhouse
recorded that the guerrilla forces were more:
... easily directed from the field as by Zervas.
The EAM remote control is sure but slow. Luckily
Ares (Veloukhiotis), their outstanding commander,
pays only li9 service to their system and acts as
he decides. 5
In addition to making a strong case for the possibilities of
guerrilla warfare, he implied that they could be controlled
much easier from the mountains than by any central authority
in Athens.
Moreover, Myers in his first reports played up the
importance of ELAS and indicated that although EAM was
( communist controlled most of its members were not aware of
this. According to Myers: "The Thessaly guerrillas (ELAS
bands) are the largest and best organized of aIl. Athens
attaches importance to them owing to their position astride
the main North-South road.". He went on to describe EAM:
" ... as a genuine body organized to free Greece. It has many
Royalist members including a general. After the war ? (sic)
the y desire a plebiscite ta decide the government and ta be
controlled by the Allies, followed by a General Election.
The EAM would then dissolve.".58 Woodhouse in his first
57. "Political Aspects of the Greek Resistance Movement",
FO 371/37201 74220 R 2050 p. 123.
('. 58. "Political Aspects of the Greek Resistance Movement" ,
FO 371/37201 74220 R 2050.
388
report, on the other hand, highlighted the Communist links
of EAM and wrote that: "The EAM literature has a pro-Russian
tinge and abuses the King, Tsouderos and Canellopoulos. I
believe the Communists control EAM unknown to most
members. " .59 Myers, furthernlore, advocated the crea t~on of
a single command and headquarters in the mountains for aIl
the resistance groups. Neither Myers nor Woodhouse could
have known that Glenconnor had proposed something similar
and that the Foreign Office was in the process of agreeing
that the direction of the Greek resistance, as long it was
strictly military in nature, should pass ta the SOE
representat~ves in Greece.
However, Myers also proposed that the British ensure a
plebiscite after liberation to determine the fa te of the
Greek monarchy.60 This proved to be too much f~r the
F reign Officed and Myers and the SOE were severely
chafitised for meddling in politics. 61 It was one thing for
the SOE to direct the military activities of the Greek
resistance but something entirely different when it
attempted to implement a poiiticai agenda. After this
Foreign Office officiaIs in London and Cairo went on a
59. "Poiiticai Aspects of the Greek Resistance Movement",
FO 371/37201 74220 R 2050.
60. "Political Aspects of the Greek Resistance Movement", FO
371/37201 74220, R 2050 , pp. 116-117.
61 "Resistance Groups in Greece", Minute by Dixon, 7 March
1943, Fa 371/37201 74220 R 2050. Dixon went 50 fdr as to
recommend that aIl SOE activity be suspended in Greece.
389
campaign to curtail the activities of the SOE in Greece
which they now claimed supported groups hostile to the Greek
monarchy and whose objectives were contrary to British
policy. They did not succeed but had to be content with the
instructions given to members of the BMM to state that:
" ... while they don't mix in politics, they know that His
Majesty's Government support the King and his
Government.".62 On 9 March 1943, on the advice of
Woodhouse, Zervas proclaimed his loyalty to the Greek King 63
which helped to ease tensions between the Foreign Oftice and
the SOE, but it was only a temporary truce. 64
In the period following the destruction of the Gorgopotamos
{. viaduct both EDES and ELAS began to expand their forces and
increase their operations against the Axis. Although dü~ing
this time severai new organizations took the fielà, from
1943-1944 the guerrilla war in the mountain was domindted by
ELAS and EDES. The smaller bands usu~lly confined their
62. FO 371/37201 74220 R 2332.
63. Woodhouse had prompted Zervas to send a friendly message
to the king of Greeee on the occasion of Greek National day,
on 25 Mareh. To Woodhouse's (Woodhouse, Something Ventured,
London 1982, p. 64) surprise, Zervas went even further and
in the telegram assured George II that if the British so
desired he would accept the return of the monarch with or
without a plebiscite. Initially, this was kept secret and,
aceording to Pyromaglou (0 Georgios Kartalis kai i Epoehi
tou 1943-1957, Vol. A, p. 544), had it become known right
away it would have led to the break up of EDES.
64. Clogg, "Pearls from Swine", London 1975, p. 175. The
SOE used this message from Zervas to prove to the Foreign
Office that it was not only supporting anti-monarchist
resistanee organizations (FO 371/3717194 R 2266).
1
390
activities in the regions from which their personnel was
recruited and later faced consid(~able pressure from ELAS to
cither join that organizatjon or be forced to disband. By
the end of February, according to the estimates of My~rs,
ELAS had reached a strength of approximately 2,000 and EDES
2,420, while the combined force of aIl the other bands did
not exceed 550. 65 Myers reported confidently that the
strength of EDES along with the other bands was 2,970 while
ELAS only had 2,000 men and ultimately would be forced to
accept to corne under the direction of a common
headquarters. 66
Despite these optimistic assessments of the numerically
superior EDES forces, ELAS continued to expand at a greater
rate. In March 1943, ELAS began a programme of disbanding
and absorbing the smaller groups near its territory and by
the summer succeeded in establishing control over central
and northern Greece as weIl as part~ of the Peloponnese. By
the end of the summer of 1943 ELAS, had increased its forces
to approximately 12,000 men, with an additional force of
24,000 reserves. EDES, on the other hand, did not fare sa
well and during the same period (January - May 1943) it only
increased its forces to 4,000. 67 One SOE report, however,
65. FO 371/37201 74220, R 2322.
66. "Political Aspects of the Greek Resistance Movement",
FO 371/37201 74220, R 2050.
67. On the strength of these forces see: Hondros (New York
1983, pp. 117-118 and pp. 144-145).
391
argued that qualitatively EDES possessed better trained
andartes and a greater proportion of officers. 68
The relationship of these nurnbers to the relative strength
of EUS and EDES was, however, deceptive. ELAS, un'ike
EDES, could rely on the popular su~port of EAM which had
been developed a year ear~ier in most cities and towns. In
addition to a steady stream of recrLits and supplies, EAM
was able to provide for ELAS a netwo\'k of support services
based in villages and hamlets in the Gr3ek mountains not
under the control of EDES. 69 In the s,ummer of 1943, ELAS
began to recruit considerable numbers tf Greek officers,
many of whom were a~tracted to that org~nization by its
recent successes and because they were influenced by the
68. The report was written in June 1943 by J.M. stevens who
had returned to Cairo from a fact finding mission in the
Greek rnountains trying to assess the merits of ELAS and
EDES. stevens concluded in his report (British Reports on
Greece 1943-44, "Report of Lt.-Col. J.M. stevens on Present
Conditions in Central Greece", ed. Lars Baerentzen,
Copenhagen 1982, p. 16 and p. 24), that ELAS was poorly led
since it had mounted a campaign against regular Greek
officers but by the summer of 1943 was in the process of
attempting to attract such men into its ranks.
69. In each village, EAM had set up four organizations: 1)
the local EAM Central Committee which supervised aIl
political and resista~ce activiLY, 2) a group responsible
for relief, 3) another for youth, 4) a division which looked
after logistical support for ELAS. The entire EAM apparatus
was under the control of the secretary of the central
cornmittee, who was usually a member of the Greek Cornmunist
Party. The v1lJage secretaries elected a district EAM
which, in turn, elected regional committees of EAM. Each of
the regions then had one representative on the twenty-five
mernber National Central Committee of EAM in Athens. cities,
such as Athens and Thessaloniki, had independent
representation and the EAM organizations were based on
neighborhood units (Hondros, New York 1983, p. 118).
392
adhesion to ELAS of senior officers such as sarafis,
Othonaos, Mandakas and Bakirdzis. 70 By the summer of 1943,
ELAS included: 600 professional officers, 1,250 Republican
officers and 2,000 lower ranking reserve officers. 71
Originally, the guerrilla bands had been unsuccessful in
attracting professional officers to their respective
organizations. As mentioned above, the officer corps before
the war was divided along monarchist and Republicall lines. 72
Most senior officers were adverse to the idea of resistance
because thËy were either in awe of the German military
machine or were discouraged by the Greek Government-in-
Exile. Many Republican officers who had been cashiered in
the 1930's, however, saw in the resistance an opportunity
for reinstatement in a post-liberation Greek army. In the
beginning, they provided 3 steady stream of recruits for
EDES but as the resistance expanded the y were also attracted
to new Republican organizations such as EKKA. These new
organizations, formed in 1943, diverted potential recruits
from Zervas and when the y were dispersed by ELAS or the
Germans very few came over to EDES. 73 In addition, the fact
70. Sarafis, a weIl respected Republican officer, had
initially ta ken the field with a new band but it was soon
dispersed and he was captured by ELAS. After sorne
hesitation Sarafis agreed to join ELAS and serve as its
military commander.
7l. Andre Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps
in the Resistance", p. 75 and also see note 22.
72. See Chapter 1.
73. Andre Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps
393
that Zervas had made his peace with the monarchy had the
effect of ultimately driving rnany of EDES' Republican
supporters away from the resistance or into the arms of
ELAS. This sharpened the difference betwee~ the two major
arrned bands and it began to work in ELAS' favor that EDES
was now associated with the monarchy.74
Increasingly, the BMM became more involved with political
rnatters and was less able to control the growth or direction
of the Greek resistance movement. By the late spring of
1943 there were indications that relations between the
guerrilla groups were heading towards a crisis. The BMM,
although mandated to guide the guerrilla movement, was
quickly losing control. Despite this, the post-war
interpretation by the SOE was that: " .•. at this critical
period, and indeed until the summer of 1944, there was no
direct contact, or even liaison, no element of control,
between the guerrilla movements and the Greek Government in
cairo.".75 This, however, was the result of the SOE policy
to act as a buffer between the Greek Government-in-Exile and
the resibtance group~. Myers, furthermore, began to send
in the Resistance", p. 75.
74. Although Zer~~s' message to King George was kept secret,
it was leaked to ~he antifascist organization ASO, based in
the Middle East, which passed it on to Athens and it was
published in the Communist newspapers (Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 393; Kommoupistiki Epitheoresi, February 194~, p.
15; Rizospastis 15 November 1944).
75. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Greek situation", Appendix III, p. 10.
394
reports ta cairo which indicated that EAM-ELAS was bent on
dominating the resistance and intended to eliminate aIl
other guerrilla organizations. SOE headquarters, however,
was reluctant to break with EAM-ELAS which had proven
willing ta fight and there was still sorne suspicion
regarding Zervas and EDES. 76
The BMM, on ~he other hand, did manage to establish almost
complete influence over EDES. According to the analysis of
D.J. Wallace, who had arrived in Greece at the end of June
1943 to act as Myers' pOlitical adviser:
... Zervas is a Bri'_ish creation in the sense that
we are responsible for his continued existence
today and for aIl the consequences that may follow
therefrom.
We presumably did this advisedly and it behoves us
to consider exactly what we want out of Zervas.
Ever since March i943, when he signed the first
agreement with the Middle East, he has been a
completely loyal ally and he will still do
absolutely and exactly what we tell him. He is
therefore not only our creation but remains an
instrument in our hands. 77
76. When ELAS captured Sarafis on 7 March 1943 Zervas
requested permission from the BMM to affect a rescue but
Myers feared it would have led ta a war between ELAS and
EDES. He was convinced, however, that Zervas' forces would
prove superior and recommended ta the SOE that the
destruction of ELAS would have little impact upon the
guerrilla war. He also added that this was the last
opportunity to check the growing power of ELAS and
recommended aIl out support for EDES (Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 391; FO 71/37202 R 4209).
77. D.J. Wallace, "Conditions in Zervas-held territory",
British Reports on Greece 1943-44, p. 120.
395
The BMM, on the other hand, made little impression on the
leadership of ELAS which by this time was becoming the pre-
dominant guerrilla movement. 78 M,~dnwhile Zervas' allegiance
to thp- British, a foreig~ power, was exploited by EAM-ELAS
which claimed that unlike EDES it was a truly Greek
controllcd organization.
In July 1943, after sorne difficulty and extended
negotiations, Myers was able ta convince the leadership of
EAM-ELAS ta accept coordination with the BMM and the other
guerrilla bands. EAM-ELAS agreed but on the condition that
a joint hEadquarters be set up in its territory and that the
function of the BMM was tû be relegated to that of liaison.
( In addition, Myers had ta convince thé SOE that ELAS should
be recognized as a sovereign Allied force and although it
intended ta accept general directions from the Commander-ln-
Chief, Middle East, it would retain its own freedom of
action.
In exchange, Myers was able ta extract two major concessions
from ELAS. The first, permitted the BMM ta raise new
guerrilla banns in areas under the control of ELAS and the
second, allowed Myers to coordinate a series of guerrilla
operations that were part of a major Allied deception plan
78. Woodhouse, "Subject: Recent Crisis in Greece", British
( Reports on Greece 1943-44, ed. Lars Baerentzen, Copenhagen
1982, pp. 56-57.
•
396
discussed below. 79 The National Bands Agreement, as this
arrangement was called, was considered a major achievement
in the development of the guerrilla war and even brought
Myers the appreciation of the Foreign Office. 80 For the
British the advantage of a temporary pause of the fighting
that had developed between ELAS and the other groups was off
set by the recognition of ELAS as an AlI ied force which g(lVe
that organization legal status. 81
Initially, Myers had planned for the creation of national
and non-political guerrilla bands deployed over the Greek
mountains and once these were strong enough, he reckoned,
ELAS would be forced to join this "National Movement".82 By
this means the ambitions of EAM-ELAS to dominate the
resistance would be contained. Indeed, the prevailing
theory by the BMM and SOE Cairo, until the fall of 1944, was
that it was possible to segregate EI~S from the left-wing
79. On the text of the agreement see: Woodhouse, Apple of
Discord, London 1948, Appendix C, pp. 299-300.
80. FO 371/37203 R 5573.
81. According to Hadzis (Athens 1982, Vol. B, p. 139),
another reason why the British were fcrced to accept the
recognition of ELAS as an Allied force was that they were
afraid of complications in the Balkans since ELAS was coming
into contact with Albanian and Yugoslavian partisans with
the possibility of concluding a military and perhaps even a
political alliance. Hadzis adds ~hat the British
recognition of ELAS was considered a significant poli~ical
victory.
82. According to Myers (Greek Entanglement, Gloucester 1985,
p. 115.), the idea of organizing non-political "National
Bands" evolved during a discussion he had when he first met
with Sarafis.
J
397
and Communist control of EAM. However, D.J. Wallace in one
of his periodic reports to Rex Leeper in September 1944
concluded that:
... the best time for engineering a split in
EAM/ELAS has passed, as their hold over the towns
accessible to their area was now sa st rang that
there was nowhere for dissidents ta take refuge or
establish themselves. 83
The BMM policy of encouraging the formation of small
guerrilla bands depended upon the British for weapons and
supplies, something which the SOE could not ensure, not only
prevented EDES from becoming a much larger organization but
1eft these small groups exposed to attack by ELAS.
Concurrent1y, the formation of these national bands was
viewed by EAM-ELAS as an attempt by the British to control
the resistance ?nd impose the ~onarchy after liberation. 84
Furthermore, EAM-ELAS refused to accept the rationale of a
guerrilla movement broken up into small groups. The
assessment of Sarafis, who after Marct 1943 was the
Commander-in-Chief of ELAS, was that:
... if we wanted to give better and more speedy
83. D.J. Wallace, "Conditions in Zervas-held territory in
Greece", British Reports on Greece 1943-44, p. 139
84. Hadzis, Athens 1982, Vol. B, pp. 140-141. Markos
Vafeiadis (Apomnemone"mata, "B' Tomas 1940-1944", Athens
1985, pp. 120-121), the commander of ELAS forces in
Makedonia and of th8 Democratie Army during the Greek civil
war in 1946-1949, not only condemns the National Bands
Agreement, which he saw as a British attempt ta control the
resistance but, claims that this resulted in the refusaI of
EAM-ELAS ta conclude an alliance with the other Balkan
partisans.
,
398
help to the Allied struggle, to secure concor~ and
a smooth transition to liberation and political
life for the Greek people, to avoid clashes and
ultimately civil war, then the best solution was
for there to be a single orqanization and a single
guerrilla army, not a number of independent
capetans. As the basis of this organization l
proposed EAM which was nationwide and weIl
organized. 85
Myers' implementation of the National Bands Agreement failed
to give the BMM any control over the largest guerrilla
organization, weakened EDES by diverting potential recruits
and weapons to smaller groups and created a climate 0_
mutual suspicion between the British and EAM-ELAS.
