FANOULA ARGYROU, a
professional researcher, looks at allegations made this week in a BBC Radio
programme about a British spy ring operating to support the Turkish Cypriots
in 1964 and finds that the truth is even more amazing…THE murky side of
Britain’s role in Cyprus was highlighted this week by a BBC Radio 4
programme that claimed a British spy ring cooperated with the Turkish
Cypriots during the troubled days of 1964.
The following summary
of the documentary was also available on the same day on the BBC 4’s
website:
" Ever since the
Turkish army invaded and occupied Northern Cyprus in 1974, the partition of
the island between ethnic Greeks and Turks has seemed set in stone.
"But the first
Green Line, through the capital, was drawn ten years earlier, by a British
general (Young) using a green chinagraph pencil that happened to be at
hand. Throughout 1964, British troops were on the island, supposedly for
peace-keeping. But were they really bringing peace?
"In this
programme, Mike Thomson examined new documents that suggest that the real
motives of some of the peacekeepers were less than honourable."
The documents reveal
the existence of a spy ring of British troops who were materially aiding
Turkish insurgents by gun-running and spying on Greek Cypriot military
installations.
Although one of the men
was caught by the Greek Cypriots, the rest were spirited off the island by
the British authorities before the Cypriot police could interrogate them.
The programme also
investigated the long-standing mystery of a British army major, who was
abducted, presumed murdered, by Greek Cypriot paramilitaries. New
documentary evidence uncovered by the programme shows that he, too, was
aware of illicit gun-running on behalf of the Turks and that, although the
British authorities had good intelligence about the identities of his
murderers, they chose not to press the Greek Cypriot authorities to
investigate the case.
Intelligence officer
Many Greek Cypriots
have long believed that the Nato powers, notably Britain and America, were
opposed to the idea of an independent Cyprus because of fears that it could
fall into communist hands and become a "Mediterranean Cuba" - a
scenario that would have put at risk British electronic spying bases on the
island.
The programme assesses
the evidence that pro-American elements on the island in 1964 actively
conspired to foment inter-communal strife in order to justify the effective
partition of the island - a situation that came to pass in 1974."
The most striking part
of the BBC documentary was the story of Martin Packard, a British naval
intelligence officer who was sent to Cyprus from Malta on account of being
a fluent speaker of Greek, to help prevent small incidents between Greek
and Turks from escalating into serious ones.
It seems, though, that
he was taking his mission very seriously, for just as he was being very
successful in stopping bloodshed, he was virtually abducted by his
superiors, put on a plane and flown out of the island.
Packard related his
experience to the BBC that, after mediating successfully between a Greek
and a Turkish village over some stolen sheep: "The US Acting Secretary
of State George Ball, visiting the island at the time, patted me on the
back, as though I were sadly deluded and he said: ‘That was a fantastic
show son, but you’ve got it all wrong, hasn’t anyone told you that our plan
here is for partition?’ "
Undaunted, Martin
pursued plans to move Turkish Cypriots back to the villages they fled. But
as the first settlement was about to take place, British General Michael
Carver had him arrested and flown off the island in an unmarked CIA plane.
Not new documents
I listened to the
programme very carefully and as a researcher I have the following comments
to make.
It is necessary from
the offset to set the record straight by underlining that these documents
are not new releases but documents that were released ten years ago and
ever since have available for research at the Public Records Office (PRO)
in London.
As a regular researcher
at the PRO myself, I have seen and researched thoroughly these documents
long ago and refer to them in length in two of my books - ‘Conspiracy or
Blunder?’ published in Nicosia in 2000, and ‘Top Secret,’ also published in
Nicosia in 2004.
I have no doubt that
the Radio 4 programme, although well intentioned, gave half the truth
around the existence of the ‘spy ring’ in Cyprus that was aiding the
Turkish Cypriots.British ‘conciliators’
Both Lt Commander
Martin Packard and Major Ted Macey were, in fact, working in Cyprus under
the instructions of the Foreign Office, specifically under the instructions
of high-ranking official Sir Cyril Pickard.
Sir Cyril was at the
time an Assistant Under Secretary directly involved with the Cyprus
problem.
Their secondment to
UNFICYP -†Martin Packard as Conciliator for the Greek Cypriot
side and Ted Macey as special Liaison Officer attached to Turkish Cypriot
leader Dr Kutchuk’s office - had a hidden agenda.
In 1963, Lt Commander
Martin Packard was rushed to Cyprus from Malta, where he was serving as a
naval intelligence officer.
He mastered the Greek
language perfectly.
After his peacekeeping
in Cyprus he was awarded an MBE.
Invasion
preparations
The same went for Major
T. Macey. He mastered both the Greek and Turkish languages and had served
in Greece for a number of years.
