UN Secretariat Item Scan - Barcode - Record Title Page 195 Date 15/06/2006 Time 9:27:45 AM

S-0903-0011-04-00001

Expanded Number S-0903-0011 -04-00001

Title items-in- - documents, resolutions, reports by the Secretary-General - press tickers

Date Created 15/07/1974

Record Type Archival Item

Container s-0903-0011: Peackeeping - Cyprus 1971 -1981

Print Name of Person Submit Image Signature of Person Submit NU27 4 V0IR NU 21-22. AJOURNEHENT CHYPHE —/UN. NATI0NS UNIES (NEW Y0RK)? 10.~(AFP>— . IL EST THES PEU PROBABLE QUE LES ENTHETIENS INTERCOMMUNAU- ^# TAIIES SUR "CMYPSE REPRENDRONT, EN TOUS CAS DANS LES DEUX MQJLS. *&: aui SUIVENT, A DECLARE MERCREDI SOIR AUX JOURNALlTtTr^TTLAFKOS CEERTDESTTtEPRESENTANT DE LA COMMUNAUTE CHYPRIOTE GREC3UE, APRES L'AJOURNEMEMT DES ENTRETIENS SANS AUCUN RESULTAT. M» CLERIDES A FAIT VALQIR -"QU'lL NE SERT A RIEN DE TENIR DES CONVERSATIONS SI L'ON NE VEUT PAS NEGOCIER. IL FAUT DOMC ATTENDRE QUE'LA PARTIE CHYPRIOTE TURQUE S£ MONTRE DISPOSES A NEGOCIER AVANT DE TENIR UNE NOUVELLE'SESSION D'ENTRETIENS INTERCOMMUNAUTAIRES." Mo CLERIDES A DECLARE ENCORE QUE LE SECRETAIRE GENERAL, M. • WALDHEIM, AVAIT PRESENTS UN CERTAIN NOMBRE DE SUGGESTIONS (IL S'ACISSAIT NOTAMMENT. INDIQUE T-ON PAR AILLEURS,'DE LA QUESTION? 0ES REFUGIES) QUI AURAIEMT PU PERMETTHE DE POURSUIVRE LES NEGOCIA- TIONS* MAIS M, DEMKTASH, A-T-IL SIT, A REJETE CES SUGGESTIONS. LES ENTRETIENS SONT ALORS DP/ENUS SANS OBJET. (SUIVRA) AW/HFJ631

NU2S • 4 AJOURNEMENT CHYPRE--DEUX DERNIER. NATIONS UNIES, N.Y.- •"UNE EXCELLENTE OCCASION A ETE PERDUE DE FAI8E DES PROGRES, A DIT M* CLERIDES, D/OQUANT .LES NOMBREUX PR08LEMES QUI DEMEURENT, ET NOTAMMENT LA PRESENCE SUR LE SOL DE CHYPRE DE 30,000 SOLDATS ^ TURCS, LE FAIT QUE'L'ADMINISTRATION L^AEROPORT DE NICOSIE, QUI EST EN ETAT BE FONCTIONNEMENT. NPA PAS ENC9RE PU ETRE REAFFECTE A L'AVIATION CIVILE. A CAUSE, A-T-IL DIT, BE L^ATTITUDE CHYPRIOTE TURQUE LES BIENS GRECS SAISISj ETC, M* CLERIDES A RENDU HOMMAGE AUX CASQUES BLEUS DE L'ONU, ET **A LA PATIENCE, A LA COMPREHENSION ET A L'HABILITE" DE He WALDHEIM DANS LES ENTRETIENS QUI VIENNENT DE SE DEROULER* • . H. CLERIDES VA RENTRES A CHYPRE EN S'ARRETANT A LONDRES ET , POUR SA PART. LE REPRESENTANT DE LA COMMUNAUTE CHYPRIOTE TORQUE. 'M. HAUF DENKTASH. PARLANT AUX JOURNALISTES, A DECLARE •dU'IL BEHEURAIT A \A DISPOSITION BE M. CLERIBES A CHYPRE, ET QUI LES PROBLEMS N^ETAIENT PAS RESOLUS MAINTENANT, ILS LE SER- AIENT DANS UN AVENIR NOW RECULE* CFIN) 1 ^ Q /u, UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES /

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ^^~ MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: THE SECRETARY GENERAL DATE: ifi AUGUST A:

REFERENCE: IQlOO Rtm,

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: s.N. GRANITSAS - OPI

CYPRUS

ECEVIT ANNOUNCED TURKEY WILL KEEP CEASE - FIRE AT NOON, AFTER HAVING COMPLETED OBJECTIVE, THAT IS OCCUPYING NORTHERN PART OF ISLAND. CLERIDES AND HIS GOVERNMENT ABANDONED BECAUSE OF CONTINUED MILITARY ACTION. THEY HAVE GONE TO LIMASSOL, AP REPORTS r r .' '•"••• UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ~^~ MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

T0. THE SECRETARY GENERAL DATE: AUGUST 15 f I97k A: • 5.45 REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM- S.N. GRMITSAS - DPI DE:

SUBJECT: OBJET: RNR 883 CYPRUS - CLERIDES NICOSIA , AU3 15? REUTER — PRESIDENT GLAFKOS CLERIDES TOLD THE GREEK CYPRIOT PEOPLE TONIGHT THEY MUST FIGHT ON AS IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE TO ACCEPT TURKEY S ULTIMATUM FOR AN AUTONOMOUS TURKISH CYPRIOT REGION ACROSS . MR CLERIDES WAS MAKING A RADIO BROADCAST AFTER AN EMERGENCY MEETING OF CABINET MINISTERS, OPPOSITION LEADERS, TRADE UNION LEADERS AND BUSINESSMEN SUMMONED TO DISCUSS THE NEW TURKISH OFFENSIVE ON THE ISLAND. THE PRESIDENT SAID THE MEETING HAD FAILED TO REACH ANY DEFINITE CONCLUSIONS. HE SAID IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE TO ACCEPT THE TURKISH ULTIMATUM AND THAT THE GREEK CYPRIOTS WOULD HAVE TO CARRY ON THEIR STRUGGLE.

DECLARATIONS CLERIDIs NICOsIE, ST AOUT (AFP) ; - - - - A LISSUE DZ SA RESIGN AVEC LEs PRINCIPALS REPRESS TAM TS DZS GRZCs DE CH-vpRE, LE PRESIDS^T GLAFCOs CLERIDZS A FAIT, ALA RADIO GREC,1UE DE CH YPRE CAPTEE A TEL AVIV LA' DECLARATION SUIVA^TEJ SS-JE ME SUIS RENDU A GENEVE, AVEC LIN TUITION DABGUTIR A UN ACCORD aUI AURAIT PU SATIsFAlRE T3UTES LES PARTIES. JAI MALHEUREU- SEMS^T Cff^sTATE aUE LES TU2C£ HE SETAIEtfT PAs RD'DUS A GRIEVE POUR MEGOCIER, MAIs POUR sQUMETTRE DES ULTIMATUK. Sx T^J T HUF GRECc NQUs NAVa-'Js PAS LHABITUDE DE :!OUS IHCLINER DEVAN T D£s DIKTATS. LES EXIGVT-ICES TUR1UES ETAIENT DE" TELLE NATURE 4UE NOUS NE PQUVl^s SUE. LES REJZTER. JE CRGls SUE Vt®S CETTE DECISION. JAVAIT, AU MOM^ OU JS LAI PRIsEj LAPPUI Dl TQUS LES GRECS CHYPRIQTES ET DZ TGUTE LA NATION KSLLSJE. IL SZ FAIT PAs DE DQUTZ: POUR KOI HUE NQUS S^RTIROMs VAIN- aUEURs DE CETTE IPREUVS, Si NOUS OEUVRG^Is M*S UM ESPRIT BUNION NATIffl'ALE. ' • ' EN CE a'JI ME C£HCERNEj MQII SEUL CRITZRE sHRA LINTERZT DE LANATI^I, ET JE NHESITERAI P/S A PREHDRE TOUTES DZCIsIONs SXI GEES'PAR LE^TERET NATIONAL. JIZ SUIs CERTAEI 1UE LA DET~R-- MINATIffil, LE COURAGE ET LA RESOLUTION DE LA NATION MACCOMPAGGERS'! T. SSDIEU EST AVEC VOUS. r c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

THE SECRETARY GENERAL 15 AUGUST 197'|

REFERENCE: p.m.

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: S.N. GRANITSAS - OPI PPSG DE:

SUBJECT: OBJET: CLERIDES' STATEMENT

ACCORDING TO UNFICYP INFORMATION, NICOSIA AIRPORT IS KOT OPERATING, AND IT IS THEREFORE UNCERTAIN IF CLERIDES IS ACTUALLY ON CYPRUS OR NOT (NOON BRIEFING). C WE HAVE THE FOLLOWING URGENT MESSAGES FROM AFP:

DEMENTI DE M. CLERIDES

ATHEWES 15.S.74 KAFP)

DAT-Is UWE COMMUNICATION TELEPHONIQUE AVEC LE PREMIER MINIS TEE GRTC, M. CCHsTA^TIN CARAI£TALIS» LE PRESIDENT DE LA REPUELIttUE CH YPRI Q TF9 M. GL AF COS CLERI DEs 9 A DEMEN TI FORMELLEMEN T L IN FOR - MATIGN PUELIEE A LE TRACER SELffil LAaUELLE IL AVAIT LIMTET'l TION' DE CEDER AUX TRUCs LA REGICN SEPTEN TRIONN ALE DE CHyPREj APPRS1^ D ON DE SOURCE AU TOR I SEE A A THEMES. M. a SRI DES-A PRECISE QUJL AVAIT COTVOSUE MERCREDI APRES MIDI LEI-ISEMBLE DES PERSONALITES POLITISUES CH^RIOTESJ AFIM DE LES INFORMER DE'LA SlTUAHOM MILITAIRE ET POLITiaUE DE LILE ET D ONE FA CON OENERALE PROCEDER A UT^I ECH/SGE DE VUES • 9 BIEN LIRE CEDER AUX TURCs.

' AV/NT LA REUNION CCNVQaUEE HAR LE PRESIDENT CLERIDES

NI COS IE 15 AOUT

SELCfs' RADIO"MICOSIE, DAMs'SCN BULLETIN DIN FORM ATION DE 11H30 GMT 9 DIM PORT ANTES DECISIONS SERONT PRISES AU f^OURS DE LA REUNICN PAN-CH^RIOTE aUE PRESIDERA LE HRESlD^T CHTiPRIOTE M. GLAFCOs KLERI DES A 12 HEURES GMT. TOUs LES DEPUTES ET AN CIENs DEPUTES? LA TOTALITE DES MIN Is- IRESi LES CHEFs DES HARTIS PQLITISUES ET DES OR GA'JIs ATICNc DCNT L EOKA B AINsI SUE LES PROPRIETAIRES DES JO URN AUX ' CH ^R10 TES E T TES RE PRES 3$ T^1 TS DES DE TE?-J Us POL I TI aUES 9 Y S CW T • RADIO NICOSIE ME DONNE AUCUNE PRECISION aUA'JT AUX DECIcIQNs aUI PQURRAIHJT ETRE PRISES. r r UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

ATTfgTffP TO: A: THE SECRETARY GSWERAL REFERENCE: 1 • OO p.Ttl.