Woodhouse, however presents the dilemma of the SOE from a
different perspective:
The first question, raised by supporters of the
left both inside and outside Greece, is: Why did
not the British authorities give more support to
ELAM/ELAS instead of their rivals? The second,
raised by opponents of the left is: Why did no~
the British authorities give more support to thejr
rivals instead oÎ EAM/ELAS? What is common ta
both questior,s is the conviction that it was a
mistake ta divide British support between
irreconcilable rivaIs. The first part of the
answer is that they cou Id not be ploved
ir~econcilable except by trying: it may have been
trup that conflict between them was eventually
inevitable, but it would hdve been absurd to
precipitate it by saying so. The more important
part of the answer is that D~itish policy had no
alternative. 86
This explanation ignores several important factors. First,
85. Stefanos Serafis, ELAS: Greek Resistance Arrny, London
1980 p. 89.
86. Woodhouse, Apple of Oiscord, London 1948, p. 137.
399
as early as 1941 the SOE was weIl informed about EAM-ELAS
and its relationship to the KKE and certainly by January
1943 had no illusions about the policies of these
organizations. Secondly, support for guerrilla warfare was
directed to groups opposed to the Greek Government-in-Exile,
not becau~e they were first in the field but because the SOE
believed that only such organizations had the necessary
motivation to mount an effective resistance, a policy
carried over from the pre-war theories of querrilla warfare
and adopted by the SOE from its inception in 1940. Thirdly,
as mentioned above, the SOE was determined to keep control
of the Greek resistance and deliberately kept the Greek
Government at a distance, a policy much easier to carry out
with left-wing anù Republican groups than it would have been
with organizations loyal to the Greek Government-in-Exile.
After March, although it was realized that EAM-ELAS would
pose a serious threat to British post-war plans for Greece,
the se organization were necessary to execute a major
deception plan against the Germans, and only on this
occasion did the British have no alternative. Woodhouse
admits that British policy towards EAM-ELAS and EDES went
through two changes between March and October. He writes
that:
Put it in its simplest terms, in March 1943
British policy was friendly towards Zervas
CE.D.E.S.) and hostile towards E.L.A.S.i by the
end of June it had reached a point of careful
balance between being pro-Zervas and pro-E.L.A.S.i
400
but by the end of September it had reverted to the
position held in March, of friendliness towards
Zervas and hostility towards E.L.A.S., in an even
more extreme degret:!.87
The last consideration is interesting because it coincides
with the strategie decline of Greece in relation to the war
in the Mediterranean. After September 1943, as far as the
Foreign Office was concerned, the British did not have any
need for a guerrilla war in Greece and they had to corne to
terms with the political difficulties posed to them and the
Greek Government-in-Exile by EAM-ELAS. The collapc.e of
Italy in September 1943 and the advance of the Red Army
within reach of the Balkans negated any advantages offered
by the Greek guerrillas against the Axis. On the other
hand, the guerrilla forces in the Balkans were considered
necessary by the military in order to tie down as many
German divisions in the region and keep them from France and
Italy. British policy after October 1943, attemptcd to
maintain a balance between finding a means of containing the
expansion and influence of EAM-ELAS while at the same time
keeping it in the field to satisfy the needs of the
military.88
87. Woodhouse, "Summer 1943: The critical Months", British
Policy towards wartime Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece,
ed. P. Audy and R. Clogg, London 1975, p. 117.
88. Sir Alan Brooke, Chief of the Imperial General Staff,
strongly recomrnended to the Chiefs of Staff, on 7 February,
that British rnilitary strategy in Greece was to pin down as
rnany German divisions as possible and for this reason he
argued the resumption of support to EAM-ELAS. (COS 44, 23,
27 and 28 February; COS 44, 199; CAB 79/1; CAB 80j81).
After the fa1l of Mussolini in August 1943, the British
•
401
The events that unfolded between August 1943 to January 1944
represent the second critical stage of the history of the
Greek resistance and were not only a function of the earlier
developments but a reaction to the course of the war in
south eastern Europe which for the Greeks signalled immanent
liberation. 89 An Integral element of this period was the
impact of the activities and policies of British
intelligence organizations, primarily the SOE, upon the
Chiefs of Staff were urging General Wilson to profit by any
opportunity in turning the eastern Mediterranean into an
active theater dnd enlist local help whenever possible.
Wilson himself was convinced that Middle East Command had to
be ready to take advantage of any German withdrawal from the
Aegean and be prepared to advance to Athens or Rhodos and
eventually Thessaloniki (Michael Howard, Grand Strategy,
( Vol. IV, London 1972, pp. 489-490). Although Italy took
priority over the eastern Aegean, after the Italian collapse
the British mounted a limited offensive against Rhodos, Kos
and Leros which by the end of November had ended in failure.
Despite this, the British Chiefs of Staff had on 25 November
proposed the upgrading of Allied military policy in
Yugoslavia, Greece and Albania 'on a regular military basis'
and recommended increasing support to the guerrilla forces
in these countries. Four days later, during the Tehran
Conference, Churchill explained to Stalin that the objective
of the Mediterranean strategy was to take the weight off
Russia anà give the best possible chance to Overlord.
According to Churchill, there was no possibility of
committing large forces in the Mediterranean since the
Yugoslav, Greek and Albanian partisans were tying down
twenty-o~e German divisions (Gilbert, Road to Victory, Vol.
7, p. 564 and pp. 578-579). Even the Foreign Office,
usually skeptical about the guerrilla movement, was
convinced that it was better to keep the partisans active by
fighting the Germans otherwise they would be tempted to
conti~ue the civil war Stafford, Toronto and Buffalo 1980,
p.163).
89. Woodhouse (Apple of Discord, London 1948, p. 137),
suggests that the period between January to August 1943 as
( the first phase of the attempt by the Greek Communists to
seize power.
402
Greek resistance organizations. As the war swung in favour
of the Allies the leadership of EAM-ELAS was anticipating
the liberation of Greece and the possibility that this would
be accomplished by the Red Arroy. This was partly a result
of the Soviet victory at Stalingrad and subsequently
increased by the German defeat at Kursk prp.ceded by the
Allied invasion of Sicily. 90 At any rate, in the summer of
1943 there was every indication that the liberation of
Greece was in the foreseeable future. These perceptions
were greatly intensified by the implementation of Operation
AnimaIs, designed to deceive the Germans into believing that
the Allies were to invade Greece whereas in reality they
intended to land in Sicily.91 Part of the Allied strategy
was to instigate considerable guerrilla activity, in the
respective regions of the Greek resistance groups, giving
the impression of an immanent Allied invasion. 92
Operation AnimaIs led to the transfer of three German
armored divisions to Greece and contributed to a speedy
90. The Soviet victory at Kursk was reported by the Greek
Communist newspaper, Rizospastis on 18 July 1943. On 30
July, the same newspaper provided an analysis of the war on
the Eastern Front which concluded that the Soviet advance
from Kursk-Orel would bring the Red Army into the Balkans.
91. Myers, Greek Entanglement, GlouceRter 1985, p. 228.
92. AnimaIs was one element of a mu ch greater effort,
Operation Minced Meat, implemented to deceive the Germans
that the Allies had targeted Greece for their offensive in
the Mediterranean (see: Charles Cruickshank, Deception in
World Wdr II, London 1979. chapter 4); Hinsley, New York
1984, Vol. 3, p. 120).
403
Allied victory in Sicily followed by the invasion of
southern Italy.93 According to the anonymous R~port on S~E
Activities in Greece and the Islands of the. Aegean Sea, six
German and twelve Italian divisions were contained in Greece
during this periode However, the sarne report stotes that:
" ... it is difficult to evaluate how rnany of the se divisions
could have been spared if a (guerrilla) movernent had not
been built up by the SOE.".94
In September, Mussolini was deposed and Italy surrendered
unconditionally. The impact of aIl these events upon the
Greek resistance was that it not only created the perception
of an Allied landing in Greece, but for EAM-ELAS and the
Republicans, it also raised the specter of the return of the
Greek Government-in-Exile and George II. The climate of
rnutual suspicion and hostility was further exacerbated in
August by the failure of the British and the Greek
Governrnent to come to terms with EAM-ELAS. In August 1943,
Myers had arranged for the transportation of a delegation
from the main resistance organizations to Cairo. 95 The aim
93. Between March to the Allied landings in Sicily, the
total number of German divisions in the Balkans rose from
eight ta eighteen and those in Greece from one to eight
(Hinsley, New York 1984, Vol. 3, p. 11, p. 80 and pp. 144-
145).
94. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean Sea, "Appendix IV".
95. Myers ("The Andarte Delegation to Cairo: August 1943",
British Policy towards Wartime Resistance in Yugoslavia and
Greece, ed. P. Audy and R. Clogg, London 1975, pp. 148-149)
had planned ta visit Cairo on his own to report to Lord
Moyne and discuss the problerns of the guerri11a bands
..
404
of the mission, at least as understood by Myers, was to
facilitate better coordination and organization between the
guerrilla bands and the Greek General staff as weIl as with
the Greek Government-in-Exile. 96 But within two days,
according to Myers, the delegation focussed its efforts
exclusively on political issues. 97 That Myers would have
honestly expected them to do otherwise displays a naivety of
the situation in Greece that is almost incomprehensible.
The arrangements that Myers wished to implement between the
but after he informed Tsimas and Pyromaglou of his trip,
both asked if they could go along. To satisfy EKKA, Myers
also had to agree to take George Kartalis. Before Myers
could complete the travel arrangements, George Siantos, the
acting Secretary of the Greek Communist Party insisted that
three other EAM representatives join the group. Although
Myers had asked and received permission from Cairo to take
Tsimas, Pyromaglou and Kartalis when he signaled the SOE
about the additional EAM representatives there was not
enough time to await for a reply.
96. Myers (Greek Entanglement, Gloucester 1985, pp. 236-
243), proposed that the guerrilla bands he recognized as
part of the Greek arrned forces and arrange for the
attachment of andarte liaison officers with the Greek
General staff. He also believed that political matters,
concerning the resistance organizations, should be handled
by civilian authorities and hoped that the joint
headquarters could be divided into two separate departments,
with civil liaison officiaIs attached to the Greek
Government-in-Exile. Myers feared that after the intensive
guerrilla activity, which preceded the Allied landings in
Sicily, the andartes bands would grow restless and begin to
attack each other. Therefore, he planed to limit the size
of the bands but provide them with light artillery and other
supporting arms, in arder to raise both the status and
quality of the guerrillas and focus their attention on
training thus avoid a civil war in the mountains. Before
departing from Greece, Myers held several meetings with the
delegation that was to travel to Cairo and aIl agreed to
accept and collectively support Myers' recommendation.
97. Myers, "The Andarte Delegation to Cairo: August 1943",
p. 151.
•
405
resistance and the Greek Governrnent required as a
precondition agreement over the constitu~ional issue. It
was not surprising, therefore, that the members of the
delegation demanded that the King remain outside Greece
after liberation until the Creek people decided the fate of
the monarchy by plebiscite and tha~ the Greek Government-in-
Exile be broadened to include three representatives from the
resistance organizations. 98 Sorne of these sentiments were
echoed by Georgios Exindaris who had arrived in Cairo three
days earlier as the representative of the Greek liberal
politicians and made it quite clear that the King must not
return until a plebiscite was held after liberalion. 99
George II, after consulting with both Churchill and
( Roosevelt, rejected aIl the dernands of the andartes'
representatives anà the Foreign OffIce instructed their
officiels in Cairo to terrninate aIl discussions with the
delegation concerning the Greek monarchy and the Government-
in-Exile.
The subsequent claim by the Foreign Office and Rex Leeper,
the British Ambassador to the Greek Government-in-Exile, was
that neither had èny forewarning of the arrivaI in Cairo of
six representatives from the Greek resistance organizations.
In his own account of the affair, When Greek meets Greek,
98. Myers, "The Andarte Delegation to Cairo: August 1943",
pp. 151-152.
{. 99. Clogg, "Pearls from Swine", p. 183; Fleischer, Athens
1988, p. 453-454 .
406
Leeper states that:
l had been told a day or two before that somû
Greek guerrilla representatives were coming by air
to discuss military questions with G.H.Q. caira,
but 1 did nct known who they were and l certainly
did not expect them ta be almost purely political.
1 was therefore tak~n aback to find that ELAS were
re~resented by three Communists, Tsimas, Roussos
and Despotopoulos, and one fellow-traveller
Tsirimokos, Zervas by Pyromaglou and Psaros by
Kartalis. AlI the se six men were first and
foremost political and were mainly interested in
raising political issues. 100
Leeper made matters more complicated by omitting to inform
the King or the Greek Government-in-Exile of the pending
arrivaI of the guerrilla representatives since he claims he
had failed to realize the nature of their visit. 101 The
Foreign Office and Leeper were indignant that the SOE,
through Myers, had thrust upon them and the Greek
Government-in-Exile a very messy and complicated situation.
The extant evidence, however, indicates the contrary. Both
Leeper and the Foreign Office had sanctioned and even
encouraged the SOE to bring out of Greece representatives of
the Greek political parties and the resistance
organizations. 102 Leeper even attempted to use the
opportunity of the delegation in Cairo to encourage George
II to broaden his government and accept sorne compromise over
100. Rex Leeper, When Greek meets Greek, London 1950, p. 31.
101. Leeper, London 1950, p. 31.
102. According ta Clogg ("Pearls from Swine", pp. 182-183)
Leeper was aware of the delegation almost three weeks before
their arrivaI.
407
the issue of his return to Greece after the country was
liberated. 103 But the Foreign Office and Lord Selborne, the
minister responsible for the SOE, were opposed to any
compromise with regards to George II. 104 Leeper then
decided on his own initiative that while the Greek King
waited for the aùvice of Churchill and Roosevelt 1 0 5 the best
course of action was to send the delegation back to Greece.
In a telegram to the Foreign Office on 23 August, Leeper
explained that:
For political reasons l asked both the Minister of
State and the Commander-in-Chief that we should
send them back now on the ground of having myself
the responsibility for the se del~cate negotiations
with the King and Tsouderos and knowing how mu ch
the presence of these six men would influence M.
Tsouderos' colleagues, l was satisfied that it was
( essential for the Government to try to find a
solution acceptable to the King in a calm
atmosphere. 1 0 6
Although the Foreign Office disagreed, Leeper had a powerful
ally in Churchill who concurred that the six man deleg~tion
be sent back to Greece as quickly as possible. 1 0 7 On their
way to the airport Tsouderos intervened and the delegation
103. Clogg, "Pearls from Swine", p. 183; FO 371/37204 R
7884.
104. FO 371/37231 R 7894.
105. Both were attending the Quadrant Co~ference in Quebec.
106. FO 371/37198 R 7950. Clogg ("Pearls from Swine", cites
this reference as proof that Leeper was acting on his own
and not on instructions from the Foreign Office as Myers
(Greek Entanglement, Gloucester 1985, p. 254 ) had assumed.
107. FO 371/37198 R 7950.
408
remained in Cairo for a couple of weeks but in the end
failed to reach any accommodation with the Greek Government-
in-Exile. In the interim period, the British Government,
especially under Churchill's influence, decided that it
would continue the same policy of unequivocal support for
the Gre~k King and accept no compromise with the andartes'
representatives,108 this was followed shortly by the reply
of Roosevelt who also pledge the support of the United
states to George II. 109 The continued presence of the
delegation hence constituted not only an embarrassment but
held the potential of further complications. Leeper in
particular feared that they might influence members of the
Greek Government-in-Exile as weIl as other Greek politicians
in cairo. 110 In mid September the delegation "returned to
Greece disgruntled at their treatrnent and in a most
disappointed frame of mind .... 111 The only change that they
managed to bring back was two American officers which now
turned the British Military Mission (BMM) into the Allied
Military Mission (AMM) .112
108. FO 371/37198 R 7950.
109. FRUS 1943, Vol. 4, pp. 150-151.
110. FO 371/3719b R 7950.
111. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of
the Aegean, Appendix III, p. 10.
112. The two Americans were captain Winston Ehrgott and
Lieutenant Bob Ford. In November, they were joined by Major
Gerald K. Wines who assumed command of the OSS (Office of
strategie Services) part of the Allied Military Mission.
Between August 1943 and November 1944, the OSS dep10yed over
400 men in various clandestine operations in Greece and
provided the state Department with an independent source of
409
The failure of the Cairo visit by the andarte delegation has
been considered by several historians and participants as a
contributing factor to the outbreak of civil war in the
Greek mountains between the resistance groups.113 The
resistance representatives returned to Greece convinced that
the British were bent upon imposing the Greek King and the
pre-war political structure which had led to a dictatorship
between 1936-1941. In Cairo the failure by the British and
the Greek Government-in-Exile to ~jdress the demands of the
andarte delegatian brought to the fo~efront the
contradictory policies of the SOE and the Foreign Office
towards Greece which thus far had been, at least
superficially, cloaked in ambiguity. Equally relevant was
information on the Greek situation. By the end of the
occupation, th~ OSS maintained eight missions: five with
EAM-ELAS and one with EDES, the rest operated independently
in several parts of Greece. For the most part, OSS
personnel in Greece tended ta support whichever organization
they were attached to, but they had orders to use British
communications under the control of a senior SOE officer.