He had a rough ‘Rambo’
image and his ‘terms of reference’ were quite different from those of Packard
for obvious reasons if one studies the British documents analytically vis-a-vis
the Foreign Office policy of the period (which has hardly changed at all!).
Macey, indeed, provided
the Turkish Cypriots with arms and ammunition, offered them training and,
in general, he headed the preparation for an eventual Turkish invasion.
Packard, on the other
hand, was working on a different level; that of a friendly conciliator, as
the British policy needed the Greek Cypriots to be kept in check, quiet,
unarmed, restrained and behaving themselves.
The knowledge of the
local languages in these cases was a definite must and the best way to gain
the confidence of the people.
According to PRO
documents (which refer to a statement made by the then President Archbishop
Makarios) Major Macey and his driver were murdered by a ringleader of a
gang active in the Famagusta-Larnaca area.
Macey and his driver
were accused of spying and working for the Turks.
In another document, it
is revealed that two Greek Cypriot informants gave the British authorities
information as to the place where the bodies lay.
The informants were
helped by the British authorities to take asylum in England and also
received the £2,000 reward offered.
Macey was also employed
to make visits to Greek and Turkish villages throughout Cyprus (just like
Martin Packard) reporting on the state of feeling in the countryside. In
other words, both were engaged in collecting intelligence in a manner
undetected by the locals and keeping things in check for their superiors.
The Foreign Office also
regarded the positioning of British officers within the UN a necessity, in
order to be privy to all information received by the UN. " His special
experience (Macey’s) enabled him to play a unique role in efforts to maintain
peace and save lives through his personal contacts with Greek Cypriots and
Turkish Cypriots," it was noted in a report in the PRO files.
The British documents
reveal the true ‘unique’ role of T. Macey as a British ‘spy ring leader’
aiding the Turkish Cypriots against the Greek Cypriots.
Martin Packard’s
superiors, fearing for his life, days after Macey’s murder, rushed him out
of Cyprus via a CIA plane that took him to an American base in
Greece.British subversion
As it was correctly
stated in the BBC programme, British officers were directly involved in
subversive activities on the island: the manufacture of bombs, bombing
Turkish properties to blame the Greek Cypriots, espionage and so on.
Their main objective
was to de-stabilise Cyprus, bring chaos and confusion and assist the Turks
in the execution of their long-term plans.
As Nicos Koshis stated,
the British policy was to keep the two communities separated. But with an
enlarged hidden agenda.
In February 1964,
Archbishop Makarios handed a document to the British High Commissioner
regarding those activities.
He referred to the case
of Colonel Thursby who, on January 20, 1964, went to the Manager of the
Cyprus Asbestos Mines Co Ltd and, under false pretences, demanded to be
allowed to collect all the explosives in the stores.
Makarios also wrote to
General Gyani (UN force) complaining and listing instances when British
troops with the UN contingent did nothing to stop Turks from firing at
Greek Cypriots. Marley (mentioned in the programme), Bachelor, Bass
(mentioned), Heron, Tyft, Offard and Jones are among those accused of
aiding and providing the Turks with arms, ammunition and other military
equipment.
Some of those arrested
had given sensational information but the Cypriot authorities were totally
ignorant of the even more damning information they could have extracted.
But they did not have
the chance. The British authorities, who knew full well the extent of the
consequences in such a case, quickly arranged for them to be flown out of
Cyprus. Marley, who was arrested (as stated in the programme) and gave
vital information under interrogation, was tried and condemned to 15 years
imprisonment.
However, the British
authorities again ‘arranged’ with the then Attorney General (ex Colonial
employee) Tornaritis (and not the Cypriot Government) to get him out of for
health reasons.
Partition plans
Although Martin Packard
refers to George Ball’s statement regarding "their policy being
partition," he and the programmers make no mention whatsoever of the
policy of the Foreign Office, which is clearly demonstrated in no uncertain
terms through the PRO files.
In fact, George Ball
was at the time referring to the British plans to which he and his
department were privy.
In February, 1964, the
Planning Department of the Foreign Office (Packard’s superiors) devised a
comprehensive plan named ‘ The Future of Cyprus’ which stated: "It is
now clear that any long term solution in Cyprus must involve geographical
separation of the Greek and Turkish communities.
"This could of,
course, be achieved by wholesale removal of the Turkish community
elsewhere. Less drastic alternatives following some redeployment of the
population in the island are:
"a Partition so
that a predominantly Greek area is united with Greece and a predominantly
Turkish area is united with Turkey.
"b Partition so
that one or both areas are independent, perhaps with special relationships
with Greece and Turkey respectively, or
"c A Federal
Constitution, in which the island would be divided into cantons, one or two
of which were Turkish.
"It would already
be difficult for the Greeks to intervene successfully in Cyprus. The Turks
would have completed their intervention before they could prevent it.
