Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα soldiers. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα soldiers. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Τρίτη 8 Οκτωβρίου 2024

Georgios Tsolakoglou, Quisling

 

Georgios Tsolakoglou                           ΓΕΩΡΓΙΟΣ ΤΣΟΛΑΚΟΓΛΟΥ

Born  April 1886 in Thessaly               Died May 1948 in Athens

 



Section 14, Number 196

 When including quisling Prime Minister Georgios Tsolakoglou in our examination of the people buried in the First Cemetery, it seemed like a slam dunk in terms of assessing responsibility. He was a career military officer with no political experience who not only surrendered to the Germans in 1941 but at the same time offered to become Greece’s Prime Minister under Nazi occupation. It was an unexpected offer that surprised even Hitler.  Under Tsolakoglou’s 19 month watch, the Germans and Italians began their systematic rape of the country which resulted in one of the worst famines in Greek history - the terrible winter of 1942. At the end of that year, the Germans who considered Greece something of a side show on their way to world domination, simply replaced him with someone even more biddable.



Why did he do it and why did he never recant ?

To comprehend that, you have to understand something of the European situation in the 30s, the temper of the country in 1940, and the mindset of army men like Tsolakoglou. Add Germany’s territorial ambitions, the voracious appetite of Mussolini’s Italy, the nature of the Metaxas dictatorship itself, and the underlying geopolitical aims of Greece’s allies during that period. Stir in a disgruntled Greek king with mixed feelings about his subjects along with a newly appointed Prime Minister who apparently committed suicide rather than face a German occupation – and you have the toxic mess that led Georgios Tsolakoglou to put himself forward as a leader of the nation in April of 1941.

 

 


On the day of the capitulation

 

His Life

Georgios was born in 1886 in Rentini, a town in Thessaly near Karditsa. He had the correct antecedents – a grandfather who had been a member of the Filiki Etaireia and who had subsequently been hanged in Larissa on the order of a Turkish Pasha in 1822. Thessaly had only joined the Greek state 5 years before he was born and the usual route to success for many young men from Thessaly with no important Athenian connections was to join the military.

He excelled at the Petty Officers School from where he graduated in 1912 with the rank of lieutenant and was placed in the 4th Infantry Regiment in Larissa. He was 26 and at the beginning of a 28 year military career during which he served in both Balkan wars, the First World War, and the Greco-Turkish war in Asia Minor (1919-1922)(1).  In Asia Minor he experienced, first the fighting, then the humiliating defeat of the Greek army, which ended in the burning of Smyrna.

This 1922 defeat would leave indelible marks on the psyche of the Greek population and none more searing than on the Greek military men who had been fighting almost continuously since 1912 and saw themselves betrayed, not only by their own politicians, but by their allies, the British, French, and Italians who had decided that abandoning the Greek side and backing the Turkish nationalists was a better geopolitical bet. No wonder that in 1922 Lieutenant General Nicolaos Plastiras, another soldier from Thessaly, headed a coup against the Greek government leaders he regarded as responsible for the debacle.

During Tsolakoglou’s military career there were several coups and counter coups, a somewhat shaky Second Hellenic Republic spanning the years from  1924 to 1935, and the return of an unpopular king in November of 1935.  It would be surprising if a military man like Tsolakoglou had not succumbed to some degree to a disdain for chaotic civilian rule.

During these upheavals, a career officer had to keep his head down or be lucky enough to have backed a winner if he wanted to keep his position. It would seem that Tsolakoglou did a bit of both. In 1923 he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in 1923, became a Colonel in 1925, and commander of Greece’s premier army training school, Evelpidon, in 1935.

 


1936 saw the beginning of the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas, yet another military career officer who had turned politician in the belief he could solve the country’s problems.  Metaxas had gained almost none of the popular vote in the elections of 1936 and only 7 parliamentary seats but King George II used his royal prerogative to make him prime minister anyway.

