868.00/6–747

Memorandum of Conversation, by the Director of the Office of Near Eastern and African Affairs (Henderson)

secret

The Greek Ambassador1 called upon me this afternoon in order to deliver the attached aide-mémoire no. 3618 of June 7.2

Upon handing this document to me, he said his Government had asked him informally to stress the difficult position in which it finds itself. The Government of Greece is fighting for the very life of Greece; the struggle is desperate; the enemies of Greece know no restraint and do not hesitate to resort to any tactics which might give them an advantage. The Greek Government, on the other hand, is handicapped. Greek officers are increasingly hesitant to take decisive actions of a nature called for by the situation because of pressures brought to bear upon them by the representatives to Greece of Great Britain and the United States. The officials of Greece are losing confidence in themselves and the officers of the Greek Army hesitate to give the proper orders. The morale of the soldiers is suffering because they believe that the guerrillas with whom they are fighting will in any event be granted some kind of an amnesty and therefore will not have to suffer for their crimes. The guerrillas, on the other hand, are encouraged by the thought that if they win, they will have Greece; if they lose, they will have an amnesty.

He said that it was hoped that the American Government would carefully review the situation in which Greece finds itself and would issue directives which would permit the Greek Government to take such measures as it might feel necessary in order to save Greece without fear that the officials who give the orders for the taking of such measures would be subjected to censure by the British and American Governments.

He said that he would appreciate it if he could have the reaction of the American government to the points made in the aide-mémoire after the Department had had an opportunity to study that document.

L[oy] W. H[enderson]
[Page 196]
[Annex]

The Greek Embassy to the Department of State

secret
No. 3618

Aide-Mémoire

It becomes daily clearer that it is not simply an internal rebellion, widely organized and systematically supported from outside, with which Greece is confronted. The case is far different: Greece finds herself in a veritable state of war, an undeclared war, which, in its present phase, she is compelled to wage alone and unaided. The war was initiated under the pretext of an ideological crusade on behalf of the allegedly oppressed sections of the population; today it clearly appears, and is avowed, to be an aggressive operation, openly aimed at the suppression of Greece’s independence.

The Soviet Union’s attitude during the Moscow Conference, together with that of the Slav bloc in general toward the Security Council and the Commission of Investigation, establishes certain facts: (1) The new orientation given to American policy in the Eastern Mediterranean through President Truman’s initiative in Greece and Turkey has not proved a restraining influence upon Soviet aggressiveness, such as might have been anticipated from the experience of analogous circumstances, in Argentine [Azerbaijan?] and Iran in 1946; (2) on the contrary, Soviet policy in spite of the Truman Doctrine has been of a highly provocative order in the Eastern European sector, as is shown by events in Hungary, by the indications of increased pressure against Turkey and intensified maneuvering in Arab countries, and above all, by the Soviet Union’s undisguised designs against the very existence of Greece as an independent state. Those designs are made manifest by the systematic campaign of abuse against Greece’s representatives in Moscow and Belgrade, by the undermining of Greece’s position in every quarter, and most of all, by the intensification of the war on her northern frontiers, where the attacks recently launched against Florina and Kilkis have shown that the guerrilla activities have now been transformed into full-scale modern warfare, in which not only are the most up-to-date equipment and material made available to the insurgent forces but, as is commonly reported, an international brigade is making its way to the front-line by way of Yugoslavia and Albania.

In spite of the gravity of the situation Greece’s efforts still remain unsupported; indeed those efforts are constantly being hampered. It is not merely a question of the long interval between the virtual cessation of British and the arrival of American aid. Almost every day the [Page 197] Greek Government receives insistent representations from the United States or British Governments to the effect that it should follow a certain line of action, avoiding this measure or adopting that. The result of these representations can only be to discourage those who are fighting for their country’s independence and to embolden Greece’s enemies, whose leaders are at work, actively and with impunity, in the heart of Athens.

To cite but a few instances: Urgent requests are made to the Greek Government to suspend the execution of traitors at the very moment when a parallel recommendation is made for the execution of members of the Eight who have engaged in vendetta activities. At other times intervention takes the form of a request for a fresh amnesty or—as in recent weeks—of insistent pressure against the implementing of a decision to raise the strength of the Gendarmerie by 6,000 men and that of the Army by 35,000, though an assurance had been given that nothing would be done without the assent of the United States Government.

The Greek Government has repeatedly drawn attention to the impending perils, only to receive the reply that its reports concerning growing military concentrations in Albania, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria are either exaggerated or unfounded, although there is accumulating proof that there is substance to these reports; while, to counter its natural anxiety, recommendations are made for “greater patience and optimism”.

In these circumstances the Greek Government is compelled to continue its efforts under the double handicap of inadequate means and a disturbed public opinion; it faces a foe who is able to act officially and without hindrance through the Communist party. Conversely, the Government is precluded, by reason of the afore-mentioned counsels, from adopting even such measures as have already been authorized in the great democratic countries such as the United States.

It will readily be appreciated that under such conditions the Greek Government is unable to foresee how long the situation can be kept under control or how long a collapse of the army’s morale can be averted. The Government’s endeavors in both these directions are based upon the expectation that the Security Council will take effective steps to safeguard Greece’s independence. Should those steps prove inadequate, however, and Greece remain unaided, her Allies will bear sole responsibility for future events which will not be confined to the Eastern Mediterranean alone and to the loss of Greece’s independence but will involve the complete disturbance of the present political balance, to the advantage of the Slav bloc.

It may be stressed in this connection that a disaster in the Near East may arise in either of two ways: (a) The present offensive against [Page 198] Greece may have as its exclusive purpose the subordination of Greece to a unified Balkan bloc, or (b) The Soviet attitude toward Greece constitutes a factor of negotiation and bargaining in the Soviet policy toward the United States. In either eventuality the consequences of Greece’s destruction would be equally dire, and for that reason it is imperative that her Allies should make a single uniform approach to the Greek problem.

Furthermore, it is hardly credible that, in disregard of the experience of the years 1935–39 and 1944–45, the situation could be allowed—through dilatoriness, excessive optimism or a policy of appeasement envisaging a reversal of Soviet policy—to develop into a fresh disaster, of which the eclipse of Greece would be but the opening phase.

But were such an event to materialize, it could not at any rate be argued that the Greek Government had failed to give timely warning.

  1. Vassili G. Dendramis, who had presented his credentials to President Truman on June 9; for the texts of the remarks made at that occasion, see Department of State Bulletin, June 29, 1947, pp. 1302, 1303.
  2. Infra.