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The German Invasion of 1941
Initially the war against Germany and
Italy went very well for Greece. The nation rallied behind Metaxas,
and men of all political persuasions joined the military. Under the
leadership of General Georgios Tsolakoglou, the Greek army in Epirus
drove the Italians out of Greece and through most of Albania by early
December. For many Greeks, this campaign was an opportunity to
liberate their countrymen across the Albanian border in "Northern
Epirus." The campaign stalled in cold weather, then it lost its
leader, Metaxas, who died in January 1941. The British, who at this
time had no other active ally in the region, provided air and ground
support. But poor coordination between the allied forces made Greece
vulnerable to a massive German attack in the spring of 1941, which was
intended to secure the Nazi southern flank in preparation for the
invasion of Russia. Under the German blitzkrieg, the Greek and British
forces quickly fell. Most of the British force escaped, but
Tsolakoglou, trapped between the Italian and the German armies, was
forced to capitulate. Athens fell shortly afterward as the second
element of the German invasion force rushed southward. King George II,
his government, and the remnants of the Greek army fled to Crete.
Crete fell the next month, however, and George established a
government-in-exile in Egypt.
By June 1941, Greece had been divided
among Bulgaria, Germany, and Italy. The Germans controlled all the
most critical points: Athens, Thessaloniki, Crete, the Thracian border
zone with Turkey, and a number of the Aegean Islands. The Bulgarians
were given Thrace and most of Macedonia, which they proceeded to rule
with an iron hand. The Italians occupied the rest of Greece. From the
outset, however, the Germans effectively controlled the country,
ruling harshly through the collaborationist governments of Tsolakoglou
and later Ioannis Rallis. The German plundering of the nation's
resources for the war effort combined with a British naval blockade to
cause food shortages, massive inflation, and finally a devastating
famine that killed as many as 100,000 people in the winter of 1941-42.
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