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Democratic Army of Greece

The Democratic Army of Greece (DAG; Greek: Δημοκρατικός Στρατός Ελλάδας - ΔΣΕ, romanizedDimokratikós Stratós Elládas - DSE) was the army founded by the Communist Party of Greece during the Greek Civil War (1946–1949). At its height, it had a strength of around 50,000 men and women.

Democratic Army of Greece
Δημοκρατικός Στρατός Ελλάδας
Badge of the DSE. The letter Delta stands for Demokratia, meaning "Democracy" and "Republic"
LeadersNikos Zachariadis (Gen. Sec. of the KKE)
Markos Vafiadis (military leader, President of the Provisional Government)
Dates of operation1946–1949
AllegianceKKE
Democratic Government (from 1947)
IdeologyCommunism
Republicanism
Left-wing nationalism
Hellenic nationalism
Minorities rights
Anti-Fascism
Anti-imperialism
AlliesEastern Bloc
Opponents Kingdom of Greece

 United Kingdom

 United States

Battles and wars

The DSE was backed up by the Popular Civil Guard (Λαϊκή Πολιτοφυλακή - ΛΠ), the Communist Party's security police force.

History

After the liberation of Greece from the Axis occupation, the Dekemvriana and the Varkiza Agreement (in which ELAS, the main Partisan Army in Greece, agreed to a disarmament), the persecution of left wing citizens, communists and officials of EAM, started. There were 166 different anti-communist groups, such as those of Sourlas and Kalabalikis in Thessaly, and Papadopoulos in Macedonia. Archives of D.S. National Solidarity indicate that by 31 March 1946, nationwide, 1,289 suspected communists had been killed, 6,671 had been wounded, 84,931 had been arrested, 165 been raped, and the property of 18,767 was looted. Imprisoned suspected communists numbered in excess of 30,000. Those responsible for the murders, according to the DSE, were collaborationist groups, national guards, rural police, and members of the British armed forces.

 
One of the flags used by the Greek Democratic Army during the Greek Civil War, from 1946–1949.[1]

After the second party congress of KKE in February 1946, approximately 250 leftist self-defence militias, known as Groups of Democratic Armed Persecuted Fighters (ODEKA), were formed across Greece, totaling some 3,000 men. Most of the militiamen were former ELAS fighters.[2] By April, ODEKA membership had grown to 4,400 fighters, reaching 5,400 fighters by August. Between April and June 1946, ODEKA fighters took part in 72 clashes, mainly targeting the Greek Gendarmerie and right wing paramilitary squads. The first coordinated attack by ODEKA took place on the night of 30/31 March 1946 when a band of 33 guerillas struck the Gendarmerie station at Litochoro, killing 13 gendarmes. The Battle of Litochoro marked the beginning of the third phase of the Greek Civil War.[3]

 
Organization and military bases of the "Democratic Army", as well as entry routes to Greece (legend in Greek)

The Communist Party of Greece led the armed struggle, through the General Partisan Command, which was created on 28 October 1946, and headed by Markos Vafiadis. Order number 19 of the General Command, issued on 27 December 1946, renamed the guerilla groups to the Democratic Army of Greece (DSE). The relevant order[4] included the following comment regarding the DSE: "It is the national people’s revolutionary army of the new Democratic Greece and fights with gun in hand for our National independence and for People's Democracy."

In 1947, KKE and the Democratic Army formed the "Provisional Democratic Government" ("Mountain Government") under the premiership of Markos Vafiadis. After this, KKE turned illegal.

As well as issues regarding the war effort, the Provisional Government had to deal with issues regarding the "People's Law" in the territories controlled by the DSE. These had to do with the judicial, financial, and political systems. As the Provisional Government was based on political forces which aimed to establish a socialist state, its decisions were driven by this political agenda. The self-determination of national minorities living in Greece was one priority. The Provisional Government and the KKE intended to establish a People's Republic of Greece in which all nationalities would work together in a Socialist state.[5] 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...."[6] 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...."[7]

 
Fighters of the Democratic Army of Greece
 
Markos Vafeiadis, commander-in-chief of DSE
 
Democratic Army deployment in 1948
 
Fighters of the Democratic Army

The Provisional Government never achieved international recognition. During the first two years, from 1946 to the beginning of 1948, it managed to control large rural areas but no major town. At the same time, the Hellenic Army, advised by the British up to 1947 and afterwards by US military delegation led by General James Van Fleet, US Army, established the Greek government's position in the rest of the country as well as internationally.[8]