 

 


Metaxas on the left and George II on the right

Metaxas, as ardent a royalist as the king could wish for, proceeded to disband parliament all together. To keep an exhausted and restless population under his thumb, Metaxas had a new internal enemy to create, enlarge, and then conquer: the communists.  A good deal of his regime was focused on arresting leftists and creating his own brand of fascism in Greece.


 

In the 1930s, Greece had no overt expansionist policies having enough domestic problems dealing with the influx of Greek refugees brought about by the population exchange after the Treaty of Lausanne. But as Greece’s expansionist star had waned, Italy’s was in the ascendant.

 The Roman Empire Restored: Italian Expansionist Dreams

 


 

The German desire for ‘lebensraum’, the expansion of German territory to provide land and resources for the German people, is better known today than Italy’s own effort to conquer the Balkan states and Turkey, and thus make their proposed empire stretch from Albania to the Persian Gulf.  Mussolini had a bone to pick with Greece because it had been promised a piece of the Ottoman Empire when the Greeks had invaded Asia Minor in 1919 – a promise Greece could not keep after Smyrna. Italy already held the Dodecanese since 1912 and had officially annexed them in 1923 and invaded and conquered Albania in April of 1939 – both handy stepping stones for their proposed empire.

Mussolini’s plan was to annex the Ionian Islands, the Cycladic islands, and the Sporades, all to be directly administered by Italy. His ‘legal’ claim was that they had once been Venetian.  Epirus and Acarnania were to be separated from the rest of Greek territory and administered by Italy, and the new Italian 'Kingdom of Albania' would annex territory between the Greek north-western frontier and a line from Florina to Pindus, Arta and Preveza.  The rest along with other Balkan areas would become pliable client states. (2)

 



This all seems breathtakingly grandiose today, but it was a crowd pleaser back then and fuelled Mussolini’s ambition to match German expansionism.

 

When Germany pushed east in September 1940 to ‘protect’ the oil fields of Romania, Mussolini decided that he needed to show Hitler that Italy could successfully  ‘blitzkrieg’ too.  He believed that the Greek state would be easy pickings and his campaign over in a matter of days.

He could not have been more wrong.

When Italy delivered its ultimatum to Metaxas on October 28, 1940, demanding to enter Greece and take over certain unspecified ‘strategic areas’, Metaxas refused and the entire country rose en-mass to defend the homeland. Overnight, Metaxas became a hero. Even leftist leaders (communist and liberal and some of them from their prison cells or from exile) asked to join in the fight. General Alexandros Papagos was put in charge of the army.

Giorgios Tsolakoglou, now a Lieutenant General, became commander of the General Army Corps in Western Macedonia and was charged with repelling the Italians.  Tsolakolgou did drive them back into Albania. It was a heroic 6 month effort that impressed the entire world, as well as the German high command.


 

 

Meanwhile…

Metaxas had died on January 29, 1941 and been replaced by Alexandros Koryzis, a banker loyal to the king. The British, taking notice of Italian expansionism and fearful of a German response, diverted 58000  British, New Zealand, and Australian troops from North Africa on March 7, 1941 in order to fortify the Olympus-Vermion line in Greece.


 

It was too little too late. The Germans were compelled to invade Greece and bail out Mussolini. An invasion had not been on the German agenda until Mussolini’s miscalculations and bumbling forced their hand.

Germany entered Greece from the north and east on April 6, 1941 and quickly overran its defences. They had a green light from the Bulgarians who had just joined the Axis 31 days earlier in the hopes of expanding their territory at the expense of Greece. The Germans took Thessaloniki on the third day. That left the Eastern branch of the Greek army of Eastern Macedonia trapped between Bulgaria and Thessaloniki. On April 9, The Greek general of the eastern army surrendered.

By April 10, the King had already decided to abandon Athens for Crete and the entire Greek leadership realized that the Greek position was hopeless. But the king was advised by the British to delay a Greek surrender of Tsolakoglou’s army so that Britain would have time to evacuate their troops before the Germans pushed farther south.

