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Greek Military Intelligence and the Crescent Estimating the Turkish Threat - Crises, Leadership and Strategic Analyses, 1974-1996
The argument advanced in this book is that Greek military intelligence downplayed the immediate threat of a Turkish surprise invasion of an Aegean island or an attack on the free Cyprus Republic. Prime Ministers Papandreou and Simitis had extremely different personalities and their attitudes towards intelligence also varied considerably. During the 1987 Greek-Turkish crisis under Papandreou, Greek military intelligence provided useful information about Turkey’s limited military preparations, and so helped to prevent an escalation to confrontation. During the 1996 crisis under Simitis, a serious failure in tactical intelligence occurred. Military intelligence failed to provide timely information of the tactical situation and of the Turkish plan to deploy troops on one Greek islet. This failure allowed the Turks to turn the tables on the Greeks. It also caused a breakdown in civil-military relations at a critical moment. As a consequence, the prime minister seeking to avoid a conflict and thus a possible bilateral resolution with Turkey, accepted a short term political settlement brokered by US President Bill Clinton. Greek and Turkish forces withdrew from the disputed area but Athens and Ankara continued arguing that the islets were their national soil.

Author: Panagiotis Dimitrakis
Editor: Tanya Sinclair

 

Greek Military Intelligence and the Crescent

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Greek Military Intelligence and the Crescent Estimating the Turkish Threat - Crises, Leadership and Strategic Analyses, 1974-1996

publication date: October 2008
ISBN 978-1-84102-192-8
paperback
192 pages
£45.00

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