- Regime of the Colonels redirects here. For the
Polish regime of colonels, see Colonels'
group.
The
Greek military junta of 1967–1974, alternatively
"The Regime of the Colonels" ( , To kathestos
ton Syntagmatarhon), or in Greece "The
Junta", ( or ; Greek Χούντα, ) and "The Seven
Years" ( , I eptaetía) are terms used to refer to
a series of right-wing military
governments that ruled Greece
from 1967 to
1974. Rule by the military started in the morning of
21 April,
1967 with a
coup d'état led by a group of
colonels of the
Greek military,
and ended in July 1974.
Background
The 1967 coup and the following seven years of military rule were
the culmination of 30 years of national division between the forces
of the
Left and the
Right that can be traced to the time of
the
resistance against Axis
occupation of Greece during
World War
II. After the liberation in 1944 Greece descended into
civil war, fought between the forces of the
Communist-led Greek
resistance and the now returned government-in-exile.
American influence in Greece
In 1947,
the United States formulated the Truman
Doctrine, and began to actively support a series of authoritarian governments in Greece
, Turkey
and Iran
, in order to
ensure that these states did not fall under Soviet
influence. With American and British
aid, the
civil war ended with the military defeat of the Left in
1949. The
Communist
Party of Greece (KKE) was outlawed and many Communists had to
either flee the country or face persecution.
The CIA and the Greek military began to work closely,
especially after Greece joined NATO
in
1952. Greece was a vital link in the NATO defense
arc which extended from the eastern border of Iran
to the north
most point in Norway
.
Greece in particular was seen as being in risk, having experienced
a
Communist insurgency. In
particular, the newly-founded
Hellenic National
Intelligence Service (KYP) and the
LOK Special Forces (later
actively involved in the 1967 coup) maintained a very close liaison
with their American counterparts.
In addition to preparing for a Soviet
invasion, they agreed to guard against a left wing
coup. The LOK in particular were integrated into the
Gladio European
stay-behind network. Although there have been
persistent rumors about an active support of the perpetrators of
the coup d'état by the US government there is no evidence to
support such claims. It is however likely that the US military was
informed of the coup a few days in advance by Greek liaison
officers.
The Apostasia and political instability
After many years of conservative rule, the election of
centrist George Papandreou, Sr. as
Prime Minister was a sign of change.
In a bid to gain more control over the country's government than
what his limited constitutional powers allowed, the young and
inexperienced King
Constantine
II clashed with liberal reformers, dismissing Papandreou in
1965, causing a constitutional crisis known as the
Apostasia of 1965.
After making several attempts to form governments, relying on
dissident Center Union and conservative MPs, Constantine II
appointed an interim government under
Ioannis Paraskevopoulos, and new
elections were called for
28 May 1967. There were many indications that Papandreou's
Center Union would emerge as the
largest party, but would not be able to form a single-party
government and would be forced into an alliance with the United
Democratic Left, which was suspected by conservatives of being a
proxy for the banned
Communist
Party of Greece. This possibility was used as a pretext for the
coup.
A "Generals' Coup"
Greek historiography and the press have also hypothesized about a
"
Generals' Coup", a coup that would
have been deployed at the behest of the palace, under the pretext
of combatting communist subversion. In the confusion of the first
few hours it was actually thought by many outside observers that
the King was behind the coup and many European newspapers carried
headlines accusing Constantine of being the mastermind behind the
events in Greece.
Before the elections that were scheduled for 28 May 1967, with
expectations of a wide Centrist victory, a number of National
Radical Union politicians feared that the policies of leftist
members of the
Center Union, such as
Andreas Papandreou and
Spyros Katsotas, would lead to a
constitutional crisis. One such politician,
George Rallis, has recounted he had proposed
that, in case of such an "anomaly", the King should declare
martial law, as the monarchist
constitution permitted him. According to Rallis, Constantine was
receptive to the idea.
According to US diplomat John Day, the Americans also worried that
due to the old age of Georgios Papandreou, Andreas Papandreou would
have a very powerful role in the next government. According to
Robert Keely and John Owens, American diplomats attached to the US
Embassy in Greece at the time, Constantine asked US Ambassador
Philip Talbot what would be the attitude of the US government to an
extra-parliamentary solution to this problem. To this the embassy
responded negatively in principle, adding however that "US reaction
to such move cannot be determined in advance but would depend on
circumstances at time". To this day, Constantine denies this.
According to then US Ambassador Philip Talbot, after this
communication, Constantine met with the army generals, who promised
him that they would not take any action before the coming
elections. However the proclamations of Andreas Papandreou made
them nervous, and they resolved to re-examine their decision after
seeing the results of the elections.
In 1966
Constantine II of Greece
sent his envoy Demetrios Bitsios
to Paris
on mission
to convince Constantine
Karamanlis to return to Greece and resume a role in Greek
politics. According to uncorroborated claims made by the
former monarch, in 2006 and after the deaths of the two men
involved, Karamanlis replied to Bitsios that he would only return
if the King imposed
martial law, as was
his constitutional prerogative.
US journalist
Cyrus L.
Sulzberger has separately claimed that
Karamanlis flew to New
York
to lobby US support from Lauris Norstad for a coup d'état in Greece that would establish
a strong conservative regime under himself; Sulzberger alleges that
Norstad declined to involve himself in such affairs.
Sulzberger's account, which unlike that of the former King was
delivered during the lifetime of those implicated (Karamanlis and
Norstad), rested solely on the authority of his and Norstad's word.
When, in 1997, the former King reiterated Sulzberger's allegations,
Karamanlis stated that he "will not deal with the former king's
statements because both their content and attitude are unworthy of
comment".Giannis Politis,
"Συνεχίζει τις προκλήσεις Ο Κωνσταντίνος
Γλύξμπουργκ", Ta Nea, 10 May 1997. The deposed King's adoption
of Sulzberger's claims against Karamanlis was castigated by the
left-leaning media, typically critical of Karamanlis, as
"shameless" and "brazen". It bears noting that, at the time, the
former King referred exclusively to Sulzberger's account, to
support the theory of a planned coup by Karamanlis, and made no
mention of the alleged 1966 meeting with Bitsios, which he would
refer to only after both participants had died and could not
respond.