After the fatal blow in early 1948, when DSE's III Brigade numbering 20,000 men and women was completely wiped out, DSE lost support in southern Greece as well as the political and economic control of a huge area. That was the beginning of the end of the Greek Civil War. At the same time, the efforts of the HQ of DSE to capture and hold a major town in the North such as Konitsa or Florina led to catastrophic defeat of the partisan army, which never recovered. On the other hand, the DSE did manage to achieve some military victories in 1948 and early 1949, in the battles of Karpenisi, Naousa, and Karditsa. At the same time, DSE had a huge problem regarding reserves. Most of the men and women capable and willing to join its ranks were imprisoned or unable to reach areas controlled by DSE.

One of the biggest battles of the three-year Greek Civil War took place in the Grammos mountains in 1948. The operation took place after the Hellenic Army had secured the Peloponnese, where it managed to defeat the DSE's III Division, numbering 20,000 fighters. In the battle of Grammos, forces of the Hellenic Army, with the codename Operation Koronis, deployed 70,000 troops, while the DSE had 12,000 fighters.[9] The battle lasted from 16 June until 21 August 1948. On that day, DSE forces, after hard fight, retreated into Albanian territory and reformed towards Vitsi.[10] The maneuver from Grammos to Vitsi is considered one of the most important tactical actions of DSE during the war, from a military point of view.

Towards the end of August 1949, the Hellenic Army, under the leadership of Alexander Papagos, deployed 180,000 troops, and achieved the defeat of the DSE army of about 7,000 fighters on the Grammos-Vitsi front. After this defeat, the DSE fighters crossed the border into Albania and scattered to camps all over the newly founded Socialist Republics, with the main body of the fighters camped in Taskent, the capital of Uzbekistan in the USSR.

The post-Civil War era left a country in ruins. Many of the nation's youth were either killed on the battlefield, imprisoned or became political refugees. The political situation was quite unstable for most of the next two decades – the decisive factor leading to the Greek military junta of 1967–1974. The ghost of the Civil War haunted Greece for many years after. In 1981, when the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) party came to power in Greece following a long period of right-wing dominance, the political refugees of the DSE were finally given permission to return to their homeland (Slavic Macedonians excluded) by the new Interior Minister, George Gennimatas. Markos Vafiadis also returned to Greece and supported the PASOK government, and was elected a Member of Parliament for PASOK.

In 1989, the Greek Parliament voted unanimously a law that declared the three-year war of 1946–1949 as formally having been the "Greek Civil War" and accepted the former "Communist Bandits" as "Fighters of DSE", giving some of them privileges of pension.

Awards and decorations

On 4 April 1948, the Provisional Democratic Government's Law Number 13 established awards and decorations in order to mark extraordinary bravery and courage, as well as distinguished service during times of war by individual DSE soldiers and well as units. The aforementioned law established the following awards and decorations:

  • Medal of Military Valor Grade A and B
  • Electra Medal
  • Sniper Distinguished Service Medal
  • Saboteur Distinguished Service Medal
  • Distinguished Service in an Occupied City Medal
  • Artillery Distinguished Service Medal
  • Navy Distinguished Service Medal
  • Distinguished Service in the Monarchist-Fascist Army Medal
  • Aircraft Destruction Medal
  • Tank Destruction Medal
  • Distinguished Scouting Service Medal
  • Wound Badge
  • Distinction for Past Service in ELAS
  • Seniority Distinction[11]

Α Provisional Democratic Government decree dating to 24 March 1949, awarded 33 participants of the Battle of Litochoro with the Medal of Military Valor which bore the inscription "LITOCHORO".[12] A total of 970 DSE members received medals during the course of the civil war, including 557 men and 413 women.[13]

The Oath of the DSE fighter

The following text was the oath that DSE members must swear and abide by. During enrollment, the member would swear:

“I, a child of the Greek people and a DSE fighter, swear to battle with gun in hand, to shed my blood, and give even my life to banish from the soil of my motherland every last foreign occupier. To banish every trace of fascism. To secure and defend the national independence and territorial integrity of my motherland. To secure and defend democracy, honor, work, fortune, and progress of my people.
I swear to be a good, brave and disciplined soldier, to carry out all the orders of my superiors, to observe all regulations, and not betray any secrets of the DSE.
I swear to be a good example to the people, to encourage popular unity and reconciliation, and to avoid any action that reduces and dishonors me, as a person and as a fighter.
My ideal is a free and strong democratic Greece and the progress and prosperity of the people. And in the service of my ideal I offer my gun and my life.
If I ever prove to be a liar, and with bad intent violate my oath, let the vengeful hand of the nation, and the hate and scorn of the people, fall upon me implacably.”