 

New Zealand troops waiting for evacuation at Nauplio

It would be safe to say that King George II had no deep love for or feeling of affinity with his Greek subjects. He had been exiled twice and, in one famous letter, referred to them as ‘Orientals’ – and not in a complimentary way.  He considered them ungovernable enough that he was content to condone the Metaxas dictatorship and the end of parliamentary rule.  There was very little chance that he would have done what the kings of Denmark and Sweden did during the same war – stay and become a beacon of hope for his occupied people. Tsolakoglou considered the king’s decision to depart as criminal.

That and the future of his own men were the reasons for Tsolakoglou’s fateful decision. He was faced with the possibility of all fourteen divisions under his command being captured and made prisoners of war by the Italians whom he had just defeated. He had no love for the British who had abandoned the Greeks in Smyrna and who were advising the king to escape. The suicide of the Greek Prime Minister on April 18 left no one at the helm.(3)  With the Bulgarians (Axis members since march 1941) hungry for territory on one side and Italy ready to break the country into pieces on the other, he came to the conclusion that an immediate surrender was best and that a Greek leader, even under German occupation, could prevent the country from being dismembered altogether.

On April 20 he sent an emissary to the German general Sepp Dietrich to capitulate to the Germans and only to the Germans, insisting that the defeated Italians be left out of the equation entirely, that his officers be allowed to keep their weapons, and that the army under his leadership be disbanded and the men allowed to make their way home as civilians.

Panagiotis Kanellopoulos (later a Greek prime minister), his corporal and legal advisor, was aghast, telling him: You are trifling with your military honour and your life with what you are doing. Tsolakoglou replied: And who cares? Our entire nation is at risk.  In such moments the life and honour of any one individual is of no value.(4)

The Germans considered Tsolakoglou’s offer a ‘gift from heaven’ and agreed to leave out the Italians on April 21, but things fell apart almost immediately when Italy objected. Therefore another capitulation that included Italy had to be staged all over again two days later in Salonika on April 23, the same day, King George11 left for Crete.

 

On April 29, Tsolakoglou was sworn in as Greece’s prime minister in Athens.

 

He started out hopefully. He addressed his soldiers and praised the ‘magnanimous gesture’ of the Fuhrer who had freed all military officers and soldiers. He went on to say  “the German army has not come here as an enemy but as a friend in order to expel the British who had been invited in by a ‘criminal government’”. (5)

 

The German occupiers must have been delighted by that speech. Did he hope by praising Hitler to gain an easier occupation? There was a certain admiration for Germany in many circles in Greece. Many had been educated there, and Germany had certainly been their friend in the 19th century. The most likely reason was his hope to be able to influence the Germans in order to curb the territorial ambitions of Italy and Bulgaria.

 

In late May, the king was evacuated from Crete, the last Greek stronghold, as the Germans invaded the island. He headed a government in exile in Cairo supported by the British, some of the old Greek political elite, and one or two members of Metaxas’ inner circle.

 

The Rest

 

Tsolakoglou’s soldiers did get to go home. But the Germans did not turn out to be the ‘friends’ that Tsolakoglou first called them when he became prime Minister.  In spite of a professed admiration for Greece, they were ruthless conquerors and bled Greece dry.

 

Greece was divided into three occupation zones by Germany. They kept Thessaloniki, the border with Turkey, the Athens area, a couple of Islands, and western Crete for themselves, giving Bulgaria Thrace, and the rest to the Italians.

 


 

 

This tri-part arrangement did nothing for the country’s people – in fact, the Axis’ own rivalries and squabbles over jurisdiction made matters even worse.

 

Any hopes of helping his own people that Tsolakoglou would have had disappeared quickly. His government proved to be incompetent and worse, completely unable to influence the occupiers. Shockingly, his government, turned over the communist and leftist prisoners languishing in Greek jails under the Metaxas regime. Many died in German concentration camps or at home in Greek prisons.  Nor was he able to prevent the famine of 1942.