On thp other hand, the Secret Intelligence groups, the OSS
intelligence units, maintained independent communications.
In September 1943, relations between the SOE, MI6 and the
OSS were formalized by a series of agreements which gave
each organization certain geographic spheres of
resistibility. Under the terms of these understandings, the
SOE was given exclusive control over the Balkans and the
Middle East (Gerolymatos, "American Foreign Policy towards
Greece and the Problem of Intelligence, 1945-1947", Journal
of Modern Hellenisrn).
113. Clogg, "Pearls from swine, p. 194; Myers, Greek
Entanglement, Gloucester 1985, pp. 263-264; Woodhûuse, Apple
of Discord, LOlldon 1948, p. 158; Pyromaglou, 0 Dourios Ipos:
l Ethniki kai Politiki Krisis kata tin Katochi, Athens 1978,
p. 141; P. Rousos, l Megali Pendaetia 1940-1945: l Ethniki
f Andistasi kai 0 Rolos tou K.K.E., Vol. A, Athens 1982, pp.
1
482-487; Hondros, New York, p. 171.
410
that the Cairo crisis forced the British authorities to mùke
a choice between pursuing the line of the SOF that would
have led to the political recognition of the resistancc
groups or unconditionally support the Greek monarch. In the
final analysis the choice had already been made by
Churchill's conviction that after the defeat of the Axis
Europe had to return to the pre-war political status quo.
The presence of the andarte delegation simply forced the
British in Cairo to come to terms with that policy as far as
the Greeks were concerned.
The process of invoking Churchill's policy however,
precipitated an interdepartmental crisis between the Foreign
Office, the SOE, Headquarters Middle East and the British
Ambassador to the Greek Government-in-Exile. Since
Churchill's absolute support of the Greek King not only
surprised the SOE but caught the British Ambassador
unprepared. Yet in a remarkable turn of events Rex Lecper
managed to turn a politically embarrassing situation into a
skilful attack against the Special operations Executive
which brought about another purge of the SOE organization in
Cairo. 114 The thrust of Leeper's argument was that the SOE
had not only exceeded its mandate by bringing the delegation
to Cairo but its activities in Greece were a liability to
British policy. In a long telegram to Sir Orme Sarget on 7
114. Bickham Sweet-Escott, Baker street Irregular, London
1965, p. 173.
411
October 1943, Leeper attempted to cover himself by
explaining that:
It is true that l realized the anomaly of my
position when l first took over this job and l
discovered that we were engaged in a policy of
complete dupllcity, backing the King with one hand
and EAM with the other. l have do ne my best to
remedy the situation, but since the establishment
of the Joint H.Q. in the rnountains, for which we
have to thank Brigadier Myers, the tide ~3S turned
steadily against my effort, as I was, from th~t
time onward, presented with a fait accompli.1~5
But as early as May 1943 Leeper had indicated that he had
examined the situation in Greece and had implemented
policies to keep track of SOE activities. In a memorandurn
to Sir Orme Sarget he had outlined his analysis of the
( situation and the procedures he had put in place:
~hat ernerges very clearly in my mind was that the
operations in Greece were moving much more quickly
and on a much wider scale than in any of the
occupied countries with which I had to deal
hitherto and it seerned to me that the whole
conception of the S.O.E. having a monopoly in
occupied countries was already out of date as
regards Greece. In order to secure what l wanted
l therefore told Glenconner how much l was
impressed by the way Myers and the other British
officers in Greece had organized the National
Bands and that he had practically assumed the
position of Force Commander ln the field.
Glenconnor, of course, was pleased by this
appreciation of what the S.O.E had done. In this
atmosphere l then proceeded to what l really
wanted, namely to get members of other departments
attached to Myers as a Force Commander in the same
way as in open operations a Force Commander would
have su ch officers attached to him. Glenconnor
agreed to this in the case of the political
advisor and also agreed in the case of the P.W.E.
115. FO 371/37206 74337 R 10553.
412
agents and he asked Hambro particularly not to
upset ~he agreement reached in Cairo. 116
In an earlier cable Leeper had written to Sarget that Myers:
" ... has no political acumen and does not see beyond his no se
or, should l say the noses of his guerrillas. He is not
astute enough in dealing with E.A.M. and l am sure he
exaggerates their political importance.II.117 Yet in August
Leeper had the opportunity to confer with Wallace, Myers'
political advisor, who confirrned much of what Myers had
reported concerning the Greek resistance and particularly
the resentment felt by the Greeks for the King. 11S After
the decision by Churchill and Roosevelt, Leeper not only
backtracked on his initial enthusiasm for negotiating with
the andarte delegation but was able to convince Wallace that
Myers, and by extension the SOE, had been pursuing a
mistaken policy in Greece. 119
It is probable that Leeper's antagonism for EAM-ELAS was
fuelled by a greater resentment of the SOE and the desire to
minimize if not entirely eliminate that organization's role
in Greece. Leeper's relations with the Special operations
Executive had been soured from his earlier posting as head
116. FO 371/37202 74220 R 4461.
117. FO 371/37202 R 4504.
118. FO 371/37204 R 7884.
119. FO 371/37204 R 8216.
413
of SOI, the SOE's propaganda department, which later became
the Political Warfare Executive. 120 In the wake of the
political fiasco caused by the delegation from Greece Leeper
launched a systematic attack on the organizations and
individuals supported by the SOE and through this was able
to undermine the credibility of the Special Operations
Executive. His targets were the senior SOE administrators
in cairo, particularly Keeble, Myers and EAM-ELAS, the
largest resistance force associated with the Special
operations Executive. EAM-ELAS became his first priority
partly from the conviction that this organization stood
against British interests and partly to cover himself from
his initial enthusiasm of supporting sorne of the demands of
the andarte delegation. After subverting Wallace's own
outlook concerning the resistance in Greece 121 his cable of
24 August to the Foreign Office characterized the Greek
guerrillas as:
... untrain€~ and ill-disciplined: theyare
regarded with contempt by Most of the British
liaison officers who are highly skeptical about
their ability ever to undertake serious military
operations su ch as holding beaches or neutralizing
airfields, which tasks S.[O.E.] cheerfully assured
the C-in-C thev will be able to do on the day of
the invasion. 122
120. Cruickshank, Oxford 1981, pp. 17-27.
121. Precisely what was contained in Wallace's report
concerning the Greek resistance and whether this agreed with
the interpretation of Myers o~ Leeper is still unknown. The
file is retained by the department of origin and is not
available for consultation. Wallace himself was killed
after his return to Greece in 1944.
122. FO 371/37204 R 8048.
414
In a second cable Leeper described Myers:
... a complete disaster. He is a man of most
upright and obstinate character, which l find very
boring as it is quite impossible to penetrate his
skull. My blows seem to ricochet off his skull
and disappear somewhere in thin air. He kecps
telling me that he must have hours and hours of
conversation with me in order to convince me. l
have avoided as many of these hours as possible,
but even so 1 am completely convinced that he is a
very dangerous fool, and being a fanatic for his
own ideas, thinking that they provide the only
means of winning the war in Greece, he runs around
exposing them to aIl and sundry, British as well
as Greeks. 123
Leeper's poor impression of Myers carried the day. By late
February 1944 Churchill not only agreed that Myers should
not be permitted to return to Greece but described him as:
" ... the chief man who reared by hand this cockatrice brute
of E.A.M.-E.L.A.S.". In the same minute to the Chiefs of
staff, his evaluation of the Greek andartes was that: "No
great results are anyhow ta be expected from the Greek
guerrilla at the present time . . • . There is no comparison
between them and the bands of Marshal Tito. They are a mere
scourge on the population, and are feared by the Greek
villagers even more than the Germans.". 124
In another respect, Leeper's personnel vendetta was simply a
123. FO 371/37199 R 8314.
124. FO 371/43681 74206
415
more direct expression of the Foreign Office's hostility to
1
the SOE in general. The incident of the andarte delegation
simply served as the primary catalyst for Eden's attempt to
undermine the very existence of the Special Operations
Executive. The basic motive for this attitude outlined by
George Taylor, former Chief of Staff of the SOE, was that:
The Foreign Office simply cou Id not afford to
accept the S.O.E. picture as it was coming out of
Greece without completely stultifying their policy
of complete, total support of the Royal Hellenic
Government. Therefore the attempts to suppress
and rebut this picture turned into an attack on
S.O.E., which was its source; this poison, as it
were, just and grew in London and Cairo. They had
to discredit the picture because once they
accepted it the whole basis of their policy would
have been removed and it would have been shown to
be non-viable. 125
The difflculty with this analy~is is that the SOE, like any
other agency of the Government was obliged to follow the
dictates of British policy, regardless of its
contradictions. The problem, created by the andarte
delegation, brought to the fore front not only the
contradictions of British policy towards Greece but forced
the British Government to deal with the role of the SOE as
an independent organization. For this reason the epicenter
of the Cairo crisis had quickly shifted to London and Lord
Selborne and Colin Gubbins, had to fight desperately to
prevent the dismantling of the SOE. In addition to the
( 125. Taylor, British Policy towards Wartime Resistance in
Yugoslavia and Greece, London 1975, p. 266.
416
Foreign Office attack, Selborne and Gubbins had to fend off
an atternpt by Middle East Headquarters which according to
Sweet-Escott would have led to the: Il • • • actual dismemberment
of S.O.E. in the Middle East and its links with London, to
be replaced by something of their own creation entirely
within their own hands.". 126 Ultimately, Selborne and
Gubbins rnanaged to save the SOE both in London and in Cairo.
The Defence Cornrnittee of the Cabinet and the Chiefs of Staff
accepted that the SOE should retain its autonomy but its
activities were placed under the direct control of the
Chiefs of Staff. Middle East Headquarters, however,
continued to retain operational direction of its activities
within their area of jurisdiction 127
Part of the compromise affected in London by Gubbins and
Selborne was that both Glenconnor and Keeble had to be
sacrificed and that Myers was not permitted to return to
Greece. The almost complete shift of the Cairo SOE to
rnilitary control did not, however, satisfy the Foreign
Office's desire to break off aIl contact with EAM-ELAS.
General Wilson, the Cornrnander-in-Chief of the Middle Ea~tern
Theater of Operations, viewed the work of the SOE with the
resistance from a strictly military perspective:
.•• (the) SOE wanted to build up resistance
126. Bickharn Sweet-Escott, British policy towards wartirne
Resistance in Yugoslavia and Greece, London 1975, p. 167.
127. Hinsley, New York 1984, Vol. 3, p. 463.
417
regardless of the politics of any of the bands
they had contacted. From the war effort point of
view the latter course was preferable and I
personally did not like the idea of tying our
liaison officers exclusively to one political
party. (The right and right-centre parties did not
figure in ~he resistance movement while Zervas was
a republican); l felt that the wisest course was
to work with the left wing parties and endeavour
to guide them rather than to resist them. 128
On 9 October the Greek guerrillas entered into a full scale
war with each other but despite this Wilson resisted the
efforts of the Foreign Office to sever aIl contact with EAM-
ELAS and remove the AMM. 129 In effect, British policy
towards the Greek resistance after the fall of 1943 still
clung to the notion that they could maintain a balance
between the left-wing EAM-ELAS and the other guerrilla
bands.
To a great extent the British hdd little choice since they
had not been able to strengthen Zervas early enough in the
development of the Greek resistance, nor did he have the
capability, of gaining control of the entire guerrilla
movement. SOE support of Republican and anti-monarchical
organizations had also created the impression that Britain
was prepared to discuss the Greek constitutional issue
before the end of the war but the failure cf the Cairo
delegation had clearly demonstrated that the resistance
128. Wilson, London 1950, p. 167.
129. FO 371/37206 74337.
418
organizations would have little say over the question of the
monarchy. Since this almost coincided with the collapse of
Italy in September it raised the specter of immanent
liberation and the imposition of the Greek King by the
British arrny. These considerations served as the
fundamental causes for the civil war which pitted the
EAM-ELAS, now representing the main opposition to the
monarchy, against EDES and the other smaller groups
identified by the Left as agents of the British and the
Greek King.
Fighting broke out on 9 October 1943 and within one week had
spread to the areas of eastern Epiros under the control of
the guerrillas. By the end of November, Zervas had
withdrawn his forces from the edst side of the Arachtos
river to defensive positions from Ioannina to Arta. On 21
December, EDES units attacked the ELAS forces in the region
of Amphilochia and Pramanda, approximately twenty-five miles
from Arta, and pushe~ them back across the Arachtos river.
In Janl.lary, Zervas began an offensive which forced ELAS to
withdraw across the Akhelos. On 23 January, the EAM Central
Committee authorized ELAS to discuss a truce which lasted
only until the 26th when units of ELAS, commanded by Aris
Veloukhiotis launched a major counter-attack which forced
EDES back across the Akhelos. By 1 February, Zervas'
situation was becoming desperate as ELAS forces were
concentrating in the area of Flamburion, approximately 20
419
miles from Ioannina, EDES's base of operations. Zervas was
saved at the last moment thanks ta the intervention of the
Germans who, afraid that EDES would be destroyed and that
eastern Epiros along with the essential Ioannina - Arta road
would corne under the control of ELAS, on 2 February 1944
attacked the northern flank of ELAS along the east bank of
the Arachtos.1 30 Although the Gerrnans failed to destroy the
ELAS forces in this region they forced thern out of Epiros
and saved Zervas. According to Hondros the Germans expected
Zervas to take the offensive but the latter, having suffered
considerable casualties, kept his forces west of the
Arachetos and as long as he remained in this region, he no
longer needed to fear ELAS since the presence of strong
Wehrmacht units guaranteed his safety.131 The civil war was
now stalemated and bath rival guerrilla organizations
accepted the mediation of the AMM ta end hosti~ities.132
130. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 183. Hondros (New York
1983, pp. 175-183), in his account of the Greek resistance
includes a detailed study of Zervas' contacts with the
Germans. On contacts between the Greek guerrilla bands and
the Germans in general also see: Hagen Fleischer, "Contacts
between German Occupation Authorities and the Major Greek
Resistance Organizations: Sound Tactics or Collaboration",
Greece in the 1940's: A Nation in crisis, ed. J.O. Iatrides,
Hanover and London 1981, pp. 48-60.
131. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 183.
132. By August 1944, according to General H. Lanz ("Partisan
Warfare in the Balkans", Historical Division European
Command, Foreign Military Studies Branch, MS No. P-055a, pp.
21-22), EDES had received considerable material support from
the Allies and under strong pressure from the AMM attempted
ta destroy German units in the region of Epiros. As a
result, Zervas' forces suffered considerable losses so that
1• by the time of the German withdrawal in October, EDES was
d0wn to 8,000 men and, in the ensuing battles with ELAS, not
only were the forces of Zervas defeated but had to be
420
The civil War also renewed the conflict between the Foreign
Office and the SOE, only this time it was Middle East which
was responsible for the Special Operations Executive. The
military was convinced that the Greek resistance was
necessary in order to tie down as many German divisions as
possible in the Balkans to support the Allied effort in
Europe. They disagreed with the Foreign Office policy of
supporting George Il which they viewed as an obstacle in
continuing the expansion of the Greek guerrilla forces,
particularly those of EAM-ELAS. 133 General Wilson as weIl
as the Chiefs of Staff still believed that it was possible
to wean ELAS from the Communist influence of EAM and re-
introduced an earlier SOE proposaI to bring Plastiras from
France to the Greek mountains and create a regency council
headed by Archbishop Damaskinos. 134 The Foreign Office,
although skeptical of the rnilitary value of ELAS, was
prepared to accept the use of a regency council, providing
that the military break with EAM-ELAS. The latter provision
was the price Leeper demanded in order to accept the
evacuated by the British from mainland Greece to the ronian
Islands. Thus, when the Greek Government returned to Athens
ELAS controlled the entire Epiros region, northern Greece,
the Peloponnese and Attika.
133. In a rnernorandum to the Foreign Office on 14 October
1943, it was argued that British had to work with EAM-ELAS
since this was the rnost effective resistance in Greece. The
author of the memorandum also stressed that left wing groups
produce much better results (FO 371/37206 R 10177).