[original text][14][15][16]

References

  1. ^ Βραζιτούλη, Γιώργου Μ. (10 June 2010). "Στρατηγοί και αντάρτες του Δημοκρατικού Στρατού στην Ανατολική Γερμανία". Ιχνηλατώντας την Ιστορία (in Greek). Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  2. ^ Kamarinos 2015, p. 101.
  3. ^ Kyritsis 2012, pp. 98–102.
  4. ^ Daily Orders General Command, DSE, 28 December 1946
  5. ^ Study on the History of KKE.
  6. ^ Δημοκρατικός Στρατός magazine, edited by Ριζοσπάστης, 1996, vol. I, pp. 408-412.
  7. ^ KKE, Official Documents, vol. 6, pp. 356, 338.
  8. ^ Δοκίμιο Ιστορίας του ΚΚΕ
  9. ^ Timothy Boatswain and Colin Nicholson: A Traveller's History of Greece, The Windrush Press, Gloucestershire, 1989, p. 240
  10. ^ Shrader, Charles R. (1999). The withered vine : logistics and the communist insurgency in Greece, 1945-1949 ([Online-Ausg.] ed.). Westport, Conn.: Praeger. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-275-96544-0.
  11. ^ Kyritsis 2012, pp. 298–299.
  12. ^ Kyritsis 2012, p. 102.
  13. ^ Kyritsis 2012, p. 301.
  14. ^
  15. ^ ΡΙΖΟΣΠΑΣΤΗΣ : Ο χαρακτήρας του και η βασική του στρατηγική επιδίωξη
  16. ^ Flag of the Greek Democratic Army

Notes

  • ^ «Εγώ, παιδί του Λαού της Ελλάδας και μαχητής του ΔΣΕ, ορκίζομαι: Να πολεμήσω με το όπλο στο χέρι, να χύσω το αίμα μου και να δώσω την ίδια μου τη ζωή, για να διώξω από τα χώματα της πατρίδας μου και τον τελευταίο ξένο καταχτητή. Για να εξαφανίσω κάθε ίχνος φασισμού. Για να εξασφαλίσω και να υπερασπίσω την εθνική ανεξαρτησία και την εδαφική ακεραιότητα της πατρίδας μου. Για να εξασφαλίσω και να υπερασπίσω τη Δημοκρατία, την τιμή, την εργασία, την περιουσία και πρόοδο του λαού μου. Ορκίζομαι να είμαι καλός, γενναίος και πειθαρχικός στρατιώτης, να εκτελώ όλες τις διαταγές των ανωτέρων μου, να τηρώ όλες τις διατάξεις του κανονισμού και να κρατώ τα μυστικά του ΔΣΕ. Ορκίζομαι να είμαι υπόδειγμα καλής συμπεριφοράς προς το λαό, φορέας και εμψυχωτής στη λαϊκή ενότητα και συμφιλίωση και να αποφεύγω κάθε πράξη, που θα με εκθέτει και θα με ατιμάζει σαν άτομο και σα μαχητή. Ιδανικό μου έχω τη λεύθερη και ισχυρή Δημοκρατική Ελλάδα, την πρόοδο και ευημερία του λαού. Και στην υπηρεσία του ιδανικού μου θέτω το όπλο μου και τη ζωή μου. Αν ποτέ φανώ επίορκος και από κακή πρόθεση παραβώ τον όρκο μου, ας πέσει πάνω μου αμείλικτο το τιμωρό χέρι της Πατρίδας και το μίσος και η καταφρόνια του λαού μου».