As it turned out, the constitutional crisis did not originate
either from the political parties, or from the Palace, but from
middle-rank army
putschists.
The coup d'état of 21 April

The junta members.
On
21 April,
1967,
(just weeks before the scheduled elections), a group of right-wing
army officers led by Brigadier
Stylianos Pattakos and Colonels
George Papadopoulos and
Nikolaos Makarezos seized power in a
coup d'etat. The colonels were able to
quickly seize power by using surprise and confusion. Pattakos was
commander of the Armour Training Centre ( , ΚΕΤΘ), based in Athens.
The coup
leaders placed tanks in strategic positions in Athens
, effectively
gaining complete control of the city. At the same time, a
large number of small mobile units were dispatched to arrest
leading politicians and authority figures, as well as many ordinary
citizens suspected of left-wing sympathies, according to lists
prepared in advance. One of the first to be arrested was Lieutenant
General
Gregorios Spandidakis,
Commander-in-Chief of the
Greek
Army.
The conspirators were known to Spandidakis. Indeed, he was
instrumental in bringing some of them to Athens, to use in a coup
he and other leading Army generals had been planning, in an attempt
to prevent
George
Papandreou's victory in the upcoming election and the Communist
takeover that would, supposedly, follow it. The colonels succeeded
in persuading Spandidakis to join them and he issued orders
activating an action plan (the "Prometheus" plan) that had been
previously drafted as a response for a hypothetical Communist
uprising (see
Operation
Gladio). Under the command of paratrooper Lieutenant
ColonelKostas Aslanides, the LOK (see above) took control of the
Greek Defence
Ministry while
Brigadier
General Stylianos Pattakos
gained control over communication centers, the
parliament, the royal palace, and according
to detailed lists, arrested over 10,000 people. Since orders came
from a legal source, commanders and units not involved in the
conspiracy automatically obeyed them. Many of the arrested were
held during the first days at the
Phaliron
race track and some of them were executed
in cold blood by young army officers.
By the early morning hours the whole of Greece was in the hands of
the colonels. All leading politicians, including acting Prime
Minister
Panagiotis
Kanellopoulos, had been arrested and were held incommunicado by
the conspirators.
Phillips Talbot,
the US ambassador in Athens, disapproved of the military coup,
complaining that it represented "A rape of democracy", to which
Jack Maury, the CIA chief of station in Athens, answered, "How can
you rape a whore?" The Papadopoulos' junta attempted to
re-engineer the Greek political
landscape by coup.
The role of the King
When the tanks rolled on to Athens streets on
21 April, the legitimate National Radical Union
government, of which Rallis was a member, asked King Constantine to
immediately mobilise the state against the coup; he declined to do
so, and swore in the dictators as the legitimate government of
Greece, while asserting that he was "certain they had acted in
order to save the country".
The three
plot leaders visited Constantine in his residence in Tatoi
, which they
circled with tanks, effectively preventing any form of
resistance. The King wrangled with the colonels and
initially dismissed them, ordering them to return with Spantidakis.
Later in the day he took it upon himself to go to the Ministry of
National Defence, located north of Athens city centre, where all
the coup leaders were gathered. The King had a discussion with
Kanellopoulos, who was detained there, and with leading generals.
This was a pointless exercise, since Kanellopoulos was a prisoner
whilst the generals had no real power, as was evident from the
shouting of lower and middle-ranking officers, refusing to obey
orders and clamouring for a new government under Spantidakis.
The King finally relented and decided to co-operate, claiming to
this day that he was isolated and did not know what else to do. He
has since claimed that he was trying to gain time to organise a
counter-coup and oust the Junta. He did organise such a
counter-coup; however, the fact that the new government had a legal
sanction, in that it had been appointed by the legitimate head of
state, played an important role in the coup's success. The King was
later to regret bitterly his decision. For many Greeks, it served
to identify him indelibly with the coup and certainly played an
important role in the final decision to abolish the monarchy,
sanctioned by the 1974 referendum.
The only concession the King could achieve was to appoint a
civilian as prime minister, rather than Spantidakis.
Konstantinos Kollias, a former Attorney
General of the Areios
Pagos
, was chosen. He was a well-known royalist
and had even been disciplined under the Papandreou government for
meddling in the investigation on the murder of MP
Gregoris Lambrakis. Kollias was little
more than a figurehead and real power rested with the army, and
especially Papadopoulos, who emerged as the coup's strong man and
became Minister of Defence and Minister of the Government's
Presidency. Other coup members occupied key posts.
Up until then constitutional legitimacy had been preserved, since
under the then-Greek Constitution the King could appoint whomever
he wanted as prime minister, as long as Parliament endorsed the
appointment with a vote of confidence or a general election was
called. It was this government, sworn-in in the early evening hours
of
21 April, that formalised the coup. It
adopted a "Constituent Act", an amendment tantamount to a
revolution, canceling the elections and effectively abolishing the
constitution, which would be replaced later. In the meantime, the
government was to rule by decree. Since traditionally such
Constituent Acts did not need to be signed by the Crown, the King
never signed it, permitting him to claim, years later, that he had
never signed any document instituting the junta. Critics claim that
Constantine II did nothing to prevent the government (and
especially his chosen prime minister Kollias) from legally
instituting the authoritarian government to come. This same
government formally published and enforced a decree, already
proclaimed on radio as the coup was in progress, instituting
military law. Constantine claimed he never signed that decree
either.
The King's counter-coup

The former King Constantine of Greece
shaking the hand of Georgios Papadopoulos.
In the background a smiling Stylianos Pattakos.
From the outset, the relationship between King Constantine II and
the Colonels was an uneasy one. The colonels were not willing to
share power with anyone, whereas the young King, like his father
before him, was used to playing an active role in politics and
would never consent to being a mere figurehead, especially in a
military administration.
Although the colonels' strong
anti-communist, pro-NATO
and
pro-Western views appealed to the United States
, fearful of domestic and international public
opinion, President of the
United States Lyndon B.
Johnson told Constantine, in a visit to
Washington,
D.C.
in early autumn of 1967, that it would be best to
replace that government with another one. Constantine took
that as an encouragement to organise a counter-coup and it was
probably meant as one, although no direct help or involvement of
the US was forthcoming.