134. FO 371/37208 R 1221; FO 371/37206 74337.
421
Plastiras-Damaskinos compromise. 135 The entire matter was
dealt with by the War Cabinet on 22 November which
authorized Churchill and Eden to deal with the issue in
cooperation with the Middle East Commando Accordingly, it
was recommended that aIl supplies to ELAS cease and EDES be
incorporated into the Greek army and the same invitation was
to be extended to the ELAS guerrillas. To ensure this, the
King had to agree to accept a regency council and not return
to Greece until a plebiscite was held. 136 Churchill and
Eden advised George II to accept this proposaI but the
latter, after consulting with Roosevelt declined. 137 The
most that George II was prepared to accept was to declare
that he would reconsider the timing of his return to Greece
at liberation, in consultation with his government. Once
again the failure to resolve the constitutional issue
remained the major stumbling block to either reaching an
accommodation with the Left or countering the influence of
EAM-ELAS with those who opposed the monarchy.
Although ELAS achieved considerable tactical success against
the forces of Zervas it failed to destroy EDES and it was
135. FO 371/37206 R 10295; FO 371/37208 R 11753, R 11908.
136. CAB 65/40, W.M. (43), Minutes, 22 November 1943.
137. Anthony Eden, The Reckoning, London 1962 pp. 498-499;
FRUS 1943, Vol. 4, 157-158; Lincoln MacVeagh, Ambassador
MacVeagh Reports: Greece, 1933-1944, ed. J.O. Iatrides,
Princeton 1980, p. 395. For a comprehensive of American
policy towards Greece at least from 1943 see: Lawrence S.
Wittner, American Intervention in Greece, 1943-1949, New
-{ York 1982.
422
beginning to lose popularity because of the hardships
endured by the population as a result of the civil war. The
British were also forced to come to terms with the Greek
civil war, Hondros argues, since the decision to irnplernent
Operation Overlord, taken at the Teheran Conference,
required the Allies to support Tito and the Greek resistance
in order to keep the "Balkan pot boiling" for the
Germans. 138 Under these conditions, the Foreign Office was
prepared not to break with EAM-ELAS but atternpted to lirnit
its strength and diminish its influence. To this end it
proposed, Hondros cornrnents, " ... to restrain the more
ruthless mernbers of ELAS and to build an anti-KKE coalition
around Damaskinos and the exiled government which was to be
revived and strengthened by including fresh political
moderates from Greece.".139
The Foreign Office wast despite Churchill's objections,
prepared to accept memhers of EAM-ELAS in a new Greek
coalition government. 140 In January, consequently, the
Foreign Office proposed to initiate talks with EAM-ELAS with
the purpose of ending the civil war and although Tsouderos
agreed he insisted that any negotiations be lirnited to
military matters. A few weeks lat~r, Tsouderos received a
communication from the leaders of the political parties
138. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 204.
139. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 204.
140. FO 371/37210 R 13883.
423
endorsing the King's position of 8 November regarding his
return to Greece. In turn, Tsouderos appealed to Archbishop
Damaskinos ta attempt a reconciliation between the leaders
of the political parties and the Greek Government-in-Exile.
In addition, if EAM-ELAS accepted an armistice, Damaskinos
was to select a committee to negotiate the formation of a
coalition government that would include representatives from
EAM-ELAS. Woodhouse was authorized to represent the Greek
premier in the talks with EAM-ELAS and after fourteen
meetings, the civil war was brought to an end by the
c~nclusion of the Plaka Agreement on 29 February 1944. 141
The gist of this agreement obliged the signatories to
continue the armistice and maintain the territorial status
quo in their respective regions while agreeing to cooperate
i, in the future. A secret clause was aiso included which
added that the guerrilla organizations would participate
closely with Operation Noah's Ark designated to harass the
German retreat from Greece. 142
The Plaka Agreement was only a limited succeS8 since it
essentially established a permanent military truce but
failed to address any of the outstanding political issues.
The political failure of the agreement now acted as a
141. Hondros, New York 1983, pp. 206-207.
142. Other stipulations included the resumption of supplies
to all the guerrilla organizations and the release of
prisoners. For the complete articles of the agreement see:
Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, Appendix F, "The
{ Plaka Armistice", pp. 303-304.
424
catalyst for EAM-ELAS to begin the process of forming its
own government. Although most Greek po1iticians had
rebuffed EAM's efforts to participate in the creation of ~
Greek government in the mountains, several liberals and
Republicans accepted to work with EAM in order to moderato
the KKE's influence and work towards achieving self-
determination for post-war Greece. On 10 March 1944, EAM
formally established the Political Committee of National
Liberation (PEEA). The Committee inc1uded not only rnernbers
of EAM but had attracted: Alexander Svolos, one of Greece's
preeminent constitutional experts, Angelos Angelopoulos,
another academic, General Mandakas, the only senior Greek
officer to lead a coup against the Metaxas regime in 1938
and Colonel Bakirdzis, who abandoned EKKA and joined
PEEA. 143 The creation of PEEA caused a political crisis for
the British and the Greek Government-in-Exile since,
according to Hondros, it "presented London and Cairo with a
real if not legal rival.".144 Many of the officers and men
of the Greek armed forces in the Middle East viewed PEEA as
the legitimate representative of the Greek people and
resented the refusaI of Tsouderos and the King to corne to
143. The other members of PEEA included several more
academics and social Dernocrats with Siantos serving as the
only representative of the KKE (On the history and
organization of PEEA see: Basilis Bouras, l Politiki
Epitropi Ethnikis Apeleftherosis PEEA: Eleftheri Ellada
1944, Athens 1983, passim). Bouras (Athens 1983, p. 90)
argues that the participation of sorne of Greece's most
notable academics indicated that the intellectuals had
become supporters of EAM.
144. Hondros, New York 1983, pp. 211-212.
425
terms with PEEA'S request for the establishment of a new
Greek government. 145 On 26 March, the day after the
celebration of Greece's independence day, PEEA made another
appeal for a government of national unit y and this time it
sparked a mutiny in the Greek arrned forces in the Middle
East. Tsouderos refused to deal with the dernands of the
mutineers to recognize PEEA and broaden the governrnent and
was supported by the British, particularly by Churchill who
blamed the mutiny on extremists and Communists. Meanwhile
the liberals and Venizelist politicians in and out of the
Greek Government-in-Exile tried to convince Tsouderos to
resign in favor of Sofoklis Venizelos who they argued was in
a better position to deal with the rebellious Greek forces.
Tsouderos at first resisted but on 13 April gave up his post
and was succeeded by Venizelos. 146 The latter was equally
unsuccessful in quelling the mutiny and after thirteen days
also resigned. The British took matters into their own
hands and forced the appointment of AdmiraI Voulgaris as
Commander-in-Chief of the Greek Navy to put down the rebels.
145. L.S. Stavrianos, "Mutiny of the Greek Arrned Forces,
April 1944", The American Slavic and East European Review,
(December 1950) Vol. 9, p. 307; Harold Macmillan, The Blast
of War, 1939-1945, London 1967, p. 571: Fleischer, "The
Anomalies in the Greek Middle East Forces, 1941-1944",
Journal of the Helienic Diaspora, (Fall 1978) Vol. V, No. 3,
pp. 26-27.
146. According to Fleischer ("The Greek Middle East Forces,
1941-144", pp. 28-29), Venizelos had contacts with the
mutineers ana he as weIl as the other Republican politicians
were attempting to use the crisis to topple Tsouderos. By
this time, however, bath the King and the Foreign Office had
( become convinced that keeping Tsouderos would aggravate the
crisis and found Venizelos the only acceptable alternative.
426
After a short skirrnish, Vou1garis with the support of the
British mi1itary restored order by the end of April. 147
The end of the civil war in February 1944 and the mutiny of
the Greek armed forces in th~ Middle East 1eft the Greek
Government-in-Exi1e in disarray and with little influence in
occupied Greece. EAM-ELAS, on the other hand, had emerged
not only a much stronger organization but raised the specter
of a potential conflict with the British since 1iberation
would not come in the form of an Allied invasion of Greece
but follow in the wake of a German retreat, thus leaving
most of the country under the control of EAM-ELAS. In the
interim period, between the spring of 1944 and the German
evacuation in October, the British had to plan for two
possibilities: a) to bring about the liberation of Greece
with the cooperation of EAM-ELAS, at least long enough for
the Greek Government-in-Exile to re-assert its authority
over the country, b) to cooperate with the anti-Communist
elements linked to the Rallis Government and use thern to
maintain control of Greece until the British could bring
sufficient forces to prop up the return of the King and his
government.
147. Eighteen of the rebels were condemned ta death but
their sentences were comrnuted to life irnprisonment by the
Greek Government in October 1944. The British irnprisoned
6,397 Greek seamen and soldiers in camps in Eritrea and in
other detention cent ers in the Middle East. 2,060 were
eventual reinstated in the arrned forces but confined to
garrison duties while another 1,450 who were offered amnesty
refused and were detained for the duration of the war (FO
371/43714 R 7081; Rondros, New York 1983, p. 214).
427
Both possibilities required at least a partial reform of the
Greek Government-in-Exile which had to include
representatives from the resistance as weIl ~s deal with the
question of the monarchy. Although these factors had come
into play and had surnmarily been rejected when the andarti
delegation visited cairo in August 1943, the new realities
created by the civil war and the fa ct that no Allied army
would liberate Greece required an accommodation with the
Left, at least on British terrns. Part of the means of
addressing this problem required, at the very least, the
semblance of a Greek coalition government and a premier who
represented the liberal establishment and had credibility in
occupied Greece.
The man who had these qualities was George Papandreou. As a
follower of Venizelos, he had held three cabinet portfolios
and had a reputation of supporting progressive legislation.
In March 1942 he had signed the petition calling upon George
II to remain outside Greece until a plebiscite determined
the fate of the rnonarchy. During the occupation, he kept in
touch with members of the resistance but declined to join
EAM-ELAS and later sent a series of dispatches ta Cairo not
only denouncing the former but warning the Greek Government-
in-Exile and the British of the growing influence of the
KKE. These communications had greatly impressed the Foreign
Office particularly Papandreou's analysis of the
428
international political order which he essentially divided
into: Pan-Slavist Communism, which threatened to swallow
Greece and Europe and Anglo-Saxon Liberalism as the only
force able to oppose it. 148 Accordingly, the British and
George II decided to bring Papandreou out of Greece and with
Churchill's approval he was made acting premier on 26 April
1944.
Papandreou's first task was to chair an all party conference
to be held in Lebanon on 17 May 1944; the purpose of which
was to form a government of national unit y that would also
include representatives of the resistance organizations. 149
Papandreou's skilful management of the conference isolated
the EAM-ELAS delegates by accusing them of causing the civil
war as well as the April mutiny.150 Next he side-stepped
the constitutional problem by having the 8 November letter
of George II, which declared that the King would reconsider
his return to Greece in consultation with his governrnent, as
the guiding principle of the role of the monarchy in the
immediate post-liberation period. 151 The conference ended
three days later on 20 May with the conclusion of the
Lebanon Charter whose eight points were accepted by aIl the
148. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 216.
149. The conference had been arranged by Tsouderos before
the arrival of Papandreou.
150. Leeper, London 1950, p. 51.
151. According to Leeper (London 1950, p. 54) Papandreou
, " simply managed ta postpone the question of the monarchy.
429
participants including the EAM-ELAS and PEEA delegates. 152
'.
Papandreou reported the results of the conference to the
King and submitted his resignation. The King, in turn,
accepted the Lebanon charter and asked Papandreou to form a
new government based on the principles agreed to at the
conference. 153
The main objective for Papandreou was ta form a government
152. A summary of these points is found in Woodhouse, Apple
of Discord, London 1948, Appendix G, pp. 305-306 and in
Leeper, When Greek Meets Greek, London 1950, pp. 53-54: 1)
The reorganization and re-establishment of discipline in the
Greek armed forces in the Middle East under the Greek
national flag must be carried out exclusively on a national
and military basis. The arrny will carry out the orders of
the Government, and cannat poses political opinions. 2) AlI
guerrilla bands in free Greece must be unified and
disciplined under the orders of a single government, and
( also the setting in motion, when the moment arrives, of aIl
fighting forces of the nation against the invader. The
guerrilla principL' Jf military organization cannot be a
permanent one; but no change should be made at the moment
which will lead to a reduction of resistance. Consequently
the present situation must be regarded as a transitional
one, and the initiative in settling it can only be taken by
the Government in consul~ation with GHQ, MEF. 3) Cessation
of the reign of terror in the Greek countryside and firm re-
establishment of personal security and political liberty of
the people, when and where the invader has been driven out.
4) continuaI care for sending sufficient supplies of food
and medlcines to enslaved Greece and also to mountain
Greece. 5) The securing - once the country has been
liberated in common with the Allied forces - of order and
liberty for the Greek people in such a way that,
uninfluenced by material or moral pressure, they may
sovereignly decide both on the constitution and the social
regime and on the Government which they want. 6) Imposition
of severe sanctions against traitors to the country and
against those who have exploited the mis fortune of our
people. 7) Care in advance that the material needs of the
Greek people shall be immediately satisfied after
liberation. 8) Full satisfaction of our national claims.
Creation of a new, free and Great Greece.
153. Leeper, London 1950, p. 56.
430
of national unit y which would include representation from
the resistance organizations and thus force EAM-ELAS to act
in concert with the new government and abandon PEEA. EAM-
ELAS, however, upon receiving the terms of the Lebanon
Charter refused to endorse it or join the new Greek
Government. 154 For the next several, rnonths Papandreou and
the British waged an overt and covert campaign ta bring EAM-
ELAS into the new government of national unity. Papandreou
for his part interpreted the Ki~g's letter of 8 November
1943 ta ffiean that the Greek Government-in-Exile accepted
that George II would not return ta Greece until a plebiscite
addressed the issue of the rnonarchy thus removing the most
serious objection for EAM-ELAS to join the government. 155
The British, on the other hand, had been atternpting, even
before the Lebanon Agreement to conta in the growing power of
EAM-ELAS and search for new coalitions to form an anti-left
front. Ironically, the Gerrnans at this time were pursuing
the same pol icy.
After the outbreak of civil war in October 1943 it had
become obvious that the Venizelists and LiberaIs were na
154. Hondros, New York 1983, pp. 224-226.
155. On 12 June, according to Leeper (London 1950, pp. 57-
58), Papandreou canvinced his cabinet ta state publicly that
it was the view of the National Governrnent that the King
would return to Greece only after a plebiscite and that the
King had agreed to this in advance bath by his letter ta
Tsouderos on 8 November 1943 and by approving the Lebanan
Charter in which this policy was implicit. George II had
little choice but to accept or face the resignatian of the
Government.
-.
431
match for the KKE. The Republican forces, which the SOE had
50 carefully cultivated as the lesser of two evils with
respect to the Left and extreme Right, had lost their
cohesion as a unified political organi?ation in the
resistance. However, they still represented a considerable
force and an Ideal target for the Germans who in the fall of
1943 began to approach counter-insurgency from a political
perspective, with a focus on anti-communism. From the
beginning of the occupation, the Germans concentrated on
occupying and protecting key strategie positions along their
lines of communications and supply. The countryside was
left to the guerrillas except for limited operations
conducted occasionally.156 Until 1943, the Italians han
responsibility for securing most of Greece as weIl as
(
implementing anti-guerrilla operations and according to
Hondros the Germans only took action in cases of specifie
sabotage in their zones of occupation. 157 The situation,
however, changed as a result of the Italian collapse.
In the Spring of 1943, Ioannis Rallis had agreed to head the
third occupation government with the proviso that his regime
would be permitted to maintain a security force. The German
authorities agreed in principle and on 7 April 1943, the
Rallis Government decreed the mobilization of four Evzone
156. For a detailed analysis of the tactics of the German
military operations see: Hondros, New York 1983, pp. 153-
159.
{ 157. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 153.
432
Battalions. 158 In order to allay the fears of their Italian
Ally, the Germans only permitted the newly created
battalions to be armed with rifles and machine guns. 159
This policy changed with the surrender of Italy and by
October 1943, the first of the battalions came into service
in Athens followed by two more by the end of December.
Despite a persistent recruitment campaign, the Rallis forces
only attracted a handful of volunteers. But the success of
EAM-ELAS in the early stages of the civil war encouraged
many conservative officers to join the Security Battalions.
During the course of the civil war, sorne mernbers of
guerrilla bands dispersed by ELAS, sought refuge and/or
revenge by enlisting in the battalions. 160 Since a large
proportion of these men were Republicans they were attracted
ta the battalions which were advertised as antl-Communist as
weIl as anti-Royalist forces. Moreover, EDES, after Zervas'
reconciliation with the monarchy, had ceased to represent
the Republican cause.
In June 1943 the political organization of EDES fell apart
158. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the Civil
War", Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora, Vol. XlI, No. 1,
Spring 1985, p. 17.