Sources

  • Kamarinos, Aristos (2015). Ο εμφύλιος πόλεμος στη Πελοπόννησο 1946-1949 [The Civil War in the Peloponesse (1946-1949)] (in Greek). Athens: Syghroni Epoxi. ISBN 9789602248720.
  • Kyritsis, Nikos (2012). Δημοκρατικός Στρατός Ελλάδας. Ιδρυση - Μονάδες - Αξιωματικοί - Δυνάμεις - Απώλειες - Κοινωνική Σύνθεση [Democratic Army of Greece. Creation – Units – Officers – Strength – Casualties – Social Structure] (in Greek). Athens: Syghroni Epoxi. ISBN 978-960-451-146-4.

democratic, army, greece, other, uses, delta, sigma, epsilon, delta, sigma, epsilon, disambiguation, greek, Δημοκρατικός, Στρατός, Ελλάδας, ΔΣΕ, romanized, dimokratikós, stratós, elládas, army, founded, communist, party, greece, during, greek, civil, 1946, 194. For other uses of Delta Sigma Epsilon see Delta Sigma Epsilon disambiguation The Democratic Army of Greece DAG Greek Dhmokratikos Stratos Elladas DSE romanized Dimokratikos Stratos Elladas DSE was the army founded by the Communist Party of Greece during the Greek Civil War 1946 1949 At its height it had a strength of around 50 000 men and women Democratic Army of GreeceDhmokratikos Stratos ElladasBadge of the DSE The letter Delta stands for Demokratia meaning Democracy and Republic LeadersNikos Zachariadis Gen Sec of the KKE Markos Vafiadis military leader President of the Provisional Government Dates of operation1946 1949AllegianceKKEDemocratic Government from 1947 IdeologyCommunismRepublicanismLeft wing nationalismHellenic nationalismMinorities rightsAnti FascismAnti imperialismAlliesEastern Bloc Albania Yugoslavia until July 1949 OpponentsKingdom of Greece Hellenic Army Hellenic Gendarmerie United Kingdom British Army United States American ArmyBattles and warsGreek Civil War Battle of GrammosThe DSE was backed up by the Popular Civil Guard Laikh Politofylakh LP the Communist Party s security police force Contents 1 History 2 Awards and decorations 3 The Oath of the DSE fighter 4 References 5 Notes 6 SourcesHistory EditAfter the liberation of Greece from the Axis occupation the Dekemvriana and the Varkiza Agreement in which ELAS the main Partisan Army in Greece agreed to a disarmament the persecution of left wing citizens communists and officials of EAM started There were 166 different anti communist groups such as those of Sourlas and Kalabalikis in Thessaly and Papadopoulos in Macedonia Archives of D S National Solidarity indicate that by 31 March 1946 nationwide 1 289 suspected communists had been killed 6 671 had been wounded 84 931 had been arrested 165 been raped and the property of 18 767 was looted Imprisoned suspected communists numbered in excess of 30 000 Those responsible for the murders according to the DSE were collaborationist groups national guards rural police and members of the British armed forces One of the flags used by the Greek Democratic Army during the Greek Civil War from 1946 1949 1 After the second party congress of KKE in February 1946 approximately 250 leftist self defence militias known as Groups of Democratic Armed Persecuted Fighters ODEKA were formed across Greece totaling some 3 000 men Most of the militiamen were former ELAS fighters 2 By April ODEKA membership had grown to 4 400 fighters reaching 5 400 fighters by August Between April and June 1946 ODEKA fighters took part in 72 clashes mainly targeting the Greek Gendarmerie and right wing paramilitary squads The first coordinated attack by ODEKA took place on the night of 30 31 March 1946 when a band of 33 guerillas struck the Gendarmerie station at Litochoro killing 13 gendarmes The Battle of Litochoro marked the beginning of the third phase of the Greek Civil War 3 Organization and military bases of the Democratic Army as well as entry routes to Greece legend in Greek The Communist Party of Greece led the armed struggle through the General Partisan Command which was created on 28 October 1946 and headed by Markos Vafiadis Order number 19 of the General Command issued on 27 December 1946 renamed the guerilla groups to the Democratic Army of Greece DSE The relevant order 4 included the following comment regarding the DSE It is the national people s revolutionary army of the new Democratic Greece and fights with gun in hand for our National independence and for People s Democracy In 1947 KKE and the Democratic Army formed the Provisional Democratic Government Mountain Government under the premiership of Markos Vafiadis After this KKE turned illegal As well as issues regarding the war effort the Provisional Government had to deal with issues regarding the People s Law in the territories controlled by the DSE These had to