THROUGH: S/C DE:

S.N. GRAHITSAS - DPI

U-S. IN CYPRUS RNR 824 CYPRUS - GAETA , , AUG. 15, REUTER -- THE FLAGSHIP OF AMERICA S SIXTH FLEET IN THE MEDITERRANEAN, THE CRUISER LITTLE ROCK, STEAMED OUT OF GAETA HARBOR SUDDENLY TODAY, INFORMED SOURCES REPORTED — PRESUMABLY ON A MISSION CONNECTED WITH THE CYPRUS CRISIS. THE SHIP S COMMANDER RECALLED CREW MEMBERS ON SHORE LEAVE DURING ITALY S MAIN SUMMER HOLIDAY. THE LITTLE ROCK HAD NOT BEEN SCHEDULED TO LEAVE BASE UNT IL THE BEGINNING OF SEPTEMBER. OBSERVERS CLOSE TO U.S. NAVY HEADQUARTERS IN NAPLES SAID IT WAS GENERALLY ASSUMED THAT THE SAILING OF THE LITTLE ROCK WAS CONNECTED WITH THE FIGHTING IN CYPRUS. CHYPRE EMISSAIRE AMERICAIN A ANKARA • K AR fy I 5 AOU T( AFP ) U??r'IMPOR.T/NTE_PERsCNNALITZ DU DEPARTSIISJ^T DETAT AMERICAIM ZST ATTSJDUE JIUDI SOIR A L AERO DROME DE iJESlLKO YKIS TPMBUL), APPREND ON JEUDI APRES MIDI DE SOURCE GENER ALEMSN T BIE^ ' IH FORKEE. ' L IDENTITY EXACTE DE LEMISSAIRE PRESUME DU DR NEST PAS ENCORE CGHNUE. CATP). c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

1 AUGUST TO: THE SECRETARY GENERAL A: 12:50 p.m. REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRANITSAS - OPI, PPSG

SUBJECT: OBJET: STATEMENT BY MAKARIOS AFP07S ' WO URGENT'*' '""•'" CH "VPRE MGR MAKARIOS ACCUSE LA TUR2UIE DE VIOLER SES ENGAGEMENTS

LCWDRES 1ER AOUT (AFP) LARCHEVEaUE A ACCUSE L A TURQUIE DAVDIR VI OLE SES ENGAGEMENTS A CH ^RE> EN BQMBARDM T DEUX GRA"*I VILLAGES GRECS? VIKGT SUATRE HEURES APRES LA CONSECRATION DU CESSEZ-LE-FEU PAR LA CONFERENCE DE GENEVE. PARLffIT AUX JOURNALISTES APRES UNE EWTREVUE DE 40 MINUTES AVEC LE SECRETAIRE AU FOREIGH OFFICE? M. JAMES CALLAGKAtf, MGR MAKARIQS A DECLARE I IL EsT EVIDS^T QUE LES TURCs SIT NOW SEULEMENT PORTE AFFRONT A LOPINIOf-I MCW DI ALE ET A LS^U MAIS ILS OHT MAHSUE DHffiJQRER LEURS PROPRES PAROLES. IL A AJCUTE : A MOINs QUE LES TURCs NACCEPTENT DE SE RETIRER DES DEUX ' VILLAGES JE ME DEMAMDE SlL EST SOUHAI TABLE aUE LA CONFERENCE REPRS5NE SES TRAVAUX AVEC LA PARTI CIPATIDM DE CH TPRE, LE 8 AOUT PRO CHAIN A GENEVE. JE PE^SE aUE DES HRESSlCNs DEVRAIENT ETRE EXERCEES SUR LA TURSUIE POUR aUELLE RESPECTS SES Ef^ GAGEMEN TS. SUIVRA.... AFP AFP079 WO CH -tfPRE LOHDRES— MGR MAKARIOS ACCUSE ....DEUX MGR MAKARIQS A COrJFIRME DAUTRE PART aUIL NE CCMPTAIT PAS SE RS^DRE A GEI-JEVE POUR ASSISTER AUX NOUVELLES MEGOCIATIONS ET A LAISSE ENTENDRE SUIL NAVAIT PAs DQBJECTIOM A CE aUV LES GRECs C^HIOTES YSQIEMT REPRESEMTES PAR M. GLAFCOS CLERIDE^, INTERIMAIRET . • MGR MAKARIOs A DAUTRE PART IN DlflUE QUAU COURS DE qOM M- AGH/H - flUI A DONNE LIEU A W IW ECHAMGE ffi VUE, C°MM3'>JTAIRZS UR LACCORD COM CLU I S IVrHUb - bhUUfUS NluHiUHi) nSIKRRiOb LONDOrl= JULV 30; REUlER -- RRCHBISHOP pjfiKfiRIOS HRS GUHRDED

. _f .1 :- : •: •— •-! : w s •= - •-• : : I - : ~ : •. — *- •- — .' i v ! i i M.

TUu P; CT D f; C iT n f ' U D r= T f> f DDiTCTf-iTsiT i.i : F i \- -.- '-. i I.' ..' U •/ L- • • ••-. i :_: ! = ".. ;_ _t i L." L :? ! .'• H

:• : i: rs •; i r ; T :— : : •. • • ; • • : '' • ' •— • • ~ : r • f ' t i V • J : : : A i : : : i i-, Lu : : «• U. ;-•' i : ; : : r : : : L. v' i *- V .. — —• ^. •_ MnvL.: r": t r ?c™ ?pj .™ JiJjULic. r" : ? : T " "•y. Ti i :\'- . "'n: s ir ? :"n: :" u• ?"::"; ^ L" n 7 ^n 7 "n ? :r 4T = r"rur :"": ~i -r": n ^ILL PU! H N LND !U IHL IcKKlDLb. Lubr

;•- •"•-•. -\;; M T r":i; iii'^rj-rn T;?;JT t n^ s" Q T T r r T r r-. :JT~:J Tjjr •!;;:-•" i iv;;;?i?i.;: _?:i = i ;;yr7L,vi.;\.: :;;i:j i ;•;• _::;ii_=- .iLv -^j.;;; -;;L, wriUi-L. rn=.;T[r=.= Tc nr T.UC D :"• D c u K c M T

A i ^ i r —: • : :J -' ': i ^ : : :.: "•,:::: 7 : : i i ;': : -: r-'-; ) : ^. v.' : i i. *s T: • fL i -:::,*{(: £ F\ i ™; i n :::::inuuri: •- : i r - : trr^ur i : : r.: i J •::LTr^: t :::::fj^. / : in: i :u \_\••un.L.c.nci^ : • : : : i fr. : r : ; i ..: 3 : i vLr\:;::;-i i i v:::n -=

' i- J PHr w P: -. TU: : J i_P n-• n•-- ^.i i , TMP^ -•:; I ^ cbtPMTfiTTnt* ; J ^. : T :: r 1 i •_•--^ ? nwr : TM: ; : ™? ccniP,_• L- •„- •_•T -. T•.--.:V : •_- -^- '~- : -. -• .-. p CT C T! i M T T i"i ?.! TiC THJL? "'ft « 1 "• L. .^ -.SL. i.' i i W ii w i i.' US. S £. v . . inn; iv. c 3 u L u i i u « L. n L L L v:- n n u ••= u u r U K L 1 li N n 1 L 1 ! H K V 1 N I b K V h K I I U N H N i) ! H ^ i^ I i H \)K ri ;•! H L '\ K U n ' I H t

KiQjjn npl PHPPTNN MTiTTfiPv PHPTPC - .«>• i. ; j : •; I.- -_ : .- v : •- u- ~ •-: : i ;.- i ^. i :::;•. j : v :•.-„• •— — • .

: : : H r* : : •- r-* : i -. :- • i r" f? "-. : : ; ~ f-j ; 7. X V :»" ! : s-l' ; ?-j : ". i : ?-' '-•" T: ; I :-i '-" H i-' H r, Tv :/ :: -> :; s : : •„ u- i- : •_• «- i_ ^.* : s •. ..• A v i, : -s : : i : i : : : A •„•:•. .1 : i vs •-• : t- : ^ v '„:•.: r : .- : ;•,.-•;:-. v ^ ~- .

;ri ;:ti -.1 't::!:;r rr f :: : ." :r .•::::-! i *. i- u* J i™ :'. t- v V *f ARMS,

UP 10 95 (CYPRUS) • t ^ "GENEVA (UPI) -- AMD TURKEY REAC.">2D AGREEMENT TUESDAY OH A CYPRUS PEACE SETTLEMENT, A BRITISH SPOKESMAN SWKJ7*9«9ftLOWING URGENT INTERVENTION BY SECRETARY OF STATE HENRY KISSINGER. ON THE ISLAND ITSELF TURKISH INVASION" F ORCES WITH TANKS AND ARTILLERY HUMBLED EASTWARD TOWARD THE CYPRUS PANHANDLE. THE BRITISH SPOKESMAN SAID THE AGREEMENT WOULD BE SIGNED TUESDAY NiGHT. ' "WE HAVE REACHED VIRTUALLY FULL AGREEMENT.," TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER TURAN GUNES. TURKEY HAS BEEN THE HOLD OUT IN THE NEGOTIATIONS. "^ KISSINGER TELEPHONED TURKISH PRIME MINISTER 3ULEMT ECEVIT IN ANKARA AT THE REQUEST OF GREAT BRITAIN. AMD THE STATE DEPARTMANT SAID KISSINGER BROKE A MAJOR DEADLOCK AFTER SPEAKING 3Y TELEPHONE SEVERAL TIKES MONDAY WITH BOTH ECEVIT AND BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY JAKES CALL A!-; AN CONCERNING THE NEGOTIATIONS. DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN ROBERT ANDERSON SAID HE WAS UNABLE TO FURNISH ANY DETAILS OF THE CONVERSATIONS BUT"HE NOTED THAT THE DEPARTMENT TUESDAY RECEIVED "ENCOURAGING REPORTS WITH RESPECT T 0 TH E NEGOTIATION'S IN GENEVA." . A DEPARTMENT Q?F ICIAL SAID LATER THE UNITED STATES WAS ABLE TO "BREAK A PRINCIPAL DEADLOCK IN THE NEGOTIATIONS" MONDAY NIGHT BECAUSE IT HAD THE TRUST BOTH PARTIES. 7 CONFERENCE SOURCES SAID THE AGREEMENT WOULD BE SIGNED 3Y THE THREE FOREIGN MINISTERS IN THE TALK'S, CALL AC-: AH 0? . GREAT BRITAIN, GEORGE MAVROS OF GREECE AND GUNES OF TURKEY. VIKTOR MININ. HEAD OF THE SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTRY'S MIDDLE EAST DESK, ARRIVED TUESDAY IN GENEVA TO OBSERVE THE GENEVA TALKS. THE UNITED STATES OBSERVER IS WILLIAM BUFFUM, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION AFFAIRS, WHO HAS BEEN 'IN GENEVA SINCE THE TALKS BEGAN THURSDAY. ' OH CYPRUS. THE TURKS LANDED MORE MEN AND . MATER I EL FOR THE lOTH'DAY IN A ROW. A TURKISH REGIMENT WITH ARTILLERY AND ARMOR DROVE TUESDAY ALONG THE COASTAL HIGHWAY TO A POINT SEVEN MILES EAST OF THE PORT OF "rA ONE-MILE ADVANCE SINCE MONDAY. ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS. DEPOSED AS PRESIDENT OF CYPRUS TWO WEEKS AGO BY FORCES ADVOCATING UNION WITH GREECE. "ARRIVED IN LONDON. TUESDAY FROM WASHINGTON. MAKARIOS TOLD REPORTERS. "I AM THE ELECTED LEADER AND I AM THE PRESIDENT OF CYPRUS AND NOTHING CAN PREVENT ME FROM "RETURNING TO CYPRUS." HE SAID HOWEVER HE WOULD NOT RETURN UNTIL THE 650 GREEK OFFICERS WHO HELPED ENGINEER HIS OVERTHROW RETURN TO GREECE. •"* ' " " UPI 07-30 03:15 PED t/4 452 25 SSI

MUM 581 AKAfftfil* fl*, YACDU8 ISFO OSSS SHYER, URQWABT ST0P tfterSRnXSll ALL 8S0SA ST0P »Y 28-'JULY WIJCH ESITSMAL A0fI0Jf AS G0HSEQIEWCS IfJtERWAtiQBftL FAILURE EXSHT PRSSSUHE OM A?HEHS SWP LEftBiss AHTICLIS iw PIBA-ROIAL TIWSS, 8BA9BUR* f . ;