 

 


 

 

The only positive thing Tsolakoglou managed while in office was sign into law in 1941 the creation of N.I.M.T.S, an army hospital in Athens for the Greek veterans who had suffered so much for so long for so little. He contributed his own wealth to this endeavour and the hospital opened in 1942.

 

He was replaced in December 1942 by Constantinos Logothetopoulos, but not before he again, at least publically, reiterated his appreciation to the Axis government.

 

When the war ended and the Greek government in exile was back in place, he was sentenced to death but, because of his previous service to the country, his sentence was commuted to Life in Prison.  He had been suffering from leukemia since 1940 and spent the last year of his life in N.I.M.T.S, the hospital he had signed into being.

 

He died in 1948 and was buried in the First Cemetery but under the same rules as a prisoner who had been sentenced to death (probably only one priest and family member in attendance). In 1960, the mayor of Athens had his bones exhumed and reburied in Section 14, Number 196 - although his name is not engraved on the monument.

 

 

Afterword

  In his memoirs, Tsolakoglou wrote that he was faced with a dilemma in 1941 and had decided on capitulation. Not only did he not regret his decision, he expressed pride in it.

Opinions differ. I am reminded of a famous article written by Greek Prime Minister Charilaos Trikoupis on June 29, 1874 in an Athens daily entitled "Who's to blame?"  He blamed the king in that article and, it seems to me, that might be as good a place as any to start. The  king’s power to create prime ministers has created havoc more than once in Greece.  George II’s  withdrawal along with many of the old political elite left the ordinary Greek people helpless, made the communists the only effective resistance organization in the country, and created a lot of contempt on the part of many Greeks for a post war government that had waited out the war in relative comfort before coming back to pick up where they had left off.

The Metaxas dictatorship, which ended parliamentary rule and raised the communist threat to the heights of paranoia, is also to blame as are Greece’s allies who historically have remained allies only so long as it suited their own geopolitical goals. Greek dependence on one great power or another is a lietmotif running all through its modern history. Did Tsolakoglou really believe that Germans were a better bet? If he did, he could not have been more wrong.

Tsolakoglou did save a lot of people. By capitulating in 1941, he prevented an estimated 220,000 Greeks from becoming prisoners of war, or worse. His professed aims in his memoirs were to avoid a dissolution of the state, uphold the national dignity, and preserve Hellenism.

Perhaps more time has to pass before any final judgment can be made.

 

Footnotes

(1)  He was commander of the 1/39 Evzones Battalion. The Evzones were a type of light infantry in the Hellenic Army before they became window dressing in front of the Greek Parliament buildings.

 

(2)  The Italians intended to compensate what was left of the Greek state for its territorial losses by allowing it to annex the British Crown Colony od Cyprus  after the war. The latter offer was on the assumption of victory over Great Britain.

(3)  Koryzis was found to have been killed by, not one, but two bullets to the heart, a fact that has lead to a great deal of speculation as to his suicide. See:

(4) Παίζετε την στρατιωτική σας τιμή και την ζωή σας με αυτό που κάνετε.

- Και ποιος νοιάζεται; Βρίσκεται σε κίνδυνο τώρα ολόκληρο το έθνος. Η ζωή και η τιμή του καθ’ ενός ατόμου δεν έχει αξία τέτοιες στιγμές.

(5)See https://metaxas-project.com/metaxas-tsolakoglou-dictatorship-to-collaborationism/    One wonders if this speech and other speeches were written for him to recite. I find it hard to believe he was not under some form of coercion, even if it was just his own desire to preserve the nation under the occupation.

Sources

the activities of general georgios tsolakoglou to retain ...

 

ResearchGate

https://www.researchgate.net › ...