159. NARS RG 226:83476; E. Wiskemann, The Rome Berlin Axis:
A History of the Relations between Hitler and Mussolini,
London 1949, p. 278: The Brutal Friendship, London 1962, p.
253.
160. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the civil
War", p. 18.
433
and one faction led by Voulpiotis and Tavoularis had played
,~
... a prominent role in the organization of the Security
Battalions. other prominent Republicans either joined or,
as in the case of Pangalos, were instrumental in urging many
of their followers to do so. Pangalos also arranged for the
appointment of Voulpiotis to the Rallis Government and
nominated Col. Dertelis, another memher of the Republican
faction, to the position of commander of the battalions. 161
For one faction of the old Republican guard the battalions
represented the best means of combating the Left but more
importantly, they planned to use the battalions to prevent
the re~urn of the monarchy.162
For the Germans, increasing the numLer of the battalions
(
also provided them with needed forces to replace the Italian
units stationed in Greece. Early in 1944 the Rallis
Government seized the opportunity offered by the willingness
of 'the German authorities to expand the battalions and began
an intensive campaign to recruit a con~iderable number of
new volunteers. In order to maintain a steady flow of
recruits the Rallis regime dismissed hundreds of men from
local police forces without any pay or rations. To make
recruitment to the battalions more palatable rumors were
spread that the British and American Governments secretly
161. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the civil
War", p. 19.
162. Gerolymatos, The Security Battalions and the cjvil
War", p. 19
434
supported Rallis. In addition, on 19 March 1944, the puppet
government enacted legislation which perrnitted aIl officers
who had been disrnissed from the arrned forces since 1927 to
re-enlist on the basis of their former rank provided they
served in the battalions. 163 This, coupled with the
propaganda that the battalions were essentially to be used
to combat Comrnunisrn 164 offered rnany cashiered Republican
officers the possibility of reinstatement in a post-war
Greek arrny.165
Ironically, Royalist officers faced a similar dilemma. In
the spring of 1943, the rnonarchist faction of the officer
corps made an atternpt to create an organization to represent
and maintain the unit y of the Royalist officers. This group
was established by General Papagos and five other GeneraIs
163. NARS RG 226:83476
164. According to Pyromaglou ("Ta Tagmata ASfalias",
Istoriki Epitheorisis, p. 543), although the Security
Battalions were envisioned as a means of controlling the
immediate post-war perjod in Greece they were not intended
~o be used as an anti-Cornmunist force. Pyromaglou adds that
their use against EAM-ELAS not only betrayed the Republican
leaders wh ' ) had supportect the establ ishrnent of these uni ts
but served ~o divide the Republican ~orld in a rnanner that
was unreconcilable.
165. Professional considerations were certainly a motive
since the rnutinies on the Greek arrned forces in the Middle
East had caused the removal of rnany Republican officers. A
post-war Greek arrny, i t was assurned would also have to
accommoda te officers who had fought in North Africa and
those who had participated in the resistance, at least with
right wing groups. This would leave little roorn for
officers who had rernained outside these forces (A. stavrou,
Allied Politics and Military Interventions: The Political
Role of the Greek Army, Athens 1970, p. 24.
435
on 20 May and named the Military Hierarchy. Very quickly,
the new organization extended its influence among the
professional officers in Athens and through them to those
who resided in the pre-war regions of the Greek Army
divisions. 166 The aims of the Military Hierarchy were to
support the organizations fighting the occupation forces by
providing leadership and maintain the established social and
political order by gaining control of Athens after a German
withdrawal. 167 Despite the prestige of Papagos the generals
were unable to solicit any interest from either the British
or from any of the guerrilla bands. Shortly after aIl six
were arrested by the German authorities and sent to a
concentration camp. Although the leadership of the Military
( Hierarchy was decapitated by the arrest of the generals the
organization survived and remained dormant until liberation.
At that point, many of its adherents re-surfaced and were
able to take advantage of the anti-Left policies of the
British and the Greek Government to ensure the establishment
of the pre-war social and political order.
The failure of the Military Hierarchy in the spring of 1943
to take control of the resistance or to create a Royalist
counterpart, forced many of the Royalist officers to join
166. Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer Corps", p.
76.
167. Constantinos Th. Bakopoulos, l Omeria ton Pende
(. Andistratigon: l Zoe ton - stratopeda Sygendroseos, Athens
1948, pp. 34-38 .
436
ELAS, EOES or other snlaller groups. Indeed, the attempt by
the Military Hierarchy ta get involved with the resistance,
despite its failure, sent a strong signal to the officer
corps that it was now acceptable for the professional
officers to participate in the guerrilla bands. The
subsequent disbanding of the smaller groups and occasionally
of EDES bands also brought Many of these Royalists into the
Security Battalions. 168 At the same time the adherence of
the Royalist faction of Greek officers to the resistance
groups in 1943 had a significant impact upon the ideological
composition of EOES. In the fall of 1943 EDES included 900
officers, Many of whom had been forced to leave the Greek
army as a result of their participation in the coups of the
1930's. This, however, did not remain a constant figure and
both the number and political affiliation of the officers
and men in EDES reflected the fortunes of the organization
during the course of the civil war. By the late fall of
1943 EDES was down to 150 men as a result of its conflict
with ELAS yet by the sp!:ing of 1944 it had increased its
numberr to 5,000. During the se fluctuations, many
Republicans either left the resistance or joined the
battalions and were replaced by Royalists whose admission to
EOES was facilitated by Zervas' reconciliation with the
monarchy.169
168. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the civil
War", p. 20.
169. Gerolymatos, "The Role of the Greek Officer corps", p.
77.
- l
437
The development and growth of the battalions was also
assisted by the ambivalent attitude of the British t0wards
these and other forces carrying the label of anti-communism.
Even prior to the outbreak of civil war, officers of the
British intelligence services had come into indirect contact
with the representatives of the Rallis Government and
individuals associated with the battalions. In September
1943 captain Frank Macaskie attempted with the collaboration
of Angelos Ever1:, the head of the Athens police force, and
Archbishop Damaskinos to form an anti-Communist front as a
counter-block te> EAM-EIAS. 170 The coalition of these anti-
Communist forces not only included several conservative
( Republicans but certain members of the Athens EDES who were
already working for the Germans or had been instrumental in
organizing the Security Battalions. 171
Macaskie's efforts led to a proposal by Damaskinos that he
and Evert be recognized by the British and Greek Government-
in-Exile as the legitimate representatives of the government
in occupied Greece and form sorne type of regency council.
Macaskie would then act as liaison between Cairo and the
council. It was also proposed that in return for
intelligence to be provided by Evert, the British would
undertake to arm 3,000 men that would be led by Evert
170. Hondros, New York 1983, pp. 172-173.
f 171. Hondros, New York 1983" p. 173.
438
himself. 172 Although these proposaIs were weIl received by
the Foreign Office, the British declined the otfer since
they feared that such an arrangement would Intensif y the
civil war. Macaskie's efforts, however, were followed by
another British officer, Captain Don stott, who on 4
November 1943 signed an agreement with several staunch anti-
Communists that also inc1uded a member of the Ral1is
Gavernment. The Foreign Office, however, repudiated this
agreement after stott's return to Cairo in December. 173 Yet
according to Hondros: "The crucial point, however, was that
EAM/ELAS was aware of efforts by British agents, whether
authorized or not, to build a counter-organization to
EAM/ELAS.".174
Compounding the suspicions of EAM-ELAS, both the British and
Greek Government-in-Exile initially avoided any outright
denunciation of the Security Battalions but confined their
comments in propaganda broadcasts to mild reprimands. 175
172. According to Hondros (New York 1983, p. 173), these
forces were to serve as the basis of an expanded resistance
army to be organized in the mountains near Athens and
commanded by Greek officers from the Middle East. Following
a German withdrawal from Greece Damaskinos proposed that the
council organize a general election followed by a plebiscite
on the monarchy.
173. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 174.
174. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 174. Hondros adds (New
York, p. 173) that Although EAM-ELAS did not publicly
denounce British contacts with the Rallis Government shortly
after the outbreak of the civil wvr they made strong
protests ta Cairo that British officers were working with
collaborators.
175. Hondros, "Too Weighty a Weapon: Britain and the Greek
•
439
For example, one directive of 2 June 1944 stipulated that
aIl those who joined the battalions were assisting the
Germans but they should not be denounced as traitors.
Twenty days later, a second directive suspended aIl direct
attacks against the Rallis forces 176 but was lifted in July
and it was only in September 1944 that the Greek Government-
in-Exile publicly denounced these units. 177
By the summer of 1944 the political spectrum of the
resistance had altered significantly and the pre-dominance
of EAM-ELAS now overshadowed the old Royalist-Republican
schism. Within this framework, the battalions assumed the
position of intermediaries between the post-war "political
revolution" represented by EAM-ELAS and the re-e-stablishment
(
of the old order identified by EDES and backed by the
British. In as mu ch as the civil war spawned the creation
of the Security Battalions it also marginalized the role of
EDES, and with it the Republican cause, not only within the
resistance movement but as a potential player in post-war
Greece. On the other hand, EAM-ELAS between the fall of
1943 and the summer of 1944 clearly emerged as a major
political and military force which controlled most of the
Greek countryside and had an established infrastructure
Security Battalions, 1943-1944", Journal of the Hellenic
Diaspora, Vol. XV, Nos. 1 and 2, 1988, pp. 36-37.
176. FO 371/43706
177. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the Civil
( War", p. 21.
440
within the major cities and towns. The collapse of Italy
also provided EAM-ELAS with an added bonus, since the one
Italian division which managed to avoid internment by the
Germans was forced to surrender to the AMM but in ELAS held
territory. Despite British efforts to keep the Italian
force intact logistical problems required that the Italians
be dispersed but in the process they had to abandon their
weapons. 178 Most of these ended up in the hands of ELAS
giving that organization a considerable number of artillery
and heavy machine guns and hence decreasing its independence
on British supplies.
Thus with the exception of Zervas' nurnerically inferior EDES
bands and the lirnited number of guerrillas controlled by
right-wing groups the only other force capable of containing
what had now become an army, ELAS, was the Security
Battalions. According to Hondros, after EAM-ELAS refused to
accept the Lebanon Charter, Churchill, Eden and Leeper
considered denouncing EAM-ELAS but were dissuaded by
Woodhouse. The lattùC had arrived in Cairo in June and
proposed that if the British broke off with EAM-ELAS, the
Security Battalions would be needed. Woodhouuse recommel.ded
178. General Infante, the ('0inmander of the Pinerolo Di vision
instantly changed sides after the Italian surrender and
signed an agreement with ELAS recognizing his unit as an
Allied force. The Pineralo Division had a compliment of
12,000 weIl equipped men. within one month, ELAS divided
the Italian division into small units which were
.... subsequently disarmed (Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London
1948, p. 101).
441
that contact be maintained with the battalions. 179 As
mentioned above, Lela Karagiannis had been instructed to
initiate talks with Dertilis, the commander of the Securiry
Battalions, and persuade him to place his units at the
disposaI of the British in exchange for immunity from
prosecution by the Greek Government. 180 While these
discussions were going on, both Dertelis and Karagiannis
were arrested ln May and September respectively.
Papandreou, with the support of Lord Moyne, was also
considering the possibility of incorporating the Security
Battalions into the new national army that was to be formed
after liberation. 1B1 Although this plan fell through,
during the summer of 1944 the absence of any strong and
outright denunciation of these forces was used as indirect
pressure for EAM-ELAS to join the Greek Government. 182
After many mutual denunciations between EAM-ELAS and the
Greek Government-in-Exile on 29 July EAM-ELAS informed Cairo
that it was prepared to join the government providing that
Papandreou stepped down as premier. This sudden change in
policy has been attributed by sorne scholars to the influence
of a Soviet mission which had arrived in Greece 011 26
179. Hondros, "Britain and the Security Battalions, 1943-
1944", p. 37.
180. Chapter 6.
181. Papastratis, London 1984, p. 210.
182. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the Civil
War", p. 21 note 23.
442
July.183 Both Churchill and Eden, however, denounced the
condition of EAM-ELAS for Papandreou's resignation. On 18
August, Siantos, the acting secretary of the KKE and a
member of the Central Committee of EAM, dropped all previous
demands and accepted the admission of five EAM-ELAS
representatives in the Greek Government. 184 In the meantime
the British had resolved to send a small force to Greece to
facilitate the transition from occupation ta liberation but
primarily ta prevent EAM-ELAS from seizing power. l85 In
early September the Greek Government-in-Exile moved to
Caserta, Italy and on 26 September in conjunction with the
British and the representatives of the resistance concluded
an agreement (The Caserta Agreement) to facilitate the
transition from occupation ta libe~ation. The main concern,
however, was the demobilization of the guerrilla bands and
the re-establishment of the Greek Government. The essential
provisions included:
183. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 230: Woodhouse, Something
Ventured, London 1982, p. 86. For a detailed study of the
Soviet Mission in Greece and its possible role in the
decision of EAM-ELAS to join the Greek Government see: Lars
Baerentzen, "The ArrivaI of the Soviet Military Mission in
July 1944 and KKE Policy: A study of Chronology" , Journal of
the Hellenic Diaspora, Vol. XII, Nos. 3 and 4 (Fall-Winter
1986), pp. 77-111.
184. The EAM ministers were sworn in on 3 September 1944 and
receivp.d the following portfolios. Svolos was made minister
of finance, Askoutis received communications, Tsirimikos,
Porphyrogenis, and Zevgos were made ministers of economy,
labour, and agriculture respectively, while Angelopoulos
became undersecretary for finance.
185. FO 371/43715 R 12457; Force 133 MEF Reports,
GSOE/94506.
443
1) AlI guerrilla forcp.s in Greece came under the
control of the Greek Government.
2) The Greek Government places those forces under
the orders of General ~cobie who has been
nominated oy the Supreme Allied Commander as
GOC Forces in Greece.
3) The Greek guerrillas declare that they will
forbid any attempt by any units under their
command to take the law into their own hands.
Such actions will be treated as a crime and
will be punished accordingly.
4) As regards Athens no action is to be taken save
under the direct orders of General Scobie, GOC
Forces in Greece.
5) The Security Battalions are considered as
instruments of the enemy. Unless they
surrender according to orders issued by the GOC
the y will be treated as enemy formations.
6) AlI guerrilla forces, in order to put an end to
past rivalries, declare that they will forrn a
national union to co-ordinate their activities
in the best interests of the common struggle.
7) General Zervas will continue to operate within
the territorial limits of the Plaka Agreement
and to co-operate with General Saraphis in
harassing the German withdrawal within the
territory between the northern Plaka boundary
and Albania.
8) General Saraphis will continue to operate in
the remainder of Greece with t.he following
exceptions:
a) Attica Province. AlI troops in this
province will be commanded by General
Spiliotopoulos, acting in close co-
operation with representatives of the
Greek Government and assisted by a liaison
officer nominated by General Saraphis.
b) Peloponnese. Troops in this area to be
commanded by an officer recommended by
General Saraphis in agreement with the
Greek Government, assisted by a British
Liaison Officer.
c) At a later stage Thrace (including
Salonica) to be under command of an
officer nominated by the Greek Government.
9) The task of both commanders will be to harass
the German Withdrawal and to eliminate German
garrisons.
10) As territory is evacuated both commanders are
personally responsible to Commander, Force 140
(designation of British forces to arrive with
444
Scobie), for:
a) Maintenance of law and order in the
territories where their forces are
operating.
b) Prevention of civil war and killing of
Greeks by Greeks.
c) Prevention of infliction of any penalty
whatsoever and of unjustifiable arrest.
d) Assistance in the establishment of the
legal civil authority an distribution of
relief. 186
The agreement was signed by: General Wilson, as the Supreme
Allied Commander, Mediterranean Theater; George Papandreou,
on behalf of the Greek Government; Harold Macmillan,
representing the British Government; and GeneraIs Zervas and
Sarafis for EDES and ELAS respectively. Remarkably EAM-EI~S
accepted these conditions which after liberation,
effectively gave the British and the Greek governments
control of key areas thus enabllng them to offset sorne of
the strategic advantage held by ELAS. On 18 September 1944,
almost a week before the Caserta Agreement, Harold
Macmillan, the Resident Minister of State, confided in his
diary that Greece is: " ... in grave danger of EAM seizing
power whenever the Germans are leaving .... 187 Thus, despite
the concessions given by EAM-ELAS, the British assumed that
the Communist would use the resistance to gain control of
Greece. For the next several months this underlying
186. Woodhouse, Apple of Discord, London 1948, Appendix H,
pp. 306-307.