The King finally decided to launch his counter-coup on
13 December 1967.
Since
Athens was effectively in the hands of the junta militarily,
Constantine decided to fly to the small northern city of Kavala
.
There he hoped to be among troops loyal only to him.
The vague plan he and
his advisors had conceived was to form a unit that would advance on
and take Thessaloniki
. Constantine planned to install an
alternative administration there. International recognition, which
he believed to be forthcoming, as well as internal pressure from
the fact that Greece would have been split in two governments
would, the King hoped, force the junta to resign, leaving the field
clear for him to return triumphant to Athens.
In the early morning hours of
13
December, the King boarded the royal plane, together with
Queen Anne-Marie of
Greece, their two baby children
Princess Alexia of Greece
and Denmark and
Pavlos, Crown Prince of
Greece, his mother
Frederika of
Hanover and his sister,
Princess Irene of Greece
and Denmark. Constantine also took with him Prime Minister
Kollias. At first, things seemed to be going according to plan.
Constantine was well received in Kavala which, militarily, was
under the command of a general loyal to him. The
Air Force and
Navy, both strongly royalist and not involved
in the 1967 coup, immediately declared for him and mobilised.
Another of Constantine's generals effectively cut all communication
between Athens and northern Greece.
However, the King's plans were overly bureaucratic, naïvely
supposing that orders from a commanding general would automatically
be obeyed. Further, the King was obsessive about avoiding
"bloodshed", even where the junta would be the attacker. Instead of
attempting to drum up the widest popular support, hoping for
spontaneous pro-democracy risings in most towns, the King preferred
to let his generals put together the necessary force for advancing
on Thessaloniki in strict compliance with military bureaucracy. The
King made no attempt to contact politicians, even local ones, and
even took care to include in his proclamation a paragraph
condemning communism, lest anyone should get the wrong idea.
In the circumstances, rather than the King managing to put together
a force and advancing on Thessaloniki, middle-ranking pro-junta
officers neutralised and arrested his royalist generals and took
command of their units, which subsequently put together a force to
advance on Kavala to arrest the King. The junta, not at all shaken
by the loss of their figurehead premier, ridiculed the King by
announcing that he was hiding "from village to village". Realising
that the counter coup had failed, Constantine fled Greece on board
the royal plane, taking his family and helpless Prime Minister with
him.
They
landed in Rome
early in the
morning of 14 December.
Constantine remained in exile all through the rest of military rule
(although nominally he continued as King until
1
June 1973) and was never to return to
Greece as King.
The Regency
The flight of the King and Prime Minister to Italy left Greece with
no legal government or head of state. This did not concern the
military junta. Instead the Revolutionary Council, composed of
Pattakos,
Papadopoulos and
Makarezos, issued a notice in the
Government Gazette appointing another member to the military
administration, Major General
Georgios
Zoitakis, as
Regent. Zoitakis
then appointed Papadopoulos Prime Minister. This became the only
government of Greece after the failure of the King's attempted
coup, as the King was unwilling to set up an alternative
administration in exile. The Regent's position was later confirmed
under the 1968 Constitution, although the exiled King never
officially recognised, or acknowledged, the Regency.
In a legally controversial move, even under the junta's own
Constitution, the Cabinet voted on
21 March
1972 to oust Zoitakis and replace him with
Papadopoulos, thus combining the offices of Regent and Prime
Minister. It was thought Zoitakis was problematic and interfered
too much with the military. The King's portrait remained on coins,
in public buildings, etc., but slowly, the military was chipping
away at the institution of the monarchy: the royal family's tax
immunity was abolished, the complex network of royally managed
charities was brought under direct state control, the royal arms
were removed from coins, the Navy and Air Force were no longer
"Royal" and the newspapers were usually banned from publishing the
King's photo or any interviews.
During this period, resistance against the colonels' rule became
better organized among exiles in Europe and the United States. In
addition to the expected opposition from the left, the colonels
found themselves under attack by constituencies that had
traditionally supported past right-wing regimes: pro-monarchists
supporting Constantine; businessmen concerned over international
isolation; the middle class facing an economic downturn after 1971.
There was also considerable political infighting within the junta.
Still, up until 1973 the junta appeared in firm control of Greece,
and not likely to be ousted by violent means.
Characteristics of the Junta
Ideology
The colonels preferred to call the coup d'état of
21 April a "
revolution to
save the nation" ("Ethnosotirios Epanastasis"). Their official
justification for the coup was that a "communist conspiracy" had
infiltrated the
bureaucracy,
academia, the
press, and
even the
military, to such an extent
that drastic action was needed to protect the country from
communist takeover. Thus, the defining characteristic of the Junta
was its staunch
anti-Communism. They
used the term
anarcho-communist (
, anarchokommounistes) to describe all leftists. In a similar vein
the junta attempted to steer Greek public opinion not only by
propaganda but also by inventing
new words and slogans,
such as
old-partyism (
palaiokommatismos) to
discredit parliamentary democracy, or
Greece for Christian
Greeks (
Ellas Ellinon Christianon) to underscore
its ideology.
The junta's main ideological spokesmen included
Georgios Georgalas and journalist
Savvas Konstantopoulos, both
former
Marxists. Its propaganda often relied
on fabricated evidence and fictional enemies of the state.
Atheism and
pop culture,
such as
rock music and the
hippies, were also seen as parts of this conspiracy.
Nationalism and
Christianity were widely promoted.
Civil rights
As soon as the coup d'état was announced over the radio on 21 April
1967, martial music was continuously broadcast over the airwaves.
This was interrupted from time to time with announcements of the
junta issuing orders that always started with the introduction "We
decide and we order" ( ). Long standing political freedoms and
civil liberties, that had been taken for granted and enjoyed by the
Greek people for decades, were instantly suppressed. Article 14 of
the
Greek Constitution which
protected
freedom of thought and
freedom of the press was
immediately suspended. Military courts were established, and
political parties were dissolved. Legislation that took decades to
fine tune and multiple parliaments to enact was thus erased in a
matter of days. The rapid devolution of Greek democracy had
begun.