TJKES, C fELESRAPK, UfflRftlWS S¥

CBIKF RS91ATOR 86tE STOP 25CjBtY IRISH TIMES FS9HT PA8E «af@TE WAL8HSIS! SEEKS WDSE ftSB KMU0TE AHS IM fefflTOTXAt TITLES m rim TO SPAM CO»«EWTE& su0Tt saeests SHOWED A Amt&tAXIfttt OF THE PRA€TIGAL V&ft COLTJES YfStSSBAY WHEN HE APPEALS®' &»i A StHSKgtMtH-MS &F W PS'ftggKEEPItie IF fflE

4 •' STRE'86TH W®tB RESOWSf JTHTS0 It WOBLB FOR THE STRfttB 'T JJAf HAVE TO TAKE DUSSTTE STOP IS ARf 16LE IRIgH TIIHM STATES THAT WtfU KI®HL¥ tHLXfflE IRISH efWER'WEBT W00L§ SE«0 A tJtOSP. CUSTIWSIiiiT fO UHFISYP, ' OF A TOKE8 FOR

08T STSP 2&

7 •: ' (UOIE SII.GH COSMETICS ftTf£ A W-EftSWE 8F THE SR1S1S >ACIS<3 THE / ^ FftSeiST RESIME »»« RI6HT FROM STASt THE SBlTISH Afi0 US SQVERNPfEMTS MAVE IEF8SED ft BALL FSR EFFECTIVE ACfl&H BY Utf&TIOWS TO RESTORE i. TW LEttTXHAtE CtPHUS «l«$RimiEff 0»@aQTS OfHSB 84 48Lf OBIMENf' .: VONERffaS REFERCTCSS ft SS'fiTIOfiff ffiOOTIATEB eSSfH©! flF ' • - 4 -/; I - PAR'A 8 < . jstspostT WHICH see TB3.svisi@s SE^S eousasB eaupmcftLLY STOP • .. ••• . TIMES AHXmA REPMSt BY PHILLIP K»IG3ITtSY THAT T8R8EY WILL PRESS PAHmiOlf ABB RISETTLEWERf AtQKflKVft TA^K^ WITH SREEJC TURKEY ANB ASRUTRftL THIRD QlVieiWS TM tW WITH US TR09PS KEEPIS0 *• , ST0P Sa«R&lA» LETTER

PftRft * f . ' ' . PBSLISIEB mymim mmm 22 *r»tr CRITKJISKIS OF ix SEeeeoNeiL sftP FREJTAS 0^iBtss eALLftSHAB 6»ftTI0HS ASS S1SS& BESEftVS atESIf F0» MHA'T HAS BEEH AC«IITO> STOP -..., >> eARABSW ABD BSfSASIEB ttARBDIttf. • 8X .»« 8WI5YP CHIEF STAFF J* FHEQSSSfLY IMTBRVIPPE0 ALL ME&IA EX.PLA1J?J«I3 UffFICYP »0U AW0 ' PRSBLEHSs '

©MILE ia m ALSO TO PSWELL OPI Canadian Press reports — James Richardson, Minister of Defense, going into a Cabinet Meeting (apparently to consider U.N. request for additional troops for UFFICYP) said that the 100 Canadian troops assigned to the Airport had "been moved back to patrol on the Green Line. He said that TJHPICYP should give up the airport if attacked. He did not believe that it is "the correct use of U.H, forces to become a Third Army" forced to defend itself against invaders. The U.liT. troops are not armed well enough to defend the airporto The British are better armed than the Canadians but still not well enough armed to stop a tank-armed force cS

There may be further additions to this story0 c c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: Plj- JULY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL

REFERENCE: .H-

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRANITSAS - DPI

SUBJECT: OBJET: GEORGE MARVOS - NEW GREEK MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS

RNR 587 - - URGENT CYPRUS — NIGHTLEAD KARAMANLIS BY NEO COSMOS TZALLAS ATHENS, JULY 24, REUTER — NEW GREEK PREMIER CONST ANT INE KARATEANLIS TODAY ANNOUNCED HIS CIVILIAN GOVERNMENT OF NATIONAL^ UNITY, GIVING THE KEY POST OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS TO GEORGE MAVROS,- ' THE LEADER OF CENTER UNION PARTY WHO TWO MONTHS AGO WAS "A '""" POLITICAL DETAINEE. S c^ - UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: 24 JULY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL

REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: S.N. GRANITSAS - DPI DE:

SUBJECT: OBJET: NEW LEADERS IN GREECE

THE NEW PREMIER OF GREECE, CONSTANTINE CARAMANLIS. (BORN 1907) ¥AS LEADER OF THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY - NATIONAL RADICAL UNION. HE LIVED IN SELF-IMPOSED EXILE IN PARIS FOR NEARLY 11 YEARS, DURING WHICH TIME HE EXPRESSED THE FOLLOWING VIEWS IN INTERVIEWS WITH THE UNDERSIGNED: 1) HE IS A STRONG SUPPORTER OF THE U.N. 2) HE IS AN ADHERENT OF THE EUROPEAN IDEA AND WILL WORK CLOSELY WITH EEC. 3) HE WILL PROBABLY UPHOLD THE I960 CYPRUS AGREEMENT, WHICH HIS GOVERNMENT NEGOTIATED AND SIGNED.

POLITICALLY A CONSERVATIVE, HE HAS REVISED HIS VIEWS IN RECENT YEARS SO THAT HE MIGHT BE CONSIDERED A "MODERATE LIBERAL".

PROBABLE FOREIGN MINISTER (AFP) - AVEROFF TOTSITZA - (BORN 190LO). HE WAS FOREIGN MINISTER FOR 8 YEARS UNDER CARAMANLIS. IT WAS HE WHO NEGOTIATED THE CYPRUS AGREEMENT. ALSO A DISTINGUISHED WRITER, HE EXPRESSES VIEWS SIMILAR TO THOSE OF CARAMANLIS. HE REPRESENTED GREECE AT THE U.N. MANY TIMES.

TURKISH PREMIER ECEVIT WELCOMES EMERGENCE OF CARAMANLIS (R). c ' Reuters, UPI and AP all sent the SG's . statement as an "urgent" - this is a high level classification showing importance attached to the .story editorially. % AP wire broken down here, but attached is a copy of the beginning of the story as sent from here, AP bureau has checked, and thip was sent on their wire as written. Keith CCA IOQ EPASJVi 22 35 EPA 3J'4 PR IvDD EAS P5E 2335s CYPRUS -, l^LDHEIM 2 UNITED NATIONS s "PS A RESULT OF REPORTS RECEIVED FROM CYPFUS* I PX tllrLV CONCERN ED ABCUT VIOLATIONS OF THE CEASEFIRE* PND THE RESULTS THAT SUCH VI CLP TICMS M£Y HAVE' IF THEY CONTINUED" HE SPID IN A STATEMENT- "I HAVE THEREFORE PCrRlTSSED TC THE PARTIES TO THE CONFLICT AW URGENT PPPE£L TO OESEPVE THE CE.PSEFIFE -ANC 7T. ^ ITH C F A l«. THEIF FORCFS TO THE PCSITICNS WHICH THEY HELD PT THE TIME THE: CEPSEFIRE CPf^E'INTO FC?RCE-, THPT 13j U600 HOURS CYPRUS TIME* 22 JULY." * UoKu SPOKFSM/SN S^ID MR. WPLDHEIM HPD SENT-IDENTICAL COHHUMICATIONS TO THE PRIME MINISTERS OF GREECE £ND TURKEY AND' THE ACTING PRESIDENT OF CYPRUS. .THE'SECRETARY-/GENERALSS PPPEPL W/B ANNOUNCED ^S GREECE CPLLED FOP A NEW COUNCIL MEETING TO T£KE UP THE CONTINUING FIGHTING, INCLUDING PTT£CKS ON THE GREEK EMBASSY IN NICOSIA. MOPE IC/PM

NNNN CCfl ES 1 EPASJ'5 •' •22 sr . EPA 3J'5 RR WDD EAS•PSE 2335s CYPRUS -s WALDHEIM. 3 UNITED NATIONS? IN HIS STATEMENT* MR. WALDHEIM URGED ALL INVCLVED IN THE CONFLICT

TO OESEPVE THE CEASEFIRE STRICTLY AND "THUS MAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR PEACE TC RETURN TO THAT TROUBLED -ISLAND. " "I HOPE MY WORDS WILL BE HEEDED. IF THEY ARE NOT* I DEEPLY FEAR THE GRAVE CONSEQUENCES WHICH ,W3LL INEVITABLY FQLLOfc BOTH FOR CYPRUS AND FOR THE MAINTENANCE OF INTERNATIONAL PEACE." REUTER IC/PH NNNN CCA09-4 EPA.aJ'O 222 A EPA 31 TO RR WDD EAS RSE S320: URGENT" ' CYPRUS -i WALDHEIM; UNITED NATIONS., JULY 23, REUTER - SECRETARY- GENERAL KURT WftLDHEIM TONIGHT EXPRESSED DEEP CONCERN AT CONTINUIMG VIOLATIONS OF THE CEASEFIRE IN, CYPRUS^ jAND WARNED OF GRAVE CONSEQUENCES IF THEY CONTINUED. HE ALSO APPEALED FOR A WITHDRPWAL. TO POSITIONS HELD WHEN THE CEASEFIRE WENT INTO FORCE MONDAY. MORE PM . WITH CYPRUS > NI6HT il BY BRUCE W» MUNN UNITED NATIONS ~ SECRETARY GENERAL KURT VALiREIM APPEALED T© GREECE ANB TURKEY T© ABIBE BY THE CEASE-FIRE ©N CYPRUS ANB SAIB HE WAS "BEEPLY CONCERNED" ABOUT REPORTS ©F CONTINUES FIGHTING. GREECE AT THE SAME TIME REQUESTED AN IMMEDIATE MEETING *F THE SECURITY COUNCIL* AND B,N. SPOKESMAN WILLIAM C. POWELL SAID THE 15-MEMBER C0UNCIL W@OLI> MEET TUESBAY NIGHT. GREECE *S REASON F©R THE REQUEST FOR WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY DISCLOSED. WAUHEIM MABE HIS APPEAL IN IDENTICAL NOTES SENT T© THE PRIME MINISTERS ©F GREECE'ANB TURKEY AND THE ACTING PRESIDENT ©F CYPRUS. "AS A RESULT ®F REPORTS RECEIVES FR©M CYPRUS * I AM BEEPLY C®NCERNEB'ABOUT VI©LATI©NS ©F THE CEASE-FIRE ANB THE RESULTS THAT SUCH VI©LATI®NS MAY HAVE IF THEY CONTINUE*" WALBHEIM SAIB. *I HAVE THEREF6RE ABBRESSEB T© THE PARTIES T© THE CONFLICT AN URGENT APPEAL T® ©BSERVE THE CEASE-FIRE ANB T© WITHDRAW THEIR F©RCES T® POSITIONS WHICH THEY HELB AT THE TIME ©F THE CEASE-FIRE CAME INT© FORCE* THAT IS* 16Oft HOURS <10 A.M. EBT>." HE WARNED THAT IF HIS APPEAL T© ST©P FIGHTING FAILS* "I 1EEPLY FEAR THE GRAVE CONSEQUENCES THAT WILL INEVITABLY FOLLOW BOTH FOR CYPRUS ANB FOR THE MAINTENANCE ©F INTERNATIONAL PEACE," POWELL* COMMENTING ®N THE UNITEB NATIONS OCCUPATION ©F THE NICOSIA AIRPORT* SAIB THE BLUE-HELMETEB U.N. PEACEKEEPING TROOPS MOVED IN "AFTER A NEW ANB SERIOUS BREACH OF THE CEASE-FIRE EARLIER THIS MORNING IN THE VICINITY ©F THE AIRPORT. "THE AIRPORT THUS BECOMES A U.N. INTERNATIONALLY PROTECTED AREA." HE SAIB THE AIRPORT WOULB BE USED LANB NEW PEACEKEEPING TROOPS ANB SUPPLIES. POWELL SAIB GLAFKOS CLERIBES* NEW ACTING PRESIDENT OF CYPRUS* HAS SAIB HE WOULB GO PERSONALLY TO 2GNES OF CEASE-FIRE VIOLATIONS WITH TURKISH CYPRIOT VICE PRESIDENT RAUF BENKTASH IN A JOINT EFFORT T© STOP THE FIGHTING/ HE SAIB THAT IN ADDITION TO 400 TROOPS AND ARMORED CARS PLEDGED BY BRITAIN MONDAY* OFFERED AN ADDITIONAL 175 MEN NOW WITH ANOTHER 175 T© FOLLOW. PLEDGED TW© COMPANIES -- 150 MEN AT ONCE ANB 150 LATER* THE SPOKESMAN SAID. HE SAIB THE AUSTRIAN* CANADIAN* BANISH AND AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENTS WERE CONSIBERING WALBHEIM'S REQUEST FOR MORE HEN FOR PEACE-KEEPING FORCE, UPI ©7-23 07}04 PED URGENT

