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Communist Party of Greece

The Communist Party of Greece (Greek: Κομμουνιστικό Κόμμα Ελλάδας, Kommounistikó Kómma Elládas, KKE) is a Marxist–Leninist political party in Greece.[2] Founded in 1918 as the Socialist Labour Party of Greece and adopted its current name in November 1924.[9] It is the oldest political party in modern Greek politics.[10] The party was banned in 1936, but played a significant role in the Greek resistance and the Greek Civil War, and its membership peaked in the mid-1940s. Legalization of the KKE was restored following the fall of the Greek military junta of 1967–1974.

Communist Party of Greece
Κομμουνιστικό Κόμμα Ελλάδας
AbbreviationKKE
General SecretaryDimitris Koutsoumpas
FoundersDemosthenes Ligdopoulos
Stamatis Kokkinos
Michael Sideris
Nikos Demetratos
Nikos Giannios
Avraam Benaroya
Michael Oikonomou
Spyros Komiotis
Giorgos Pispinis
Aristos Arvanitis[1]
Founded17 November [O.S. 4 November] 1918 as SEKE
Legalised1974
Headquarters145 Leof. Irakliou, 142 31 Athens (Nea Ionia)
NewspaperRizospastis
Student wingPanspoudastiki
Youth wingCommunist Youth of Greece
Trade union wingAll-Workers Militant Front
Paramilitary wingDemocratic Army of Greece (1946–1949)
IdeologyCommunism[2]
Marxism–Leninism[2]
Hard Euroscepticism[3]
Political positionFar-left[4][5][6][7]
European affiliationINITIATIVE
International affiliationIMCWP
European Parliament groupNon-Inscrits[8]
Colours  Red
SloganProletarians of all countries, unite (Προλετάριοι όλων των χωρών, ενωθείτε!)
AnthemThe Internationale
Parliament
15 / 300
European Parliament
2 / 21
Regional Governors
0 / 13
Regional Councilors
48 / 703
Mayors
1 / 332
Election symbol
Hammer and sickle
Party flag
Website
www.kke.gr

The party has returned MPs in all elections since its restoration in 1974, and took part in a coalition government in 1989 when it got more than 13% of the vote.

History

Foundation

 
Plaque at the building of Piraeus where the first congress and foundation of the party was held
 
View of the Piraeus building

The October Revolution of the Bolsheviks in Russia in 1917 gave impetus for the foundation of Communist parties in many countries globally. The KKE was founded on 4 November 1918 by Aristos Arvanitis, Demosthenes Ligdopoulos [el], Stamatis Kokkinos, Michael Sideris, Nikos Dimitratos [el], and others.[9] The party was run by a five-member Central Committee which initially consisted of Dimitratos, Ligdopoulos, Sideris, Arvanitis and Kokkinos, and had a three-member Audit Committee initially including George Pispinis, Spyros Koumiotis and Avraam Benaroya.[9] Ligdopoulos was elected director of the party's official newspaper, Ergatikos Agon.[9]

The background of KKE has roots in more than 60 years of small socialist, anarchist and communist groups, mainly in industrialized areas. Following the example of the Paris Commune and the 1892 Chicago workers' movement for the eight-hour working day, these groups had as immediate political goals the unification of Greek workers into trade unions, the implementation of an eight-hour day in Greece and better salaries for workers. Inspired by the Paris Commune and the communist revolutionary efforts in the United States, Germany and Russia at the beginning of the century and the destruction that almost 20 years of wars had brought upon the Greek workers, a unified Social-Communist party was founded in Greece.[11]

At the Second Congress of the SEKE in April 1920, the party decided to affiliate with Comintern, an international Communist organisation founded in Moscow in 1919. It changed its name to the Socialist Labour Party of Greece-Communist (SEKE-K). A new Central Committee was elected, which included Nikos and Panaghis Dimitratos, Yannis Kordatos, G. Doumas and M. Sideris.[citation needed] At the Third Extraordinary Congress of the SEKE-K in November 1924, the party was renamed the Communist Party of Greece and adopted the principles of Marxism–Leninism. Pandelis Pouliopoulos was elected as general-secretary. Ever since, the party has functioned on the basis of democratic centralism.

KKE between the two World Wars

KKE strongly opposed Greece's involvement in the Greco-Turkish War of 1919–1922, which it considered an imperialistic scheme to control the market of Asia Minor given the new political situation after the Ottoman Empire's collapse. KKE members propagated this position both on the front—which provoked accusations of treason from the Greek government—as well as in the mainland. KKE collaborated with the Soviet ambassador to persuade Venizelos' administration to withdraw its troops from Asia Minor and to persuade the Soviet Union to exert political pressure on Mustafa Kemal Atatürk to allow autonomy for Greek cities in Asia Minor.[12]

KKE played a prominent role in strikes, anti-war demonstrations, foundation of trade unions and worker associations. KKE and other leftist political forces fostered the creation of labor unions in all sectors, including the General Greek Workers Confederation (ΓΣΕΕ), which shared common goals with KKE.[13][14]

These activities met by opposition from the Mid-War governments. In 1929, as minister of Education in the government of Eleftherios Venizelos, Georgios Papandreou passed legislation against organised communist teachers, known as Idionymon. Such legislation was often used to prosecute KKE members and other leftist activists.[15] Under the Idionymon all members of the Communist Party of Greece, being considered dangers to the state, were to be removed from public service or put in exile.

The first prison camps for left-wing citizens and communists were founded in that era. KKE and its organisations, although small in numbers, continue operating in all Greek major cities, especially industrial areas such as Athens, Piraeus, Patra, Thessaly and Volos, Thessaloniki, Kavala and elsewhere.[16]

KKE collaborated with other newly founded Communist Parties to oppose the rise of the fascist movement in Europe. In 1932, the Comintern decreed that anti-fascist fronts be formed internationally. KKE responded by creating the People's Front, which was the largest Marxist anti-fascist organisation in Greece prior to the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas.

The party was banned in 1936 by the dictatorial 4th of August Regime of Metaxas and brutally persecuted by his security chief, Konstantinos Maniadakis. Many KKE members were imprisoned or exiled on isolated Aegean Islands.

KKE members volunteered to fight on the side of the republican government of Spain during the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939. About 440 Greeks joined the ranks of the International Brigade, Especially brigades such as the XV International Brigade and the Dimitrov Battalion, many of whom were high-ranking KKE members.

KKE and the Macedonian issue

After the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913, World War I in 1916–1918 and the disastrous Greco–Turkish War of 1919–1922, there were diplomatic approaches from the superpowers of that era regarding the re-drawing of Greek borders, based on Bulgaria and Turkey–United States relations pressing for more territory to improve trade routes with the British Empire. The ruling parties were simultaneously trying to move parts of Northern Greece (Macedonia and Thrace) to Bulgaria and Turkey; and to win the return of islands in the Aegean and parts of Macedonian territory to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. This policy was reiterated several times throughout the pre-war era.[17][18]

The main impetus for their demand was the ethnic and religious minorities then living inside Greek borders in Northern Greece. KKE opposed any geo-strategic game in the area which would use minorities to start a new imperialistic war in the region. At its Third Party Congress in 1924, KKE announced its policy for the self-determination of minorities, pointing out the minorities in Macedonia.[19] Its policy was dictated by each Marxist–Leninist theory, that stated any minorities should be self-determined under a common socialist state and it had its roots in the example of the newly founded Soviet Union.[20]

In 1924, KKE expressed the official position of the Third International for "independent Macedonia and Thrace". Some members disagreed with this, but it remained the official position of the party and caused expulsions of communists by the Greek state.[21] KKE was seen by many as a party whose policy was "the detachment of large areas of northern Greece". According to Richard Clogg, "this was dictated by Comintern and hurt the popularity of Communism at the time".[22]

In 1934, KKE changed its view and expressed its intent to "fight for the national self-determination, under a People's Republic where all nations will found their self-determination and will build the common state of the workers".[23]

Nikos Zachariadis, General Secretary of the party, officially renounced KKE's policy of secession in 1945.[24] Anti-KKE propaganda up-to-day added on this quote the will to collaborate for this goal with the Bulgarian organizations of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization and the Thracian Revolutionary Organisation. This is not mentioned on any of KKE official documents. The quote is referenced as KKE's policy for "giving Greek soil to the northern enemies of the country", a fact that can not be crossed referenced with any of KKE referenced literature of that era.

During the civil war (1946–1949), an article written by Nikos Zachariadis expressed the KKE's strategy after the envisioned victory of the Democratic Army of Greece regarding what was then known as the "Macedonian Issue": "The Macedonian people will acquire an independent, united state with a coequal position within the family of free peoples' republics within the Balkans, within the family of Peoples' Republics to which the Greek people will belong. The Macedonian people are today fighting for this independent united state with a coequal position and is helping the DSE with all its soul".[25] The policy of self-determination for Macedonia within a People's Republic was reiterated during the 5th KKE Central Committee meeting held in January 1949, which declared that the "Macedonian people participating in the liberation struggle would find their full national re-establishment as they want giving their blood for this acquisition [...] Macedonian Communists should pay great attentions to foreign chauvinist and counteractive elements that want to break the unity between the Greek and Macedonian people. This will only serve the monarcho-fascists and British imperialism".[26] These statements can be explained due to the large number of Slavomacedonian fighters (30–50%)[citation needed] amongst the DSE fighters and prompted the government in Athens to begin a campaign against KKE and the party's military wing, the Democratic Army of Greece (DSE), blaming them for secession plans in northern Greece.

In order for KKE to clear up its position on the "Macedonian subject", the 6th Congress of its Central Committee was called a few months later, during which was clearly stated that KKE was fighting for a free Greece and for a common future for Greeks and Macedonians under the same state.[27]

The issue was ended by Central Committee in 1954 with the withdrawal of the position of self-determination of minorities. In 1988, the General Secretary of KKE, Charilaos Florakis, once again presented KKE's political position on the matter in a speech to the Greek Parliament.

KKE during World War II

1940

By 1940, KKE had almost collapsed after Metaxas' dictatorship had imprisoned many of its leadership and members. By October, half of the party's two thousand members were in prison or in exile. The Security Police proved successful in dismantling the party structure; not only had it imprisoned the leadership, but it created a fake series of Rizospastis, the Central Committee newspaper. This generated confusion among the remaining scattered underground members.[28][29]

A small group of old party officials formed the "Old Central Committee" and two of them were elected by the 6th Conference.[30] In his memoirs for the Greek Civil war, C. M. Woodhouse (the British liaison with Greek resistance groups during World War II) wrote: "The 'Old Central Committee' interpreted a directive issued by Comintern as indicating collaboration with the German and Italian dictatorships, given the Hitler-Stalin alliance".[31] On the other hand, Woodhouse argues that Georgios Siantos, who had escaped from prison; and Nikos Zachariadis, who was still incarcerated, took the opposite view that KKE must support Metaxas in his fight against Mussolini.[31] The archives of KKE[32] also address the confusion between different KKE cadres as the "Old Committee" interpreted the politics of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy as part of the "imperialistic game between the Axis forces and the British". This faction of KKE felt that the Metaxas regime was a "pawn of British imperialism in the region"[33] and therefore the "Old Committee" viewed any war between the Axis forces and the British as an "imperialistic war that the people of any of the countries involved should not participate in". According to KKE's account, this position was criticised by Comintern in 1939 (a few months after the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact), which had instructed KKE to fight against Italy in the event of an invasion of Greece.[34][35]

Nikos Zachariadis, KKE General Secretary, wrote from prison on 2 November 1940: "Today the Greek people are waging a war of national liberation against Mussolini's fascism. In this war we must follow the Metaxas government and turn every city, every village and every house of Greece into a stronghold of the National Liberation Fight... On this war conducted by Metaxas government all of us should give all our forces without reservation. The working people's and the crowning achievement for today's fight should be and shall be a new Greece based on work, freedom, and liberated from any foreign imperialist dependence, with a truly pan-popular culture".[36][37]

Several party members, including Nikos Ploumpidis of the "Old Central Committee", denounced this letter as a forgery produced by the Metaxas regime.[38][39] Zachariadis was even accused of writing it to win the favour of Konstantinos Maniadakis, the Minister for Public Order, to win his release from prison.[12] According to one source, when drafting this letter Zachariadis was unaware of the German–Soviet Non-aggression Pact and was castigated by the Comintern for an anti-Soviet stance.[40]

According to KKE's archives, the "Old Central Committee" had been denounced for its stance on the war issue and today KKE claims that the majority of the party membership had not followed the decision of being neutral in case of an invasion.[41][42] On 16 November 1940, Zachariadis repudiated the line of his first letter in a second letter where he accused the Greek Army of waging a "fascist" and "imperialistic war" and appealed to the Soviet Union for peaceful intervention,[43][44] thus aligning his position with that of the "Old Central Committee".[38]

On 7 December 1940, the "Old Central Committee" issued a manifesto addressed "to all the workers and public servants, to all soldiers, sailors and airmen, to patriot officers, to the mothers, fathers, wives and children of the fighters and the workers of all neighboring countries", in which it describes the war as a game of the imperialist powers, headed by the British. According to KKE, the "Old Central Committee" based this opinion on the belief that Mussolini's Italy would not dare to attack a country that had a cooperation agreement with the Soviet Union. The main political line of this manifesto was the call to the soldiers on the front not to go beyond Greek borders, but after securing them to try seek a peace agreement with the enemy.[45]

Zachariadis may have issued a third letter on 17 January 1941, in which he explained the motives for his first letter and wrote: "Metaxas remains the principal enemy of the people and the country. His overthrowing is in the most immediate and vital interest of our people ... the peoples and soldiers of Greece and Italy are not enemies but brothers, and their solidarity will stop the war waged by capitalist exploiters".[40]

According to KKE archives, Zachariadis had issued no further letters and the third letter may have been in fact the statement of the "Old Central Committee" on 18 March 1941.[46] In any case, Zachariadis himself referred in his public statements after liberation almost exclusively to his first letter as proof of the patriotic character of KKE and its role as an inspiration to the Greek resistance movement during the war.