In fact
the junta crackdown was so fast that by September 1967, Denmark
, Norway
, Sweden
and the
Netherlands
went before the European Commission of Human
Rights to accuse Greece of violating most of the Human Rights protected by the European Convention on Human
Rights. Following the 21 April coup, 6,188 suspected
communists and political opponents were imprisoned or exiled to
remote Greek islands.
Under the junta torture was a deliberate practice carried out both
by the Security Police and the
Greek Military Police, as portrayed in
the film
Your Neighbor's Son,
with an estimated 3,500 people detained in torture centres run by
ESA.
Examples of the types of torture commonly used include (amongst
others):
- Beating the soles of people's feet with sticks and pieces of
metal pipe.
- Sexual torture such as shoving objects into people's
vagina/anus and twisting them violently, or hoses shoved into the
anus and forcing water in at high pressure.
- Choking people and shoving rags soaked in urine and excrement
down their throats
- Ripping out hair from the head and pubic regions.
- Jumping on people's stomachs
- Pulling out toenails and fingernails
According to a human rights report by
Amnesty International, in the first
month of the 21 April coup an estimated 8,000 people were arrested.
James Becket, an American attorney and
author of
Barbarism in Greece, was sent to Greece by
Amnesty International and wrote in December 1969 that "a
conservative estimate would place at not less than two thousand"
the number of people tortured.
The citizens'
right of assembly
was revoked and no political demonstrations were allowed.
Surveillance on citizens was a fact of life, even during permitted
social activities. That had a continuously chilling effect on the
population who realised that, even though they were allowed certain
social activities, they could not overstep the boundaries and delve
into or discuss forbidden subjects. This realisation including the
absence of any civil rights as well as maltreatment during police
arrest, ranging from threats to beatings or worse, made life under
the junta a difficult proposition for many ordinary citizens.
Following the junta's logic, one was allowed to participate in a
rock concert, as an example, but if any misbehaviour occurred
during that activity that was not up to junta's standards, the
resulting arrest, coupled with the complete absence of any civil
rights, could easily lead to beatings and labelling of the
individual as an anarchist, communist, a combination of these
terms, or worse. The absence of a valid code of jurisprudence led
to the unequal application of the law among the citizens and to
rampant favouritism and
nepotism. Absence
of elected representation meant that the citizens' stark and only
choice was to submit to these arbitrary measures exactly as
dictated by the junta. The country had become a true
police state.
Complete lack of
press freedom
coupled with non existing civil rights meant that continuous cases
of civil rights abuses could neither be reported nor investigated
by an independent press or any other reputable authority. This led
to a
psychology of
fear among the citizens during the Papadopoulos
dictatorship, which became worse under Ioannides.
External relations
The military government was given support by the United States as a
Cold War ally, due to its proximity to the
Eastern European Soviet bloc, and the fact that the previous
Truman administration had given the
country millions of dollars in economic aid to discourage
Communism. US support for the junta, which was
violently anti-communist, is claimed to be the cause of rising
anti-Americanism in Greece during
and following the junta's undemocratic rule.
Greece's allies in Western Europe were split in their attitudes
toward the Junta. The Scandinavian countries as well as the
Netherlands took a very hostile stance towards the Junta and filed
a complaint before the Human Rights Commission of the
Council of Europe in September 1967.
Greece however opted for leaving the Council of Europe voluntarily
in December 1969 before a verdict was handed down.
Countries
such as the United
Kingdom
and the Federal Republic of Germany
on the other hand were voicing criticism about
Greece's human rights record but supported the countries continued
membership in the Council of Europe and NATO
because of
the country's strategic value for the western
alliance.
Sociocultural policies
To gain support for his rule, Papadopoulos projected an image that
appealed to some key segments of Greek society.
The son of a poor but
educated rural family, he was educated at the prestigious Hellenic
Military Academy
. Papadopoulos allowed substantial social and
cultural freedoms to all
social
classes, but political
oppression and
censorship were at times heavy handed,
especially in areas deemed sensitive by the junta, such as
political activities, and politically related art, literature, film
and music.
Kostas Gavras's film
Z and
Mikis Theodorakis's music, among others,
were never officially allowed even during the most relaxed times of
the dictatorship, and an index of prohibited songs, literature and
art was kept.
Western music and film
Remarkably, after some initial hesitation and as long as they were
not deemed to be politically damaging to the junta, junta censors
allowed wide access to Western music and films.
Even the then racy,
West
German
film Helga ( , ), a 1967 sex education documentary featuring a live birth scene,
had no trouble making its debut in Greece just like in any other
Western country. Moreover, the film was only restricted for
those under 13 years of age.
In 1971 Robert Hartford-Davis was allowed by
the junta to film the classic horror film Incense for the Damned, starring
Peter Cushing and Patrick Macnee and suitably featuring
Chryseis (Χρυσηίς), a beguiling Greek siren
with vampire tendencies, on the Greek island
of Hydra
. In 1970 the film
Woodstock was shown all over Greece,
with reports of arrests and disturbances especially in Athens as
many youths flocked to see the film and filled theatres to
capacity, while many others were left outside.
Meanwhile
at Matala
, Crete
, a hippie colony which had been living in the caves
since the 1960s, was never disturbed. Singer songwriter
Joni Mitchell was inspired to write
the song "
Carey" after staying in the
Matala caves with the hippie community in 1971.
Hippie colonies also
existed in other popular tourist spots such as "Paradise Beach" in
Mykonos
.
Greek rock
Western music broadcasts were limited from the airwaves in favour
of
martial music, but this was
eventually relaxed. In addition,
pop/
rock music
programmes such as the one hosted by famous Greek
music/radio/
television
personality and
promoter Nico Mastorakis were very popular throughout
the dictatorship years both on radio and television. Most Western
record sales were similarly not restricted. In fact, even
rock concerts and
tour were allowed such as by the then popular
rock groups Socrates Drank the Conium and
Nostradamos. Another pop group
"Poll" was a pioneer of Greek pop music in the late 1960s. Its lead
singer and composer was Robert Williams, who was later joined, in
1971, by
Kostas Tournas.