U. N. Curtis 2nd NL •

( UNITED rJATIONS, N. Y (AP)-Secretapy-^eneral Kurt ^aldheira ^^•M* said Tuesday night he was

(A^*^«»»t « the saine tiiae, the Greek eiission here asked for a rseeting of the Security Council, presumably to take up Greek charges of Turkish attacksf The president of the council #as consulting on a tiioe for

(siore) Kgb558p 23/7 c UNITED NATIONS |||p NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ~^"~ MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: mm? OWDTOTIATJV ramwQAT. DATE: JULY 25> 197** A . THA JtJULEJ kJ,UwJL>JuJJLXUSECRETARtY X GENERASJIilM AJ**fmL v TC

REFERENCE: THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: S.N. GRANITSAS - DPI DE:

SUBJECT: OBJET:

XRECE ,

BULLETIN ""•... CARAM/WLIS PARIS - T" ..... " l* . LE GUJERAL GHJZIKJs A TELEPHONE AM. COMSTA^TIN • CARAM/WLIS POUR LINVITK, A RENDER E^ GRECE ET DIRIGER'LE GOUVERNEMBvT DUNJGN

NATIONALS, fflHWCE.T-CW AU BUREAU DE PRESSE BE M. .CARAM^LJS, A PARIS.

GRECE' ~ ' BULLETIN CAR AM AN L IS,. DEUX PARIS ' ' - ' - ; ' : '

A ACCEPTE DE RENTRER EN GRrQE SUR LINVITATIffll

M.Caramanlis was Prime Minister of Greece between 1953 and 6l. It was under his pr&ni&r- ship that Cyprus accord between Turkey, UK and Greece was signed. He was leader of the Conservative Party (National Radical Union). The king has no plans to return yet (R).

> • /( SERIES'—797-59«S5."" """ """ ** " UPI 07-22 Ql:i7 PPJT~Pnil, ~7 "7 ,,,.-,. , . - -t * y£ c; UPI072 t ^-ADD CYPRUS, UNITED NATIONS xu»J.-v./J/ *^T 1715 HOURS CYPRUS TIME C 11S15 A.M. EDT)," WALDHEIM SAID. "THE MADE A SECOND AT TACK" OH NICOSIA AIRPORT AND THE U. NT COMPOUND. WOUNDING ONE BRITISfl ' SOL'D'IER. FITTING IS STILL GOING ON IN OTHER PARTS OF THE ISLAND. " "THERE WERE A NUMBER OF BREACHES OF THE 'CEASE-F IRE." HE SAID. "I HOPE THIS WILL BE STOPPED IN THE NEAR FUTURE." WALDHEIM APPEALED TO THE COUNCIL FOR AN INCREASE IM"*THE STRENGTH OF THE U.N. PEACE FORCE IN CYPRUS. THE FORCE'."7 2,137 OFFICERS AND MEM FROM SEVEN COUNTRIES, IS WELL BELOW THE AUTHORIZED FORCE. A UNFICYP COMPOUND IS LOCATED 1'iEXT TO THE NICOSIA AIRPORT. ' U.N. SOURCES SAID NINE CANADIANS AND ONE DANE HAD ALSO BEEN WOUNDED. A SOURCE SAID SOME UNFICYP PERSONNEL HAD BEEN KILLED. UPI 07-22 01:22 PED

UP 10 73. *>'r ~C ORRESP OND EMT S j

PRESIDENTIAL LAWYER JAMES ST. CLAIR HAS SCHEDULED A NEWS CONF ERENCE F OR 7 S30 P.M. rnr - ; •" - UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ~^*~ MEMORANDUM INTERIELIR

DATE: JULY TOi w.: THo.rLcEi SECRETAR>_>jLi^x\jjj.ru.ijYL GENERAvuauiuiuuL j ,t T/^\ -rq

REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: s.N. GRANITSAS - OPI

SUBJECT: OBJET:

w RNR 274 URGENT CYPRUS -PRESIDENT S ATHENS , JULY 23, REUTER -- GLAFKQS CLERIDES , PRESIDENT OF THE CYPRUS NATIONAL ASSEMBLY , WAS SWORN IN TODAY AS CYPRUS NEW PRESIDENT REPLACING COUP LEADER NIKOS SAMPSON, NICOSIA RADIO ANNOUNCED TODAY- HE SUCCEEDS SAMPSON WHO WAS INSTALLED AS PRESIDENT AFTER THE OVERTHROW OF ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS IN A COUP BY THE NATIONAL GUARD JULY 15. MR CLERIDES, WHO TOOK NO PART IN THE COUP, HAD BEEN IN CHARGE OF NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN THE ISLAND S GREEK AND TURKISH COMMUNITIES UNDER PRESIDENT MAKARIOS AND HIS NAME HAS FREQUENTLY BEEN MENTIONED AS BEING AN ACCEPTABLE REPLACEMENT TO THE TURKISH GOVERNMENT FOR SAMPSON, MORE 0946

RNR 275 CYPRUS -PRESIDENT 2 ATHENS THE RADIO, MONITORED IN THE ISLAND OF RHODES, SAlDs "A FEW MINUTES AGO? MR. GLAFKOS CLERIDES WAS SWORN IN AS PRESIDENT OF .THE CYPRUS REPUBLIC." THE NEW PRESIDENT IS 54 YEARS OLD* UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIELIR

TO: : « \ DATE: A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL h.\ REFERENCE: 23 JULY

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRANITSAS - OPI

SUBJECT: OBJET: FIGHTING - CYPRUS

RNR 269 SNAP CYPRUS - AIRPORx (REPEATING RNR 267 FOR CLIENT ) TEL AVIV 9 JULY 23, REUTER — THE COMMANDER OF THE UNITED NATIONS FORCES ON CYPRUS ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT HIS FORCES WERE [TAKING OVER THE,,.. INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AT NICOSIA FOLLOWING A 'NEW AND SERIOUS OUTBREAK OF FIGHTING IN THE AREA. ""—"~ f UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ~*^~ MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: Pg JTILY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL EFERENCE:. 5:05' P.M.

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: S.N. GRANITSAS - DPI PPSG DE: I: I

SUBJECT: OBJET: MOST RECENT CYPRUS-GREECE DEVELOPMENTS

.UNCONFIRMED PRESS DISPATCHES FROM WASHINGTON REPORT THAT REBELLIOUS GREEK TROOPS ARE ADVANCING FROM THE NORTH TOWARDS ATHENS.

AFP SAYS GENERAL DAVOS HAS MARCHED FROM SALONICA TO LARISSA. IT ALSO REPORTS THAT A COMPLETE BLACKOUT HAS BEEN ORDERED IN SALONICA, LARISSA AND ATHENS.

UNCONFIRMED REPORTS SAY THAT GREEK TROOPS, LOYAL TO THE JUNTA, ARE MOVING TOWARDS THEBES.

US STATE DEPT. HOPES THAT CHANGES IN THE GREEK MILITARY HEAD OF STATE MAY HELP CAM THE SITUATION'IN CYPRUS.

SALONICA LA-R-I-SSA-

PAPHOS

.ACCORDING TO TURKISH INFORMATION, 8 GREEK VESSELS ATTEMPTED TO LAND AT (WQXR). 15 (NATO) VESSELS (UPI) -- THE WESTERN ALLIES SIEC I AND TURKEY URGED . NATIONS MONDAY TO FOLLOW UP THE ^ CEASE-FIRE WITH "*.Fu/i-.rTA AND -SUCCESSFUL DISCUSSIONS" ON T AND' S FUTURE. "THERE WAS BROAD EXPRESSION OF HOPE T EFFECTIVE CEASE-FIRE 'WILL LEAD TO PROMPT AND SUCCESSFUL"*DI SCU I i- ORDER TO" RE STORE PEACE, STABILITY AND CONSTITUTIONAL ORDE. YPRUS " T; MORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION COUNCIL SAID STATEl'jElH AFT^R A 30-MINUTE EMERGENCY MEETING. FOREIGN MINISTERS OF THE NINE EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET •J AT IONS, GATHERED IN BRUSSELS ON OTHER BUSINESS, SCHEDULED A MEETING MONDANt Y NIGHT TO DISCUSS CYPRUS. GREECE AND TURKEY BELONG TO NATO BUT NOT TO THE COMMON MARKET SOURCES SAID THE NATO COUNCIL MEETING MONDAY TOOK PLACE IN A MOOD OF SELF-CONGRATULATION OVER THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMACY IN BRINGING ABOUT THE CEASE-FIRE. ITS PUBLIC STATEMENTS SALUTED THE DIPLOMATIC LEADERSHIP OF 3RITIAN AND AMERICA IN THE CRISIS, BUT ADDED ITS OWN PLEA FOR A CEASE-FIRE AND FOR BRITISH TURKISH AND GREEK PEACE NEGOTIATIONS TO BEGIN IN .GENEVA. SECRETARY GENERAL JOSEPH LUMS SAID IN A LETTER TO GREECE AND TURKEY"THAT THE CRISIS "THREATENS THE EXISTENCE OF THE

ALLIANCE...T:-:is1 STATE OF AFFAIRS CANNOT BE PERMITTED TO CONTINUE." T : IT THROUGHOUT THIjTi E2j WEEK,"GREECbV J-j«l\, e 13* E AND TURKEY KEPT CONTACT WITH OTHER ANITTnElR .Hi_f. -f . Lir^-I •»•'—• ofN '> i-jur ~,r~rl* ONLY IN COUNCIL ME1 BUT IN DOZEN"STOF BILAT RAL MEETINGS AT NATO HEADQUARTERS. MONDAY' S MEETIN THE TWO NATIONS CONFIRMED THEIR GOVERNMENTS ACCEPTANCE 'OF THE^CEAsi-F IRE. TURGUT TUL'UiiEN, THE ACTING CHIEF OF TURKEYS DELEGATION HERE. WENT FURTHER. READING A LETTER TO LUNS FROM KIS GOVERNMENT WHICH CABLED THE TURKISH INVASION SATURDAY "A PEACEFUL ACTION". UPI 07-22 04:01

UPI 11 6(VOTER ATTITUDES)

UPIU9 C GREECE) ATHENS (UPI) — THE GREEK GOVERNMENT ANNOUNCED ACCEPTANCE MONDAY OF A CEASE-FIRE ON CYPRUS AMID RUMORS OF A GOVERNMENT CRISIS AND PROTESTS BY GREEK' CYPRIOT STUDENTS WHO STONED THE BRITISH EMBASSY. GREEK AUTHORITIES WERE MORE THAN TWO HOURS LATE IN ANNOUNCING THE CEASE-FIRE. THEY CGi^TNED THEMSELVES TO A FOUR-LINE STATEMENT WHICH CONCLUDED, "THUS THE INDEPENDENCE, SOVEREIGNTY AND TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY 07 CYPRUS ARE SAFEGUARDED.n U.S. UNDERSECRETARY OF STATE JOSEPH J."SI"SCO, WHOSE DIPLOMATIC SHUTTLING BETWEEN ATHENS AND ANKARA HELPED BRING ABOUT TH £- CEASE-FIRE« L'EFT"F'OR WASHINGTON. WESTERN DIPLOMATS IN ATHENS SAID SI SCO WAS TO REPORT TO PRESIDENT NIXON AND MIGHT GO TO GENEVA TO OBSERVE THE CYPRUS PEACE TALKS AMONG GREECE, BRITAIN AND TURKEY, THE THREE GUARANTOR POWERS OF CYPRUS. THE TALKS WERE SCHEDULED TO BEGIN WEDNESDAY. TH E ' GOV ERNMENT DENIED THE COUP RUMORS, WHICH WERE BROADCAST FROM THE RIVAL CAPITAL OF ANKARA. REPORTS OF'TANK MOVEMENT IN ATHENS FUELED THE RUMORS BUT THEY DIED DOWN DURING THE DAY. OTHER RUMORS. WHICH LED "STOREKEEPERS TO CLOSE EARLY FOR THEIR MIDDAY SIESTA, n A3 FORMER EXILED-KING CONSTANTINE AND PREMIER CONSTANTINE KARAMANLIS ARRIVING IN GREECE.