187. Harold Macmillan, War Diaries: Politics and War in the
Mediterranean. January 1943-May 1945, New York 1984, 18
September 1944, pp. 524-525.
445
principle guided British policy towards the Greek resistance
and was a contributing factor to the Decernber uprising.
The provisions of Caserta, handed Athens over to
Spiliotopoulos, a former rnernber of the Cornrnittee of six
Colonels and an associate of General Vendiris, the new
commander of the Greek Forces in the Middle East. Before he
left for Cairo, Vendiris turned over to spiliotopoulos
control of RAN, an underground organization of conservative
Greek officers and closely linked with the Military
Hierarchy. Spiliotopoulos also replaced Apollo, when the
later was surornoned to Cairo to face charges of supporting
EAM. Apollo's organization was, as a result of his absence,
( alrnost destroyed by the German security services and
Spiliotopoulos used its funds ta arrn agents of X (chi), an
extreme right-wing organization dedicated to the cause of
anti-comrnunisrn and closely connected with the Security
Battalions. 188
AlI the other stipulations in the Caserta Agreement were
structured in a manner that would have limited the rnovernent
of ELAS' forces and keep them away from the main cities of
Greece and other strategie locations. In addition the
clauses referring to law and order as weIl as the Security
188. FO 371/43693 R 16288. According to another document,
(WO 204/1985 74072) although X is not referred ta by narne,
the instructions given to Spiliotopoulos by SOE were not
only to take charge of the Apollo network but of: "other
local groups unknown to us.".
446
Battalions, although the later were condemned, aimed at
preventing ELAS from cdrrying out any summary executions and
preventing it from seizing their weapons. As the day of
liberation approached, special commando units were sent to
the Peloponnese to assist in preventing the ~ithdrawal of
German units and prepare for the arrival of the British.
Their reports as well as those from the British Liaison
Officers in the Peloponnese added to the suspicions of the
British that EAM-ELAS was preparing ta take over the country
and brought requests from the Foreign Office ta increase the
nurnber of British traops in order to prevent a blood bath in
the wake of the German withdrawal. 189 This forced tbe
British to begin sending advance elements of Scobie's forces
into the north west Peloponnese on 24 September which
arrived just as ELAS had captured the port of Patras along
with its German garrison and local Security Battalion. The
Gerrnans were taken prisoner and the 1,600 man Security
Battalion was interned by the British. 190 In fact, the
British Liaison Officers and members of Force 140 were
instructed that whenever possible, the personnel of the
Security Battalions were ta be given preferred treatment and
189. Hondros, New York 1981, p. 233; One report referred to
a wholesale massacre at Pyrgos, the site of a battle between
a security Battalion and ELAS units. According to the
report, ELJ.S was killing and executing all prisoners as well
as civilians. It also suggested that there was considerable
fear that the situation would get worse and affect other
areas (WO 204/1985 74072).
190. FO 371/43736 R 20177.
447
ta remain armed in their barracks. 191
\
On 12 October 1944, the Germans pulled their forces out of
Athens and beqan their withdrawal from Greece. six days
later, the Greek Gavernment, alang with a small British
farce arrived in Athens and after the cheering ended began
ta deal with the enormous problems of relief for the
beleaguered population and the potential volatile issue of
demobilizing the guerrilla bands. 192 Papandreou had managed
ta shelve the constitutianal issue Ly convincing George II
ta declare publicly that he would stay out of Greece until
the question of the monarchy was settled by plebiscite but
the monarch still refused to appoint a regent in his place.
For the Greek Government, the most pressing issue was the
(
establishment of a new national army to replace the
guerrilla bands and participate in the defeat of Nazi
Germany. Wjth the exception of the Greek Navy and small air
force, the Greek Government had under its control the 3rd
Mountain Brigade and the Sacred Battalion, the latter made
191. WO 204/1985 74072.
192. The Greek Gavernment was ta arrive in Athens on 17
October 1944 but when it was realized that the 17th fell on
a Tuesday, the day that Constantinople fell to the ottomans
and considered unlucky, the arrivaI was postponed to the
18th. Consequently, the Greek Government was transported by
a Canadian ship from T~ranto to the island of Poros and for
the sake of propriety, the passengers were transferred ta
the Greek cruiser Averoff. Althaugh a very old ship and
only able ta make ten knots, the Averoff was the pride of
the Greek navy in the Balkan Wars and thus had the honor of
bringing the Greek Government ta Athens (Leeper, London 1950
( pp. 73-74).
448
up of officers who could not be employed. These forces were
aIl that remained of the Greek units in the Middle East
after the mutinies and the subsequent purges. Their
composition, as a result of the dismissal and court-marshal
of liberals and Republicans who had participated in the
mutinies, was conservative including many reforrned
Republicans such as Vendiris who now espoused the cause of
the monarchy. This made them totally unacceptable to EAM-
FLAS who feared that any new arrny based on these officers
would simply restore the pre-war political status ~uo. For
the time being, the 3rd Brigade was stationed in Italy and
its disposition, at least officially, rernained in question.
In the fall of 1944, consequently, the Greek Governrnent was
dependent upon the small British force, made up of
logistical personnel, the goodwill of EAM-ELAS and the
Security Battalions. It seems clear from the events that
unfolded between November and December that the Papandreou
Government had decided, in cooperation with the British, to
quietly re-instal at least the officers who had served in
the battalions. At the same tirne it had becorne British
policy to dissolve EAM and dismantle ELAS while using
quisling forces to support the Greek Government. According
to one SOE report, on 8 Septernber 1944, it was recornrnended
that:
By a combination of secret and overt means to
persuade the moderate majority to desert EAM-ELAS
at an opportune moment and join the supporters of
449
the legal government.
Details must vary slightly according to local
conditions but the two essential principles are
that secrecy must be maintained and that HMG must
not appear to be connected with this scheme.
The same report also outlined the policy towards other
groups, including collaborators:
By contrast with EAM the fragmentation of right
wing groups Quisling and non-political formations
has less importance. Leaders and rank and fil~
could easily be made to support the legal
Government of Greece when the time comes. 193
After liberation, the majority of the Security Battalions
were confined to the Goudi barracks outside Athens and in
( other locations in Attika. In the middle of November the
British began to release Security Battalion officers from
Averoff Prison and shortly, sorne of them were seen in
uniforrn in the streets of Athens. Other elements of the
Security Battalions were assist~d by the British and the
Greek General Staff to leave Greece for Egypt 194 while
others who had been released in early November were formed
into regular army units. 195 On 23 November the Ministry of
Defence published a list of two-hundred and fifty offices
designated ta command the new national guard units; of these
193. Force 133 MEF Reports, Ref GSOE/94/505, "Maintenance of
Law and Order in Greece".
194. NARS RG 226: L49839i XL 2683; L49838.
( 195. NARS RG 226: L49839.
•
450
eight had served with the Security Battalions. 196 EAM-ELAS
and the press were so outraged that the Government was
forced to revise the list and drop those associated with the
battalions as weIl as replace the Undersecretary of Defence
with an ELAS officer, General Sarigiannis. 197 Dcspite the
uproar over this incident, the attempt to include members of
the Security Battalions in the national guard indicated the
first official step towards the rehabilitation of at least
the officers who had served with these forces. 19B
Rex Leeper and General Scobie did not officially condemn the
196. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the Civil
War", p. 23.
197. According to Hondros ("Britain and the Security
Battalions, 1943-1944", p. 35), the decisions made at Tehran
by Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin regarding war crimes
worked to the advantage of those who served in the Security
Battalions. The criteria for charging war criminals
invested by United Nations commjssion set up by the Allies
omitted atrocities committed by traitors or quislings of
Allied nations against their own country. The Allies
eventually agreed to three categories of collaborators: 1)
Allied nationals in German uniform, 2) Allied nationals in
military or paramilitary quisling formations, 3) Allied
nationals who actively collaborated but did not take up arms
against the Allies. The United states, writes Hondros,
wanted to treat categories 1 and 2 as prisoners of war who
would be screened for war crimes and turned over to their
national governments for trial. The British Chiefs of Staff
agreed but requested that "after thorough investigation,
Lhose found suitable" for incorporation into their national
forces or formation into labor units, be transferred to
their own governments. In 1945, the Greek courts trying
collaborators ruled that the formation of the Security
Battalions did not fall under the category of collaboration
sinee their function had been to maintain law and urder and
to aet against criminal elements (Gerolymatos, "The Security
Battalions and the civil War", p. 25).
198. Gerolymatos, "The Security Battalions and the civil
War", p. 23.
451
actions of the Papandreou Government with regards to the
security Battalions. The British army continued to provide
protection and assist in the graduaI rehabilitation of the
rank and file into elements of the Greek arrny and the police
forces. They were guided in this policy, even before
liberation, ry the aimost absolute conviction that EAM-ELAS
and through them the KKE was deterrnined to seize power. 199
On 9 August 1944, according to Gilbert, Eden outlined
Britain's policy towards post-wa~ ~reece to the War Cabinet
and stressed the:
... political importance of maintaining our
position in Greece, and of avoiding a Communist
coup d'etat immediately the Germans withdraw.
Were the Greek Communist forces, who were strongly
arm~~, to seize po~er a massacre might follow.
ThiR would be very injurious to our prestige, and
( might even add Greece to the post-war Balkan Slav
block which now showed signs of forming under
Russian influence, and from which we were anxious
to keep Greece detached .... 200
These pre-conceived notions were accentuated by the almost
daily marches and protests by EAM-ELAS and by the knowledge
that ELAS controlled most of Greece, with the exception the
EDES forces in Epiros. Churchill, on the other hand, had
secured the place of Greece within the British Sphere of
influence by concluding a secret agreement with Stalin which
divided the Balkans into British and Soviet zones. 201 Part
199. On this see: Papastratis, London 1984, p. 213-216.
200. Gilbert, The Road to Victory, Vol VII, London 1986, p.
882.
{
201. The so called percentages agreement was made during
4~2
of the motivation for the agreement with Stalin emanated
from Churchill's fear that the Greek Cammunists were planinq
a coup.202
There is little evidenc~, however, to indicated that the KKE
was planing to take such a step.203 Woodhause, in his
autobiography, writes that on the day of liberatian, he was
in Athens expecting EAM-ELAS ta occupy the city but he
admits that: "My fears that EAM would try ta take over the
city were unfounded, at least for the time being. There
were uniformed guerrillas of ELAS ta be seen, but in
handfuls rather than hundreds." After the British
authorities and the Greek Government had disembarked at
Piraeus, Scobie's AOC offered Woodhouse a place in one of
the cars which were to take part in the victory parade in
Churchill's visit to Moscow on 9 October 1944. Officially,
and to allay American suspicions over the creation of
permanent spheres of influence, the se divisions were to
apply anly for the duration of the war. Accordingly, it was
agreed that the British would get 90% of Greece and the
Soviets 10% Rumania was divided 90% ta the Soviet union and
10% left for the others. Yugoslavia and Hungary were to be
shared evenly while Bulgaria was distributed 75% for the
Soviet Union and 25% for the others (Churchill, London 1953,
Vol. 6, pp. 196-197; Gilbert, ROdd To VictoKY, London 1986,
Vol. VII, pp. 992-1000.
202. In August Churchill, according to his doctor and
confidant Lord Moran (Churchill Taken from the Diaries of
Lord Moran, London 1966, 21 August 1944, p. 185), was very
worried about a communist take-over of Greece.
203. Accarding John O. Iatrides (RevoIt in Athens, Princeton
1972, pp. 149-150) the KKE had issued secret instructions to
its members to cooperate with the Allies while at the same
time make every effort to win the support of the middle
classes. Iatrides bases his conclusions KKE documents
captured during the December uprising.
453
Athens. When Woodhouse inquired where the guerrilla leaders
were ta be placed, he received a curious reply: "The
guerrilla leaders? ... What has it got to do with them?".204
Later Woodhouse declined an offer to serve as a political
advisor on Scobie's staff partly because he felt that such
an appointment would remind the Greeks of the: "odious
political advisors in ELAS" and in prote st to the treatment
given to his British ~nd Greek subordinates who were either
transferred or relegated to insignificant positions. 2 0 5 In
fact, most of the mernbers of the Allied Military Mission
were evacuated right after liberation and the senior
officers, who were farniliar with the leading personalities
of EAM-ELAS and who could have provided a clearer
understanding of the Left, were not included on Scobie's or
Leeper's staffs. On the contTary, according to Woodhouse,
they were not wanted and that: " ... incoming officers had
been advised to disregard us because we had been too long in
Greece and our judgernent had become untrustworthy .... 206
Between the end of October to early Decernber events seemed
to move increasingly toward5 another civil war. On 31
October, the Papandreou Governrnent proclairned that the
resistance had come to an end and on 1 Novernber announced
204. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 93.
205. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 94.
206. Woodhouse, Something Ventured, London 1982, p. 95.
454
that ail the guerrilla and resistance organizations as weIl
as the civil police forces would be disbanded on 10
December. In their place, Papandreou declared, the Grcck
Government would set up a new national guard and mobilize a
new army. According to John Iatrides, the KKE atternpted to
recruit volunteers for the new national guard from the ranks
of ELAS and subrnitted the narnes te) the Greek Governrncnt of
those who accepted. 207 Yet three weeks later, as mentioncd
above, the Greek Government when it published the list of
the officers who were to cornrnand these forces, along with
those acceptable to EAM-ELAS, included sorne rnembecs of the
Security Battalions. For EAM-ELAS, the crucial issue was
that the establishment of a new armY and national guard had
to be broadly based and not built around the 3rd Mountain
Brigade and the Sacred Battalion. In addition, the large
number of officers who had served in ELAS had to have equal
access to command the new armed forces. Furtherrnore, EAM
refused to disband ELAS unless the Greek Government
dissolved the 3rd Mountain Brigade, the Sacred Squadron and
the ultra right-wing organization X (chi).
Indeed, the problem of dernobilization quickly escalated into
a crisis and was interpreted by the British as a trial of
strength between the Greek Governrnent and EAM. On 7
Novernber, Churchill inforrned Papandreou that the British
forces were at the disposal of the Greek Governrnent and
".
207. Iatrides, Revolt in Athens, Princeton 1972, p. 156.
455
every effort was made to transfer the 3rd Mountain Brigade
to Athens. 208 On 9 November, the 3rd Brigade arrived in
Athens and its presence, according to Hondros, " ... was the
provocation which ignited the December explosion .... 2 0 9 This
conclusion is denied by Leeper who remained convinced that:
"EAM's attempt to seize power would have been made just the
same .... 210 The analysis of Iatrides, and the extant
evidence he has provided,211 sustains Hondros' assertion
that the arrivaI of the 3rd Brigade in Athens forced EAM to
seek a confrontation with the Greek Government and the
British. 212 The clash came on 3 December 1944 when a mass
demonstration by EAM-ELAS was fired upon by the Greek police
killing twenty-two demonstrators. ELAS responded by a
( general attack on most of the police stations throughout
Athens and within a few days, Greece was engulfed in a civil
war.
The guerrilla bands which the SOE had helped to develop, in
order to tie up German forces during the occupation, now
fought the British army which was forced to divert units
from the Italian front to Greece. Ironically, the British
208. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 239.
209. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 240.
210. Leeper, London 1950, p. 94.
211. Iatrides, RevoIt in Ataens, Princeton 1972, pp. 156-
157.
{
\
212. Hondros, New York 1983, p. 240.
456
were obliged to follow the German example and rais~ the
specter of Communism to rally the forces of the Right
against the andartes they had only a few rnonths earli0r
supplied with arms and arnmunition. During the fateful da ys
of December, the Greek Minister of Defence ordered the
release and employment of the security Battalions. 213
Twelve thousand of these men were deployed in national gUilrd
units and participated in the battles against EAM-ELAS. In
February 1945 the Varkiza Agreement brought an end to
hostilities and the demobilization of the resistance. Part
of the agreement called for the establishment of a new Greek
army that would incorporate an officer corps including
recruits from ELAS. 214 In practice, however, the veteran
ELAS officers were placed on the inactive list which allowed
them ta draw their salaries until they were afficially
demabilized. 215 On tne other hand, by the summer of 1946,
most of the officers who had served in the Security
Battalions were formally re-instated in the Greek arrny, thus
fulfilling a promise made to them by the Rallis Government
in 1943.
The December uprising was the legacy of the civil war which
had broken out in the fall of 1943 because the Left feared
213. Gerolymatos, "The security Battalions and the Greek
civil War", pp. 24-25.
214 • .f.AM White Book (May 1944-March 1945), "varkiza
Agreement", Article V, No. 117.