Poll enjoyed a number of nationwide hits, such as
"Anthrope Agapa (Humankind Love One Another)", an
anti-war song, composed by Tournas and "Ela Ilie
Mou (Come, My Sun)", composed by Tournas, Williams), Tournas later
pursued a solo career and in 1972 produced the
progressive psychedelic hit solo album
Aperanta
Chorafia ( ,
Infinite Fields). He wrote and arranged
the album using an
orchestra and a rock
group ("Ruth") combination.
While the lyrics of "Poll" were composed exclusively in Greek, the
band's name was an English word rendered in Greek characters, Πολλ.
The
dictionary definition of poll,
a
sampling or collection of opinions on a subject or
the
voting at an election, apparently did not register with the
Greek military junta
censors.
Songwriter and
troubadour Dionysis Savvopoulos, who was initially
imprisoned by the regime, nevertheless rose to great popularity and
produced a number of influential and highly politically
allegorical, especially against the junta, albums
during the period, including
To Perivoli tou Trellou ( ),
Ballos ( ) and
Vromiko Psomi ( ).
Tourism
Concurrently,
tourism was actively
encouraged by Papadopoulos' government and, funding scandals
notwithstanding, the tourist sector saw great development. With
tourism came the
nightlife.
However, under Papadopoulos, in the absence of any civil rights
these sociocultural freedoms existed in a legal vacuum that meant
they were not guaranteed, but rather dispensed at the whim of the
junta. In addition any transgressing into political matters during
social or cultural activities usually meant arrest and punishment.
Although
discos and
nightclubs were, initially, subjected to a
curfew, partially due to an
energy crisis, this was eventually extended
from 1.00 a.m. to 3:00 a.m. as the energy crisis eased. These
freedoms were later reversed by
Dimitrios Ioannides after his
coup.
Agriculture
The farmers were Papadopoulos' natural
constituency and were more likely to support
him, seeing him, because of his rural roots, as one of their own.
He cultivated this relationship by appealing to them, calling them
the backbone of the people ( ) and cancelling all
agricultural loans.
Recent Social Trends in France, 1960-1990
Michel Forsé Quote: "In addition the writing-off of agricultural
debts, the gradual abolition of hard monetary policy and the supply
of loans for opprtunist investments created a climate of economic
euphoria (mainly in 1970–1973). Although the way in which loans
were being provided and their uncontrollable use constituted the
introduction to the process of de-industrialization which begins
with the Ioannides period. The collapse of the dictatorship, due to
the nationalist fury of the last period, the Ioannides period, led
to the collapse of the compulsive interconnections of power that
the civil war and its consequences had shaped." p. 12 ISBN
0773508872
also Recent Social Trends in Greece, 1960–2000 By Dimitris
Charalambis, Laura Maratou-Alipranti, Andromachi Hadjiyanni
Translated by Dimitris Charalambis, Laura Maratou-Alipranti,
Andromachi Hadjiyanni Contributor Dimitris Charalambis, Laura
Maratou-Alipranti, Andromachi Hadjiyanni Published by
McGill-Queen's Press — MQUP, 2004 ISBN 0773522026, ISBN
9780773522022 701 pages Retrieved 15 August 2008 By further
insisting on promoting, but not really enforcing for fear of
middle-class backlash,
religion and
patriotism, he further appealed to the
simpler ideals of rural Greece and strengthened his image as
people's champion among farmers, who tended to ridicule the middle
class. Furthermore, the regime promoted a policy of economic
development in rural areas, which were mostly neglected by the
previous governments, that had focused largely on urban industrial
development.
Urban classes
Papadopoulos was less likely to appeal to the largely
civilian and
city-oriented
middle class, since he was a
military man from a
rural
background. In addition, he had promised from the beginning that
the dictatorship would not be permanent, and that when political
order was established democratic rule would return. On top of that,
his promotion of tourism and other beneficial economic measures and
the fact that, with the notable exceptions of political freedoms
and press censorship, he did not otherwise substantially restrict
the middle class, had the effect of assisting the junta in
establishing its control over the country by gaining, at least
initially, the reluctant acquiescence of some key segments of the
population.
Economic policies
The 1967–1973 period was marked by high rates of economic growth
coupled with low inflation and low unemployment.
GDP growth was driven by investment in the
tourism industry, public spending, and
pro-business incentives that fostered both domestic and foreign
capital spending. Several international companies invested in
Greece at the time, including the
Coca-Cola Corporation. Economic growth started
losing steam by 1972.
In addition, large scale construction of
hydroelectric dam projects, such as
in Aliakmon
, Kastrakion, Polyphytos, the expansion of Thermoelectric generation units and other
significant infrastructure development, took place. The
junta used to proudly announce these projects with the
slogan: "Greece is a
construction zone" (Η Ελλάς είναι ένα
εργοτάξιον). The always smiling
Stylianos Pattakos, also known as the
first trowel of Greece, (Το πρώτο μυστρί της Ελλάδας),
since he frequently appeared at project inaugurations with a
trowel in hand, starred in many of the
Epikaira propaganda
documentaries that were screened before feature film presentation
in Greek cinemas.
Financial scandals
Cases of non-transparent public deals and corruption allegedly
occurred at the time, given the lack of democratic checks and
balances and the absence of a free press. One such event is
associated with the regime's tourism minister,
Ioannis Ladas ( ). During his administration,
several low-interest loans, amortized over a twenty-year period,
were issued for tourist development. This fostered the erection of
a multitude of hotels, sometimes in non-tourist areas, and with no
underlying business rationale. Several such hotels were abandoned
unfinished as soon as the loans were secured, and their remains
still dot the Greek countryside. These questionable loans are
referred to as
Thalassodaneia ( ), or "loans of the sea",
to indicate the loose terms under which they were granted.
Another contested policy of the regime was the writing-off of
agricultural loans, up to a value of 100,000 drachmas, to farmers.
This has been attributed to an attempt by Papadopoulos to gain
public support for his regime.