THE UNION OF CYPRUS WITH GREECE. SOME DAMAGE WAS CAUSED WHEN DEMONSTRATORS DENTED NEARBY PARKED CARS BY STANDING ON THEM AND THROWING STONES AT WINDOWS. ABOUT 20 POLICEMEN STOOD BY BUT DID NOT INTERVENE. THE STUDENTS, CARYING GREEK FLAGS, CHANTED, "DOWN WITH BRITAIN", "GET "BRITAIN OUi", AND "ENOSI'S". " J UPI 07-22 04:2^i FED ' " " (TURKISH STRATEGY) LORD OK (UPI) -- TURKISH- FORCES IK CYPRUS GAIIIED SWIFT CONTROL Of THE AIR BUT WERE STOPPED ON TnE GROUND FROM CAPTURING THEIR MAJOR STRATEGIC TARGETS; MILITARY ANALYSTS SAID MONDAY. THEY SAID THE REPORTS ON THE FLOW OF BATTLE, ALTHOUGH CONFUSING, SHOWED THE TURKS FAILED TO SEIZE THE KYRENIA PORT FACILITIES, THE NICOSIA AIRPORT. AND THE MOUNTAIN PASS CONNECT! i-j G THEM. MILITARY EXPERTS SAID CONTROL OF THE PASS WOULD HAVE GIVEN THE TURKS A LAND ROUTE FROM KYRENIA ON THE NORTHERN COAST TO THE LARGE TURKISH COMMUNITY IN NICOSIA. 16 MILES SOUTH OF T;. E FORT. EXPERTS REACHED CONCLUSIONS ON THE TURKISH OBJECTIVES BECAUSE OF THE LIMITED NUMBER OF MEN IN THE INVASION FORCE. TH-EY SAID 20,000 MEN WIRE NEEDED TO CAPTURE THE ENTIRE ISLAND, BUT THE TURKS ONLY LANDED S.QQO* INDICATING OBJECTIVES UIRI LZSS THAN ISLAND CmUESr.'"~ IN SPITE OF THE VIRTUMTTOTAL AIR SUPERIORITY OF TURKEY, GREEK CYP RIOTS HELD TI-TEIR GROUND 3Y EMPLOYING MORE ARTILLERY AMD TANKS IN T-* - i— :~ r. \~\ 7 V •"1• "•" ^r ' ill i iaaL i i iurv. THE MAIN TURKISH ATTACKS WERE ON THE NICOSIA AIRPORT AND KYRENIA, , ItiERE GREEK COUNTER-ATTACKS STOPPED THE TURKS FROM SEIZING THE FORT 7 £*," TT TT T ~CJ '.''"AT THE AIRPORT, WITNESSES SAID TURK IS.-; PARATROOPERS SUFFERED HEAVY CASaALTIES"BECAUS^ THEY LANDED WITHOUT ARTILLERY SUPPORT. GREEK ARTILLERY HITTING THE DROP ZONE STARTED A GRASS FIRE PRODUCING A SERIES OF SECONDARY EAPLOSIDiIS, APPARENTLY DESTROYING THE SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION THE TURKS NEEDED TO bUPPORT THEIR ADVANCE. THE MAIN BATTLES FOR KYRENIA AND THE AIRPORT WERE MATCHED IN INTENSITY 3Y FIGHTING IN THE SCATTERED TURKISH CYPRIOT COMMUNITCES THROUTHOUT LiE .ISLAND. . ,. _ „ „.. ., . .„ IN WASHINGTON, THE TURKISH EMBASSY SAID TURKISH CafPiaOi. ClVu-irtH Sc WERE KILLED LIMASSOL 5"F AMAGUST A, ?A?HOS? PLIS, ANAKA AiJD LE;« i\A. UPI 07-22 04:30 PED

1 IT1 T . ~ -

J •••...' 3 UP I 07-22 Cri:3o

UP 10 79 ( C (CYPRUS) V ' ' . ¥

UP 10 30 ADD 3 ELLSBERG, WASHINGTON SESELL SAID CONGRESS DID NOT INTEND THE LAW UNDER WHICH EHRLICHMAN WAS CONVICTED TO "BE APPLIED TO STATEMENTS GIVEN TO TKE FBI VOLUNTARILY AND WITHOUT OATH OR VERBATIM TP*'-""""'"-" "" •"" INTERVIEW INITIATED 3Y TH TT n^-— -; _ ruuiii ON THE MOUND . WITH 'WILL I AM "COHEN IR RESERVE. WHILE THE DEMOCRAT4J JLil J vy kx J "-riA S>- J WILW O,J_iL J_ i PITCHA -i. J. y-» ' MENDEi J i^i^OJ J.jiLj DAVISiJ JT.V J. «.J ,a WITV* J. .Hi J 1 RONALJ*t> \JA * i^iiJ JT/ ^ELLUM' J«J_r J_»W **•_S - I^iN' THA-I^-E J BUL'j_/-^j_JL j_» PENEN. . THEE GAKEGAME.. TOO ( GINN /A"T 6' P.M~ *':. , WIL"^'LT PRZCik,TH~-"~^ —-Z OK-----I OLE-DETROI- - T GAMEME.. SID YUDAIYUDAIN'W SSOMBES ;

NYA 368 UU LJP : CYPRUS-•+ /ATROCI TIES i UNITED NATIONS, JULY 2)1, REUTER-j^, A UNITED NATIONS SPOKESMAN SAID TODAY THE WORLD BODY HAD RECEIVED REPORTS OF ATROCITIES IN SCATTERED LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT CYPRUS AND SECRETARY-/GENERAL KURT WALDHEIM APPEALED FOR THE HUMANE TREATMENT OF CIVILIANS CAUGHT UP IN THE FIGHTING. THE SPOKESMAN SAID THE REPORTS ABOUT ATROCITIES ALLEGED THEY HAD BEEN COMMITTED AGAINST BOTH CIVILIANS AND MILITARY PERSONNEL* BUT HE WOULD GIVE NO DETAILS. INFORMED SOURCES SAID THE GREEK U.N. MISSION WAS CONSIDERING SUMMONING A SECURITY COUNCIL SESSION TO DEAL WITH WHAT THE SOURCES REFERRED TO AS ALLEGATIONS OF GENOCIDE IN CYPRUS. A GREEK U.N. MISSION SPOKESMAN CONFIRMED THAT A CALL FOR A COUNCIL. SESSION WAS UNDER STUDY BUT COULD GIVE NO FURTHER DETAILS. IN HIS STATEMENT, MR. WALDHEIM SAID: "REPORTS REACHING ME FROM CYPRUS INDICATE THAT THE FIGHTING IS EXTREMELY VIOLENT AND BITTER AND THAT THE CIVILIAN POPULATION IN MANY PARTS OF THE ISLAND IS LIVING IN GRAVE DANGER, FEAR AND GREAT SUFFERING.

MORE NNNN CCTA999 EPAJ'SJ' 2022 EPAJUF" UU CCC EUK EAS YY SAF RSE ell!': CYPRUS -, ATROCITIES 2 UNITED NATIONS: "I APPEAL MOST URGENTLY TO ALL THE PARTIES INVOLVED IN THE FIGHTING, PENDING THE ACHIEVEMENT OF A CEASEFIRE, TO EXERCISE EXTREME RESTRAINT AND TO RESPECT THE ACCEPTED INTERNATIONAL RULES,FOR THE TREATMENT OF CIVILIAN POPULATIONS IN TIME OF WAR.1 MR. WALDHEIM URGED THE PARTIES TO TAKE EVERY POSSIBLE MEASURE TO AVOID ACTIONS "WHICH HAY CAUSE FURTHER SUFFERING TO THE CIVILIAN POPULATION AND WHICH CAN ONLY FURTHER EMBITTER THE ALREADY-/TRAGIC SITUATION." REUTER RS/WL * NNNN CCAQ06 EPC6 91 2039 EPC6 9 1 - UU CCC EUK EPS YY SAF RSE 8 138: CYPRUS- ATROCITIES 3 UNITED NATIONS«EP/i "IS *7) ! TURKISH AIRCRAFT WERE SAID TO HAVE USED NAPALM 'IN TWO INCIDENTS MENTIONED IN TGDAYsS U.N. REPORTS. ONE WAS AN ATTACK ON THE CYPRUS NATIONAL GUARD AT BELLAPAIS IN THE KYRENIA AREA OF NORTHERN CYPRUS. THE OTHER WAS AN AIR RAID ON FAMAGUSTA, AT THE EASTERN END OF THE ISLAND* WHERE THE CYPRUS NATIONAL. GUARD WERE REPORTED TO HAVE ATTACKED THE OLD CITY WITH ARTILLERY. REUTER RS/GE CCA9J 9 CK ) 193 1

CCA980 NY A 36 5 193 1 RR UKP UU EUR CCC EAS YY SAP RSE

NY A 365 UU LJP :CYPRUS- #• /SOLD! ER! UNITED NATIONS, JULY 2> 1* REUT£R-r. A BRITISH SOLDIER SERVING WITH THE U.N. PEACE-KEEPING FORCE IN CYPRUS WAS ACCIDENTALLY KILLED TODAY WHILE UNLOADING A WEAPON SURRENDERED BY A TURKISH CYPRIOT IN THE LIMASSOL DISTRICT, A-U.N. SPOKESMAN REPORTED. THE IDENTITY OF THE SOLDIER WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY DISCLOSED BUT HfS UNIT WAS REPORTEDLY BASED AT THE POLEMIDHIA CAMP. HE WAS THE FIRST MEMBER OF THE 2,300-MAN> EIGHT-NATION PEACE /KEEPING FORCE ON THE ISLAND TO DIE SINCE THE START OF THE CYPRUS CRISIS LAST MONDAY. THE)lQ>ffEAR>.JOLD SON OF A BRITISH SERVICEMAN DIED FROM BULLET WOUNDS ON HIS WAY TO A FAMAGUSTA HOSPITAL TODAY* BRITISH OFFICIALS REPORTED FROM CYPRUS.