 

· Μετάφραση αυτής της σελίδας

THE ACTIVITIES OF GENERAL GEORGIOS TSOLAKOGLOU TO RETAIN THE TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OF OCCUPIED GREECE

 

 

Δευτέρα 21 Νοεμβρίου 2022

Nikolaos Plastiras

 

Nikolaos Plastiras                                 ΝΙΚΟΛΑΟΣ ΠΛΑΣΤΗΡΑΣ

Born 1883 in Karditsa                                        Died 1953 in Athens


 

Plaza, Number BB

The more you read Greek history, the harder it gets to make simple judgements.  Soldier Nikolaos Plastiras was known as the  Dark Rider because of his bravery on the battlefield. Politically, he became an avid Venizelist, and was deeply involved in 5 military coups (3 successful, 2 not) between 1909 and 1935. In 1922, he was complicit in the execution of six men who would later be exonerated and later in one who perhaps did not deserve to die. To make his own story more complicated, he was himself sentenced to death by the Greek government 1935. He spent the next decade in exile in France,  but was still popular enough at home to be named the titular head of EDES a resistance group formed during the Second World War which was in need of a respectable figurehead. Towards the end of his life he was drafted into a brief premiership in 1945 because an acceptable centrist leader needed to be found and he became Prime Minister again in 1950 and 1951. By that time, he seems less of a dark rider and more of an aged war horse being paraded in a political arena where he looks just a tad out of place.

 


Plastiras in 1924

I started out thinking of him as just another of those military men who gallop through the pages of modern Greek history, either saving the nation or wreaking havoc, depending on your point of view. But, against my own prejudices (5 coups!), I have found myself admiring Nikolaos Plastiras who was certainly a better soldier than a politician, but was a man who had integrity and who tried to do the right thing during an era when keeping one's ethical balance was indeed a challenge.

 


Riding into history in Karditsa

 

His Life

Nikolaos was born in 1883 in the area of Karditsa in Thessaly which had only recently become part of the Greek nation. His father, Christos, was a tailor and his mother, Stergianos, a weaver. The grandfather after whom he was named had fought with Georgios Karaiskakis during the battle for Independence, but Thessaly had remained in the Ottoman sphere when Greece gained its freedom.

  


                                             Thessaly was acquired in 1881

He began his schooling in Vounesi (today’s Morfovouni) and went on to High School in Karditsa. His family were not wealthy and, since the only sure way of advancement for a likely lad of his class was the army, it is not surprising that he joined as volunteer in 1903 and officially in 1904 becoming a sergeant, then a sergeant major.  This was during the period of the undeclared war to wrest Macedonia from the Ottomans. Contributing to the struggle there was his first baptism into active duty.

1909: The Goudi Coup

Five years passed and Nikolaos found himself as one of the many non-commissioned officers unhappy with the army's slow rate of advancement, its failure to modernize, and the lack of meritocracy in the ranks. It was especially galling to have crown prince Constantine still in command after the debacle of the 1897 war between Greece and the Ottomans in which Greece had suffered an ignominious defeat.  He joined the newly formed Military League, an organization begun by a group of frustrated NCOs. The government tried various ways to suppress them and matters came to a head in August 1909 when they arrested two of its leaders. The League then marched from their Goudi barracks on the outskirts of Athens to the city centre and staged their coup.

 


The Goudi Coup: the people praise the army while Greece herself tramples on the old order – a dragon of course.

It turned out to be a months-long confrontation during which the soldiers tried to rally the populace to their cause and the government tried various devices (including changing prime ministers) to stall their momentum. In October of the same year, the League took a new tack. A delegation headed to Crete to meet with Eleftherios Venizelos, then Prime Minister of the semi-autonomous island and no great friend of the Greek monarchy. Venizelos, already a consummate politician and negotiator, saw an opportunity but one that had to be handled carefully.  He advised the League members to return to Athens. He would arrive on his own in December - to mediate.

Both sides welcomed him. Changes were promised, new elections were to be held, and Venizelos was able to persuade the League to dissolve before he returned to Crete. However, he did allow allies to place his name on the Greek electoral candidate list in spite of the fact that he was not technically a Greek citizen. He not only got elected but so did a majority of his Greek political admirers. And that is how Venizelos became prime Minister of Greece in October 1910.