Anti-Junta movement

Alexandros Panagoulis on trial in
front of the junta justice system
The democratic elements of the Greek society were opposed to the
junta from the start. In 1968 many militant groups promoting
democratic rule were formed, both in exile and in Greece. These
included, among others,
Panhellenic Liberation
Movement,
Democratic Defense,
the
Socialist Democratic
Union, as well as groups from the entire left wing of the Greek
political spectrum, including the
Communist Party of Greece which
had been outlawed even before the junta. The first armed action
against the junta was the failed assassination attempt against
George Papadopoulos by
Alexandros Panagoulis, on
13 August 1968.
Assassination attempt by Panagoulis
The
assassination attempt took place in the morning of 13 August, when Papadopoulos went from his summer
residence in Lagonisi to Athens
, escorted by
his personal security motorcycles and cars. Alexandros Panagoulis ignited a bomb
at a point of the coastal road where the limousine carrying
Papadopoulos would have to slow down, but the bomb failed to harm
Papadopoulos. Panagoulis was captured a few hours later in a nearby
sea cave, as the boat that would let him escape the scene of the
attack had not shown up.
Panagoulis was transferred to the
Greek Military Police (EAT-ESA)
offices were he was questioned, beaten and tortured (see the
proceedings of Theofiloyiannakos's trial). On
17 November 1968 he was
sentenced to death, and remained in prison for five years. After
the restoration of democracy, Panagoulis was elected a Member of
Parliament. Panagoulis is regarded as an emblematic figure for the
struggle to restore democracy.
Broadening of the movement
The funeral of
George Papandreou,
Sr. on
3 November 1968 spontaneously turned into a massive demonstration
against the junta.
Thousands of Athenians
disobeyed the military's orders and followed the
casket to the cemetery. The government reacted by arresting
41 people.
On
28 March 1969, after
two years of widespread censorship, political detentions and
torture,
Giorgos Seferis, recipient
of the
Nobel Prize for
Literature in 1963, took a stand against the junta. He made a
statement on the
BBC World
Service, with copies simultaneously distributed to every
newspaper in Athens. Attacking the colonels, he passionately
demanded that "This anomaly must end". Seferis did not live to see
the end of the junta. His funeral, though, on
September 20,
1972, turned
into a massive demonstration against the military government.
Also in 1969,
Costa-Gavras released the
film
Z, based on a book by
celebrated left-wing writer
Vassilis
Vassilikos. The film, banned in Greece, presented a lightly
fictionalized account of the events surrounding the assassination
of
United Democratic Left MP
Gregoris Lambrakis in 1963. The
film captured the sense of outrage about the junta. The soundtrack
of the film was written by
Mikis
Theodorakis, who was imprisoned by the junta and later went
into exile, and was smuggled into the country to be added to the
other inspirational, underground Theodorakis tracks.
A lesser known
Danish film, in
Greek,
Your Neighbor's Son,
detailed the subordination and training of simple youths to become
torturers for the junta.
International protest
The junta exiled thousands on the grounds that they were communists
and/or "enemies of the country".
Most of them were subjected to internal
exile on Greek deserted islands, such as Makronisos
, Gyaros
, Gioura
, or
inhabited islands such as Leros
, Agios
Eustratios
or Trikeri
.The most famous were in external exile, most
of whom were substantially involved in the resistance, organising
protests in European capital cities, or helping and hiding refugees
from Greece. These included:
Melina
Mercouri, actor, singer (and, after 1981
Minister for Culture);
Mikis Theodorakis, composer of
resistance songs;
Costas Simitis,
(
prime minister from 1996
to 2004);
Andreas Papandreou,
(prime minister from 1981 to 1989 and again from 1993 to 1996); and
Lady
Amalia Fleming, (wife of Sir
Alexander Fleming, philanthropist,
political activist). Some chose exile, unable to stand life under
the junta. For example
Melina
Mercouri was allowed to enter Greece, but stayed away on her
own accord.
Also in the early hours of 19 September 1970 in
Matteotti square in Genoa
, Geology student Kostas
Georgakis set himself ablaze in protest against the
dictatorship of George Papadopoulos. The junta delayed the
arrival of his remains to
Corfu for four
months, fearing public reaction and protests. At the time his death
caused a sensation in Greece and abroad as it was the first
tangible manifestation of the depth of resistance against the
junta. He is the only known anti-junta resistance activist to have
sacrificed himself and he is considered the precursor of later
student protest, such as the
Athens Polytechnic uprising.
The
Municipality of Corfu
has
dedicated a memorial in his honour near his home in Corfu city
.
The German writer,
investigative reporter and
journalist
Günter Wallraff
traveled to Greece in May 1974.
While in Syntagma Square
, he protested against human right
violations. He was arrested and tortured by the police, as
he did not carry, on purpose, any papers on him that could identify
him as a foreigner. After his identity was revealed, Wallraff was
convicted and sentenced to 14 months in jail. He was released in
August, after the end of the dictatorship.
The Velos mutiny

VELOS D16 ( , "ARROW"), now a
museum in the Gulf of Faliron in Athens
In an
anti-junta protest, on 23 May 1973, HNS Velos, under the command of Commander
Nicholaos Pappas, refused to return to Greece after participating
in a NATO
exercise and
remained anchored at Fiumicino
, Italy
.
During a
patrol with other NATO vessels between Italy
and
Sardinia, the captain and the officers
heard over the radio that a number of fellow naval officers had
been arrested in Greece. Cdr Pappas was involved in a group
of democratic officers, who remained loyal to their oath to obey
the Constitution, which was planning to act against the junta.
Evangelos Averoff also
participated in the Velos mutiny, for which he was later arrested
as an "instigator".
Pappas believed that since his fellow anti-junta officers had been
arrested, there was no more hope for a movement inside Greece. He
therefore decided to act alone in order to motivate global public
opinion. He mustered all the crew to the stern and announced his
decision, which was received with enthusiasm by the crew. Pappas
signalled his intentions to the squadron commander and NATO
headquarters, quoting the preamble of the
North Atlantic Treaty, which declares
that "all governments ... are determined to safeguard the freedom,
common heritage and civilisation of their peoples, founded on the
principles of democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law",
and, leaving formation, sailed for Rome.
There, anchored about
away from the coast of Fiumicino, three ensigns sailed ashore with
a whaleboat, went to Fiumicino Airport
and telephoned the international press agencies,
notifying them of the situation in Greece, the presence of the
destroyer, and that the captain would hold a press conference the
next day.