On 22 June 1941, the very same day that Hitler attacked the Soviet Union, KKE ordered its militants to organize "the struggle to defend the Soviet Union and the overthrow of the foreign fascist yoke".[38][43]

1941: German invasion and beginning of the Resistance

On 6 April 1941, the German invasion was launched and Athens was occupied on 27 April following an unconditional surrender of the Greek forces by General Georgios Tsolakoglou, who was later appointed Prime Minister by the Nazis. Confusion remained among many Greek Communists as to what the Moscow-sanctioned position was. In his memoirs, KKE leader Ioannis Ioannidis wrote about a regional communist cadre who proclaimed the following as Greece was being bombed by the Axis: "The Germans will not bomb us. The mustached-one [Stalin] will not let them".[47] Ioannis Ioannidis was purged by Nikos Zachariades, leader of the KKE in exile in 1953, and was stripped of his party offices.[48] The article in the reference just cited ends with just the fact of his "Purge" and being "stripped of his Party offices", so it is unclear whether he was physically Purged (executed), as many Communists still were in 1953.

A large number of KKE members were already in prison before the Nazi invasion. The pro-Nazi occupation government handed some of them over to the Nazis fearing that they—following the pro-Soviet party line—would resort to sabotage in Greece following Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941.[49][50][51][52] There were many occasions that police officers released Communist prisoners, especially the ones that they were in exile in Aegean islands. In 1941, several KKE members managed to escape prison. One of the many stories includes the 20 communists held as political prisoners in Heraklion, Crete. They demanded to be released to fight against the invading Germans. The Greek government, which had left mainland Greece by then and was en route to Egypt, had no power to release them. They eventually escaped after their jail was damaged by German bombs and joined the British and Greek forces defending the Heraklion harbor. After the fall of Crete, many officers of the Greek Army joined forces with ELAS and became commanders in ELAS's corps of partisan units.[53][54]

It became German policy—especially after it became obvious to them that they were losing the war—to execute civilians in retaliation for attacks against them by communist or non-communist partisans. Approximately 200 communists, delivered to the Germans on 1941, were executed at the Kaisariani Shooting Range on 1 May 1944.[55]

Although KKE was suffering from a lack of central political leadership since its leader Nikos Zachariades had been taken by the Germans to the Dachau concentration camp, its members succeeded in maintaining communication with each other. The 6th Meeting of KKE Central Committee was held in Athens from 1–3 July 1941, which decided on strategy for an armed liberation struggle against the Axis invaders. At the same time, the "Old Central Committee" submitted to the authority of the new Central Committee.[56] The first united resistance organization was founded in the regions of Macedonia and Thrace on 15 May 1941.[34] In Thessaloniki, the Macedonian Bureau of KKE established the Eleftheri (Liberty) Organization, along with the Socialist Party, the Agrarian Party, the Democratic Union and Colonel Dimitrios Psarros (who later founded the EKKA).

The Macedonian Bureau of KKE organised the first two partisan units at the end of June 1941. The first was based in Kilkis and was named Athanasios Diakos, the second was based in Nigrita and was named Odysseas Androutsos. These small partisan units blew up bridges, attacked police stations and eventually organized into larger combat units of more than 300 men each.[57] In several other places and in major cities, small armed groups of KKE members and non-communists began to emerge, protecting people from looters, the Germans, or collaborators.[58] On 27 September 1941, Greek communists together with five other leftist parties formed the National Liberation Front (EAM) in Kallithea, Athens and began forming partisan militia units.

1942 to Liberation

 
Cavalry of ELAS

On 16 February 1942, the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) was founded in a small kiosk in Fthiotida and by 1943 it consisted of 50,000 members, both men and women, with 30,000 as reserve units in major cities. The KKE played a prominent role in the organisation. By the end of the war, some 200,000 Greek citizens, both workers and peasants, had joined the ranks of KKE. KKE maintained its alliances with the EAM. Its main stated aim at this time was to form a united government with all parties that wanted to see Greece liberated from foreign powers.[59]

ELAS conflicted finally with the rest of the resistance organizations and armies (especially EDES and EKKA), accusing most of them of being traitors and collaborators of the Nazis. These were the first conflicts of the coming civil war.

Nikos Zachariadis was imprisoned in Dachau; he was released in 1945 and returned to Greece as the elected general secretary of the KKE. During his imprisonment, Andreas Tsipas and Georgios Siantos served as party general secretaries.

KKE and the Greek Civil War

After the liberation of Greece from the Nazi German forces, the government of National Unity, led by G. Papandreou, landed in Athens in October 1944. The government was formed after the Treaty of Cazerta and its main purpose was to form the new Greek state, try accused political and military personnel of collaboration with the Germans and to hold a referendum for the government and the constitution. After the first weeks, it was obvious that British policy in the region was against these goals as KKE and EAM were controlling 98% of Greece and they were afraid of the foundation of new socialist state.[citation needed] Papandreou demanded the disarmament of ELAS and the trials of the collaborators were stalled. Meanwhile, British troops together with the "refined"[clarification needed] Greek arm divisions after the prosecution of thousands of EAM members in the middle east, loyal to the Papandreou segment, were landing in all major Greek cities and EAM was welcoming them as liberators. In mid-November 1944, the situation escalated dramatically, KKE criticised the interference of British General Scobie in Greek affairs, EAM refused to disarm ELAS and ELAN.[60] Six ministers of the EAM, resigned from their positions in the government of Georgios Papandreou in November 1944. Fighting broke out in Athens on 3 December 1944 during a demonstration organised by EAM and involving more than 100,000 people. According to some accounts, the police, covered by British troops,[61][62] opened fire on the crowd. More than 28 people were killed and 148 injured. According to other accounts, it is uncertain if the first shots were fired by the police or the demonstrators.[63] A member of the pro-monarchists Nikos Farmakis, in one of his interviews revealed that they had a direct order to fire at will when the demonstrators reach the court of the Palace.[64] This incident was the beginning of the 37‑day Battle of Athens (Dekemvriana). Following a ceasefire agreement called the Treaty of Varkiza, ELAS laid down the majority of its weapons and dissolved all of its units. Right-wing groups, including elements which had collaborated with the Germans, seized this opportunity to persecute many KKE members.[65]

According to EAM figures, in the few months after the Treaty of Varkiza the anticommunist violence on the Greek mainland had resulted in the imprisonment or exile of 100,000 ELAS partisans and EAM members, the deaths of 3,000 EAM officials and members, the rape of between 200 and 500 women, the burning of houses and other acts of violence.[66] The KKE Central Committee issued a directive to all party forces not to engage in any armed conflict, but to try to prevent attacks by other means. This caused confusion among the majority of its supporters and served to weaken the party organisation across the country.[67]

 
Fighters of DSE
 
Badge of the DSE in which the letter Delta stands for Demokratia, meaning both "Democracy" and "Republic" (in Greek language these words are one and the same)

Large groups had returned to their partisan hideouts in the mountains and gradually formed smaller partisan units. As most of the ELAS armoury had been surrendered under the terms of the Varkiza treaty, these units armed themselves with weapons seized from attacks on militia units that had been provided arms by the police as well as attacking police stations. By mid-1946, these units forced the KKE leadership to change its neutral position and to plan the formation of a partisan army with the officers and fighters that were still free. On 26 October 1946, KKE militia units attacked the police station in Litochoro, armed their forces and founded the Central Greece Command of the Democratic Army of Greece (DSE). After this successful operation, the remaining scattered groups reorganized the pre-Varkiza Treaty ELAS formations all over the country. KKE's political influence and organization structure helped form units in the Aegean Islands of as Mytilene, Chios, Ikaria, Samos and Crete.[42][68]

The Civil War involved two sides. On the one side was the British and American-backed Greek government, led by Konstantinos Tsaldaris and later Themistoklis Sophoulis, which was elected in the 1946 elections which the KKE had boycotted. On the other side was the Democratic Army of Greece, of which the KKE was the only major political force, backed by the NOF, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Albania.

In December 1947, KKE and its allies that participated in the Civil War formed the Provisional Democratic Government ("Mountain Government") under the premiership of Markos Vafiadis. After this, the KKE (still legal due to the Treaty of Varkiza) turned illegal.

On 29 January 1949, the Greek National Army appointed General Alexander Papagos Commander-in-Chief. In August 1949, Papagos launched a major counter-offensive against DSE forces in northern Greece, code-named "Operation Torch". The plan was for the Greek National Army to gain control of the border with Albania in order to surround and defeat the DSE forces, numbering 8,500 fighters. The DSE suffered heavy losses from the operation, but managed to retreat its units to Albania.[69]

Charilaos Florakis, whose nom de guerre was Kapetan Yiotis, was a DSE-appointed Brigadier General during this battle. Florakis was ordered by the DSE High Command to re-enter Greece with his battalion via the Gramos Mountains and try to establish connection with all the DSE forces that remained within Greece. The battalion indeed reached small DSE units south of Gramos down to Evritania and retreated thereafter back to Albania. Floriakis later served as General Secretary of KKE from 1972 to 1989.

On 28 August 1949, the Civil War in Greece ended with the DSE forces defeated militarily and politically and KKE entered a new phase in its history.[70]

Post-war era

After the Civil War, the KKE was outlawed and most of its prominent members had to flee Greece, go underground or provide a signed declaration that they renounced communism to avoid prosecution as under Law 504, issued in 1948, a large number of KKE members were either prosecuted, jailed or exiled. Prominent members of the KKE were tried and executed, including Nikos Beloyannis in 1952 and Nikos Ploumpidis in 1954. The execution of Ploumpidis was the last such execution by the post-Civil War governments. The fear of widespread reaction from left-wing citizens curbed further executions and eventually led to the gradual release of most political prisoners. In 1955, there were 4,498 political prisoners and 898 exiles while in 1962 there were 1,359 prisoners and 296 exiles.[71] However, under the prevailing anticommunist rules the communists and KKE sympathizers were barred from the public sector and lived under a repressive anticommunist surveillance system.[72] Such discrimination against communists was partially relieved with the legalization of KKE in 1974 and the discrimination ended in the 1980s.

During this period of illegality, the KKE supported the United Democratic Left (EDA) Party. EDA functioned as the legal political expression of the outlawed KKE. It was not openly communist and attracted moderate voters reaching 70,000 members in the early 60s. Moreover, EDA had a very active youth wing. Historians have argued that the two parties operated parallel paths, something that contributed to the 1968 split between KKE and KKE Esoterikou.[73]

Former king Constantine II claims that in 1964 he proposed to George Papandreou (senior) that the KKE be legalized. According to the former monarch, Papandreou refused to comply so as not to lose his party's left-wing supporters.[74] This allegation cannot be verified as it was expressed after Papandreou's death. Moreover, Constantine's public statements regarding communism during the 1960s renders the veracity of this allegation questionable.

During the junta

On 21 April 1967, a group of right-wing Greek Army colonels led by Georgios Papadopoulos successfully carried out a coup d'état on the pretext of imminent "communist threat", establishing what became known as the Regime of the Colonels. All political parties, including EDA, were dissolved and civil liberties were suppressed for all Greek citizens. KKE members were persecuted along with other opponents of the junta.