REUTER NNNN CCAOOa EPB036 soas EPB036 UU WDD EAS YY RSE 3) E 5: CYPRUS- UNITED NATIONS, JULYS b REUTER : - -/ GREEK CYPRIOT NATIONAL GUARDSMEN, RETREATING BEFORE TURKISH FORCES IN THE KYRENIA AREA, ARE BELIEVED TO BE HOLDING A ' £- MAN,FINNISH U.N. PATROL IN CUSTODY, A UN. SPOKESMAN SAID TODAY. THE NATIONAL GUARDSMEN WERE REPORTED TO HAVE FALLEN. BACK TOWARDS BELLAPAISjr IN THE HILLS ABOVE KYRENIA, USING LANDROVEPS WITH U.N. FLAGS SEIZED FROM THE FINNS. THE SPOKESMAN SAID. HE SAID EFFORTS WERE BEING MADE ON THE SPOT TO FIND THL PATROL MEMBERS -AND RELEAASE THEM. .YESTERDAY TURKEY CLAIMED ITS FORCES HAD CAPTURS.D KYRLNIA, ON THE: NORTH COAST OF CYPRUS ONLY > ie MiLES

CCA024 NYA3S2 2t E 4 • ' UU WDD EAS YY RSE

NY A 382 UU LJP s CYPRUS -/ LEAD FINNS: UNITED, NATIONS, JULY 2n,REUTER~r/ TWELVE FINNISH MEMBERS OF THE U.N. PEACEKEEPING FORCE IN CYPRUS WERE RELEASED UNHARMED TODAY AFTER BEING HELD BY RETREATING CYPRUS NATIONAL GUARDSMEN. WHO COMMANDEERED THEIR LANDROVERS, A U.N. SPOKESMAN ANNOUNCED. . • THERE WAS NO WORD WHETHER THEIR VEHICLES, BEARING U.N. FLAGS, HAD ALSO BEEN RECOVERED. THE -FINNS WERE SEIZED BY NATIONAL GUARDSMEN FALLING BACK TOWARDS BELLAPAIS IN THE KYRENIA DISTRICT* SCENE OF HEAVY OVER NIGHT FIGHTING FOR CONTROL OF THE KYRENIA PASS. PICKUP)

REUTER •NNNN CCA030 IT/A386 2 143 UU WDD EAS RSE

NY A 386 UU LJP SCYPRUS -/ DANE? UNITED. NATIONS, JULY 31, REUTER — A DANISH SOLDIER SERVING WJTH THE U.N. FORCE IN CYPRUS WAS SERIOUSLY WOUNDED TODAY, A U.N. SPOKESMAN HERE REPORTED. THE SOLDIER, WHO WAS NOT IDENTIFIED, WAS AT THE U.ts).@S MANSOURA OBSERVATION POST IN THE LEFKA DISTRICT WHEN HE WAS HIT. FURTHER DETAILS WERE AVAILABLE.

REUTER EPCKE 2S99 EPC J''2 SS EAS RR RSE WDD UU WAV 2338: CYPRUS-/ LEAD ATROCITIES: UNITED NATIONS* JULY 2« 1* REUTER - GREECE TODAY ACCEPTED A U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION CALLING FOR A CEASEFIRE IN CYPRUS AND REQUESTED AN URGENT COUNCIL SESSION TO DEAL WITH ALLEGED TURKISH ATROCITIES IN FIGHTING ON THE ISLAND. THE GREEK DECISIONS WERE CONTAINED IN A LONG LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF. THE SECURITY COUNCIL FROM THE GREEK REPRESENTATIVE TO THE U.N.^MR. CCNSTANTINE PANAYOTACOS. IN THE LETTER, MR. PANAYOTACOS CHARGED TURKISH TROOPS WITH "ONE OF THE MOST ODIOUS FORMS OF GENOCIDE" IN FIGHTING ON CYPRUS MORE DN/PM

NNNN NNNN CCA'050 EPA806 22 ^B EPA806 UU MAV. SS EAS RR -WDD RS£ IM^Si CYPRUS -/ LEAD ATROCIT1TIKS 8 UNITED NATIONS: THE COUNCIL IS DUE TO MEET AT ' 1400 GMT TOMORROW STERDAYnS CEASEFIRE CALL BY THE COUiMC I LAND RFF EARINS G !TC5 -**6"^ AN APJP|A"KtK5tS *sKM*ifewLL TODAl^W*t SH««felY iBY s EC RET^R?-. GENERAL KURT WAL'HETM' -jiTr •• a •<• ~ • ji "- .... .F'tff i..... - .i t j SWIFT ! MPTEM 'ENfA*TI ON 'GREEK' ..... REP R'ESlwI' "I HAVE THE 'HONOUR TO BRING TO 'YOUR KNOWLEDGE THAT hY bO-'\/r.K'ivi.-- ;uv'i » i DESPITE SOME RESERVATIONS ....ACCEPTS IN TOTO* ALTHOUGH TURKEY, IN FULL CONTEMPT OF THE RESOLUTION IN QUESTION, HAS SHORTLY AFTER LAUNCHED ITS SAVAGE NAPALM BOMBARDMENT AGAINST THE NON-COMBATANT POPULATION OF NICOSIA AND OTHER CIVILIAN TARGETS IN THE ISLAND, INCLUDING HOSPITALS, THUS CAUSING HUNDREDS OF VICTIMS." MR« PANAYOTACOS SAID HIS GOVERNMENT'S RESERVATIONS CONCERNED. THAT PART OF THE CEASEFIRE RESULUTION WHICH CALLS, IN EFFECT, FOR THE WITHDRAWAL OF THE 650 GREEK ARMY OFFICERS WHO, AS LEADERS OF THE , TOPPLED THE GOVERNMENT

DEJMBRSSDSESfAMAKAPIOS LAST MONDAY JX

NNNN CCA051 CK 22*5

CCAQS3 EPA80J- 2245 EPA80J' UU MAV S3 EAS RR WDD RSE 2344:CYPRUS -/ LEAD ATROCITIES 3 UNITED NATIONS! IN HIS REQUEST FOR AN URGENT MEETING, THE GREEK REPRESENTATIVE TOLD THE COUNCIL PRESIDENT , SENOR JAVIER PEREZ DE CUELLAR OF PERU, THAT GREECE: WANTED THE is-NATION BODY TO "TAKE ALL APPROPRIATE MEASURES IN ORDER TO BRING THE CONTINUING INDISCRIMINATE BOMBARDMENT BY NAPALM BOMBS AND ROCKETS OF CIVILIAN TARGETS AND POPULATION BY THE TURKISH AIR FORCE TO AN IMMEDIATE END." HE SAID THE "IMMEDIATE CESSATION OF SUCH ATROCITIES" WAS OF PARAMOUNT IMPORTANCE, BOTH FROM A HUMANITARIAN AND A POLITICAL POINT OF VIEW. "THIESE TURKISH ACTIVITIES AGAINST THE CIVILIAN POPULATION IN CYPRUS CONSTITUTE, BY THEMSELVES AND INDEPENDENTLY OF THE AGGRESSION BEING CONDUCTED AT THIS MOMENT EY TURKEY AGAINST A MEMBER STATE OF THE U.N.,' ONE OF THE MOST IDOUS FORMS OF GENOCIDE." C (PICK UP AS REQUIRED) REUTER SEA NNNN GCA041 EPDO IT ' 22) 10 * 'EPDO IT UU CCC EUK EPS YY RSE SAF sCYPRUS-/ATROCITIES 4 UNI TED NATIONS :«EPC69l> IN AN ACCOUNT OF FIGHTING RELAYED BY U.N. OFFICIALS ON THE ISLAND, THE U.N. SPOKESMAN HERE SAID THE CYPRUS NATIONAL GUARD PROTESTED TO THE U.N. PEACE-KEEPING FORCE < (JNFICYP ) THAT THE TURKS WERE INDISCRIMINATELY BOMBING CIVILIAN TARGETS, INCLUDING THE FAMA6USTA HOSPITAL. THE NATIONAL GUARD TOLD UNFICYP THAT IF THIS CONTINUED "THERE WOULD BE A VERY STRONG RETALIATION WHICH COULD LEAD TO A LOT OF BLOODSHED*" THE U.N. SPOKESMAN REPORTED. ACCORDING TO UNFICYPBS INFORMATION* THE HOSPITAL HAD BEEN BOMBED BUT APPEARED TO HAVE BEEN EVACUATED TODAY. IT WAS NOT CLEAR FROM THE REPORT WHETHER THE EVACUATION TOOK PLACE BEFORE OR. AFTER THE BOMBING. MORE RS/CM

NNNN CCAQ4B CK 22) 15

CCA043 NYA390 22) 15 ' UU CCC EUK EAS YY SAF RSE

NYA 390 UU LJP :CYPRUS -i ATROCITES 5 UNITED NATIONS: A LATER REPORT FROM U.N. SOURCES IN CYPRUS SAID THAT HAD CEASED RESISTING AT MANDRIA IN THE PAPHOS DISTRICT. "BUT DESPITE THAT FACT AND UNFICYPES EFFORTS, < ARE BEING OVERRUN," THE U.N. SPOKESMAN HERE REPORTED. HE WAS UNABLE TO CLARIFY WHAT WAS HAPPENING TO THE TURKISH CYPRIOTS OR HOW MANY OF THEM WERE INVOLVED IN THIS INCIDENT. IN THE LARNACA DISTRICT, AN, UNSPECIFI ED NUMBER OF TURKISH CYPRIOTS SOUGHT REFUGE IN A U.N. CAMP AND THE CYPRUS NATIONAL GUARD THREATENED TO FIRS' ON IT UNLESS THE U.N. HANDED THEM OVER. AT 1530 HOURS CYPRUS TIME C <1330 GMT), THE TURKISH CYPRIOTS WERE STILL UNDER U.$. PROTECTION AND NEGOTIATIONS WERE PROCEEDING, THE U.N. SPOKESMAN REPORTED. A FURTHER USE OF NAPALM BY THE TURKISH AIR FORCE WAS REPORTED IN AN ATTACK ON PAPHOS HARBOUR, HE ADDED.

REUTER t UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE ^MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTER1EUR

DATE: JULY gg. AI?:- THE SECRETARY G 10.00 REFERENCE:

THROUGH S/C DE:

FROM- S.N. GRANITSAS DE:

SUBJECT: OB JET:

AFP 07 5 ;T^.CZ T^i?A~riTE FOUHRAIT a JUILLFFT c.vFF). .. •',. ,/,::; CaA CF.LI7.F T"Br.RAL AUTRI G-{ ~- I T T T IT ' ^ T1" -ft TT «••'' .« T />. ^ .", r>T."i A 1 ! V; T i^'7 T T —•-•'- TT- rtf'T- T'T'r- >J. Li' j-i Ji J. •--- 1 rt L^ ri j'. i-iiyjvi riu ir. J. Ln i ,~Mi i-l ,.. ;J.U_ -^n-S 1 fl " . TI L^^T.'^^'? Ti H^ -""u* ^";I.J-^ L ^rTL r^.^ -;T - .'iVj-d.-.t- \ 7 T '.^-.= t T"i " ^^ ;f~—- .V riT T f ri- ~~ l"',~i f ~1~~T HT T 'TO TT~>r- f ~ ^ T T T T"-V-i T'.T- T1—M T-> ." ' ! ~ 7-".-'M T- 1 : • r- ' i , Li-i. i l-l bi, _ i Ji ^-. '._ j_, ij J. Ljl-b • i -oS'-'- -:-J-" » i C--O •i'J''-- ij-,.'l:v- ii V-1.I..'-J1^ U-i ^ j