This action increased international interest in the situation in
Greece. The captain, six officers, and twenty five
petty officers requested and remained abroad
as political refugees. Indeed, the whole crew wished to follow
their captain but were advised by its officers to remain onboard
and return to Greece to inform families and friends about what
happened.
Velos returned to Greece after a month with a
replacement crew. After the fall of junta all officers and petty
officers returned to the Navy.
Collapse

Students demonstrating during the
uprising.
The collapse of the junta both ideologically and politically was
triggered by a series of events which unfolded soon after
Papadopoulos' attempt at liberalisation, with ideological collapse
preceding its eventual political collapse. During and following
this ill-fated process the internal political strains of the junta
came to the fore and pitted the junta
factions against each other, thus
destroying the seemingly
monolithic
cohesion of the dictatorship. This had the effect of seriously
weakening the coherence of the political message and, consequently,
the credibility of the regime, a fatal blow from which, as later
events would show, it never recovered. At the same time, during
Papadopoulos' attempt at liberalisation, some of the junta
constraints were removed from the
body
politic of Greece and that led to demands for more freedoms,
and political unrest, in a society well used to democratic action
prior to the dictatorship.
Normalization and attempts at liberalization
Papadopoulos had indicated as early as 1968 that he was eager for a
reform process and even tried to contact Markezinis at the time. He
had declared at the time that he did not want the "Revolution",
(
junta speak
for the "dictatorship"), to become a "regime". He then repeatedly
attempted to initiate reforms in 1969 and 1970, only to be thwarted
by the hardliners including Ioannidis. In fact subsequent to his
1970 failed attempt at reform, he threatened to resign and was
dissuaded only after the hardliners renewed their personal
allegiance to him.
On 10 April 1970 Papadopoulos announced the formation of the
Simvouleftiki Epitropi (Συμβουλευτική Επιτροπή) translated
as the
Advisory Council (Committee) otherwise known as
Papadopoulos' (pseudo) Parliament. Composed of members elected
through an electoral type process but limited to
ethnikofrones only, it was bicameral and comprised of the
Central Advisory Council and the Provincial Advisory Council. The
Central Council met in Athens in the Parliament Building. Both
councils had the purpose to advise the dictator. At the time of the
announcement of the formation of the council, Papadopoulos
explained that he wanted to avoid using the term "Vouli"
(Parliament) for the Committee because it sounded bad. The council
was dissolved just prior to Papadopoulos' failed attempt to
liberalise his regime with Markezinis.As internal dissatisfaction
grew in the early 1970s, and especially after an abortive coup by
the
Navy in early 1973, Papadopoulos
attempted to legitimize the regime by beginning a gradual
"democratization" (See also the article on
Metapolitefsi). On
1 June 1973, he abolished the
monarchy and declared himself President of the Republic after a
controversial referendum, the results of which were not recognised
by the political parties. He furthermore sought the support of the
old political establishment, but secured only the cooperation of
Spiros Markezinis, who became
Prime Minister. Concurrently, many restrictions were lifted, and
the army's role significantly reduced. Papadopoulos intended to
establish a
presidential
republic, with extensive powers vested in the office of
President, which he held. The decision to return to political rule
and the restriction of their role was resented by many of the
regime's supporters in the
Army, whose
dissatisfaction with Papadopoulos would become evident a few months
later.
The uprising at the Polytechnic
Papadopoulos' heavy handed attempt at liberalisation did not find
favour among many in Greece. The stilted democratisation process he
proposed was constrained by multiple factors. His inexperience at
carrying out an unprecedented political experiment of
democratisation was burdened by his tendency to concentrate as much
power in his hands as possible, a weakness he exhibited during the
dictatorship years when he would sometimes hold multiple high
echelon government portfolios. This antagonised many but especially
the
intelligentsia whose primary
exponents were the students. The students at the Law School in
Athens, for example, demonstrated multiple times against the
dictatorship prior to the events at the Polytechneion.
The tradition of
student protest was
always strong in Greece, even before the dictatorship. Papadopoulos
tried hard to suppress and discredit the student movement during
his tenure at the helm of the junta. But the liberalisation process
he undertook allowed the students to organise more freely and this
gave the opportunity to the students at the Athens Polytechnic to
organise a demonstration that grew increasingly larger and more
effective. The political momentum was on the side of the students.
Sensing this the Papadopoulos junta panicked and reacted
violently.
On the
early hours of 17 November 1973 Papadopoulos sent the
army to suppress the student strike and sit-in of the "Free
Besieged" (Ελεύθεροι Πολιορκημένοι), as the students called
themselves, at the National
Technical University of Athens
which had commenced on November 14. Shortly
after 03:00 am and under almost complete cover of darkness, an
AMX 30 tank crashed through the rail gate of
the Athens Polytechnic with subsequent loss of life. The army also
occupied Syntagma Square and for at least that day. Even the
sidewalk cafes were closed.
Ioannidis' involvement in inciting unit commanders of the security
forces to commit criminal acts during the Athens Polytechnic
uprising, so that he could facilitate his upcoming coup, was noted
in the
indictment presented to the court
by the prosecutor during the
junta
trials and in his subsequent conviction in the Polytechneion
trial where he was found to have been morally responsible for the
events.
Eleftherotypia Unrepentant for the Dictatorship
Retrieved 15 August 2008 (In Greek)
English translation by Google
The Ioannidis regime
The uprising triggered a series of events that put an abrupt end to
Papadopoulos' attempts at "liberalisation".
Taxiarkhos Dimitrios Ioannidis, a disgruntled junta
hardliner, used the uprising as a pretext to reestablish public
order, and staged a counter-coup that overthrew
Georgios Papadopoulos and
Spiros Markezinis on
25 November. Military law was reinstated, and
the new Junta appointed General
Phaedon
Gkizikis as President and economist
Adamantios Androutsopoulos as
Prime Minister, although Ioannides remained the behind-the-scenes
strongman.
Ioannidis's heavy-handed and opportunistic intervention had the
effect of destroying the myth that the junta was an
idealistic group of army officers with
exactly the same ideals who came to save Greece by using their
collective wisdom.