In 1968, a crisis escalated between KKE's two main factions. The crisis was already festering during the 12th plenum of the party's central committee held in Budapest between 5 and 15 February 1968 in which three members of the politbureau (M. Partsalidis, Z. Zografos and P. Dimitriu) were expelled for fractionist activity and was further triggered by the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. This event led a number of Greek communists who were ideologically leaning with the so-called opportunist faction to break with KKE that was loyal to the Socialist Republic's policy and to follow the nascent Eurocommunist line, which favored a more pluralistic approach to socialism. A relatively large group split from KKE, forming what became the Communist Party of Greece (Interior). The spin-off party forged bonds with Eurocommunist parties such as the Italian Communist Party as well as with Nicolae Ceauşescu's Romanian Communist Party. Its supporters referred to KKE as the KKE (Exterior) ("ΚΚΕ εξωτερικού"), inferring that KKE's policies were dictated by the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Despite the difficulties resulting from the split, KKE continued its opposition to the Greek Junta throughout the next six years. Its political fighting against the regime took the form of labour disruptions and strikes and small demonstrations all over the country.[75][76] Its power was rising inside the Universities where the newly founded Communist Youth of Greece (KNE) began working underground. KKE underground forces continued to work closely with other political groups of the center and left within Greece and abroad. In many European capitals anti-Junta committees were founded to support the struggle in Greece.

Legalisation

After the restoration of parliamentary democracy in 1974, Constantine Karamanlis legalised the KKE hoping to reclaim "a vital part of national memory".[77] In the 1974 elections, the KKE participated with the KKE Interior and the EDA under the name of the United Left, receiving 9.36 per cent of the vote. In the elections from 1977 to 1989, the KKE participated on its own.

In 1989, the political consequences of the Civil War were finally lifted. The war was named "Civil War" instead of "War against the gangs" ("συμμοριτοπόλεμος"), that was the official state name for that era up until that point and DSE fighters were named "DSE fighters" instead of "Communist Gangfighters" ("κουμουνιστοσυμμορίτες").[citation needed]

Participation in government

In 1944, KKE participated in the national unity government of George Papandreou, holding the positions of Minister of Finance, Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Labor, Minister of National Economy and Public Works and Deputy Minister of Finance.

In 1988, KKE and Greek Left (Greek EAP; the former KKE Interior), along with other left-wing parties and organisations, formed the Coalition of the Left and Progress (Synaspismos). In the June 1989 elections, Synaspismos gained 13.1 per cent of votes and joined a coalition with New Democracy to form a short-lived government amidst a political spectrum shaken by accusations of economic scandals against the previous administration of Andreas Papandreou's Panhellenic Socialist Movement. In November of the same year, Synaspismos participated in the "Universal Government" with New Democracy and Panhellenic Socialist Movement which appointed Xenophon Zolotas as Prime Minister for three months. In 1991, KKE withdrew from Synaspismos. Some KKE members left the party and remained in Synaspismos, which evolved into a separate left-wing party that is now an alliance of Synaspismos with other leftist groups called the Coalition of the Radical Left.

21st century

 
KKE central building in Athens
 
Aleka Papariga the longest serving general secretary of KKE (1991-2013)
 
Dimitris Koutsoumpas the incumbent general secretary of KKE since 2013

KKE actively participated in the anti-austerity protests beginning in 2010 [78] and also supported Greek steel worker's strikes.[79]

In the first 2012 legislative election held on 6 May, the party got 8.5% of the vote and increased its parliamentary seats by 5 for a total of 26 seats.

However, in the second 2012 legislative election held a month later, on 17 June 2012, the party's support halved, resulting in a loss of 4% and 14 MPs. After the failure of the Hellenic Parliament to elect a new President of State in late 2014, the parliament was dissolved and a snap legislative election was scheduled for 25 January 2015, where the party increased its support by 1 percentage point, to 5.5%. At the fresh elections later that year, the party got a slight increase of 0.1% to reach 5.6% of the vote.

Since the 2015 election, the party saw a further increase in its support in opinion polls, overtaking the former major party PASOK to reach 4th place.

Although KKE was again overtaken by PASOK (now called Movement for Change – KINAL) in the 2019 election, it nonetheless managed to maintain a fourth-place in the polls, due to the decline of far-right party Golden Dawn.

Policies

Economy

The KKE proposes the nationalization of the means of production and a restructuring centralisation of the economy: consequently, it requires a scientific planning oriented to meet all the needs of the Greek people (for example: jobs, health care, education, culture, sport...).[80]

Furthermore, the KKE is absolutely opposed to Greece remaining in the European Union and NATO.

LGBT rights

KKE voted against the Civil Partnerships Bill proposed by Syriza in December 2015 responding, among other things:

The family is a social relationship, it is an institution for the protection of children, as it was formed in the context of today's society, capitalism. We also believe that civil marriage should be the only, obligatory form of marriage. And whoever wants, let him have the right to the corresponding religious ceremony. But you do not touch upon this urban modernization that has taken place in other countries for years.

If the government wanted to introduce a less "bureaucratic" civil marriage, it could propose the necessary amendments to the Civil Code. There is no need for two legal regulations (civil marriage and cohabitation agreement) on the rights and obligations between spouses, the core of which is the potential reproduction, upbringing and upbringing of children.

Today, this is confirmed by the fact that the Cohabitation Agreement is extended in terms of obligations and rights of both parties, which essentially resembles marriage and especially by the fact that it extends to same-sex couples. Greece's condemnation by the European Court of Justice, cited by the government and the Report, was not a breach of any positive obligation imposed by the European Convention on Human Rights. But it was a negative discrimination against homosexual scales, but in the context of the institutionalization of the Cohabitation Pact. If there was no Cohabitation Pact for heterosexual couples, there would be no question of condemning Greece.

The aim of the bill is essentially the institutional recognition of same-sex couples, including – in a process – the acquisition of children by them. And there, is our disagreement.

Rights and obligations arise within marriage, which is the legal expression of the social relations of the family. It includes social protection of children, who are biologically the result of sexual relations between a man and a woman.

With the formation of a socialist-communist society, a new type of partnership will undoubtedly be formed—a relatively stable heterosexual relationship and reproduction.[81]

Many democratic socialist parties, including Syriza, denounced the KKE's stance as bigotry.[81]

However, the KKE also supports strengthening legislation to punish homophobic behavior, and has spoken against such discrimination, stating that "Unacceptable and condemnable discrimination and violence against our fellow human beings, based on their sexual orientation and other personal characteristics, are not addressed by cheap declarations of equality and words of sympathy, but by strengthening legislation against perpetrators of sexism, racism and homophobia, with the full social support of those who suffer from such behaviors. A real shield against such discrimination is collectivism, the struggle for modern social rights for all people."[82]

Drug reform

KKE opposes decriminalization of drug consumption and drug trafficking. It opposes the division of drugs on more and less harmful, considering harm reduction legislation as "dominant bourgeois policy".[83] It also opposes substitution rehabilitation programs (and endorses "cold turkey" programs) as it believes drug substitutes replace one addiction for another.

KKE positions on drug reform are summed up, among other texts, in an article on one of their websites:[84]

(KKE).. is opposed both to the current repressive policy that imprisons users and frees traders and to the problem management policies as well as to the efforts to privatize the existing detoxification and prevention services. KKE believes in tackling the drug problem effectively. It supports the only realistic solution which is to strengthen the prevention – treatment – reintegration efforts. It says: No to ALL drugs. It denies the separation of soft – hard (drugs). It does not believe in substitution programs, which maintain drug addiction and do not cure it. The substitution should concern special groups (eg with chronic diseases). NO to the decriminalization of hashish. "Demand reduction" policy not "harm reduction" policy.

Other policies

The KKE supports the separation of church and state. However, religious people are allowed to join the party and it also has religious associates such as Liana Kanelli.

The party considers China an imperialist power and a capitalist country like the United States, the European Union, and Japan. It believes that the Chinese Communist Party has lost its revolutionary elements, although both parties still maintain bilateral relations with each other. [85]

The KKE advocates Greek patriotism and left-wing nationalism alongside proletarian internationalism and considers it its patriotic duty to oppose Greece's EU membership.[86]

Splits and alliances

In 1956, after the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union at which Nikita Khrushchev denounced the excesses of Joseph Stalin, a faction created the Group of Marxist–Leninists of Greece (OMLE), which split from party in 1964, becoming the Organisation of Marxists-Leninists of Greece.

In 1968, amidst the Greek military junta of 1967–1974 and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, a relatively big group split from KKE, forming KKE Interior, claiming to be directed from within Greece rather than from the Soviet Union.

In 1988, KKE and Greek Left (the former KKE Interior), along with other left parties and organisations, formed the Coalition of the Left and Progress.

Also in 1988, the vast majority of members and officials from Communist Youth of Greece (KNE), the KKE's youth wing, split to form the New Left Current (NAR), drawing mainly youth in major cities, especially in Thessaloniki.

In the early 2000s, a small group of major party officials such as Mitsos Kostopoulos left the party and formed the Movement for the United in Action Left (KEDA), which in the 2007 legislative election participated in the Coalition of the Radical Left (Syriza), which was to win the 2015 national elections with a plurality.

Youth organisation

KKE's youth organization is the Communist Youth of Greece, which closely supports KKE's goals and strategic targets.

Current activities

 
ΚΚΕ 100 years anniversary logo

KKE is a force in the Greek political scene, rallying a significant amount of support within the organized working-class movement. KKE is currently trying to mold a loose and rather disorganised international communist movement along a purely Marxist–Leninist line. Since its 18th congress (February 2009), KKE has opened up a discussion within the ranks and more broadly within the Greek left-leaning community on the future evolution of communism in the 21st century, with a particular emphasis on examining the causes of the collapse of the Socialist system in the former Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe.

The KKE stands in elections and has representatives in the Greek Parliament, local authorities and the European Parliament, where its two MEPs sit with the Non-Inscrits. On 3 June 2014, following the 2014 European elections the Central Committee of the KKE announced that it would no longer continue the party's affiliation to the European United Left–Nordic Green Left (GUE/NGL) group in the European parliament.[87]

It publishes the daily newspaper Rizospastis. It also publishes the political and theoretical journal Komounistiki Epitheorisi (Communist Review) every two months and a journal covering educational issues, Themata Paideias.

The congresses of the Communist Party of Greece

  • The 1st congress – November 1918, Piraeus
  • The 2nd congress – April 1920, Athens
  • Extraordinary pre-election congress – September 1920, Athens
  • Extraordinary congress – October 1922, Athens
  • Extraordinary pre-election congress – September 1923, Athens
  • The 3rd (extraordinary) congress – 26 November–3 December 1924, Athens
  • The 3rd (ordinary) congress – March 1927, Athens
  • The 4th congress – December 1928, Athens
  • The 5th congress – March 1934, Athens
  • The 6th congress – December 1935, Athens
  • The 7th congress – October 1945, Athens
  • The 8th congress – August 1961 (illegally)
  • The 9th congress – December 1973 (illegally)
  • The 10th congress – May 1978
  • The 11th congress – December 1982, Athens
  • The 12th congress – May 1987
  • The 13th congress – 19–24 February 1991, Athens
  • The 14th congress – 18–21 December 1991, Athens
  • The 15th congress – 22–26 May 1996, Athens
  • The 16th congress – 14–17 December 2000, Athens
  • The 17th congress – 9–12 February 2005, Athens
  • The 18th congress – 18–22 February 2009, Athens
  • The 19th congress – 11–14 April 2013, Athens
  • The 20th congress – 30 March – 2 April 2017, Athens
  • The 21st congress – 24–27 June 2021, Athens

KKE delegations participated in international conferences of Communist and working parties (1957, 1960, 1969, Moscow). KKE approved the documents accepted at the conferences.