do with the judicial financial and political systems As the Provisional Government was based on political forces which aimed to establish a socialist state its decisions were driven by this political agenda The self determination of national minorities living in Greece was one priority The Provisional Government and the KKE intended to establish a People s Republic of Greece in which all nationalities would work together in a Socialist state 5 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 6 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 7 Fighters of the Democratic Army of Greece Markos Vafeiadis commander in chief of DSE Democratic Army deployment in 1948 Fighters of the Democratic Army The Provisional Government never achieved international recognition During the first two years from 1946 to the beginning of 1948 it managed to control large rural areas but no major town At the same time the Hellenic Army advised by the British up to 1947 and afterwards by US military delegation led by General James Van Fleet US Army established the Greek government s position in the rest of the country as well as internationally 8 After the fatal blow in early 1948 when DSE s III Brigade numbering 20 000 men and women was completely wiped out DSE lost support in southern Greece as well as the political and economic control of a huge area That was the beginning of the end of the Greek Civil War At the same time the efforts of the HQ of DSE to capture and hold a major town in the North such as Konitsa or Florina led to catastrophic defeat of the partisan army which never recovered On the other hand the DSE did manage to achieve some military victories in 1948 and early 1949 in the battles of Karpenisi Naousa and Karditsa At the same time DSE had a huge problem regarding reserves Most of the men and women capable and willing to join its ranks were imprisoned or unable to reach areas controlled by DSE One of the biggest battles of the three year Greek Civil War took place in the Grammos mountains in 1948 The operation took place after the Hellenic Army had secured the Peloponnese where it managed to defeat the DSE s III Division numbering 20 000 fighters In the battle of Grammos forces of the Hellenic Army with the codename Operation Koronis deployed 70 000 troops while the DSE had 12 000 fighters 9 The battle lasted from 16 June until 21 August 1948 On that day DSE forces after hard fight retreated into Albanian territory and reformed towards Vitsi 10 The maneuver from Grammos to Vitsi is considered one of the most important tactical actions of DSE during the war from a military point of view Towards the end of August 1949 the Hellenic Army under the leadership of Alexander Papagos deployed 180 000 troops and achieved the defeat of the DSE army of about 7 000 fighters on the Grammos Vitsi front After this defeat the DSE fighters crossed the border into Albania and scattered to camps all over the newly founded Socialist Republics with the main body of the fighters camped in Taskent the capital of Uzbekistan in the USSR The post Civil War era left a country in ruins Many of the nation s youth were either killed on the battlefield imprisoned or became political refugees The political situation was quite unstable for most of the next two decades the decisive factor leading to the Greek military junta of 1967 1974 The ghost of the Civil War haunted Greece for many years after In 1981 when the Panhellenic Socialist Movement PASOK party came to power in Greece following a long period of right wing dominance the political refugees of the DSE were finally given permission to return to their homeland Slavic Macedonians excluded by the new Interior Minister George Gennimatas Markos Vafiadis also returned to Greece and supported the PASOK government and was elected a Member of Parliament for PASOK In 1989 the Greek Parliament voted unanimously a law that declared the three year war of 1946 1949 as formally having been the Greek Civil War and accepted the former Communist Bandits as Fighters of DSE giving some of them privileges of pension Awards and decorations EditOn 4 April 1948 the Provisional Democratic Government s Law Number 13 established awards and decorations in order to mark extraordinary bravery and courage as well as distinguished service during times of war by individual DSE soldiers and well as units The aforementioned law established the following awards and decorations Medal of Military Valor Grade A and B Electra Medal Sniper Distinguished Service Medal Saboteur Distinguished Service Medal Distinguished Service in an Occupied City