The main
tenet of the junta
ideology (and
mythology)
was gone and so was the collective. By default, he remained the
only man at the top after toppling the other three principals of
the junta. Characteristically, he cited ideological reasons for
ousting the Papadopoulos faction, accusing them with straying from
the principles of the Revolution, especially of being corrupt and
misusing their privileges as army officers for financial
gains.
Papadopoulos and his junta always claimed that the 21 April 1967
"revolution" saved Greece from the old party system. Now Ioannidis
was, in effect, claiming that his coup saved the revolution from
the Papadopoulos faction. The dysfunction as well as the
ideological fragmentation and fractionalisation of the junta was
finally out in the open. Ioannidis, however, did not make these
accusations personally as he always tried to avoid unnecessary
publicity. The radio broadcasts, following the now familiar
coup in progress scenario featuring martial music
interspersed with military orders and curfew announcements, kept
repeating that the army was taking back the reins of power in order
to save the principles of the revolution and that the overthrow of
the Papadopoulos-Markezinis government was supported by the army,
navy and air force.
At the same time they announced that the new coup was a
"continuation of the revolution of 1967" and accused Papadopoulos
with "straying from the ideals of the 1967 revolution" and "pushing
the country towards parliamentary rule too quickly".
Previous to seizing power, Ioannidis preferred to work in the
background and he never held any formal office in the junta. Now he
was the
de facto leader of a
puppet regime composed by members some of whom
were rounded up by
ESA
soldiers in roving
jeeps to serve and
others that were simply chosen by mistake.
"Greece marks '73 student uprising",
and:
the notorious Brigadier Dimitrios Ioannidis now serving a
life sentence for his part in the 1967 seizure of power —
immediately scrapped a programme of liberalisation introduced
earlier and:
His was but to do the bidding of a junta
strongman who had never made a secret of his belief that Greeks
were not ready for democracy.Athens News, 17 November
1999 The Ioannides method of forming a government dealt yet another
blow to the rapidly diminishing credibility of the regime both at
home and abroad.
The new junta, despite its rather inauspicious origins, pursued an
aggressive internal crackdown and an expansionist foreign
policy.
Sponsored
by Ioannidis, on 15 July, 1974 the EOKA-B organisation
took power on the island of Cyprus
by a
military coup, in which Archbishop Makarios
III, the Cypriot president,
was overthrown. Turkey
replied to
this intervention by invading
Cyprus and occupying, after heavy fighting with the Cypriot and
Greek ELDYK Forces ( ), the northern part of
the island. There was a well-founded fear that an all out
war with Turkey was imminent.
The fall of the Junta and the restoration of democracy
The Cyprus fiasco led to senior Greek military officers withdrawing
their support for Junta strongman Brigadier
Dimitrios Ioannides. Junta-appointed
President Phaedon Gizikis called a meeting of old
guard politicians, including
Panagiotis Kanellopoulos,
Spiros Markezinis,
Stephanos Stephanopoulos,
Evangelos Averoff, and others.
The agenda was to appoint a national unity government that would
lead the country to elections. Although former Prime Minister
Panagiotis Kanellopoulos
was originally backed, Gizikis finally invited former
Prime Minister Constantine Karamanlis, who had
resided in Paris since 1963, to assume the role.
Karamanlis returned
to Athens
on a
French Presidency Lear Jet made available to him by President
Valéry Giscard
d'Estaing, a close personal friend, and was sworn-in as
Prime Minister under President Phaedon
Gizikis. Karamanlis' new party,
New Democracy, won the
November 1974 general
election, and he remained prime minister.
Parliamentary democracy was thus restored, and the
Greek legislative elections of
1974 were the first free elections held in a decade.
While the
physical collapse of the junta as a government was immediately
caused by the Cyprus
debacle,
its ideological collapse was triggered by the 1973 Athens Polytechnic
uprising. The uprising at the Polytechneion was the
event that discredited the military government most and acted as a
key catalyst for its eventual demise by exposing the internal
contradictions and stresses of the regime thus destroying the myth
of the political cohesion of the junta and, therefore, irreparably
damaging the political credibility of the "
Ethnosotirios
Epanastasis" and its message.
The trials of the junta
In January 1975 the junta members were formally arrested and in
early August of the same year the government of Konstantinos
Karamanlis brought charges of
high
treason and
insurrection against
Georgios Papadopoulos and nineteen other co-conspirators of the
military junta.
The mass trial was staged at the Korydallos
Prison
. The trial was described as "Greece's
Nuremberg
". One thousand soldiers armed with
submachine guns provided security. The roads
leading to the jail were patrolled by
tanks.
Papadopoulos, Pattakos, Makarezos and Ioannides were sentenced to
death for high treason. These sentences were later commuted to
life imprisonment by the
Karamanlis government. A plan to grant
amnesty to the junta principals by the
Konstantinos Mitsotakis government
in 1990 was cancelled after protests from conservatives, socialists
and communists. Papadopoulos died in hospital in 1999 after being
transferred from Korydallos while Ioannides remains incarcerated to
this day. This trial was followed by a second trial which centered
on the events of the
Athens
Polytechnic uprising and a third called "The trial of the
torturers".
Legacy
The historical repercussions of the junta were profound and are
still felt to this day in Greece. Internally the absence of civil
rights and the oppression that followed created a sense of fear and
persecution among many in the population creating trauma and
division that persisted long after the fall of the junta. The
Cyprus debacle created a tragedy that is still unfolding. While the
Cyprus fiasco was due to the actions of Ioannides, it was
Papadopoulos who started the cycle of coups. Externally the absence
of human rights in a country belonging to the
Western Bloc during the
cold war was a continuous source of embarrassment
for the free world and this and other reasons made Greece an
international pariah abroad and interrupted her process of
integration with the
European Union
with incalculable
opportunity
costs.
The 21st of April regime remains highly controversial to this day,
with most Greeks holding very strong and polarized views in regards
to it. According to a survey by Kapa Research published in the
center-left newspaper "To Vima" in 2002, the majority of the
electoral body (54.7%) consider the regime to have been bad or
harmful for Greece while 20.7% consider it to have been good for
Greece and 19.8% believe that it was neither good nor
harmful.
In 1999 President
Bill Clinton
apologised on the behalf of the US government for supporting the
military junta in the name of Cold War tactics.
See also
References
Citations and notes
External links