List of First Secretaries and General Secretaries

 
Pandelis Pouliopoulos, a supporter of the internationalist and revolutionary character of the communist movement.
  1. Nikolaos Dimitratos (November 1918 – February 1922), expelled from the party on charges of "suspect behavior"[citation needed]
  2. Yanis Kordatos (February–November 1922)
  3. Nikolaos Sargologos (November 1922 – September 1923), expelled from the party on charges of "espionage"[citation needed]
  4. Thomas Apostolidis (September 1923 – December 1924), expelled from the party on charges of "opportunism"[citation needed]
  5. Pandelis Pouliopoulos (December 1924 – September 1925)
  6. Eleftherios Stavridis (1925–1926), expelled from the party on charges of pro-bourgeoisies political position
  7. Pastias Giatsopoulos (September 1926– March 1927), expelled from the party on charges of "liquidarism"[citation needed]
  8. Andronikos Chaitas (March 1927 – 1931), expelled from the party and executed in the Soviet Union in 1935[citation needed]
  9. Nikos Zachariadis (1931–1936), first term
  10. Andreas Tsipas (July 1941 – September 1941)
  11. Georgios Siantos (January 1942 – May 1945), caretaker until the return of Zachariadis
  12. Nikos Zachariadis (May 1945 – March 1956), second term
  13. Apostolos Grozos (March – June 1956)
  14. Konstantinos Koligiannis (June 1956 – December 1972)
  15. Charilaos Florakis (December 1972 – July 1989)
  16. Grigoris Farakos (July 1989 – February 1991), resigned from the party to join Synaspismos
  17. Aleka Papariga (February 1991 – April 2013)
  18. Dimitris Koutsoumpas (April 2013 – present)

Election results

Hellenic Parliament

Election Hellenic Parliament Rank Government Leader
Votes % ±pp Seats won +/−
1974 With United Left
5 / 300
 5 4th Opposition Charilaos Florakis
1977A 480,272 9.4% −0.1
11 / 300
 6 4th Opposition
1981 620,302 10.9% +1.5
13 / 300
 2 3rd Opposition
1985 629,525 9.9% −1.0
12 / 300
 1 3rd Opposition
June 1989 With Synaspismos
20 / 300
 8 3rd Interim government
NDSYN
November 1989
16 / 300
 4 3rd National unity government
ND–PASOKSYN
Grigoris Farakos
1990
15 / 300
 1 3rd Opposition
1993B 313,001 4.5% −5.7
9 / 300
 6 4th Opposition Aleka Papariga
1996 380,046 5.6% +1.1
11 / 300
 2 3rd Opposition
2000 379,454 5.5% −0.1
11 / 300
±0 3rd Opposition
2004 436,818 5.9% +0.4
12 / 300
 1 3rd Opposition
2007 583,750 8.2% +2.3
22 / 300
 10 3rd Opposition
2009 517,154 7.5% −0.7
21 / 300
 1 3rd Opposition
May 2012 536,105 8.5% +1.0
26 / 300
 5 5th Opposition
June 2012 277,227 4.5% −4.0
12 / 300
 14 7th Opposition
January 2015 338,138 5.5% +1.0
15 / 300
 3 5th Opposition Dimitris Koutsoumpas
September 2015 301,632 5.6% +0.1
15 / 300
±0 5th Opposition
2019 299,592 5.3% −0.3
15 / 300
±0 4th Opposition

A 1977 results compared to the United Left totals in the 1974 election.
B 1993 results compared to the Synaspismos totals in the 1990 election.

European Parliament

European Parliament
Election Votes % ±pp Seats won +/− Rank Leader
1981 729,052 12.8% New
3 / 24
 3 3rd Charilaos Florakis
1984 693,304 11.6% −1.2
3 / 24
±0 3rd
1989A 936,175 14.3% +2.7
4 / 24
 1 3rd
1994 410,741 6.3% −8.0
2 / 25
 2 4th Aleka Papariga
1999 557,365 8.7% +2.4
3 / 25
 1 3rd
2004 580,396 9.5% +0.8
3 / 24
±0 3rd
2009 428,151 8.4% −1.1
2 / 22
 1 3rd
2014 349,342 6.1% −2.3
2 / 21
±0 6th Dimitris Koutsoumpas
2019 302,677 5.4% −0.7
2 / 21
±0 4th

A Contested as Coalition of the Left and Progress.

Party membership

Membership (1918–1948)[88]
Year Number of members
1918 1,000
1920 1,320
1924 2,200
1926 2,500
1928 2,000
1930 1,500
1933 4,416
1934 6,000 (est.)
1936 (start) 17,500
1936 (mid) <10,000 (est.)
1941 200 (est.) free + 2,000 in prison
1942 (December) 15,000
1944 (June) 250,000
1944 (October) 420,000–450,000
1945 (October) 45,000
1946 (February) <100,000
1948 <50,000

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ ΔΕΝΕΖΑΚΗΣ, ΑΝΔΡΕΑΣ (16 November 2021). "17 Νοέμβρη 1918 – Η ίδρυση του ΚΚΕ (του Ανδρέα Δενεζάκη)". Ημεροδρόμος. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "Greece". Parties and Elections in Europe.
  3. ^ Vasilopoulou, S. (2018). The party politics of Euroscepticism in times of crisis: The case of Greece. Politics, 38(3), 311–326. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263395718770599
  4. ^ Nicolò Conti (4 December 2013). Party Attitudes Towards the EU in the Member States: Parties for Europe, Parties Against Europe. Routledge. p. 155. ISBN 978-1-317-93656-5.
  5. ^ Bart van der Steen (1 September 2014). . PM Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-60486-683-4. Archived from the original on 29 July 2020.
  6. ^ David Sanders; Pedro Magalhaes; Gabor Toka (26 July 2012). Citizens and the European Polity: Mass Attitudes Towards the European and National Polities. OUP Oxford. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-19-960233-9.
  7. ^ http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/id/ipa/05818.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ "Communist Party of Greece - Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE on the stance of the KKE in the EU parliament". inter.kke.gr. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d Kyrkos, Vaggelis (3 November 2018). "Ποιοι ήταν αυτοί που ίδρυσαν το ΚΚΕ [Who were founders of the KKE]". Newsbeast (in Greek). from the original on 4 November 2018.
  10. ^ Bollier, Sam (1 May 2012). "A guide to Greece's political parties". Al Jazeera. from the original on 9 July 2021.
  11. ^ Οι ρίζες του Ελληνικού Κομμουνιστικού Κινήματος – Roots of the Greek Communist Movement.
  12. ^ a b Andrew L. Zapantis, Greek Soviet Relations 1917–1941, 1983.
  13. ^ Δοκίμιο Ιστορίας του ΚΚΕ-Study on the history of CPG
  14. ^ KKE, Επίσημα Κείμενα, τ1, τ2 – CPG, Official Documents v1, v2
  15. ^ S. Seferiadis, 'The Coercive Impulse: Policing Labour in Interwar Greece', Journal of Contemporary History, January 2005.
  16. ^ Δοκίμιο Ιστορίας του ΚΚΕ – Study in the History of CPG
  17. ^ Rizospastis, 27 January 1925.
  18. ^ Rizospastis, 1 March 1925.
  19. ^ Ireneusz A. Ślupkov, The Communist Party of Greece and the Macedonian National Problem 1918–1940, Szczecin, Poland, 2006, pp. 31–48
  20. ^ For The Issue of Self-Determination of the People, V.I.Lenin
  21. ^ Α. Δάγκας - Γ. Λεοντιάδης, Κομιντέρν και Μακεδονικό ζήτημα: το ελληνικό παρασκήνιο, 1924, Τροχαλία, σελ. 91.
  22. ^ Richard Clogg, A Concise History of Greece, Cambridge University Press, 1992, pp. 106, 141.
  23. ^ KKE, Πέντε Χρόνια Αγώνες 1931–1936, Athens, 2nd ed., 1946.
  24. ^ Rizospastis, 24 October 1945.
  25. ^ Δημοκρατικός Στρατός magazine, edited by Ριζοσπάστης, 1996, vol. I, pp. 408–412.
  26. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 6, pp. 356, 338.
  27. ^ Επίσημα Κείμενα ΚΚΕ, vol. 6
  28. ^ KKE, History of the Communist Party of Greece.
  29. ^ Aggelos Elefantis, The Promise of the Impossible Revolution, Greek Communist Party self-meditation and the bourgeois during the inter-war Period, Themelio, 3rd edition, 1999.
  30. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 5, 1940–1945, p. 11.
  31. ^ a b C. M. Woodhouse, The Struggle for Greece, Hurst & Company, 1976, p. 16
  32. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol 5, 1940–1945
  33. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol4, vol5
  34. ^ a b History of the National Resistance, 1940–1945, vol1
  35. ^ Study in the History of KKE
  36. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 5, 1940–1945, p. 9.
  37. ^ Aggelos Elefantis, The Promise of the Impossible Revolution, Greek Communist Party self-meditation and the bourgeois during the inter-war Period, Themelio, 3rd edition, 1999, pp. 300–301.
  38. ^ a b c C. M. Woodhouse, The Struggle for Greece, Hurst & Company, 1976, p. 17.
  39. ^ Ριζοσπάστης, 17 June 1941
  40. ^ a b Giannis Marinos (29 October 2006). . To Vima. Archived from the original on 23 December 2007. Retrieved 2 October 2007.
  41. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 5, 1940–1945.
  42. ^ a b Study of the History of the KKE.
  43. ^ a b Courtois, Stéphane, et al. The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999, p. 326.
  44. ^ KKE Central Committee, 7 December 1940.
  45. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 5, 1940–1945, p. 15.
  46. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol.6
  47. ^ Γιάννης Ιωαννίδης, ΑΝΑΜΝΗΣΕΙΣ p. 63
  48. ^ Biographical Dictionary of The Comintern, by Branko Lazitch and Milorad Drachkovitch, The Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1986, p.192.
  49. ^ History of the National Resistance 1940–1945
  50. ^ The Civil War in Peloponissos , A. Kamarinos
  51. ^ Experiences of Armed Struggles, 1940–1949, Papageorgiou
  52. ^ Charilaos Florakis, The People's Leader
  53. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 February 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 February 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  55. ^ History of the National Resistance 1940–1945, vol 1
  56. ^ KKE, Official Documents.
  57. ^ V. Georgiou, History of the National Resistance 1940–1945, vol. 1, Aylos, 1979, pp. 188, 248–249.
  58. ^ History of the National Resistance 1940-145
  59. ^ P. Papastratis, 'From the "Great Idea" to Balkan Union', in M. Sarafis and M. Eve (eds.), Background to Contemporary Greece, Rowman & Littlefield, 1990.
  60. ^ K. Barbis, The Greek tragedy, in three stages, Pelasgos, Athens, 2000.
  61. ^ Kessel Album, Athens 1944.
  62. ^ Spyros Kotsakis, Captain in ELAS First Army, December 1944 in Athens, Athens, 1986.
  63. ^ C. M. Woodhouse, Modern Greece, Faber and Faber, 1991, p. 253.
  64. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9km1I5tuaY, 4:38
  65. ^ Stavrianos, L. S., and Panagopoulos, E. P. "Present-Day Greece." The Journal of Modern History. Vol. 20, no. 2, (June 1948), pp. 149–158.
  66. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 October 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2007.
  67. ^ A. Kamarinos, The Civil War in the Peloponessus, Athens, 2000.
  68. ^ Δημοκρατικός Στρατός magazine, edited by Ριζοσπάστης, 1996.
  69. ^ Thrasimvoulos Tsakalotos 40 years soldier of Greece
  70. ^ Charilaos Florakis, The Peoples Leader
  71. ^ Polymeris Voglis, Becoming a Subject: Political Prisoners During the Greek Civil War, Berghahn Books, 2002, p. 223.
  72. ^ Minas Samatas, "Greek McCarthyism: A Comparative Assessment of Greek Post-Civil War Repressive Anticommunism and the US Truman-McCarthy Era", Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora.
  73. ^ Kalyvas, Stathis; Marantzidis, Nikos (2002). "Greek Communism, 1968–2001" (PDF). East European Politics and Societies. 16 (3): 665–690 here 666–667. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  74. ^ Thanassis Lalas, "Constantine Speaks About All", BHMAgazino, 3 June 2001.
  75. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 December 2007.
  76. ^ "ΕΚΘΕΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΣΥΜΠΕΡΑΣΜΑΤΑ ΓΙΑ ΤΑ ΓΕΓΟΝΟΤΑ ΤΟΥ ΝΟΕΜΒΡΗ 1973" KE, Ιούλιος 1976, http://www.kne.gr/179.html 28 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  77. ^ Philip Carabott and Thanasis D. Sfikas (eds.), The Greek Civil War, Ashgate, 2004, p. 266.
  78. ^ Lubin, Gus (17 May 2010). "How The Greek Communist Party Plans To Solve The Crisis". Business Insider.
  79. ^ https://nonomnismoriarfilm.weebly.com/tauomicron-nutauomicronkappaiotamualphanutauepsilonrho.htmls[dead link]
  80. ^ "What About the Greek Communist Party?".
  81. ^ a b "Greek Communist Party on Cohabitation Agreement". Ριζοσπάστης. 20 December 2015. from the original on 24 December 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  82. ^ "Δήλωση του Δημήτρη Κουτσούμπα για τη Διεθνή Ημέρα κατά της Ομοφοβίας". www.kke.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 19 May 2022.
  83. ^ "Δήλωση του Δημήτρη Κουτσούμπα για την Παγκόσμια Ημέρα Κατά των Ναρκωτικών". www.kke.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  84. ^ "Whole life, not in doses". Ριζοσπάστης. 13 May 2010. from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  85. ^ "Communist Party of Greece – The International role of China". inter.kke.gr. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  86. ^ "ΚΚΕ: Ο πατριωτισμός ταυτίζεται με την πάλη κατά του ευρωμονόδρομου". m.naftemporiki.gr (in Greek). 14 April 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  87. ^ "Communist Party of Greece – Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE on the stance of the KKE in the EU parliament". Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  88. ^ The table is part of a larger table found in Chr. Vernadakis and G. Mavris (1988). Απο τη 'Λαοκρατία' στην 'Αλλαγή'. Theseis (in Greek). No. 22. Retrieved 11 January 2011. The table in the article provides detailed sources for the numbers stated above which are from CPG's official documents and/or independent historians.

