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Caserta Agreement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1944 agreement between the Greek exiled government, British Command, EAM/ELAS, and EDES
This article is about an agreement between the Greek government and resistance during World War II. For the agreement for the surrender of Axis forces in Italy, seeSurrender of Caserta.
Caserta Agreement
LocationCaserta,Italy
SignatoriesGreek government-in-exile, EAM, EDES

TheCaserta Agreement was signed on 26 September 1944, between the Greek exiled government (underGeorgios Papandreou), the British Command in the Middle East,EAM/ELAS andEDES inCaserta, Italy.[1] The agreement provided that all the resistance forces that were operating until then in Greece would be under the leadership of the Greek government, which would then be under the control of GeneralRonald Scobie.

The Caserta Agreement was achieved despite intense concerns on the part of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) and extreme right-wing circles. The concern in theELAS classes during the Caserta Agreement was intense. As soon asAris Velouchiotis, the head of ELAS, was informed of it, he convened a concentration ofELAS commanders in Lamia where he proposed the violent seizure of power. However, the majority of the rebels were reluctant to risk this, as they would find themselves against the Allies, and the attempt to create another unclear regime would be rather inappropriate.

What was exactly discussed in the Caserta Agreement is not known. However, the EAM leadership had decided to change policy and with Soviet pressure became more conciliatory. In total contradiction to the previous conditions which EAM had demanded under the control of the new Greek government, and participate in the government of National Unity abandoning its previous demands for specific ministries. The government was formed on 15 August 1944 with the participation of six members from EAM. In the following weeks, with the gradual withdrawal of the German occupying forces from Greece, there was a widespread alarm, both in the Papandreou government and on the British side, at the dominant role of ELAS in the liberated areas.[2]

Despite the attempts to avoid civil war, theBattle of Athens broke out in December 1944, pitting ELAS against the troops of the government, the police, the formerSecurity Battalions, and British forces in the country.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Mr Eden defends action in Greece".The Glasgow Herald. 21 December 1944. Retrieved17 December 2019.
  2. ^"Hellenic Foreign Policy (1936-1944)".
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