215. NARS RG 226 L57536.
457
that liberation would bring about a return of the political
status quo. Tbe hostilities between the warring guerrilla
bands were suspended in February 1944, more so by mutual
exhaustion than by the attempt to find an acceptable
compromise. The patchwork agreements of Plaka and Caserta
failed to address the crucial jssue of the monarchy but they
enabled the British to return to Greece and install the
Greek Government-in-Exile in Athens with the acquiescence of
the Left. After liberation, the SOE's role in Greece was
ended and intelligence on German movements was no longer
necessary. The clash of SOE and Foreign office interests
were removed, leaving the British free to support the
Royalist Greek Government exclusively and in the process,
condemning the country to aIl out civil war.
2
458
Part IV
Conclusions and Bibliography
459
Conclusion
When the Greek Government went into exile, after the fall of
Krete in May of 1941, the British Government based its
policy on the assumption that the basic constitution of the
Greek Governrnent would be unchanged during the exile and
that an Allied victory would see the return of that
Governrnent, with the King at its head, returning to Greece.
T~e British Government would continue to maintain such a
policy, despite the obvious divisions within Greek society,
about the place of the monarchy, which had manifested itself
even before the German occupation of Greece.
( At the same tirne, the British were faced wlth helping in the
organization of sorne forro of Greek resistance against the
Axis occupation. Such a task fell, in part, to the SOE,
many of whose mernbers believed that effective resistance
could only corne from radical, even revolutionary, elements
within the occupied state. So there were in fact two
British policies, one dictated by the perceived military
necessities, a policy that called for the creation and
eventually the expansion of guerrilla activities and the
other which called for the preservation of the existing
Greek Government. Such policies were bound to clash no
matter how rnuch the British Government tried to separate out
the military functions dictated by the war and the political
460
functions which represented its hope for the peace.
However, it proved impossible ta segregate the development
of guerrilla bands from the political objectives of the
organizations that controlled them. The SOE missions in
Greece, consequently, became identified as the
representatives of Great Britain and their support of the
resistance gave the impression that the British also
accepted the post-war agenda of those organizations. In the
end, the SOE succeeded in organizing two large guerrilla
armies which turned against each other in the fall of 1943.
The contradictions of British policy towards Greece acted
not only as a catalyst for the first Greek civil war in the
mountains, but also its legacy ensured a second wave of
hostilities in December 1944 and finally a much greater
violent struggle between 1946-1949. The outbreak of the se
conflicts represented the partial failure of the British
intelligence organizations in Greece to coordinate the
guerrilla war but the fulfillment of Foreign Office policy
which brought about the return of the Greek King and his
government to Athens in October 1944.
On the other hand, a great measure of the success of the
British intelligence organizations in Greece was not the
result of guerrilla activity but the implementation of
espionage and sabotage operations which yielded considerable
results between 1941-1944. Unfortunately, the history of
•
461
the Greek resistance has been viewed from the prism of the
guerrilla war in the mountains and little effort has been
made to understand the significant contributions of
espionage and sabotage activity during the occupation.
Indeed, the history of British intelligence organizations
and the implementation of espionage and other covert
activities has been overshadowed by the exploits of
guerrilla armies and the feats of British officers working
behind '~emy lines.
MI6, as its military designation indicates, originated from
the intelligence department of the War Office and achieved
its independence, in part, because senior British officers
wanted to distance the armed forces from the ungentlemanly
( nature of espionage. During the First World War, MI6
expanded rapidly and, in addition to espionage, extended its
activities to subversion and guerrilla warfare. In Russia
and in the Middle East, British agents financed and
attempted to use local forces in the interests of British
policy. The experiment worked against the ottoman Empire in
the Middle East and was popularized by the exploits of T.E.
Lawrence but failed miserably in Russia. Interestingly
enough, the former was an enemy while the latter 'Iad been an
ally but in 1917 was only a partial friend. An important
lesson, ignored at the time, was that Lawrence's efforts
were coordinated by the military in the Middle East whereas
the activities of MI6 in Russia were half hearted and lacked
462
any direction. Both efforts originated under war time
conditions and had post-war implications which strongly
suggested that clandestine activities were unavoidably
linked to politieal considerations. But as with so many
other lessons of World War l, it seemed better not to
remember them.
In the inter-war years, intelligence was viewed as a wartime
luxury and accordingly the budgets of the i,telligence
departments were drastieally reduced. Thus, when the
British faced the growing power of Nazi Germany they had to
rely on a very small and compartmentalized intelligence
establishment which was ill equipped to provide accurate and
timely information. The approaeh to the problem of
intelligence in the 1930's was the creation of numerous
committees and sub-committees which only served to further
Balkanize an already divided and uncoordinated intelligence
community. It was only in 1939 that the Joint Intelligence
Sub-committee was created in a belated effort ta assess as
weIl as coordinate intelligence at a strategie level. Part
of the stimulus for this was the potential of Ultra and to
address the glaring need for directing and coordinating the
efforts of the various intelligence departments.
During this period (1935-1939), the theoretical concepts of
the use of subversion, sabotage and resistance evolved from
the realization that bloekade eould not be the sole element
463
of economic warfare. The driving force behind these theories
was Desmond Morton, the head of the Industrial Intelligence
Center and later, during the war, Churchill's principal
advisor on intelligence. Morton envisioned economic warfare
as a weapon, directed by a civilian economic ministry,
consisting of strategie bombing, mass resistance and
sabotage aIl aimed at wreaking havoc behind the enemy's
lines and destroying his ability to wage war.
The ministry that Morton proposed (Ministry of Economie
Warfare) came into existence in 1939 but its activities were
initially limited to the implementation of the blockade and
providing intelligence to the Air Ministry on suitable
economic targets. until the collapse of France and the
( occupation of western Europe, blockade remained the primary
arm of economic warfare. Despite this Morton's ideas
persisted, and in May 1940 the Joint Planning Staff
recommended a strategy of bombing, mass resistance and
sabotage as the focus of a new offensive against Germany.
Part of this new strategy included the concept of a mass
uprising of the resistance forces in occupied Europe which
would coincide with a British invasion of the continent.
The Chiefs of Staff, however, regarded this with great
skepticism and the resources required for a mass rebellion
were beyond the capabilities of Britain or the occupied
Europeans in the immediate future. Although the mass
uprising concept was abandoned, the creation of secret
464
armies, to be activated in conjunction with an allied
invasion in the future, persisted and formed the basic
premise for the strategic use of the resistance.
The War Office and MI6 had only considered the possibilities
of subversion, sabotage and guerrilla warfare after the
Munich trisis in 1938. In both cases, it was thanks to
efforts of a few individuals that the concept of, what was
later termed, irregular warfare, received serious
consideration. In the War Office, J.C.F. Holland set up MIR
to plan and execute guerrilla warfare and special
operations, while Laurence Grant organized Section D in SIS
ta implement sabotage and subversion. In 1940, both
departments began to recruit agents and deploy their
personnel in Europe and the Middle East.
In Greece, anticipating the occupation of that country, MIR
and Section D attempted to create an infrastructure of
clandestine cells which would be used in the aftermath of a
German occupation. since the activities of MI6 in Greece
prior to 1940 had been drastically reduced, the British
intelligence agencies did not have a pre-established network
of agents but relied on the small SIS station based in the
British Legation in Athens. MIR and Section D,
consequently, had to recruit any willing individuals who
accepted to work for the British. In the case of Greece
both agencies focussed on using Communists and disgruntled
465
Republicans since they provided the rnost readily available
pool of potential operatives. Before both departrnents had
an opportunity to develop their networks, Greece was overrun
by the German arroyo MIR and section D, which had by this
tirne been arnalgamated into the SOE, were forced to evacuate
and only managed to leave behind a few ernbryonic cells with
sorne radio sets and hidden caches of weapons.
Alrnost concurrent with the activities of Section D and MI6,
carne the push for a new organization that would encompass
the entire spectrurn of sabotage, subversion, propaganda and
guerrilla warfare. It was assumed that the Special
operations Executive, as the new organization was called,
had to work with revolutionary elernents sirnrnering with
discontent in occupied Europe and only needed weapons and
guidance to strike at the enemy. The first minister
responsible for the SOE, Hugh Dalton, genuinely believed
that radicals, Unionist and Communists were by their very
nature ideally suited for clandestine work. These
assurnptions were, in part, an extension of the theories of
Morton and shared by Grant and Holland, the organizers of
Section 0 and MIR. What was not assumed, however, were the
political consequences of cooperating with su ch groups but
in 1940 there was little thought of post-war repercussions.
Britain was defeated on the continent and was in peril of a
German invasion. For the moment the SOE, strategie bombing
( and economic warfare held the only prospects of striking
466
back at the enemy.
The first directive to the SOE from the Chiefs of Staff in
November 1940 stressed the implementation of subversive
operations and sabotage and the creation of secret armies
that would be activated to coincide with a British invasion
of Europe. According to this strategy, in the interim
perivd, these armies would rernain inactive, receiving arrns
and training, while the SOE waged a war of sabotage,
subversion and propaganda to erode the enemy's morale and
weaken his ability to fight. In Greece, the SOE modified
this strategy not to create secret armies in anticipation of
an invasion but to organize guerrilla warfare to support
military objectives in the Mediterranean Theater of
Operations. The subtle difference between the dormant
secret armies concept, proposed by the Chiefs of Staff, and
the active use of guerrilla bands, supported by the SOE,
represents the crux of the fundamental mlsunderstanding
between British political aild military objectives in Greece.
This was further compounded by the anomalous position of the
SOE within the Whitehall establishment and the structural
flaws of its Cairo branch.
The SOE came under the direction of the Minister of Economie
Warfare, not so much because its activities were compatible
with the aims of that ministry, but because Hugh Dalton
argued that a Labour cabinet rnember of the coalition
467
government ought to control an intelligence service. This
not only isolated the SOE from the Foreign Office, despite
the future political repercussions of its activities, but
segregated the Special Operaticns Executive from the
intelligence community. Moreover, although the SOE came
under the control of the Minister of Economie Warfare, in
practice, it was an independent entity and only received
general guidance from the minister. As an organization it
was a hybrid of section D, MIR and Electra House. These had
been departments developed by other agencies who now greatly
resented loosing resources and personnel to a new
organization. MI6 was concerned that the operational
activities of the Special Operations Executive would
compromise its intelligence efforts in the field while the
Ministry of Information argued that aIl propaganda activity
fell under its jurisdiction. The conflict with the latter
led to the establishment of the Political Warfare Executive,
which created more ill-will, while the professional soldiers
of MIR carved out their own organization within the SOE.
SOE activities in Greece came directly under the control of
the Cairo branch, which for the first two years was almost
independent of the main headquarters in London. Thus if the
SOE in London was only indirectly in contact with the
Foreign Office and the War Cabinet, and hence British
policy, the Cairo section was even further removed from the
j
J direction of the governmp-nt. The SOE in Egypt had to
468
compete with the other intelligence agencies in cairo as
weIl as with the Foreign Office representatives and Middle
East Headquarters which had direct responsibility for the
Mediterranean Theater of Operations. Under the se
circumstances, its operations in Greece and the Balkans, to
some extent, served to justify the existence of the SOE and
maintain its autonomy. During the first year and one half
of the Greek occupation, the SOE networks provided
considerable information and assisted hundreds of Allied
personal to escape to the Middle East. Yet this was not why
the organization was set up. The gathering of intelligence
and setting up escape routes was duplicated by the SIS, MI9
and other intelligence services and did not entirely conform
to SOE's mandate of "Setting Europe Ablaze".
After the Axis occupation of Greece and Yugoslavia the SOE,
as weIl as the other intelligence agencies in Cairo, only
had limited and indirect contact with their agents. The SOE
had the Prometheus network but it only established radio
link with Cairo in the Spring of 1942. For the time being,
the first priority of SOE and the other intelligence
services such as MI9 was ta smuggle out of Greece Allied
troops that had been left behind and evaded capture.
Hundreds of these men had found refuge with a sympathetic
Greek population which used this opportunity as a means of
fighting against the Axis. For rnany Greeks, hiding British
and Allied soldiers served as the first introduction to
469
clandestine activity. At the same time it provided the SOE,
as weIl as the other intelligence services, with a source of
potential agents and the means of organizing subversive and
sabotage operations.
This was the intention of the first SOE/MI9 mission in
Greece, headed by John Atkinson. The mission failed, as a
result of the incompetence of the man in charge, but in the
process it decapitated the leadership of the emerging
underground in Athens. The first member~ of the resistance
in Greece were those that had participated in hiding Allied
soldiers. Atkinson, himself had been one of those left
behind and had received shelter and assistance to escape
( trom Greece. The contacts he made, while in Athens, formed
the nucleus of the network he established in the fall of
1941 and became the first victims of the Axis security
services in the winter of 1942. Many of them came from the
Athenian establishment and had the potential of playing a
leading role in the resistance, the vacuum created was
quickly filled by more radical elements with a post-war
political agenda.
Throughout the winter and spring of 1942, opposition to the
occupation took essentially two forrns: underground groups
who focussed their activities on espionage and sabotage and
organizations who planned for resistance on a national
j
, level. Sorne made contact with the SOE while others managed
470
to offer their services to the SIS as weIl as to other
British intelligence services. Yet no attempt was made to
coordinate the services themselves or the activities of
their networks in Greece. Within the SOE itself there was
considerable division and duplication of effort which was
made worse by the annual purging of the Cairo SOE senior
administrators. The uneasy relationship between the
collection of intelligence and the instigation of sabotage
activity, which reflected the contradictory roles of the SOE
and the SIS, were also mirrored within the Special
Operations Executive. The SOE in Cairo was in essence two
organizations. One dealt with sabotage and guerrilla
warfare while the other organized espionage cells and
concentrated on gathering intelligence. Originally, there
were three but the propaganda section was handed over to the
Political Warfare Executive. The different roles of the two
halves of the Cairo SOE were further accentuated by the
character of their personnel. The Operations Directorate,
was staffed by professional soldiers, while the so called
Political Directorate was made up of civilian amateurs
recruited for the duration of the war. The professionals
were in charge of irregular warfare and sabotage, while the
civilians were responsible for intelligence. Ideally, both
departments were to coordinate their activities: in
practice, each functioned almost in total isolation while
its operatives in the field pursued different objectives.
~-l
471
The contradictory and overlapping policies of the SOE was
best exemplified by the MIDAS and Harling missions in
Greece. In the summer of 1942, the SOE dispatched a second
mission to Greece, led by Tsigantes. The MIDAS team was to
block the Korinth cannel and destroy one of the railroad
bridges connecting Thessaloniki to Athens. Through the
intervention of Kanellopoulos, Tsigantes was also charged
with forming a non-partisan organiza':ion to coordinate the
disparate resista 11ce groups that were mushrooming in the
summer of 1942. Although Kanellopoulos was acting on his
own initiative, he believed that the resistance in Greece
should be directed and controlled by the Greek Government-
in-Exile. The failure of Tsigantes to create such an
organization represented the only oppor~unity the Greek
Government-in-Exile ever had of establishing a direct link
with occupied Greece and having any influence in shaping the
course of the resistance.
The period between the fall of 1942 to the beginning of
summer in 194J represents the first pivotaI stage in the
development 01 the Greek resistance. The key to this
critical phase of the Greek resistance and its relationship
to the SOE lies in understanding three fundamental factors
which manifested themselves between September 1942 to August
1943. First, the failure of Tsigantes to establish an
organization to coordinate ~e resistance and the arrivaI of
a third SOE mission (Harling) to destroy the rail link
472
between Thessaloniki and Athens as well as the impact of it3
success. Second, the establishment of the Harling te am as a
permanent military mission in Greece. Third, the isolation
of the Greek Government-in-Exile from direct contact with
occupied Greece and the exercise of exclusive jurisdiction
by the SOE over the guerrilla bands that developed and
expanded in the winter of 1943.
Underlying these factors was the SOE policy of supporting
Ieft-wing and revolutionary organizations in Greece since it
was assumed that they were the ideal forces to instigate
resistance activity. The fact that left-wing and Republican
organizations were hostile to the Greek Government-in-Exile
aiso meant that the SOE was the only body that could attempt
to direct and control their activities in the field. It
must also be kept in mind, that the survival of the SOE as
an independent entity and the war in North Africa provided
the backdrop for these events, and that prior to the fall of
1942 the military situation was bleak. Rommel's forces had
crossed the Egyptian frontier and SOE Cairo, while just
completing another period of reorganization, was preparing
to move its offices out of Egypt. Under these circumstarlces
seant attention was paid to the political repercussions of
supporting ;eft-wing or Republican resistance groups in
Greece, what mattered was that they were willing ta fight
and disrupt the Axis forces in Greece.