Further reading

  • Dimitri Kitsikis, Populism, Eurocommunism and the Communist Party of Greece, in M. Waller, Communist Parties in Western Europe – Oxford, Blackwell, 1988.
  • Dimitri Kitsikis, "Greece: Communism in a Non-Western Setting," in D. E. Albright, Communism and Political Systems in Western Europe. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1979.
  • Dimitri Kitsikis, "Greek Communists and the Karamanlis Government," Problems of Communism, vol.26 (January–February 1977), pp. 42–56.
  • Artiem Ulunian, "The Communist Party of Greece and the Comintern: Evaluations, Instructions, and Subordination," in Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe (eds.), International Communism and the Communist International, 1919–43. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Charalambous, Giorgos (2 September 2012). "Understanding the Greek Communist Party". Greece@Lse. London School of Economics.
  • Neni Panourgiá. Dangerous "Citizens Online". Online version of Dangerous Citizens: The Greek Left and the Terror of the State. ISBN 978-0823229680.
  • Gabriele D'Angeli (19 April 2012). "The KKE and the Greek revolution". National Committee of the Italian Young Communists.
  • Dimitri Kitsikis (January 2010). . Grande Europe. No. 16. La Documentation Française.
  • Dimitri Kitsikis (1975). "Le mouvement communiste en Grèce". Études internationales. Vol. 6. No. 3.