 


Venizelos starting a new era of reform in 1910

By any definition, the 1909 Goudi coup, the first of many in the twentieth century, was a huge success for Venizelos personally and for the army which would have perceived it as a potential blueprint for the future. The enthusiasm of soldiers like Plastiras must have been dampened slightly by the fact that Venizelos, ever the pragmatist, soon reinstated the Greek princes (Constantine and Andrew) into the army: he needed the king’s support for his reforms. (1)

 Between 1910 and 1919

Plastiras then attended  the Corfu School for non-commissioned Officers and graduated  as a second lieutenant. He fought in both Balkan Wars where he distinguished himself in many battles and won the soubriquet of Dark Rider. When these wars ended, Plastiras, now a captain, was stationed in Chios which had been ceded to Greece in 1913.

The 1916 Coup

In 1916, as the First World War raged, Venizelos staged his own coup, forming a government in opposition to the King who wanted to remain neutral. Plastiras and many others in the military joined him in Thessaloniki. When Venizelos prevailed, with a little help from the British, he exiled King Constantine (whom we have met earlier as the crown prince) and his soldier brother Andrew, but allowed Constantine’s son, prince Alexander, to remain as a kind of puppet king, very much under the government’s thumb. Plastiras continued his career fighting on the side of the Entente and taking part in many battles. Because of his competence and bravery, he was promoted to Major and then to Lieutenant-Colonel.

It was at this point that Plastiras adopted his first war orphan, a child whose entire family had been wiped out by the Bulgarians and who was wandering the streets of a small town in northern Greece.  He was touched by the youngster’s tragedy and asked the child if he would like to be adopted. He then sent him to his mother and sister in Karditsa . As time passed, he would adopt more children (three boys and three girls) and was instrumental in founding orphanages for many more whose lives had been fragmented by the war. Plastiras never married. When, in the 1920s, the wealthy Benakis family offered to shoulder the financial burden of raising his adopted children, Plastiras refused, saying that they were ‘the happiness of his family’s home’. (He did later accept a loan from Venizelos for a dowry for one of the girls.)

 


Plastiras with members of his adopted family

In 1919, Plastiras returned to Chios as governor of the island. He was so popular that they declared him an honorary citizen.

When part of the Asia Minor coast was placed under Greek military control in June of that year, Plastiras and his battalion arrived in Smyrna. This would mark both the beginning of a three year war with Turkey and the year he achieved the rank of colonel. During the three year struggle he gained another soubriquet: Black Pepper and his battalion were called the Devil’s army.

 


A map showing the Smyna zone

Just when Greece seemed poised to gain the Asia Minor coast and more, Venizelos lost the 1920 elections and went into a self imposed exile in France. It was a tremendous upset, possibly a result of war weariness. Royalist opposition leader Demetrios Gounaris had promised to bring the boys home. As a result, Greece lost not only her most accomplished politician but also the critical support of the British who were furious when Gounaris’ government brought back King Constantine from exile (King Alexander had died of a monkey bite in 1920). Britain regarded King Constantine as hostile to their interests. 

Inexplicably, in spite of their election promise the new government decided to continue the struggle, this time, with Prince Andrew and other military leaders in charge. The upshot: a chaotic retreat, the burning of Smyrna, many thousands dead, and the end of the Great Idea of Greek expansionism.

Plastiras, true to form, had fought bravely and engineered his soldiers’ retreat in good order while also caring for civilians in the path of his retreat to the sea at Tseme. 

