Cyprus at War: Diplomacy and Conflict During the 1974 Crisis

Cyprus at War: Diplomacy and Conflict During the 1974 Crisis

by Jan Asmussen
Cyprus at War: Diplomacy and Conflict During the 1974 Crisis

Cyprus at War: Diplomacy and Conflict During the 1974 Crisis

by Jan Asmussen

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Overview

The recent release of archives relating to the Cyprus War of 1974 shed fresh light on the lead-up to the Turkish landing on the island and its aftermath. This book, based on the records from the British and American governments, for the first time unpicks the truth behind this controversial conflict, the effects of which are still felt today: namely that, although there was no British-American involvement in the coup that overthrew Archbishop Makarios in July 1974, some members of British and American intelligence knew about Athens' plans for a coup to occur at some point in the autumn of 1974 but were surprised by the earlier timetable. Equally controversially Asmussen explores why both the British and the Americans decided not to inform the Cyprus government as well as the reasons behind Britain's surprising reluctance to exercise her right of intervention on the island. Asmussen analyses the background to the 1974 war as well as the long shadow it casts right up to the failure of the Annan plan in 2004 and Turkey's campaigns to join the European Union.

This is a vital re-reading, in the light of recently released documents, of a long-running conflict in the eastern Mediterranean, now transported to the heart of the European Union. It will be an essential source for anyone interested in British or American diplomatic affairs as well as the history of Cyprus.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350171411
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/25/2020
Pages: 376
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.78(d)

About the Author

Jan Asmussen is Assistant Professor at Eastern Mediterranean University, Famagusta, Northern Cyprus. He previously worked as Head of the Department of International Relations at Girne American University, Northern Cyprus. He studied History, Political Science, Sociology and Economic History in Kiel and Copenhagen. After working on the South-East European Handbook Project on Cyprus between 1994 and 1998 he completed his PhD at Hamburg University. He is the author of numerous articles in English and German which have been widely published, including in the Cyprus Review and in Britain in Cyprus, 1878-2006 (edited by Hubert Fausmann and Nicos Peristianis).

Table of Contents

Table of Contents:

1. Cyprus - A troubled history
2. Western-Greek relations during the Junta period
3. Turkish-American relations (late 1960s / early 1970s)
4. Makarios and the Junta - the dusk of Enosis
5. 'The Castro of the Mediterranean' - Archbishop Makarios in the eyes of British and American intelligence.
6. The coup - 15 July 1974
7. Diplomatic activity - Britain refuses to intervene
8. 20 July 1974 - the Turks land in Cyprus
9. The Junta retreats - Karamanlis returns to Athens
10. Conferences and stalemate
11. 14 August 1974 - Turkey divides the island
12. Britain threatens to open fire on Turkish soldiers - the end of the war
13. Conspiracy theories revised - What did Kissinger know and do?
14. Beyond the crises - Cyprus from Cold War to Annan
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