communist, party, greece, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, Κομμουνιστικό, Κόμμα, Ελλάδας, kommounistikó, kómma, elládas, marxist, leninist, political, party, greece, founded, 1918, socialist, labour, party, greece, adopted, current, name, n. KKE redirects here For other uses see KKE disambiguation The Communist Party of Greece Greek Kommoynistiko Komma Elladas Kommounistiko Komma Elladas KKE is a Marxist Leninist political party in Greece 2 Founded in 1918 as the Socialist Labour Party of Greece and adopted its current name in November 1924 9 It is the oldest political party in modern Greek politics 10 The party was banned in 1936 but played a significant role in the Greek resistance and the Greek Civil War and its membership peaked in the mid 1940s Legalization of the KKE was restored following the fall of the Greek military junta of 1967 1974 Communist Party of Greece Kommoynistiko Komma ElladasAbbreviationKKEGeneral SecretaryDimitris KoutsoumpasFoundersDemosthenes LigdopoulosStamatis KokkinosMichael SiderisNikos DemetratosNikos GianniosAvraam BenaroyaMichael OikonomouSpyros Komiotis Giorgos PispinisAristos Arvanitis 1 Founded17 November O S 4 November 1918 as SEKELegalised1974Headquarters145 Leof Irakliou 142 31 Athens Nea Ionia NewspaperRizospastisStudent wingPanspoudastikiYouth wingCommunist Youth of GreeceTrade union wingAll Workers Militant FrontParamilitary wingDemocratic Army of Greece 1946 1949 IdeologyCommunism 2 Marxism Leninism 2 Hard Euroscepticism 3 Political positionFar left 4 5 6 7 European affiliationINITIATIVEInternational affiliationIMCWPEuropean Parliament groupNon Inscrits 8 Colours RedSloganProletarians of all countries unite Proletarioi olwn twn xwrwn enw8eite AnthemThe InternationaleParliament15 300European Parliament2 21Regional Governors0 13Regional Councilors48 703Mayors1 332Election symbolHammer and sickleParty flagWebsitewww wbr kke wbr grPolitics of GreecePolitical partiesElectionsThe party has returned MPs in all elections since its restoration in 1974 and took part in a coalition government in 1989 when it got more than 13 of the vote Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 KKE between the two World Wars 1 2 1 KKE and the Macedonian issue 1 3 KKE during World War II 1 3 1 1940 1 3 2 1941 German invasion and beginning of the Resistance 1 3 3 1942 to Liberation 1 4 KKE and the Greek Civil War 1 5 Post war era 1 6 During the junta 1 7 Legalisation 1 8 Participation in government 1 9 21st century 2 Policies 2 1 Economy 2 2 LGBT rights 2 3 Drug reform 2 4 Other policies 3 Splits and alliances 4 Youth organisation 5 Current activities 6 The congresses of the Communist Party of Greece 7 List of First Secretaries and General Secretaries 8 Election results 8 1 Hellenic Parliament 8 2 European Parliament 9 Party membership 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditFoundation Edit Plaque at the building of Piraeus where the first congress and foundation of the party was held View of the Piraeus building The October Revolution of the Bolsheviks in Russia in 1917 gave impetus for the foundation of Communist parties in many countries globally The KKE was founded on 4 November 1918 by Aristos Arvanitis Demosthenes Ligdopoulos el Stamatis Kokkinos Michael Sideris Nikos Dimitratos el and others 9 The party was run by a five member Central Committee which initially consisted of Dimitratos Ligdopoulos Sideris Arvanitis and Kokkinos and had a three member Audit Committee initially including George Pispinis Spyros Koumiotis and Avraam Benaroya 9 Ligdopoulos was elected director of the party s official newspaper Ergatikos Agon 9 The background of KKE has roots in more than 60 years of small socialist anarchist and communist groups mainly in industrialized areas Following the example of the Paris Commune and the 1892 Chicago workers movement for the eight hour working day these groups had as immediate political goals the unification of Greek workers into trade unions the implementation of an eight hour day in Greece and better salaries for workers Inspired by the Paris Commune and the communist revolutionary efforts in the United States Germany and Russia at the beginning of the century and the destruction that almost 20 years of wars had brought upon the Greek workers a unified Social Communist party was founded in Greece 11 At the Second Congress of the SEKE in April 1920 the party decided to affiliate with Comintern an international Communist organisation founded in Moscow in 1919 It changed its name to the Socialist Labour Party of Greece Communist SEKE K A new Central Committee was elected which included Nikos and Panaghis Dimitratos Yannis Kordatos G Doumas and M Sideris citation needed At the Third Extraordinary Congress of the SEKE K in November 1924 the party was renamed the Communist Party of Greece and adopted the principles of Marxism Leninism Pandelis Pouliopoulos was elected as general secretary Ever since the party has functioned on the basis of democratic centralism KKE between the two World Wars Edit KKE strongly opposed Greece s involvement in the Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 which it considered an imperialistic scheme to control the market of Asia Minor given the new political situation after the Ottoman Empire s collapse KKE members propagated this position both on the front which provoked accusations of treason from the Greek government as well as in the mainland KKE collaborated with the Soviet ambassador to persuade Venizelos administration to withdraw its troops from Asia Minor and to persuade the Soviet Union to exert political pressure on Mustafa Kemal Ataturk to allow autonomy for Greek cities in Asia Minor 12 KKE played a prominent role in strikes anti war demonstrations foundation of trade unions and worker associations KKE and other leftist political forces fostered the creation of labor unions in all sectors including the General Greek Workers Confederation GSEE which shared common goals with KKE 13 14 These activities met by opposition from the Mid War governments In 1929 as minister of Education in the government of Eleftherios Venizelos Georgios Papandreou passed legislation against organised communist teachers known as Idionymon Such legislation was often used to prosecute KKE members and other leftist activists 15 Under the Idionymon all members of the Communist Party of Greece being considered dangers to the state were to be removed from public service or put in exile The first prison camps for left wing citizens and communists were founded in that era KKE and its organisations although small in numbers continue operating in all Greek major cities especially industrial areas such as Athens Piraeus Patra Thessaly and Volos Thessaloniki Kavala and elsewhere 16 KKE collaborated with other newly founded Communist Parties to oppose the rise of the fascist movement in Europe In 1932 the Comintern decreed that anti fascist fronts be formed internationally KKE responded by creating the People s Front which was the largest Marxist anti fascist organisation in Greece prior to the dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas The party was banned in 1936 by the dictatorial 4th of August Regime of Metaxas and brutally persecuted by his security chief Konstantinos Maniadakis Many KKE members were imprisoned or exiled on isolated Aegean Islands KKE members volunteered to fight on the side of the republican government of Spain during the Spanish Civil War of 1936 1939 About 440 Greeks joined the ranks of the International Brigade Especially brigades such as the XV International Brigade and the Dimitrov Battalion many of whom were high ranking KKE members KKE and the Macedonian issue Edit After the Balkan Wars of 1912 1913 World War I in 1916 1918 and the disastrous Greco Turkish War of 1919 1922 there were diplomatic approaches from the superpowers of that era regarding the re drawing of Greek borders based on Bulgaria and Turkey United States relations pressing for more territory to improve trade routes with the British Empire The ruling parties were simultaneously trying to move parts of Northern Greece Macedonia and Thrace to Bulgaria and Turkey and to win the return of islands in the Aegean and parts of Macedonian territory to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia This policy was reiterated several times throughout the pre war era 17 18 The main impetus for their demand was the ethnic and religious minorities then living inside Greek borders in Northern Greece KKE opposed any geo strategic game in the area which would use minorities to start a new imperialistic war in the region At its Third Party Congress in 1924 KKE announced its policy for the self determination of minorities pointing out the minorities in Macedonia 19 Its policy was dictated by each Marxist Leninist theory that stated any minorities should be self determined under a common socialist state and it had its roots in the example of the newly founded Soviet Union 20 In 1924 KKE expressed the official position of the Third International for independent Macedonia and Thrace Some members disagreed with this but it remained the official position of the party and caused expulsions of communists by the Greek state 21 KKE was seen by many as a party whose policy was the detachment of large areas of northern Greece According to Richard Clogg this was dictated by Comintern and hurt the popularity of Communism at the time 22 In 1934 KKE changed its view and expressed its intent to fight for the national self determination under a People s Republic where all nations will found their self determination and will build the common state of the workers 23 Nikos Zachariadis General Secretary of the party officially renounced KKE s policy of secession in 1945 24 Anti KKE propaganda up to day added on this quote the will to collaborate for this goal with the Bulgarian organizations of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization and the Thracian Revolutionary Organisation This is not mentioned on any of KKE official documents The quote is referenced as KKE s policy for giving Greek soil to the northern enemies of the country a fact that can not be crossed referenced with any of KKE referenced literature of that era During the civil war 1946 1949 an article written by Nikos Zachariadis expressed the KKE s strategy after the envisioned victory of the Democratic Army of Greece regarding what was then known as the Macedonian Issue The Macedonian people will acquire an independent united state with a coequal position within the family of free peoples republics within the Balkans within the family of Peoples Republics to which the Greek people will belong The Macedonian people are today fighting for this independent united state with a coequal position and is helping the DSE with all its soul 25 The policy of self determination for Macedonia within a People s Republic was reiterated during the 5th KKE Central Committee meeting held in January 1949 which declared that the Macedonian people participating in the liberation struggle would find their full national re establishment as they want giving their blood for this acquisition Macedonian Communists should pay great attentions to foreign chauvinist and counteractive elements that want to break the unity between the Greek and Macedonian people This will only serve the monarcho fascists and British imperialism 26 These statements can be explained due to the large number of Slavomacedonian fighters 30 50 citation needed amongst the DSE fighters and prompted the government in Athens to begin a campaign against KKE and the party s military wing the Democratic Army of Greece DSE blaming them for secession plans in northern Greece In order for KKE to clear up its position on the Macedonian subject the 6th Congress of its Central Committee was called a few months later during which was clearly stated that KKE was fighting for a free Greece and for a common future for Greeks and Macedonians under the same state 27 The issue was ended by Central Committee in 1954 with the withdrawal of the position of self determination of minorities In 1988 the General Secretary of KKE Charilaos Florakis once again presented KKE s political position on the matter in a speech to the Greek Parliament KKE during World War II Edit 1940 Edit By 1940 KKE had almost collapsed after Metaxas dictatorship had imprisoned many of its leadership and members By October half of the party s two thousand members were in prison or in exile The Security Police proved successful in dismantling the party structure not only had it imprisoned the leadership but it created a fake series of Rizospastis the Central Committee newspaper This generated confusion among the remaining scattered underground members 28 29 A small group of old party officials formed the Old Central Committee and two of them were elected by the 6th Conference 30 In his memoirs for the Greek Civil war C M Woodhouse the British liaison with Greek resistance groups during World War II wrote The Old Central Committee interpreted a directive issued by Comintern as indicating collaboration with the German and Italian dictatorships given the Hitler Stalin alliance 31 On the other hand Woodhouse argues that Georgios Siantos who had escaped from prison and Nikos Zachariadis who was still incarcerated took the opposite view that KKE must support Metaxas in his fight against Mussolini 31 The archives of KKE 32 also address the confusion between different KKE cadres as the Old Committee interpreted the politics of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy as part of the imperialistic game between the Axis forces and the British This faction of KKE felt that the Metaxas regime was a pawn of British imperialism in the region 33 and therefore the Old Committee viewed any war between the Axis forces and the British as an imperialistic war that the people of any of the countries involved should not participate in According to KKE s account this position was criticised by Comintern in 1939 a few months after the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact which had instructed KKE to fight against Italy in the event of an invasion of Greece 34 35 Nikos Zachariadis KKE General Secretary wrote from prison on 2 November 1940 Today the Greek people are waging a war of national liberation against Mussolini s fascism In this war we must follow the Metaxas government and turn every city every village and every house of Greece into a stronghold of the National Liberation Fight On this war conducted by Metaxas government all of us should give all our forces without reservation The working people s and the crowning achievement for today s fight should be and shall be a new Greece based on work freedom and liberated from any foreign imperialist dependence with a truly pan popular culture 36 37 Several party members including Nikos Ploumpidis of the Old Central Committee denounced this letter as a forgery produced by the Metaxas regime 38 39 Zachariadis was even accused of writing it to win the favour of Konstantinos Maniadakis the Minister for Public Order to win his release from prison 12 According to one source when drafting this letter Zachariadis was unaware of the German Soviet Non aggression Pact and was castigated by the Comintern for an anti Soviet stance 40 According to KKE s archives the Old Central Committee had been denounced for its stance on the war issue and today KKE claims that the majority of the party membership had not followed the decision of being neutral in case of an invasion 41 42 On 16 November 1940 Zachariadis repudiated the line of his first letter in a second letter where he accused the Greek Army of waging a fascist and imperialistic war and appealed to the Soviet Union for peaceful intervention 43 44 thus aligning his position with that of the Old Central Committee 38 On 7 December 1940 the Old Central Committee issued a manifesto addressed to all the workers and public servants to all soldiers sailors and airmen to patriot officers to the mothers fathers wives and children of the fighters and the workers of all neighboring countries in which it describes the war as a game of the imperialist powers headed by the British According to KKE the Old Central Committee based this opinion on the belief that Mussolini s Italy would not dare to attack a country that had a cooperation agreement with the Soviet Union The main political line of this manifesto was the call to the soldiers on the front not to go beyond Greek borders but after securing them to try seek a peace agreement with the enemy 45 Zachariadis may have issued a third letter on 17 January 1941 in which he explained the motives for his first letter and wrote Metaxas remains the principal enemy of the people and the country His overthrowing is in the most immediate and vital interest of our people the peoples and soldiers of Greece and Italy are not enemies but brothers and their solidarity will stop the war waged by capitalist exploiters 40 According to KKE archives Zachariadis had issued no further letters and the third letter may have been in fact the statement of the Old Central Committee on 18 March 1941 46 In any case Zachariadis himself referred in his public statements after liberation almost exclusively to his first letter as proof of the patriotic character of KKE and its role as an inspiration to the Greek resistance movement during the war On 22 June 1941 the very same day that Hitler attacked the Soviet Union KKE ordered its militants to organize the struggle to defend the Soviet Union and the overthrow of the foreign fascist yoke 38 43 1941 German invasion and beginning of the Resistance Edit The German invasion of Greece On 6 April 1941 the German invasion was launched and Athens was occupied on 27 April following an unconditional surrender of the Greek forces by General Georgios Tsolakoglou who was later appointed Prime Minister by the Nazis Confusion remained among many Greek Communists as to what the Moscow sanctioned position was In his memoirs KKE leader Ioannis Ioannidis wrote about a regional communist cadre who proclaimed the following as Greece was being bombed by the Axis The Germans will not bomb us The mustached one Stalin will not let them 47 Ioannis Ioannidis was purged by Nikos Zachariades leader of the KKE in exile in 1953 and was stripped of his party offices 48 The article in the reference just cited ends with just the fact of his Purge and being stripped of his Party offices so it is unclear whether he was physically Purged executed as many Communists still were in 1953 A large number of KKE members were already in prison before the Nazi invasion The pro Nazi occupation government handed some of them over to the Nazis fearing that they following the pro Soviet party line would resort to sabotage in Greece following Hitler s attack on the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 49 50 51 52 There were many occasions that police officers released Communist prisoners especially the ones that they were in exile in Aegean islands In 1941 several KKE members managed to escape prison One of the many stories includes the 20 communists held as political prisoners in Heraklion Crete They demanded to be released to fight against the invading Germans The Greek government which had left mainland Greece by then and was en route to Egypt had no power to