 


Plastiras in Asia Minor

The 1922 Coup

Greeks were devastated and angry at the enormity of their defeat. The search for those responsible began almost immediately and fell squarely on the royalist government and some members of the Greek high command.  Plastiras, from Chios where he and his army had been evacuated, along with Colonel Stykianos Gonatas on Lesvos and navy Commander Dimitrios Fokas. formed a Revolutionary Commitee that September which spearheaded the coup. This led to the government’s resignation, King Constantine’s abdication, the ascension to the throne of his son George, and the return of Venizelos at Plastiras’request to negotiate (from the difficult position of a the losing side)  what would become the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne. It was a treaty that only someone with Venizelos’ diplomatic skills could have brokered.

 


Plastiras and other coup leaders being welcomed in Athens after the 1922 coup

No one, except some members of the international community, complained when several politicians and military leaders were court martialed by an extraordinary military tribunal especially created by the Revolutionary Committee . Six (5 politicians and one general) (2) were sentenced to death for treason. Venizelos did not interfere. He later claimed that he would have asked for clemency after the verdict, but the six were executed within hours of their conviction – possibly to prevent just that. Only Prince Andrew escaped a trial at the insistence of Britain. He was evacuated with his family (including the future Prince Phillip of England) and spent the rest of his life in exile. Professional soldiers like Plastiras no doubt felt that their fate was richly deserved.

 


The six during their trial

Between 1922 and 1924, Plastiras had done his best to take care of the needs of the Asia Minor refugees in Greece. He would come to be idolized by many who named their children after him and hung his picture in their makeshift homes. The Coup leaders relinquished their hold in 1924, just in time for the civilian government to create the Second Hellenic Republic. By then Plastiras had retired with the rank of Lieutenant General and in gratitude was awarded the title "Worthy of the Fatherland(Άξιος της Πατρίδος) by the nation. He was in his forty first year.

In the following years, Plastiras dealt with a bout of tuberculosis and divided his time between Italy and Greece. Politicians, meanwhile, had to deal with a changed Greece whose population had swollen by close to one and a half million refugees and whose needs would be a destabilizing force for many years.  A coup and counter coup in 1925-6 did not help and, when in 1928 Venizelos again entered the political arena and gained 223 seats out of 250, Venizelists like Plastiras had high hopes for a reprise of the successful decade after his first election to parliament in 1910.

It was not to be.

The Wall Street crash of 1929, a host of other economic woes, and the slow rise of the communist party (3) in the 20’s offered much more radical solutions than the Liberal Party.  Even Venizelos’ friendship pact with Turkey in 1930, a tremendous diplomatic accomplishment, had alienated many refugees because it included a clause disallowing them from seeking compensation for property lost in Turkey.  All this contributed to Venizelos losing in 1933 to Tsaldaris, the royalist leader of the conservative People’s Party. 

A disappointed Plastiras initiated an unsuccessful coup that even Venizelos could not support and he fled to France to avoid repercussions (4). He tried another unsuccessful coup in March 1935, this time with Venezelos’ blessing. But these were not the heady days of the 1909 and 1916 coups. Venizelos fled to France where he died a year later. Both he and Plastiras were tried in absentia and sentenced to death.

 


Venizelos in 1935

After a plebiscite that no one believed reflected public opinion, King George was brought back in Triumph in 1935 and in 1936, he named future dictator Ioannis Metaxas as his prime minister.  Plastiras stayed in exile in France during the Metaxas dictatorship and during the Italian campaign and German occupation. He might have been confined to the dust heap of history were he not still popular enough to be persuaded to become titular head of EDES, a resistance movement meant to counter the left wing EAM_ELAS because its leader on the ground, Napoleon Zerva did, not have a sterling reputation.(5)

The Centre Could not Hold...

This same reputation for integrity came into play after 1944 when the newly returned from exile Greek government, backed by British troops arrived in Athens and almost immediately became embroiled in pitched battles in Athens between EAM-ELAS and their own forces which led to bloodshed in December 1944 (the so called Dekemvriana (Δεκεμβριανά).

 


The government needed to restore trust so they invited Plastiras to take on the premiership because he was the most acceptable figure to both sides. Plastiras’attempt at finding a middle ground in 1945 was doomed from the start. There was too much distrust and political ambition on both sides. Still, during his tenure, the Varkiza Agreement (6) was signed, possibly the last real attempt on anyone’s part to avert the coming civil war.