7 "T ~ 1 f v\ ^.—o1"1 -T'">'f T,ri'?r.."1,T •- TI IT Tl I r-7-" A T^Tf^1"- r-TT^~ ^T "T p A T"T T"T "nT''\r-'r ! I c iv ir' c —L - njru i,',.- >--i^ A .,.-.,. j- Jo .L n ioui.w. SJi ul-• i L^-i i 1 u--i <» 1-.1.I iriij—. KI^T Z-v* CF rJl CC'CFR^E LA MA'TURE 'DZ CFS CQ^ TACTS. . - ! DF &:UFCF CriFRALEKF^T BT^-IFFQRMFF SF'FFXCLUAIT ClPZr-J DA" 7 ! »•"• T T* — -* ^- ~r^ Tf* —' "O ^•'r'J A 'Yn;r^ TT) '"r* T^-^i'"; "^"i T"1- T)5 J~ ••** > •T-"V 4 ""f 'T1^ I-.T T" T -r ^ T 1^1 'C FFP'.FSF^T'I Ts gFg -PARTI £5; IM THRESSEI'S FUISSF AVOIR :LI~'U ^ U _S •'— ^- > I riR Dl « •".:'-j:.:1 - • ...... •' ' •' . . ft 1^ r> /•* '01-5 ,?'-'' c /" < cr. .' . '' i V ii - /»,i jJ t-iit. i

RNCYPRUR S — LIAD 6RIIC1 : *? D 4^ A / S i-JvJ f^iv AT-1

TURKZY j .• AAD XaRZAT BrilTAii-i ^-Tii Z TnRZZ Oij ARA^iT ORS OP C-PRUS :T IH p^'Ti '7..i r Q ;?j • '• * •' ~! T 1H TH r•~>i a TTlii.^J T. i-""".'^i' r /•.t^ T"7 r1 T ^ f .A. y ' "X? •'.T :^* .-."T1 !, -" '^ "D " '\ ' ""i "' ^-' '' ^ ^ r"1 - r -sr^* ^* "^ OT3 ^'5 -^T f r^^ y J Oi'iV-'Xj-Ji'j.A^iu-ijji i-i_.i rii ^it.-'ti 0 l itt^i« .'iijjj ^-i 11 j\>— ^ \7'^i±-» ru i -L'Jv i-tU

: : i j i i"* Uo wjj i O J i ••i'i'iJL Li t, i ~r, i . i Z- JJ il,Lj xlj a rii il. O 'w 0 i v J i_.rOi-lijj J. i/ vjiCOoi^.'J rii -J GOLj-iCi"-i.V —i-i '-'.• OAAJiD.. OUl A R^SOLUl iOA* !" 'Ji'IOM OF THZ UNdTZB":'KINGD'OM. S-iOULD £Z GlVZiJ ^AJ OR CRZDIT. .'. .V:,UPI 07-20. 05: 39 PED ' /.

' : WIT.NESS 7-2C " "'ICED'IT on s ncTZrfZLi;; YIARIS :s A j?i TZLZI/ISIOH iizws CA^ZRA^AIJ WMO Livzs.:iir.Nico'SiA\7) '•. VJITK" CYPRUS 7 '••-.- VBY :JZLIX,. Yi-'A>:is : /.,_.J^COSI^-(UPI-) --^ZVZRY^ROUR OR SO^A^PAIR^OJ AMZRI CAM-BUILT Fl05

SATURlTAY^OM^ZiR ';:AY^Tp'nUMLOAD "Bp^W.ji^ TRZ^POLI CZ .RZADju ARTZRS' AMD

'.:tl'y __// /.JIPZ ALD ^17-iZAR-OLD £0i^ I JATCliZD PROM OUR .{Oi7Z WITH A _COuiJ/iijj A,iG^ \7iz-,; uf T i - GIT/ v,-J.L- ...jCT OP T.Z BOljoS PZLL II^AR T.-IZ P3L LGj- i ^AD.i J.nif _R^ rii.O A !ui,i.R3Y LATiOiiAL GUARD ARTILLZRY POSITIOiJ.

j i lr ._j' . 1*1T -^• JrfUoj.li-i~5^-- >c 'P —-' i-ORZ uORZ 'JPI 07-2J -5:42 PZ . . ; LI.n 7-20 -.-. • c • "'•(: TOG EMT'-: "' .• "i'ST . IJi:GKT~LD. 2-2 'DY -BRUCE': 'U. ;;'iUivIJ

: - v r - iHj ri. I i_ RE SOLUTION THAT ALSO/CALLS OH GRZZCZ AND TURKEY TO 3E'GiN iNNED-iAT NEGOTIATIONS WITH --GREAT BRITAIN , THE THIRD-PARTY GJARA1ITOR Of THE i9&- TREATY GIVING CYPRUS INDEPENDENCE- TO RESTORE PZACZ TO THE • EN3ATTLED -.ISLAND. • ..„'''•' -v •• • • 7 . "^T Ln-z1- 7 ~~-i. i'i^aSJR• .: •"• /• f+t i i '•"} i"^ vJAf T P Sf* 1 K^j^KuV^ii* T**- r~" T™' ^T T — 1i 1- > 1^-r- A0 m,• .-*L '-p ±i —R •'•"> ' a i"1 i'iOKiil^' '" — t •"' " ' T ~' U• {"* * SiiSiOi(*"* — • ^^f^"T ^ .T * 0r^-"^ i.i^ ' — •" ' i— ' • •"* •-> ' r " t r^ T* T ' v T A- '"*• '•^i' .^- r*'''"1"'^ "* >. T —•-. > •-• --> ~- • • ~> .-«.—•. — • •'•-•- - * ^ T. />--iTr^1"T "~/"\:T^C* '^UUiiU.'iL VfHi. r.-Uoi'-ruiiiU ? WA rl\J^-- ia rii'J • ij^V ^i'J iiOdiXo. ••-•> .», ' )i •>• — -T-\ •• r f~* A, - ; r-i A r-< (^ \ r\ ^ f") T •'N5 ^ T~ f"1/"! ^ T T ni ^ i*"1 7 T C* — ' '"' !--»•-:-> C* "^7 T ~ ""^^ • T ' " T .-^ * T Jli-iJlL iJ^A « U'.' b« ' riUaK^bhJ Uik. -oOii-li! .oL riL i Ho L J b-l-J 1^^- O iJv i il,JL JiliUlJ 5 Tv.lrLi^^i - i T -~4:i - . : IT oO - . bpT^-'T iru D /-il:/.T1"?; i"-'L" r< oCi1rtJ-.L,.i "^ '"• T T ."•.r=:u ' •" «•-'^ ** : 1 t v 1 GRiiUr,-,.--. — .,-, ^, ..-.. 'n•• ^i-i , )-r . - r.HSivi. + *,*,. r D-i-^ T ii— . i.-- -; .-i. TU^uiiJ T ~ . r^r— . 7/:^;iT o^-^uRi.»i —',-117 — t T "^i ^ "I* ^•JUi/^i-»-*'* T '-1 ~L" T oibbiJi-C*~'(~*(~ ' " *"*,': " ^ '*UL.LJ.'^T T .^V f --Lr —i ••J T' TURKEY- S IrlVASLOrl Of. TXE JuEDITERRAiJEAi; ISLAND. BUT THE RESOLUTiOM SP^Ciriii-D TK AT- Pu'jOlJG Tii E • JOR^i Gl-i TROOPS Tn AT iiU ST"'':BE ' I'j LTj-iiJ RAWi; ARE T;,^ G50 GRi^R Oi'^iCi:-iS UuG i^jiD i^i.^ I;Ai iOiirii^ • GUARD' I.M DEPOSIiiG ARCH DlS-iOP^i-SAKARI OS_ Oi'J L'iOiiD AY. _ . . '-'".vKILE HOT i'l-^ijTIuHl II-G Tli Z ~"3REi,K GF/ICERS DY i.'AME „ . TR E RESOLUTlOii .CALLED _70R^JITlir;RAwL^O?_pOOPS "REijESrZD_ BY TX^P-tZSIDEIJT O/^TRE REPUBLIC- OF CYPRUS ARC'.-i ii'l Si GP i'lAKARluS Ii." RiS .LETTER OF JULY 2^ - •••" -' . . ~r -_._ _ .„__ . i' i *X.;'i 1'^ J-ij'\. rii'ii Oo L^ r^ LJ ^*Li ? WK '^j i i . * iJ ^ i .'"t •.'. •. '-GREECE H AS. SO FAR AGREED OiiLY • TO "REPLACE" TEE OFFICERS 30 AT A TIliE WiTIfOUT ivii ThD RA'JI!; G iii,^, _ • ; i i-[ i, RiSOi-. U i i Oi'j DiD M.OT GO iiS Fnii :f;S f.'i j^ C 'i PRU S jjiL^GAl iOi.1 ;.; Ai i i ^j.) • 1 1 O 6 i I e O' WO i L !_» jli O O A'iJ- *J I i"i -uj i - JT !'». j'lii* Il,i >. ^ L ZjjJ i i 0 ij i'io O jL Oi."' ^li ^1 -i. J" — 'w ri^j .Ui * kv * iijL1 i JL J * o ^ O IL 'l:i•yr- -:i^ i^\ ^•-"-.- i< TJ r .-i"•>. 7 1 :1 ^ri« ,v^j y-i >w ^. VJ-l.ilT T -•-. ; U,-^,-v i'i(U. ...- .-•;..\ J' u','.. ;- --i r.- U.-.' (-O* rlij^, ; ~\j -i^ ,-\'JA^ -'•O' "\i ^* i"i.~. •J " Or Oi i' ' nV."'1i " _^. v^j.."* T1 " iii - Tj-Oi T ^ . ....—. '• T J.i^p-_i --I --. ' TURICEY-G'REECE-DRIT AI 1; IIEGOT'Z ATI OHS. '•• : SCfil TOLD HEWShEH BEFORE. TRE RESOLUTION WAS ADOPTED T.IE "SOVIET ... AT TIT uaZj] AS. -'^OT 3EEi; HEL-PJUL. '^ "'_ ^ . .T' - _ '. •' . fi;./'£.. i.iJ.r-;j'\. iii ^. • .bi' i J Ai i Oil iS SO C K i r ± C r'iL PA AT IS i'S Ciii I'jli; Al. -i.F IvE . -'lj J -iJ-Ji- A'oJii.^. -j J.I Ciilj. 1' -oi! ;-i 0 j-iLi Li ' J OR- A 0 — riS_L~.; livi, Ai;Jj „' -J.'i ' ; . - 7 '-.' ??T'.lit- "V.L^ ' J../ • 7\ - -i• i:r ' i-i_c.-s O/ u\~ / rTi ijc: 1i J?='•^' ti'lij^ '-'T ,~j ' 1-.,-. ••Jiv-.L; TVl; i i.' . I"1 7 .'.; r ri''•--.V -^• -•i •i :^- c-v^-r^' J.J'1 >->vi Ji7. J-• :• - ic J.« 'Ji . •-•• i J K;\. i Ct: oOji'l.L>iS J. '-Jj-iJ i. i^,j C3i':.L. i'i • i i\ ,L,\ \j i'il ; i .il.i) ii.i 'JjUiiC-i-L iO i"* o ;..THE., -Y SAI^.,D . T;-;Ei Y . HAD WAPJIZ, D OF DIRi E JEVELOP^EITT.o« S EARLIER THIS WEEK UT THE C.OUiiCIL- REFUSED .TO DEBATE THE SITUATlOi-i UUTIL 1-iAKARlOS COUL LY -HERE TO 3E HEARD. ' DEKKTASI WAS STILL IN CYPRUS SATURDAY ii ORi-MIiG, MiTGL'JDES PREVIOUS •" ' .-'" UPI Q7-2Q 06^32 FED :

2:MA .- •.:'••••,••' • - • .•••:...• •'••- TRANSCRIPT 7-9^- ';: •'"IST':?LD ••'•226A1' CPREVI OUS WASHINGTON) ^ AND CALLED JEUNER "A'P ALE' i'-l i V • *- „ .. UPI 07-2Q