release them They eventually escaped after their jail was damaged by German bombs and joined the British and Greek forces defending the Heraklion harbor After the fall of Crete many officers of the Greek Army joined forces with ELAS and became commanders in ELAS s corps of partisan units 53 54 It became German policy especially after it became obvious to them that they were losing the war to execute civilians in retaliation for attacks against them by communist or non communist partisans Approximately 200 communists delivered to the Germans on 1941 were executed at the Kaisariani Shooting Range on 1 May 1944 55 Although KKE was suffering from a lack of central political leadership since its leader Nikos Zachariades had been taken by the Germans to the Dachau concentration camp its members succeeded in maintaining communication with each other The 6th Meeting of KKE Central Committee was held in Athens from 1 3 July 1941 which decided on strategy for an armed liberation struggle against the Axis invaders At the same time the Old Central Committee submitted to the authority of the new Central Committee 56 The first united resistance organization was founded in the regions of Macedonia and Thrace on 15 May 1941 34 In Thessaloniki the Macedonian Bureau of KKE established the Eleftheri Liberty Organization along with the Socialist Party the Agrarian Party the Democratic Union and Colonel Dimitrios Psarros who later founded the EKKA The Macedonian Bureau of KKE organised the first two partisan units at the end of June 1941 The first was based in Kilkis and was named Athanasios Diakos the second was based in Nigrita and was named Odysseas Androutsos These small partisan units blew up bridges attacked police stations and eventually organized into larger combat units of more than 300 men each 57 In several other places and in major cities small armed groups of KKE members and non communists began to emerge protecting people from looters the Germans or collaborators 58 On 27 September 1941 Greek communists together with five other leftist parties formed the National Liberation Front EAM in Kallithea Athens and began forming partisan militia units 1942 to Liberation Edit See also National Liberation Front Greece Greek People s Liberation Army and Political Committee of National Liberation Cavalry of ELAS On 16 February 1942 the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS was founded in a small kiosk in Fthiotida and by 1943 it consisted of 50 000 members both men and women with 30 000 as reserve units in major cities The KKE played a prominent role in the organisation By the end of the war some 200 000 Greek citizens both workers and peasants had joined the ranks of KKE KKE maintained its alliances with the EAM Its main stated aim at this time was to form a united government with all parties that wanted to see Greece liberated from foreign powers 59 ELAS conflicted finally with the rest of the resistance organizations and armies especially EDES and EKKA accusing most of them of being traitors and collaborators of the Nazis These were the first conflicts of the coming civil war Nikos Zachariadis was imprisoned in Dachau he was released in 1945 and returned to Greece as the elected general secretary of the KKE During his imprisonment Andreas Tsipas and Georgios Siantos served as party general secretaries KKE and the Greek Civil War Edit Main articles Dekemvriana and Greek Civil War See also Democratic Army of Greece Nikos Zachariadis After the liberation of Greece from the Nazi German forces the government of National Unity led by G Papandreou landed in Athens in October 1944 The government was formed after the Treaty of Cazerta and its main purpose was to form the new Greek state try accused political and military personnel of collaboration with the Germans and to hold a referendum for the government and the constitution After the first weeks it was obvious that British policy in the region was against these goals as KKE and EAM were controlling 98 of Greece and they were afraid of the foundation of new socialist state citation needed Papandreou demanded the disarmament of ELAS and the trials of the collaborators were stalled Meanwhile British troops together with the refined clarification needed Greek arm divisions after the prosecution of thousands of EAM members in the middle east loyal to the Papandreou segment were landing in all major Greek cities and EAM was welcoming them as liberators In mid November 1944 the situation escalated dramatically KKE criticised the interference of British General Scobie in Greek affairs EAM refused to disarm ELAS and ELAN 60 Six ministers of the EAM resigned from their positions in the government of Georgios Papandreou in November 1944 Fighting broke out in Athens on 3 December 1944 during a demonstration organised by EAM and involving more than 100 000 people According to some accounts the police covered by British troops 61 62 opened fire on the crowd More than 28 people were killed and 148 injured According to other accounts it is uncertain if the first shots were fired by the police or the demonstrators 63 A member of the pro monarchists Nikos Farmakis in one of his interviews revealed that they had a direct order to fire at will when the demonstrators reach the court of the Palace 64 This incident was the beginning of the 37 day Battle of Athens Dekemvriana Following a ceasefire agreement called the Treaty of Varkiza ELAS laid down the majority of its weapons and dissolved all of its units Right wing groups including elements which had collaborated with the Germans seized this opportunity to persecute many KKE members 65 According to EAM figures in the few months after the Treaty of Varkiza the anticommunist violence on the Greek mainland had resulted in the imprisonment or exile of 100 000 ELAS partisans and EAM members the deaths of 3 000 EAM officials and members the rape of between 200 and 500 women the burning of houses and other acts of violence 66 The KKE Central Committee issued a directive to all party forces not to engage in any armed conflict but to try to prevent attacks by other means This caused confusion among the majority of its supporters and served to weaken the party organisation across the country 67 Fighters of DSE Badge of the DSE in which the letter Delta stands for Demokratia meaning both Democracy and Republic in Greek language these words are one and the same Large groups had returned to their partisan hideouts in the mountains and gradually formed smaller partisan units As most of the ELAS armoury had been surrendered under the terms of the Varkiza treaty these units armed themselves with weapons seized from attacks on militia units that had been provided arms by the police as well as attacking police stations By mid 1946 these units forced the KKE leadership to change its neutral position and to plan the formation of a partisan army with the officers and fighters that were still free On 26 October 1946 KKE militia units attacked the police station in Litochoro armed their forces and founded the Central Greece Command of the Democratic Army of Greece DSE After this successful operation the remaining scattered groups reorganized the pre Varkiza Treaty ELAS formations all over the country KKE s political influence and organization structure helped form units in the Aegean Islands of as Mytilene Chios Ikaria Samos and Crete 42 68 The Civil War involved two sides On the one side was the British and American backed Greek government led by Konstantinos Tsaldaris and later Themistoklis Sophoulis which was elected in the 1946 elections which the KKE had boycotted On the other side was the Democratic Army of Greece of which the KKE was the only major political force backed by the NOF Bulgaria Yugoslavia and Albania In December 1947 KKE and its allies that participated in the Civil War formed the Provisional Democratic Government Mountain Government under the premiership of Markos Vafiadis After this the KKE still legal due to the Treaty of Varkiza turned illegal On 29 January 1949 the Greek National Army appointed General Alexander Papagos Commander in Chief In August 1949 Papagos launched a major counter offensive against DSE forces in northern Greece code named Operation Torch The plan was for the Greek National Army to gain control of the border with Albania in order to surround and defeat the DSE forces numbering 8 500 fighters The DSE suffered heavy losses from the operation but managed to retreat its units to Albania 69 Charilaos Florakis whose nom de guerre was Kapetan Yiotis was a DSE appointed Brigadier General during this battle Florakis was ordered by the DSE High Command to re enter Greece with his battalion via the Gramos Mountains and try to establish connection with all the DSE forces that remained within Greece The battalion indeed reached small DSE units south of Gramos down to Evritania and retreated thereafter back to Albania Floriakis later served as General Secretary of KKE from 1972 to 1989 On 28 August 1949 the Civil War in Greece ended with the DSE forces defeated militarily and politically and KKE entered a new phase in its history 70 Post war era Edit After the Civil War the KKE was outlawed and most of its prominent members had to flee Greece go underground or provide a signed declaration that they renounced communism to avoid prosecution as under Law 504 issued in 1948 a large number of KKE members were either prosecuted jailed or exiled Prominent members of the KKE were tried and executed including Nikos Beloyannis in 1952 and Nikos Ploumpidis in 1954 The execution of Ploumpidis was the last such execution by the post Civil War governments The fear of widespread reaction from left wing citizens curbed further executions and eventually led to the gradual release of most political prisoners In 1955 there were 4 498 political prisoners and 898 exiles while in 1962 there were 1 359 prisoners and 296 exiles 71 However under the prevailing anticommunist rules the communists and KKE sympathizers were barred from the public sector and lived under a repressive anticommunist surveillance system 72 Such discrimination against communists was partially relieved with the legalization of KKE in 1974 and the discrimination ended in the 1980s During this period of illegality the KKE supported the United Democratic Left EDA Party EDA functioned as the legal political expression of the outlawed KKE It was not openly communist and attracted moderate voters reaching 70 000 members in the early 60s Moreover EDA had a very active youth wing Historians have argued that the two parties operated parallel paths something that contributed to the 1968 split between KKE and KKE Esoterikou 73 Former king Constantine II claims that in 1964 he proposed to George Papandreou senior that the KKE be legalized According to the former monarch Papandreou refused to comply so as not to lose his party s left wing supporters 74 This allegation cannot be verified as it was expressed after Papandreou s death Moreover Constantine s public statements regarding communism during the 1960s renders the veracity of this allegation questionable During the junta Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Greek military junta of 1967 74 On 21 April 1967 a group of right wing Greek Army colonels led by Georgios Papadopoulos successfully carried out a coup d etat on the pretext of imminent communist threat establishing what became known as the Regime of the Colonels All political parties including EDA were dissolved and civil liberties were suppressed for all Greek citizens KKE members were persecuted along with other opponents of the junta In 1968 a crisis escalated between KKE s two main factions The crisis was already festering during the 12th plenum of the party s central committee held in Budapest between 5 and 15 February 1968 in which three members of the politbureau M Partsalidis Z Zografos and P Dimitriu were expelled for fractionist activity and was further triggered by the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia This event led a number of Greek communists who were ideologically leaning with the so called opportunist faction to break with KKE that was loyal to the Socialist Republic s policy and to follow the nascent Eurocommunist line which favored a more pluralistic approach to socialism A relatively large group split from KKE forming what became the Communist Party of Greece Interior The spin off party forged bonds with Eurocommunist parties such as the Italian Communist Party as well as with Nicolae Ceausescu s Romanian Communist Party Its supporters referred to KKE as the KKE Exterior KKE e3wterikoy inferring that KKE s policies were dictated by the Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Despite the difficulties resulting from the split KKE continued its opposition to the Greek Junta throughout the next six years Its political fighting against the regime took the form of labour disruptions and strikes and small demonstrations all over the country 75 76 Its power was rising inside the Universities where the newly founded Communist Youth of Greece KNE began working underground KKE underground forces continued to work closely with other political groups of the center and left within Greece and abroad In many European capitals anti Junta committees were founded to support the struggle in Greece Legalisation Edit After the restoration of parliamentary democracy in 1974 Constantine Karamanlis legalised the KKE hoping to reclaim a vital part of national memory 77 In the 1974 elections the KKE participated with the KKE Interior and the EDA under the name of the United Left receiving 9 36 per cent of the vote In the elections from 1977 to 1989 the KKE participated on its own In 1989 the political consequences of the Civil War were finally lifted The war was named Civil War instead of War against the gangs symmoritopolemos that was the official state name for that era up until that point and DSE fighters were named DSE fighters instead of Communist Gangfighters koymoynistosymmorites citation needed Participation in government Edit In 1944 KKE participated in the national unity government of George Papandreou holding the positions of Minister of Finance Minister of Agriculture Minister of Labor Minister of National Economy and Public Works and Deputy Minister of Finance In 1988 KKE and Greek Left Greek EAP the former KKE Interior along with other left wing parties and organisations formed the Coalition of the Left and Progress Synaspismos In the June 1989 elections Synaspismos gained 13 1 per cent of votes and joined a coalition with New Democracy to form a short lived government amidst a political spectrum shaken by accusations of economic scandals against the previous administration of Andreas Papandreou s Panhellenic Socialist Movement In November of the same year Synaspismos participated in the Universal Government with New Democracy and Panhellenic Socialist Movement which appointed Xenophon Zolotas as Prime Minister for three months In 1991 KKE withdrew from Synaspismos Some KKE members left the party and remained in Synaspismos which evolved into a separate left wing party that is now an alliance of Synaspismos with other leftist groups called the Coalition of the Radical Left 21st century Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2015 KKE central building in Athens Aleka Papariga the longest serving general secretary of KKE 1991 2013 Dimitris Koutsoumpas the incumbent general secretary of KKE since 2013 KKE actively participated in the anti austerity protests beginning in 2010 78 and also supported Greek steel worker s strikes 79 In the first 2012 legislative election held on 6 May the party got 8 5 of the vote and increased its parliamentary seats by 5 for a total of 26 seats However in the second 2012 legislative election held a month later on 17 June 2012 the party s support halved resulting in a loss of 4 and 14 MPs After the failure of the Hellenic Parliament to elect a new President of State in late 2014 the parliament was dissolved and a snap legislative election was scheduled for 25 January 2015 where the party increased its support by 1 percentage point to 5 5 At the fresh elections later that year the party got a slight increase of 0 1 to reach 5 6 of the vote Since the 2015 election the party saw a further increase in its support in opinion polls overtaking the former major party PASOK to reach 4th place Although KKE was again overtaken by PASOK now called Movement for Change KINAL in the 2019 election it nonetheless managed to maintain a fourth place in the polls due to the decline of far right party Golden Dawn Policies EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2021 Economy Edit The KKE proposes the nationalization of the means of production and a restructuring centralisation of the economy consequently it requires a scientific planning oriented to meet all the needs of the Greek people for example jobs health care education culture sport 80 Furthermore the KKE is absolutely opposed to Greece remaining in the European Union and NATO LGBT rights Edit See also LGBT rights in Greece Recognition of same sex relationships KKE voted against the Civil Partnerships Bill proposed by Syriza in December 2015 responding among other things The family is a social relationship it is an institution for the protection of children as it was formed in the context of today s society capitalism We also believe that civil marriage should be the only obligatory form of marriage And whoever wants let him have the right to the corresponding religious ceremony But you do not touch upon this urban modernization that has taken place in other countries for years If the government wanted to introduce a less bureaucratic civil marriage it could propose the necessary amendments to the Civil Code There is no need for two legal regulations civil marriage and cohabitation agreement on the rights and obligations between spouses the core of which is the potential reproduction upbringing and upbringing of children Today this is confirmed by the fact that the Cohabitation Agreement is extended in terms of obligations and rights of both parties which essentially resembles marriage and especially by the fact that it extends to same sex couples Greece s condemnation by the European Court of Justice cited by the government and the Report was not a breach of any positive obligation imposed by the European Convention on Human Rights But it was a negative discrimination against homosexual scales but in the context of the institutionalization of the Cohabitation Pact If there was no Cohabitation Pact for heterosexual couples there would be no question of condemning Greece The aim of the bill is essentially the institutional recognition of same sex couples including in a process the acquisition of children by them And there is our disagreement Rights and obligations arise within marriage which is the legal expression of the social relations of the family It includes social protection of children who are biologically the result of sexual relations between a man and a woman With the formation of a socialist communist society a new type of partnership will undoubtedly be formed a relatively stable heterosexual relationship and reproduction 81 Many democratic socialist parties including Syriza denounced the KKE s stance as bigotry 81 However the KKE also supports