"The obvious Greek
counter-move would be to invade Turkish Thrace. One way of preventing this
would be for a small force drawn from all NATO countries to police the
frontier.
"We could make
much greater use of United States and British naval power to deter Greek
naval assault across the Aegean. The ability of the Greeks to mount an
airborne intervention is strictly limited…".
(A month before, in
London, where representatives of both communities were summoned for a
conference, Rauf Denktash had placed on the table in the presence of
Glafcos Clerides, Tassos Papadopoulos, Stella Soulioti and others his and
Turkey’s demands i.e. geographical federation...).†
From the masses of the
PRO documents released so far, one can build upon the theory that it was in
fact the British and not the Americans who thought of, prepared and
instigated the Greek Junta takeover in Greece in 1967, in order to achieve
their planning objectives over Cyprus.
The Americans were used
as and when it suited the British, always retaining a secondary and
assisting role to date.
†False accusations
Upon leaving Cyprus,
Martin Packard prepared a report, which he handed to his superiors, in
which he accused the Greek Cypriots of slaughtering 27 Turkish Cypriots in
the Nicosia General Hospital.
His accusations
appeared on April 2, 1988 in the ‘Guardian’ newspaper through his friend at
the time Chief Editor of the paper Peter Preston, who, in 1964, was also
working in Cyprus.
On February 10, 1994
Channel 4 Television showed a documentary called ‘Secret History – Dead or Alive’ which in a way addressed the drama of the 1,619 missing Greek
Cypriots since the brutal Turkish invasion of Cyprus in July 1974.
Martin Packard made an
unexpected appearance to say that in 1963/64 he had prepared a report in
which he included that: "The largest single element of these missing
people were the Turkish Cypriot patients at the General Hospital. Nothing
had been heard of any of them. It was assumed that they were being held in
custody somewhere. The outcome of my investigation suggested that they had
all of them been killed in the General Hospital. They had been removed at
night, the bodies from there had been taken out to outlying farms up in the
region of Skilloura and out there they had been dismembered and passed
through farm dicing machines and they had then been seeded into the
ploughed land."
I found these
accusations too horrific to be true. Immediately, I wrote to the then
Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs David
Heathcoat-Amory and demanded to be allowed to view Packard’s report.
As he spoke about this
report having definitely not been released, I found Mr Packard’s liberty to
disclose such damning secret information, with no evidence at all to
substantiate it, extraordinarily questionable.
Five-year fight
I raised the issue that
he either had breached the Official Secrets Act as he spoke from knowledge
of a report still retained or he spoke in his capacity of a British
conciliator with the Department’s permission. Whatever the case, we had a
right to see the evidence of what he was so freely accusing us.
My fight with the
Foreign Office and other government departments lasted five years
(1994-1999) until he was finally ‘ordered’ to close the matter by
withdrawing the accusations.
Peter Preston, with an
article in the ‘Guardian’ (which was equally guilty and responsible for
printing unsubstantiated allegations), on May 3, 1999, wrote that Martin
Packard revisited the island and found out that he was given wrong
information, no evidence at all, and that in fact no Turkish Cypriot had
been harmed.
I wrote an article in
Simerini on May 18, 1999 and another one was written by Charalambos
Charalambides on May 19, 1999, finally revealing the truth.
Packard was wrong and
had no evidence whatsoever for those horrific allegations against us.
The damage, however, to
the Greek side was immeasurable. The Turks had used Packard’s allegations
to the full and in all international forums, as admitted by Peter Preston.
Packard was obliged to
write to Kofi Annan withdrawing the allegations and restoring the truth,
which is that no Turkish Cypriot had been killed.
They were all protected
under Makarios’s orders.
And that was the result
of Packard’s role in Cyprus in 1964 which had nothing to do with petty
conflicts over….sheep between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots.
†Finally: "The programme assesses
the evidence that pro-American elements on the island in 1964 actively
conspired to foment inter-communal strife in order to justify the effective
partition of the island - a situation that came to pass in 1974", is
stated on the BBC 4’s website.
This is totally
wrong.
The British documents
reveal exactly the opposite. I find it extraordinary after such a broadcast
to reach such a ridiculous assumption!
It was not the so called
pro-American elements on the island in 1964 who actively conspired to
foment inter-communal strife in order to justify the effective partition of
the island, but the very British intelligence men - the ‘spy ring’ - as
they chose to name them under direct orders of the Foreign Office and the
Ministry of Defence.
They were the ones who
were aided on the island by their pro-British elements within both
communities who in their own way assisted the British and Turkish
partitionist policy to gain ground.
This was an assistance
they enjoy to this very day with disastrous results for our national cause.
Fanoulla Argyrou
Researcher/author
London 24.1.2006.
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