473
The consequences of this strategy caused more difficulties
than the SOE had anticipated. Support of EDES and ELAS
created a serious breach with the Foreign Office while it
enhanced the reputations of organizations whose policies
were diametrically opposed to the Greek Government-in-Exile
and the British Government. In addition, the volt face by
Zervas regarding the Greek monarchy, thanks in part to
Woodhouse's influence, did little for the former's
reputatiop while it drove many moderate Republicans in the
arrn~ of EAM-ELAS. Consequently, the BMM eliminated any
possibility that EDES had in establishing a popular based
movement. On the other hand, its support of EAM-ELAS and
the recognition of ELAS by the British as an Allied military
force proved more valuable than aIl the military supplies
dropped to that organization by the RAF.
The expansion and influence of the Greek resistance movement
developed, with the support of the SOE, at a time when it
was no longer of critical importance to the war in the
Mediterranean. The victory at El Alamein had pu shed the
Africa Corps further west thus negating the importance of
Greek harbors as supply bases for Rommel's forces.
Furthermore, the strategie decline of Greece was accelerated
by the Allied landings in North Africa and later in Sicily
and Italy. Yet it is during this period that the Greek
resistance grew with a corresponding increase in the number
of SOE missions in the Greek mountains. Despite this, the
474
SOE was not able to influence the numerically superior
forces of EAM-ELAS, and hence the course of the resistance,
but rather it was placed in the position of reacting to
events that had little to do with fighting the Axis but
concerned the political future of post-war Greece.
This was dramatically illustrated by the failure of the
andarti delegation to Cairo. In August 1943, the arrival in
Cairo of a delegation representing the major resistance
groups caused a major political crisis for the Foreign
Office and the Greek Governrnent-in-Exile. The presence of
the delegation served to highlight the contradictions of
British policy which was caught between p0st-war political
considerations and military expediency. The crisis brought
about another purge of the Cairo SOE, which was held
responsible for bringing the delegation out of Greece, and
acted as a catalyst for the outbreak of civil war in the
Greek mountains. Operation AnimaIs had not only convinced
the Germans that Greece was about to be invaded by the
Allies, but for EAM-ELAS it raised the specter of a British
dominated liberation of Greece. The invasion did not corne,
but the failure of the Greek Government-in-Exile and the
British to come to terms with the demands of the resistance
not only contributed to the outbreak of civil war but laid
the foundations for a future confrontation between the
British and EAM-ELAS. The civil war ended with the Plaka
Agreement and an attempt was made to address the demands of
,
475
the resistance with the Lebanon Charter and the
establishment of a Greek coalition government. The Caserta
Agreement remarkably brought EAM into the coalition
governrnent and enabled the British to return to Greece
without any opposition from ELAS. Yet these agreements only
skirted the outstanding political issues which faced Greece
in the aftermath of liberation. The British were convinced
that aIl the concessions of the Left were a ploy to buy time
and seize the country at an opportune moment. Preparing for
such an eventuality, such as re-activating the Security
Battalions and bringing the 3rd mountain Brigade and the
Sacred Squadron to Athens in November, simply confirmed the
worst fears of EAM and exacerbated an already volatile
situation. Accordingly, the last act of the Greek
( resistance in the war was to confront the British army in
the streets of Athens.
Significantly, the SOE played a marginal role in the events
that led to the December uprising although it received the
lion's share of the blame for its causes. In the fall of
1943, the Cairo SOE, ao a result of the crisis caused by the
andarti delegation, had been placed under the jurisdiction
of the Commander-in-Chief, Middle East. This brought the
coordination of guerrilla operations in line with military
strategy but did not address the fundamental problem of
reconciling that strategy with British policy. In effect,
r the'problem was transferred to the military who essentially
,.. 76
dealt with the Greek resistance more or less along the lines
that had been adopted by the SOE. It was far too late to
disavow EAM-ELAS and not enough time to expand EDES or
create another organization to counter the influence of the
Left. Headquarters Middle East, consequently, viewed the
Greek resistance from a narrow military perspective, leaving
it to the Foreign Office and the Greek Government-in-Exile
to work out the political ramifications.
On the whole, the SOE contribution to the war effort in
Greece was impressive and occasionally dramatic but seldom
decisive. Between 1942 and 1944, the AMM personnel in
Greece reached six hundred officers and other ranks deployed
in eighty-two missions. During the same period, these in
conjunction with the Greek guerrilla bands carried out over
three thousand subversive operations averaging ninety-four
per month which peaked at three hundred from April to
November 1944. The results were: 34, 650 enemy casualties
of which 20, 000 were German. Two thousand one hundred
operations were executed against the Axis communications
which led to the destruction or damage of: two hundred
locomotives, one thousand five hundred and fort y-four
wagons, the derailment of one hundred and seventeen trains,
sixt Y seven bridges and five tunnels. The rail lines were
cut in one hundred and fifty-seven spots and at least
twenty-eight km :>f rail l ine was destroyed. In
addition, twenty-five cuts were made on the telephone lines
-----
477
accounting for the destruction of twelve thousand meters of
cable. Two hundred operations were carried out against
roads destroying one hundred and thirty-six bridges and
_~ght hundred and fifty-four military transports.
Approxirnately fort y operation were aimed at Axis stores and
equipment which resulted in the elimination of seventeen
ammunition and petrol sites, the destruction of: one
thousand tons of petrol, one thousand shells, two hundred
bombs, eight hundred and fort y cases of arnmunition, five
aircraft, and sixteen tanks. This also included the
destruction or damage of five chrome and nickel mines. 1
How significant these operations were in retarding ~he
German war effort, remains an open question. For the most
(
part, the German forces in Greece remained static and
consisted of secondary troops. The Germans concentrated
their limited forces in key strategie locations and major
areas su ch as Athens, Thessaloniki, Krete and sorne of the
other Aegean islands. The rest of Greece was turned over to
the Italian arrny which failed to maintain control and keep
the regions under its jurisdicrion pacified. As a result,
fort y percent of the mountain regions of Greece came under
the control of the resistance but as long as the guerrillas
kept to the mountains and away from the communications links
they caused little concern to the Germans.
1. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
{ Aegean Sea, pp. 6-10.
478
Operation AnimaIs certainly made a significant contribution
to the Allied victory in SiciIy but aIl the German divisions
brought to Greece in anticipation of a British invasion were
transferred out once the real target became known. After
the collapse of Italy, the Germans malldged to intern most of
the Italian divisions in Greece and replace them in part by
the creation of the security Battalions. The outbreak of
rLvil war in the mountains also enabled the Germans to check
~he guerrilla bands by using their ferces to maintain a
balance of power between ELAS and EDES, thus allowing the
Greeks themselves to contain the resistance. The almost
orderly retreat of the Wehrmacht from Greece in October
1944, with the exception of minor skirmishes, is ample proof
of the success of German counter-insurgency.
During a longer period, 1941-1944, the SOE intelligence
networks employed over six hundred British and three
thousand Greek operatives. Some of these groups were able
to account for the sabotage of two-hundred and fifty three
ships, over sixt y eight th ou sand tons of which thirteen
thousand were ascertained sunk. According to the Report on
SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the Aegean sea 2 ,
the intelligence work of these groups made a major
contribution to the Allied War effort. In this field the
SOE achieved significant results without the political
,"...
2. Report on SOE Activities in Greece and the Islands of the
Aegean Se~, pp. 16-17.
479
ramifications associated with the guerrilla war. For the
most part, many of those who participated in espionage and
sabotage have remained anonymous and their activities
shrouded in the closed archives of the Public Records
Office. As more information cornes to light, however,
greater emphasis will be placed on the significant
contributions of the espionage and sabotage organizations in
occupied Greece and their impact upon the Allied war effort
in the Mediterranean.
The SOE guerrilla operations caused considerable damage and
inflicted casualties but did not result, with one exception,
to the transfer of significant German forces to Greece to
the determent of another theater of operations. After the
(
Battles of El Alamein and Stalingrad, the German presence in
Greece was of negligible value and of little importance to
the Allied effort in the Mediterranean. It can be argued,
that proportionally it cost the British almost as much in
resources to harass the Wehrmacht in Greece as the Germans
to keep it there in the first place. This was sadly proven
by the transfer of British forces from the Italian front to
Athens during the December uprising in 1944.
In essence, the failure to address the political issues
generated by the creation of the resistance movement during
the occupation served as the underlying cause of the
violent confrontation with EAM-ELAS. Part of the failurù
480
originated from the fundamental misunderstanding that
revolutionary forces were best suited to instigate a
resistance movement. The SOE strategy of developing the
Greek Left and Republican groups was based on the assumption
that only these forces had the revolutionary fervor
necessary to fight the occupation. In practice, resistance
itself was a revolutionary act regardless of the political
ideology of any organization that fought the Axis. During
the occupation the British were able to balance the entire
spectrum of the resistance against the Germans and Italians
but even before the aftermath of liberation these forces
were ranged against each other and could not be prevented
from engaging in a series of bitter and tragic civil wars.
481
List of Abbreviations and Terms
Abwehr German Military Intelligence
A Force Special Forces Unit Responsible for
Organizing Deception behind Enemy Lines
AFHQ Allied Forces Headquarters
AllO SOE Cover Name
AKE Agrotiko Komma Ellados
(Agrarian Party of G~eece)
AI Air Intelligence (Branch of the Air Ministry)
AMM Allied Military Mission
Andartes Greek Guerrilla forces
A/O Abwehroffizier (Subortinade Abwehr Officer
responsible for InternaI Security)
'" APOLLO British Espionage and sabotage Organization
~. in Greece
APS Axis Planning section
ASO Antifasistiki Stratiotiki Organosis
(Antifascist Military organization)
AST Abwehrstelle (Abwehr Intelligence Section)
ATB Advisory Committee on Trade Question in Time
of War
BBC British Broadcasting corporation
BLO British Liaison OfÏicer
BMM British Military Mission
BOUBOU LINA Greek Espionage and Escape Organization in
Greece
C Head of Secret Intelligence Service
CAB Cabinet Papers
CCS Combined Chiefs of Staff (Anglo-American)
482
co Executive Oirector of SOE
CEO Chief Executive Officer (SOE)
CID Committee of Imperial Defence
CIGS Chief of the Imperial General Staff
Comintern communist International (Third)
COS Chiefs of Staff (British)
CCC Combined Services Interrogation Center
DO! Oep~ty Oirector of Intelligence (Air Staff)
DICO Head of SOE Administration
DDMI Oeputy Oirector of Military Intelligence
DDMI(F) Deputy Director of military Intelligence
(Representative of MI at SIS headquarters)
DDMI(I) Oeputy Director of Military Intelligence
(Intelligence)
DDMI(O) Deputy Director of Military Intelligence
(Operations)
DDMI(P) Deputy Director of Military Intelligence
(Planning)
DOMI(PW) Deputy Director of Military Intelligence
(prisoners of War)
DDMI(Y) Deputy Director of Military Intelligence
(Y Service)
DONI Deputy Oirector of Naval Intelligence
DGFP Documents on German Foreign Policy
DMI Director of Military Intelligence
ONI Director of Naval Intelligence
DRC Defence Requirements Sub-committee
EAM Ethnikon Apelevtherotikon Metopon
(National Liberation Front)
EDES Ethnikos Dimikratikos Ellinikos Syndesmos
(National Democratie (Republican) Hellenic
League)
483
EEAM E~hnikon Ergatikon Apelevtherotikon Metopon
(National Workers' Liberation Front)
EEE Ethnike Enosis Ellados
(National Union of Greece)
EKKA Ethniki kai Koinoniki Apelpvtherosis
(National and Social Liberation)
ELAS Ethnikos Laikos Apelevtherotikos Stratos
(National Popular Liberation Arrny)
ELD Enosis Laikis Dirnikratias
(Union of Popular Dernocracy)
EH Electra House
EP Sub-Cornmittee of Economie Pressure on Gerrnany
ESPO Ethniki Sosialistiki Patriotiki Organo~is
(National Socialist Patriotic Organization)
FCI Industrial Intelligence in Foreign Countries
Sub-Committee
FO Foreign Office
Force 133 SOE forces in the Balkans
Force 140 British forces designated for the liberation
FRUS Foreign Relations of the united Sates
GAF German Air Force
GAK General State Archives (Greece)
G Officer Head of Geographical region in SIS
Ge and CS Government Code and cypher School
Gendarmerie Ethniki Chorophilaki
(National Provincial police)
GHQ General Headquarters
GS(R) Research section of General Staff, later
renamed MIR
HQ Headquar.ters
."....
HMG His Majesty's Government
484
IAEi\ Istorikon Archeion Ethnikis Andistaseos
(Historical Archive of the National
Resistance)
IC Head of Ab~ehr Intelligence Section
IIC Industrial Intelligence Center
la Intelligence Officer
IS(O) Intelligence Section (Operations)
ISLD Intelligence Security Liaison Division
JIC Joint Intelligence Sub-~om~ittee
JICAME Joint Intelligence Committee Army, Middle
JIS Joint Intelligence Staff
JPS Joint Planning Staff
KKE Kommounistiko Kornma Ellados
(Communist Party of Greece)
KODROS Greek Espionage Organization in Greece
MALEAS Greek Espionage and Escape organization
MCO Military Control Officer
ME Middle East
MEF (Allied) Middle East Forces
MEIC Middle East Intelligence Center
MEW Ministry of Economie Warfare
MI Military Intelligence (War Office)
MI(C) First military designation of SIS
MI3 Military Intelligence (Occupied Europe)
MIS The British Security and Counter-Intelligence
Se:rvice
MI6 The Military Designation of the SIS
MI9 Military Intelligence (Escape)
MI14 Military Intelligence (Germany)
485
MIlS Military Intelligence (German anti-
aircraft defences)
MI17 Military Intelligence (Secretariat of DM!)
MIlS Military IntelligencG (Ul~ra)
MI19 Military Intelligence (Interrogation)
MIDAS 614 Joint SOE and Greek Intelligence and sabotage
Mission to Greece
MIR Military Intelliqence (Research)
ML Military Liaison
MLO Military Control Officer
MOl SOE Cover Name
M04 SOE Cover Name in Cairo
NID Naval Intelligence Division
NID(Q) Cover Name for SOE
NARS National Archives of the united states
NID(Q) SOE Cover Name
OIC Operational Intelligence Center (AdmiraIt y)
OKW Oberkomrnando der Wehrmacht
OMEROS Greek Espionage Cell
OSS Office of strategie Services
OVRA Organizzazicne di vigilanza e repressione
dell'antifascismo (organization of vigilance
for repressing anti-fascism, Italy)
PAO Panelliniki ApeIevtherotiki Organosis
(Pan-Hellenic Liberation Organization,
formally YVEl
PCO Passport Control Officer
PEAN Panellikos Enosis Agonizrnenon Neon
(Pan-Hellenic Un~on of Fighting Youth)
PEEA Politiki Epitropi Ethnikis Apelevtheroseos
(Political Committee of National Liberation)
486
Politburo Political Bureau of the Communist Party
POW prisoner of War
PREM Prime Minister's Papers
PWE Political Warfare Executive
RN Royal Navy
SAS Special Air Service
SOl Special Operations 1 (SOE Department
Responsible for Propaganda)
SERVICE 5-165 Gr.eek Espionage Organization in Greece
SO Special Operations
S02 Special Operations 2 (SOE Department
Responsible for operations)
S03 Special Operations 3 (SOE Department
Responsible for Planning)
SIGNT Signal Intelligence
( SIME Security Intelligence Middle East
SIS Secret or Special Intelligence Service (MI6)
SKE Sosialistikon Komma Ellados
(Socialist Party of Greece)
SOE Special 0p~rations Executive
X Chi {Royalist right-wing organization
"i Service The department responsible for the
interpretation, analysis and decryption
of Intell ig{mce
"iVE Yperaspistai Voreiou Ellados
(Defenders of Northern Greece) 1
WO War Office
W/T Wireless Telegraphy
487
TransliteratlQn Table
Alphabet Vowel and Consonant
Comblnatlons
A, 0: =a
...a =
B, v O:l = al
r, =9
(hard) E l = el
y (soft) o l = 01
6, 6 = d
E, € = e
Ul =1
o:u = af or av
Z, ( = Z EU = ef or ev
H, 11 = 1 l1U = if or lV
8, e = th ou = ou
l, L =1
K, 1< =k
1\, .,.. = 1 v, = d or nd
M, IJ ::. m '-'TT = b or mb
N, v YI< = 9 or
......... , ( = x
n ng
0, 0 = 0
= YY = ng
'ra = ts
n, TT = P 1( = dz
P, p = r
L, o,s = 5
T, T = t
T, U = y
~, ct> = f
X, x = ch or kh (hard)
h (soft)
'II,
0, 'UI" = 0
= ps
488
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