strengthening legislation to punish homophobic behavior and has spoken against such discrimination stating that Unacceptable and condemnable discrimination and violence against our fellow human beings based on their sexual orientation and other personal characteristics are not addressed by cheap declarations of equality and words of sympathy but by strengthening legislation against perpetrators of sexism racism and homophobia with the full social support of those who suffer from such behaviors A real shield against such discrimination is collectivism the struggle for modern social rights for all people 82 Drug reform Edit KKE opposes decriminalization of drug consumption and drug trafficking It opposes the division of drugs on more and less harmful considering harm reduction legislation as dominant bourgeois policy 83 It also opposes substitution rehabilitation programs and endorses cold turkey programs as it believes drug substitutes replace one addiction for another KKE positions on drug reform are summed up among other texts in an article on one of their websites 84 KKE is opposed both to the current repressive policy that imprisons users and frees traders and to the problem management policies as well as to the efforts to privatize the existing detoxification and prevention services KKE believes in tackling the drug problem effectively It supports the only realistic solution which is to strengthen the prevention treatment reintegration efforts It says No to ALL drugs It denies the separation of soft hard drugs It does not believe in substitution programs which maintain drug addiction and do not cure it The substitution should concern special groups eg with chronic diseases NO to the decriminalization of hashish Demand reduction policy not harm reduction policy Other policies Edit The KKE supports the separation of church and state However religious people are allowed to join the party and it also has religious associates such as Liana Kanelli The party considers China an imperialist power and a capitalist country like the United States the European Union and Japan It believes that the Chinese Communist Party has lost its revolutionary elements although both parties still maintain bilateral relations with each other 85 The KKE advocates Greek patriotism and left wing nationalism alongside proletarian internationalism and considers it its patriotic duty to oppose Greece s EU membership 86 Splits and alliances EditIn 1956 after the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union at which Nikita Khrushchev denounced the excesses of Joseph Stalin a faction created the Group of Marxist Leninists of Greece OMLE which split from party in 1964 becoming the Organisation of Marxists Leninists of Greece In 1968 amidst the Greek military junta of 1967 1974 and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia a relatively big group split from KKE forming KKE Interior claiming to be directed from within Greece rather than from the Soviet Union In 1988 KKE and Greek Left the former KKE Interior along with other left parties and organisations formed the Coalition of the Left and Progress Also in 1988 the vast majority of members and officials from Communist Youth of Greece KNE the KKE s youth wing split to form the New Left Current NAR drawing mainly youth in major cities especially in Thessaloniki In the early 2000s a small group of major party officials such as Mitsos Kostopoulos left the party and formed the Movement for the United in Action Left KEDA which in the 2007 legislative election participated in the Coalition of the Radical Left Syriza which was to win the 2015 national elections with a plurality Youth organisation EditMain article Communist Youth of Greece KKE s youth organization is the Communist Youth of Greece which closely supports KKE s goals and strategic targets Current activities EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2015 KKE 100 years anniversary logo KKE is a force in the Greek political scene rallying a significant amount of support within the organized working class movement KKE is currently trying to mold a loose and rather disorganised international communist movement along a purely Marxist Leninist line Since its 18th congress February 2009 KKE has opened up a discussion within the ranks and more broadly within the Greek left leaning community on the future evolution of communism in the 21st century with a particular emphasis on examining the causes of the collapse of the Socialist system in the former Soviet Union and in Eastern Europe The KKE stands in elections and has representatives in the Greek Parliament local authorities and the European Parliament where its two MEPs sit with the Non Inscrits On 3 June 2014 following the 2014 European elections the Central Committee of the KKE announced that it would no longer continue the party s affiliation to the European United Left Nordic Green Left GUE NGL group in the European parliament 87 It publishes the daily newspaper Rizospastis It also publishes the political and theoretical journal Komounistiki Epitheorisi Communist Review every two months and a journal covering educational issues Themata Paideias The congresses of the Communist Party of Greece EditThe 1st congress November 1918 Piraeus The 2nd congress April 1920 Athens Extraordinary pre election congress September 1920 Athens Extraordinary congress October 1922 Athens Extraordinary pre election congress September 1923 Athens The 3rd extraordinary congress 26 November 3 December 1924 Athens The 3rd ordinary congress March 1927 Athens The 4th congress December 1928 Athens The 5th congress March 1934 Athens The 6th congress December 1935 Athens The 7th congress October 1945 Athens The 8th congress August 1961 illegally The 9th congress December 1973 illegally The 10th congress May 1978 The 11th congress December 1982 Athens The 12th congress May 1987 The 13th congress 19 24 February 1991 Athens The 14th congress 18 21 December 1991 Athens The 15th congress 22 26 May 1996 Athens The 16th congress 14 17 December 2000 Athens The 17th congress 9 12 February 2005 Athens The 18th congress 18 22 February 2009 Athens The 19th congress 11 14 April 2013 Athens The 20th congress 30 March 2 April 2017 Athens The 21st congress 24 27 June 2021 AthensKKE delegations participated in international conferences of Communist and working parties 1957 1960 1969 Moscow KKE approved the documents accepted at the conferences List of First Secretaries and General Secretaries Edit Pandelis Pouliopoulos a supporter of the internationalist and revolutionary character of the communist movement Nikolaos Dimitratos November 1918 February 1922 expelled from the party on charges of suspect behavior citation needed Yanis Kordatos February November 1922 Nikolaos Sargologos November 1922 September 1923 expelled from the party on charges of espionage citation needed Thomas Apostolidis September 1923 December 1924 expelled from the party on charges of opportunism citation needed Pandelis Pouliopoulos December 1924 September 1925 Eleftherios Stavridis 1925 1926 expelled from the party on charges of pro bourgeoisies political position Pastias Giatsopoulos September 1926 March 1927 expelled from the party on charges of liquidarism citation needed Andronikos Chaitas March 1927 1931 expelled from the party and executed in the Soviet Union in 1935 citation needed Nikos Zachariadis 1931 1936 first term Andreas Tsipas July 1941 September 1941 Georgios Siantos January 1942 May 1945 caretaker until the return of Zachariadis Nikos Zachariadis May 1945 March 1956 second term Apostolos Grozos March June 1956 Konstantinos Koligiannis June 1956 December 1972 Charilaos Florakis December 1972 July 1989 Grigoris Farakos July 1989 February 1991 resigned from the party to join Synaspismos Aleka Papariga February 1991 April 2013 Dimitris Koutsoumpas April 2013 present Election results EditHellenic Parliament Edit Election Hellenic Parliament Rank Government LeaderVotes pp Seats won 1974 With United Left 5 300 5 4th Opposition Charilaos Florakis1977A 480 272 9 4 0 1 11 300 6 4th Opposition1981 620 302 10 9 1 5 13 300 2 3rd Opposition1985 629 525 9 9 1 0 12 300 1 3rd OppositionJune 1989 With Synaspismos 20 300 8 3rd Interim governmentND SYNNovember 1989 16 300 4 3rd National unity governmentND PASOK SYN Grigoris Farakos1990 15 300 1 3rd Opposition1993B 313 001 4 5 5 7 9 300 6 4th Opposition Aleka Papariga1996 380 046 5 6 1 1 11 300 2 3rd Opposition2000 379 454 5 5 0 1 11 300 0 3rd Opposition2004 436 818 5 9 0 4 12 300 1 3rd Opposition2007 583 750 8 2 2 3 22 300 10 3rd Opposition2009 517 154 7 5 0 7 21 300 1 3rd OppositionMay 2012 536 105 8 5 1 0 26 300 5 5th OppositionJune 2012 277 227 4 5 4 0 12 300 14 7th OppositionJanuary 2015 338 138 5 5 1 0 15 300 3 5th Opposition Dimitris KoutsoumpasSeptember 2015 301 632 5 6 0 1 15 300 0 5th Opposition2019 299 592 5 3 0 3 15 300 0 4th OppositionA 1977 results compared to the United Left totals in the 1974 election B 1993 results compared to the Synaspismos totals in the 1990 election European Parliament Edit European ParliamentElection Votes pp Seats won Rank Leader1981 729 052 12 8 New 3 24 3 3rd Charilaos Florakis1984 693 304 11 6 1 2 3 24 0 3rd1989A 936 175 14 3 2 7 4 24 1 3rd1994 410 741 6 3 8 0 2 25 2 4th Aleka Papariga1999 557 365 8 7 2 4 3 25 1 3rd2004 580 396 9 5 0 8 3 24 0 3rd2009 428 151 8 4 1 1 2 22 1 3rd2014 349 342 6 1 2 3 2 21 0 6th Dimitris Koutsoumpas2019 302 677 5 4 0 7 2 21 0 4thA Contested as Coalition of the Left and Progress Party membership EditMembership 1918 1948 88 Year Number of members1918 1 0001920 1 3201924 2 2001926 2 5001928 2 0001930 1 5001933 4 4161934 6 000 est 1936 start 17 5001936 mid lt 10 000 est 1941 200 est free 2 000 in prison1942 December 15 0001944 June 250 0001944 October 420 000 450 0001945 October 45 0001946 February lt 100 0001948 lt 50 000See also Edit Communism portal Politics portal Greece portalAll Workers Militant Front PAME International Meeting of Communist and Workers Parties Initiative of Communist and Workers Parties Socialism in GreeceFootnotes Edit DENEZAKHS ANDREAS 16 November 2021 17 Noembrh 1918 H idrysh toy KKE toy Andrea Denezakh Hmerodromos Retrieved 14 September 2022 a b c Nordsieck Wolfram 2019 Greece Parties and Elections in Europe Vasilopoulou S 2018 The party politics of Euroscepticism in times of crisis The case of Greece Politics 38 3 311 326 https doi org 10 1177 0263395718770599 Nicolo Conti 4 December 2013 Party Attitudes Towards the EU in the Member States Parties for Europe Parties Against Europe Routledge p 155 ISBN 978 1 317 93656 5 Bart van der Steen 1 September 2014 The City Is Ours Squatting and Autonomous Movements in Europe from the 1970s to the Present PM Press p 75 ISBN 978 1 60486 683 4 Archived from the original on 29 July 2020 David Sanders Pedro Magalhaes Gabor Toka 26 July 2012 Citizens and the European Polity Mass Attitudes Towards the European and National Polities OUP Oxford p 86 ISBN 978 0 19 960233 9 http library fes de pdf files id ipa 05818 pdf bare URL PDF Communist Party of Greece Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE on the stance of the KKE in the EU parliament inter kke gr Retrieved 18 December 2022 a b c d Kyrkos Vaggelis 3 November 2018 Poioi htan aytoi poy idrysan to KKE Who were founders of the KKE Newsbeast in Greek Archived from the original on 4 November 2018 Bollier Sam 1 May 2012 A guide to Greece s political parties Al Jazeera Archived from the original on 9 July 2021 Oi rizes toy Ellhnikoy Kommoynistikoy Kinhmatos Roots of the Greek Communist Movement a b Andrew L Zapantis Greek Soviet Relations 1917 1941 1983 Dokimio Istorias toy KKE Study on the history of CPG KKE Epishma Keimena t1 t2 CPG Official Documents v1 v2 S Seferiadis The Coercive Impulse Policing Labour in Interwar Greece Journal of Contemporary History January 2005 Dokimio Istorias toy KKE Study in the History of CPG Rizospastis 27 January 1925 Rizospastis 1 March 1925 Ireneusz A Slupkov The Communist Party of Greece and the Macedonian National Problem 1918 1940 Szczecin Poland 2006 pp 31 48 For The Issue of Self Determination of the People V I Lenin A Dagkas G Leontiadhs Komintern kai Makedoniko zhthma to ellhniko paraskhnio 1924 Troxalia sel 91 Richard Clogg A Concise History of Greece Cambridge University Press 1992 pp 106 141 KKE Pente Xronia Agwnes 1931 1936 Athens 2nd ed 1946 Rizospastis 24 October 1945 Dhmokratikos Stratos magazine edited by Rizospasths 1996 vol I pp 408 412 KKE Official Documents vol 6 pp 356 338 Epishma Keimena KKE vol 6 KKE History of the Communist Party of Greece Aggelos Elefantis The Promise of the Impossible Revolution Greek Communist Party self meditation and the bourgeois during the inter war Period Themelio 3rd edition 1999 KKE Official Documents vol 5 1940 1945 p 11 a b C M Woodhouse The Struggle for Greece Hurst amp Company 1976 p 16 KKE Official Documents vol 5 1940 1945 KKE Official Documents vol4 vol5 a b History of the National Resistance 1940 1945 vol1 Study in the History of KKE KKE Official Documents vol 5 1940 1945 p 9 Aggelos Elefantis The Promise of the Impossible Revolution Greek Communist Party self meditation and the bourgeois during the inter war Period Themelio 3rd edition 1999 pp 300 301 a b c C M Woodhouse The Struggle for Greece Hurst amp Company 1976 p 17 Rizospasths 17 June 1941 a b Giannis Marinos 29 October 2006 Ena para8yro sthn alh8eia To Vima Archived from the original on 23 December 2007 Retrieved 2 October 2007 KKE Official Documents vol 5 1940 1945 a b Study of the History of the KKE a b Courtois Stephane et al The Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression Cambridge Harvard University Press 1999 p 326 KKE Central Committee 7 December 1940 KKE Official Documents vol 5 1940 1945 p 15 KKE Official Documents vol 6 Giannhs Iwannidhs ANAMNHSEIS p 63 Biographical Dictionary of The Comintern by Branko Lazitch and Milorad Drachkovitch The Hoover Institution Press Stanford University 1986 p 192 History of the National Resistance 1940 1945 The Civil War in Peloponissos A Kamarinos Experiences of Armed Struggles 1940 1949 Papageorgiou Charilaos Florakis The People s Leader Efhmerida Rizospasths Rizospastis newspaper POLITIKH Archived from the original on 15 February 2012 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Efhmerida Rizospasths Rizospastis newspaper POLITIKH Archived from the original on 15 February 2012 Retrieved 24 February 2015 History of the National Resistance 1940 1945 vol 1 KKE Official Documents V Georgiou History of the National Resistance 1940 1945 vol 1 Aylos 1979 pp 188 248 249 History of the National Resistance 1940 145 P Papastratis From the Great Idea to Balkan Union in M Sarafis and M Eve eds Background to Contemporary Greece Rowman amp Littlefield 1990 K Barbis The Greek tragedy in three stages Pelasgos Athens 2000 Kessel Album Athens 1944 Spyros Kotsakis Captain in ELAS First Army December 1944 in Athens Athens 1986 C M Woodhouse Modern Greece Faber and Faber 1991 p 253 https www youtube com watch v L9km1I5tuaY 4 38 Stavrianos L S and Panagopoulos E P Present Day Greece The Journal of Modern History Vol 20 no 2 June 1948 pp 149 158 To Pontiki Civil War 60 Years Later Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 16 October 2007 A Kamarinos The Civil War in the Peloponessus Athens 2000 Dhmokratikos Stratos magazine edited by Rizospasths 1996 Thrasimvoulos Tsakalotos 40 years soldier of Greece Charilaos Florakis The Peoples Leader Polymeris Voglis Becoming a Subject Political Prisoners During the Greek Civil War Berghahn Books 2002 p 223 Minas Samatas Greek McCarthyism A Comparative Assessment of Greek Post Civil War Repressive Anticommunism and the US Truman McCarthy Era Journal of the Hellenic Diaspora Kalyvas Stathis Marantzidis Nikos 2002 Greek Communism 1968 2001 PDF East European Politics and Societies 16 3 665 690 here 666 667 Retrieved 19 August 2019 Thanassis Lalas Constantine Speaks About All BHMAgazino 3 June 2001 KNE Our History Archived from the original on 23 December 2007 EK8ESH KAI SYMPERASMATA GIA TA GEGONOTA TOY NOEMBRH 1973 KE Ioylios 1976 http www kne gr 179 html Archived 28 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Philip Carabott and Thanasis D Sfikas eds The Greek Civil War Ashgate 2004 p 266 Lubin Gus 17 May 2010 How The Greek Communist Party Plans To Solve The Crisis Business Insider https nonomnismoriarfilm weebly com tauomicron nutauomicronkappaiotamualphanutauepsilonrho htmls dead link What About the Greek Communist Party a b Greek Communist Party on Cohabitation Agreement Rizospasths 20 December 2015 Archived from the original on 24 December 2015 Retrieved 20 December 2015 Dhlwsh toy Dhmhtrh Koytsoympa gia th Die8nh Hmera kata ths Omofobias www kke gr in Greek Retrieved 19 May 2022 Dhlwsh toy Dhmhtrh Koytsoympa gia thn Pagkosmia Hmera Kata twn Narkwtikwn www kke gr in Greek Retrieved 24 September 2020 Whole life not in doses Rizospasths 13 May 2010 Archived from the original on 15 March 2015 Retrieved 26 September 2021 Communist Party of Greece The International role of China inter kke gr Retrieved 24 May 2022 KKE O patriwtismos taytizetai me thn palh kata toy eyrwmonodromoy m naftemporiki gr in Greek 14 April 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Communist Party of Greece Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE on the stance of the KKE in the EU parliament Retrieved 24 February 2015 The table is part of a larger table found in Chr Vernadakis and G Mavris 1988 Apo th Laokratia sthn Allagh Theseis in Greek No 22 Retrieved 11 January 2011 The table in the article provides detailed sources for the numbers stated above which are from CPG s official documents and or independent historians Further reading EditDimitri Kitsikis Populism Eurocommunism and the Communist Party of Greece in M Waller Communist Parties in Western Europe Oxford Blackwell 1988 Dimitri Kitsikis Greece Communism in a Non Western Setting in D E Albright Communism and Political Systems in Western Europe Boulder CO Westview Press 1979 Dimitri Kitsikis Greek Communists and the Karamanlis Government Problems of Communism vol 26 January February 1977 pp 42 56 Artiem Ulunian The Communist Party of Greece and the Comintern Evaluations Instructions and Subordination in Tim Rees and Andrew Thorpe eds International Communism and the Communist International 1919 43 Manchester Manchester University Press 1998 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Communist Party of Greece Wikinews has related news KKE Interview with the Greek Communist Party Official website Charalambous Giorgos 2 September 2012 Understanding the Greek Communist Party Greece Lse London School of Economics Neni Panourgia Dangerous Citizens Online Online version of Dangerous Citizens The Greek Left and the Terror of the State ISBN 978 0823229680 Gabriele D Angeli 19 April 2012 The KKE and the Greek revolution National Committee of the Italian Young Communists Dimitri Kitsikis January 2010 Kitsikis article Grece Le Synaspismos tiraille entre social democratie et anarchisme Grande Europe No 16 La Documentation Francaise Dimitri Kitsikis 1975 Le mouvement communiste en Grece Etudes internationales Vol 6 No 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Communist Party of Greece amp oldid 1153540765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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