Plastiras quickly disappointed the government and the British who felt he was too soft on EAM-ELAS. He was dismissed after only three months in office, ostensibly after a letter was leaked to the press suggesting that he had flirted with the Nazis while in exile in an effort to mediate in the Greco-Italian war. (7)

Undaunted, Plastiras founded a new party in 1949 after the civil war: the National Progressive Centre Union (EPEK). The multi-worded name itself suggests an attempt to coalesce the varied middle ground of liberals and left leaning democrats into a force able to counter the conservative political climate of the time. In 1950 he was part of a short lived liberal coalition and in 1951 in a longer one in partnership with Venizelos’son, Sophocles.  He was unwell and in hospital for much of a tenure concerned with economic recovery and reconstruction. The most famous result of that effort was the damming of the Tavropos River west of Karditsa which created the Lake that now bears his name.

 


Lake Plastiras today

On the downside, his government was in power during the conviction and execution of returned communist leader Nikos Belogiannis in March 1952, despite international protest. There were other efforts on the part of his government to quell fears of a futher civil war but Plastiras also incurred the wrath of his own partners when he wanted to release 130 communist prisoners in detention on Makronissos. It is ironic that this small step for reconciliation caused the New York Times to call him a communist!  Greeks would not be in the mood for reconciliation for another thirty years. Some are still not.

Plastiras lost the elections of November 1952 and died shortly after in Athens.  He had never acquired wealth. In his will he left 216 drachmas and a 10 dollar bill to his adopted daughter Kyriakoula. At his own request his doctor, Antonios Papaioannou, surgically removed his heart which lay in a casket in the National Bank for 27 years until, draped in the Greek flag, it was placed in the folk museum of Karditsa, his home town.  Echoing the placing of Byron’s heart in Messolonghi, Kanaris’ heart in the Historical Museum of Athens, and many other hearts of Greek heroes preserved over the years suggests that he saw himself in the same heroic mode.

 


 The Grave 


 

Plaza, Number B

The Map

 




Footnotes

(1)  Eleftherios Venezelos perhaps the most astute politician Greece has ever had. He understood power and expedience and could charm the birds out of the trees.

(2) Dimitrios Gounaris, Georgios Baltatzis , Nikolaos Stratos, Nikolaos Theotokis and Petros Protopapadakis and General Georgios Hatzianestis who was the last commander-in-chief of the Asia Minor campaign. Dora Stratou, the subject of one of our biographies was Nikolaos Stratos’ daughter.

 

(3). The Communist Party (first called the Socialist Labour Party) was founded in 1918. Although never a large percentage of any election, it had disturbed Venizelos’ Liberal Party enough for them to ban communists from civil service positions such as teachers. It was banned outright by the Metaxas dictatorship in 1936 and became for that government, the cause of all social evils. The rest is history...

(4). Apparently Plastiras was smuggled out of the country in a barrel

 

(5) For the checkered career of Napoleon Zervas, see http://athensfirstcemeteryinenglish.blogspot.com/2020/08/naopoleon-zervas.html

(6)  on February 12, 1945 The Treaty of Varkiza was signed calling for a plebiscite to be held within the year to resolve constitutional issues. both signatories agreed that members of the EAM-ELAS would be permitted to participate in political activities if they surrendered their weapons. Moreover, all civil and political liberties would be guaranteed and the army would be established as a non political organization.

(7)  Apparently the Nazis had approached Plastiras. They considered him a prime taget, SS Gruppenfurhrer  Nosek was sent to sound him out. Plastiras would have been delighted if he could have brokered some sort of deal between Italy and Greece. It would be a stretch to say that made him a Nazi-sympathiser. Of course many important Greek figures were also attempting to reach out to Germany before their invasion of Greece.

 

 

 

Sources

 

https://www.sansimera.gr/biographies/184