1st Edition
Greece and the Cold War Front Line State, 1952-1967
Introduction Part 1. The Era of Regional Supremacy, 1952-1955 1. An Effort to Adjust to the Post-War World 2. A New Nato Member, 1952-1955 3. Achieving Regional Supremacy: The Tripartite Balkan Pacts 4. Greece and Peaceful Co-Existence 5. Disaster in 1955 Part 2. The Era of Functionalism, 1955-1963 6. The Search for a Long-Term Strategy 7. New Security Problems 8. Functionalism in Action 9. The Limits of Functionalism: Security and Detente 10. The Regional Aspect of Functionalism: Yugoslavia, Turkey and Cyprus Part 3. The Era of Multiple Fronts, 1963-67 9. Facing New Challenges 12. Multiple Fronts 13. Maximalism and Dead-End: The Cyprus Entanglement 14. The Effort to Adjust Greece’s Eastern Policy. Conclusion
Biography
Evanthis Hatzivassiliou received his Ph.D. in International History from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 1992. He is associate professor of Contemporary History at the Department of History, University of Athens. He is the editor of the ‘Modern and Contemporary History’ series of Patakis Publications (Athens), a member of the Greek-Turkish Forum, and member of the Consultative Committee of the Foundation for Parliamentarianism and Democracy of the Greek Parliament. He has published six books.