Medal Artillery Distinguished Service Medal Navy Distinguished Service Medal Distinguished Service in the Monarchist Fascist Army Medal Aircraft Destruction Medal Tank Destruction Medal Distinguished Scouting Service Medal Wound Badge Distinction for Past Service in ELAS Seniority Distinction 11 A Provisional Democratic Government decree dating to 24 March 1949 awarded 33 participants of the Battle of Litochoro with the Medal of Military Valor which bore the inscription LITOCHORO 12 A total of 970 DSE members received medals during the course of the civil war including 557 men and 413 women 13 The Oath of the DSE fighter EditThe following text was the oath that DSE members must swear and abide by During enrollment the member would swear I a child of the Greek people and a DSE fighter swear to battle with gun in hand to shed my blood and give even my life to banish from the soil of my motherland every last foreign occupier To banish every trace of fascism To secure and defend the national independence and territorial integrity of my motherland To secure and defend democracy honor work fortune and progress of my people I swear to be a good brave and disciplined soldier to carry out all the orders of my superiors to observe all regulations and not betray any secrets of the DSE I swear to be a good example to the people to encourage popular unity and reconciliation and to avoid any action that reduces and dishonors me as a person and as a fighter My ideal is a free and strong democratic Greece and the progress and prosperity of the people And in the service of my ideal I offer my gun and my life If I ever prove to be a liar and with bad intent violate my oath let the vengeful hand of the nation and the hate and scorn of the people fall upon me implacably original text 14 15 16 References EditThis article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Brazitoylh Giwrgoy M 10 June 2010 Strathgoi kai antartes toy Dhmokratikoy Stratoy sthn Anatolikh Germania Ixnhlatwntas thn Istoria in Greek Retrieved 28 August 2019 Kamarinos 2015 p 101 Kyritsis 2012 pp 98 102 Daily Orders General Command DSE 28 December 1946 Study on the History of KKE Dhmokratikos Stratos magazine edited by Rizospasths 1996 vol I pp 408 412 KKE Official Documents vol 6 pp 356 338 Dokimio Istorias toy KKE Timothy Boatswain and Colin Nicholson A Traveller s History of Greece The Windrush Press Gloucestershire 1989 p 240 Shrader Charles R 1999 The withered vine logistics and the communist insurgency in Greece 1945 1949 Online Ausg ed Westport Conn Praeger p 70 ISBN 978 0 275 96544 0 Kyritsis 2012 pp 298 299 Kyritsis 2012 p 102 Kyritsis 2012 p 301 Politikh epitroph gia thn Anasynta3h toy KKE 1918 55 RIZOSPASTHS O xarakthras toy kai h basikh toy strathgikh epidiw3h Flag of the Greek Democratic ArmyNotes Edit Egw paidi toy Laoy ths Elladas kai maxhths toy DSE orkizomai Na polemhsw me to oplo sto xeri na xysw to aima moy kai na dwsw thn idia moy th zwh gia na diw3w apo ta xwmata ths patridas moy kai ton teleytaio 3eno kataxthth Gia na e3afanisw ka8e ixnos fasismoy Gia na e3asfalisw kai na yperaspisw thn e8nikh ane3arthsia kai thn edafikh akeraiothta ths patridas moy Gia na e3asfalisw kai na yperaspisw th Dhmokratia thn timh thn ergasia thn perioysia kai proodo toy laoy moy Orkizomai na eimai kalos gennaios kai pei8arxikos stratiwths na ektelw oles tis diatages twn anwterwn moy na thrw oles tis diata3eis toy kanonismoy kai na kratw ta mystika toy DSE Orkizomai na eimai ypodeigma kalhs symperiforas pros to lao foreas kai empsyxwths sth laikh enothta kai symfiliwsh kai na apofeygw ka8e pra3h poy 8a me ek8etei kai 8a me atimazei san atomo kai sa maxhth Idaniko moy exw th ley8erh kai isxyrh Dhmokratikh Ellada thn proodo kai eyhmeria toy laoy Kai sthn yphresia toy idanikoy moy 8etw to oplo moy kai th zwh moy An pote fanw epiorkos kai apo kakh pro8esh parabw ton orko moy as pesei panw moy ameilikto to timwro xeri ths Patridas kai to misos kai h katafronia toy laoy moy Sources EditKamarinos Aristos 2015 O emfylios polemos sth Peloponnhso 1946 1949 The Civil War in the Peloponesse 1946 1949 in Greek Athens Syghroni Epoxi ISBN 9789602248720 Kyritsis Nikos 2012 Dhmokratikos Stratos Elladas Idrysh Monades A3iwmatikoi Dynameis Apwleies Koinwnikh Syn8esh Democratic Army of Greece Creation Units Officers Strength Casualties Social Structure in Greek Athens Syghroni Epoxi ISBN 978 960 451 146 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Democratic Army of Greece amp oldid 1140818557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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