:'nii-GHT, LD . _, '.^ : -D. i K» U« J. i i. i-iL £j it . L GI'vD 01J C UP-i.)' — — L;Ri. J. -AiN« DriCAi.^1 3i in A uNii^D i>i t-n AO j-uiD y-ilLMiii IL> .'ALL IE-Si SATURDAY FORMAL Li CALLED 'ON GREECE AND TURKEY TO BEGIN CYPRUS •PEACE: TALKS IMMEDIATELY.-" , 'FOREIGN SECRETARY JAKES CALL ASIAN SAID THAT BY THE END OF THE DAY. -THE TWO NATIONS HAD NOT'RESPOND ED TO BRITAIN'S URGENT APPEAL AND APPARENTLY WERE WAITING FOR^A CEASE-FIRE. CALLASHAN SAID AFTiR CONFERRING AT LEAST FlVi^ i IMES WITH SECRETARY

inuoP-S! "' ""•'^- . u' WOULiV \JUljjDJ NOT!•; Ui - GEUj_,T i DIRECTLUJ. _ Y INVOLVE. D I_N„ . THE FIGHTING. . ,. L-iAIN THRUST OF U.S. AND BRITISH PRESSURES ON THE GREEK AND 1 r : a, GOVERNMENTS .WAS TO .ARRANGE n /~C^i-\Si*-t -.------~~* f. r*~* s-^ iRiv n •>"•. r-i^-*--di-i1- '•>Uii-^ -r-ii i-»i =T r*1 fr-rU'i i-r -i 7 7ii, r> " SPREAD TO .THE L'iAINL A13_2"?[E SAID. HE SAID H. .CALLAGHAN *SAID THE SO/1ET UNlO:N IS "NOT SAYING MUCH,*' BUT THE -- - i-f • «TI T T —, T , y* '

'CALL A G!-: AN -SAID THE FANILI'ES OF BRITIS-: SOLDIERS SERVING IN CYPRUS HAVE -SEEN MOVED I NTO:TUO. BRITISH MILITARY BASES ON THE ISLAND FOR

iiUL, Z. * Oi.^UiS.J.1. _. _ _. .. BRITISH LIVES AND PROPERTY ON CYPRUS.-, •. '. • "UP1-..Q7-20. 05sl'6'iJED

267A --. '• " •' "-:;- : '• ' ' v, ••-,.- ADVISORY. 7-20 "EDITORS; YOUR ATTENTION IS:INVITED TO THE FOLLOWING DISPATCHES SCHEDULED TO ,iOVE"LATER TONIGHT OK Tjil S WIRE: TWO ADDITlOilfi r L CYPRESS SIDEDARSo AN EYEWITN'ESS REPORT ALTTI •• -- HISTORY OF T-i ,-CT f?n ^- -^ --— _,„„... .:.^^. ^^. .^ ^.^ 1 v-,-,2•X--7'7 i"' "o V -. !(• 'j;u• •". •••>j. o . -/7 -^r^ '--~\J V{ . -- - -- r ~P! 7 .~* VC' '•-} : ? C1 i'j J. iii- '-. 1*. -i>.U O . •• ' •:'. MLGHT LD. ' TT • . "'OTTAWA (UPI)--SIX CANADIAN SOLDIERS WERE WOUNDED_IN FIGHTING ON » 'CYP.RUS--AFTER ...TURKEY INVADED THE ISLAND^ A^ EF EN SE^ SPOKESMAN SAID

: s ..' ' ' THE SPOKESMAN SAID e "PROBABLY THE 'GRAVEST WAS TO ONE SOLDIER WHO '^MEANWHlLET'c^^ WERE POISED" TO'EVACUATE" F OREI GN HiON-COMBATANf'S STRANDED-111 CYPRUS AS SOON AS TURKEY LiFTS ITS BAN OH ' NGN-MILITARY'FLIGHTS OVER THE ISLAND 5. DEF ENSE AND EXTERNAL AFFAIRS SOURCES. SAID SATURDAY, '•"< . ABOUT'': 10 5, 'CANADIAN^NATIONALS. jiOST _ OF THZ^TOUSI STSj, WERE__3EING _ AS SOON" AS'THE -COMMANDER OF THE CANADIAN- CONTINGENT OF THE UNITED NATIONS PEACEKEEPING FORCE, C'OL. CLAY 3EATTIE. DECIDES IT I S SAFE Tu MOVE THE. STRANDED ^ CANADIANS 9 THEY: WILL BE SHIFTED TO CAMP SLUE BERET y • NEAR -THE CAPITAL' S AI R? ORT , THE^SOURCES SAID. THE DEFENSE 'SPOKESMAN SalD THE GOVERNMENT DID NOT KNOW TH- NAM.a,S OF THE WOUNDED:-SOLDIERS, NOR -EXACTLY'H OW THE"INCIDENT S OCCURRED. .-•:"•' ON THE DIPLOMATIC SIDE. EXTERNAL. AFFAIRS SPOKESMEN SAID THEY WERE WAITING FOR.^A U,N. SECURlfY COUNCIL DECISION "ON THE MANDATE OF"THE U.N. FORCES, INCLUDING TH E:' CANAD IANS, " •: . THE:.DEF ENSE DEPARTMENT-SOURCE, SAID CANAD IAD TROOPS. AND OTHERS IN -'UTE'm-N. FORCE. WERE ALSO TAKING CARE^OF 30^i NON-C ANAlJl AN FOREI GN NATIO.NAL.S Wli 0 H_AD SOUSiT ^REFUGE WITH THEMV____ 1 JiLr'ULjLj -i flL. L i;'ii. Li H-iJ —ivD Mii 1 O UiH ill jj 4 OJ \j rti1-1 MiJ J-'fiij SiJLjJi L.,~{. S iii C i'PriUo WERE. .AI.RLIFTED OUT OF Ti{E COUNTRY THURSDAY, , - THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN SAID THAT. ACCORDING TO HIS . .IMFORHAT-I ON THE.-U.N. FORCE WAS STILL MANNING /OUR OF THE OUTPOSTS •.-•v-M'OSE PURPOSE'.IT WAS TO TRY AND KEEP THE FEUDING GREEK AND TURKIST • T £"*; f, -i" 7i> f*i -V-'ViV''T T r 7 "J" 'PT ]—''^ r'/^ "i~\ -S —;~" • -t- Oij .'jT'» i Vl^ . •-> >^J> J1. i 'J J i i J, >i» !_• >-j- i~i ,i jrt -11 j. e ASKED IF' THEY WOULD BE TAKING ANY FURTHER ACTION, BOTH THE DEFENSE AND THE EXTERNAL" AFFAIRS"SOURCES SAID'. "WE ARE ALL WAITCNG FOR A \ SECURITY COUNCIL DECISION ON THAT." '. -DUPLICATE. TO 3-WIRE POINTS ' . " ..•'.;• ' "'.:UP-I 07-20' 3S-J02 -PED • ""•..•

27cja/;, ..',:•'- ' ; •-• ' •' ,-:;"~:-. - '• ,• - UN 7-20 :'-:-•'. ••':'- -"CORRECTION UN .UNITED NATIONS 2!' YORK> • ' • • ' : '••Ui^.i G'7-2'0 0

. • ... .- - . . . .- . ' " • •.MIDEAST' 7^20 ;• •".. SERT^NIG-IT LD MIDEAST ' UND AATED 221 A AFTER 4TH

STATES. FOLLOWS PAL ESTI.NIAN CRlTICI SM

^UPI 07-20 06^06 PEi M. -' "" ,/':• °

R'^'^'^-nHMCVPRiJS^^ .^_ ^ lr,, „..._,_ V ' , •'•".•'••'• • '•'"•'.-;" •'il-i'A.i.'ji .-OF'^'A viAR COKii^SPu ;';D ^Ni . .• ':'•.•- .•"'•-• • '-^Y-•'•;.!7^:[ A^L "K '"A^S- '

R: '• :'.OF.-'TURKI.SR JETS: R.ERALDZD TR E START ..OF TRZ TURKISR INVASION OF CYPRUS v;:.;\::F.QR-NICOSIA ..'AT DAWN -SATURDAY^' -,./•'" R :'-:-AMZRlCA'N-BUILT. F 105'WARPLnNE'S STRI/UNG .AT NICOSIA AIRPORT. / • >V • -'• /'-P.R OP-D. RIVEN C130 HERCULES. T-Rj-, NSPO/i'f i^LAijES DROPPED Pj-.Rni ^OOP^RS

• -: . ..• ; -.\_fai j.:i S Ui: iivi U.C jl,.'i,ii r.-AiJ. ui-.'.-ilj j'Uj~^iiJ r. • ii iHi L'.ji.i^^J \jii i^— ii.OJ.' O-/ i?'. ^1. ;*COi;i'M''u.N IT IES.6.. FIRED TR IIR AK47 AUTOMATIC RIFLES_Iii F.iJSTRATi ON. ;:;-.. THE-" RAD I'ft BLARZD" THZ NZWS. YK Z F ZARZD INVASiQij BY TURKEY a AD A;'1;;. 'BEGUN.. TRE/.SI'R- DAY-OLD' COUP';OF ZX-TZRRORIST GUNMAN NICOS SAMPSOi; r I ; " -' " •". •' i'if,"^ji AD .,'-j_" , if i.i'-" \.'L_.^Ji •'~" ^-'". : i|.''iP" ; j_i j'i" i Oi.' . j~t,": ..~l .•, ' ^_iT7l " -jj^7*-j . ». • • ' ""' ' . ' ..

r 1 lr>: l : 1 T : T n r i i :."•'": •. " ' ' • ..,1-r ' • /vSL'IPP-ir — *-, -,•-) — tD^ • ''i-\C-A.O'S• VT "• -"•,Mr* r*S iNi~ i ' ^ u-~\ in * —i.• "lUivAiSn" " ~- ~f ~ r* " ' _bi,o'~'«-»'""u i' "*j.OiJ" ^ ~_ rtJii TT\ i n^.-.oj^- / '-^ - ••-> -^ r-j, _~i .j^r.i-.•-* r 7 *. —u• — * irii"• • .~* :r'''- ^AiN TURKi.S;-! ARMY JA3Z v^ZiiZ. PARAPAOCP— RS U-K^ SIJ.LL iU^B^-UvG ;« ROi'' " •• :'"':^ABOUT'"F-OUR'I'M:ILZS OUTSIDE NICOSIA^ TRZ FIRST OF TRZ INVADZRS iv>;o RAD 1 ,•'.-- DRQPPZD.,, OFF' TAK'GZT SPED PASf „ WAVING FROM THE 'V ERICLES OF TR E TURKISH -.• .--•'. ."• V;V;Y Tj'' p'V'D "Jl.fT q- ' ' • , ' . : ..'• . v ••-;.. j5 U 1:C Iri II* A • iio O'l -! « 'i 'l~i. l!j i\ / KiE,|; j. f\ ri(j rijj riiii'J I u i!i JL J. O i Lj _^i ; X^iJ Lj no i\. riiw !-• , ''•'•••. "'BULLETS ZIPPED BETWEEN A.GREEK AI-Z) TURKIS; VILLAGE. HALTING ALL '. . THAFFI-C. 'ABOUT TWO- MILES-FROM TRZ CiTY LIMITS. TURRj. SR CYPRI OT ARMY

1 ; '•' '. nil. Oi'io: jj 7 i\ ^ vV OuL*.JJ Ljjl* \J f\i i O J. i'J la w J. i i'i «li J^-iLiix :o i^'LLj O t'ii -.-ij JJ i^-i- J > i\ J. i'v b vjil J. Oj.x jl/ I _l_i \

li'il^ \j.\jL^i'i iiLm £^L~i (Ji1 I i'l Zj L! J •<-L-i k-?riJ.iJ j'i. J. o J Ou WriO oJ_iJ* i_, I i U i\.£-*i*i ii~l.Il. rl \Jr*JJ ':,'•• TO, KYRENIA IN TURKISR HANDS. ' .- • " .' - A^GHEZK •'U_NITS..D1D_NOT APPEAR TO WANT TO L-jO/r. ACROSS INTO T;;E TURKISR. '••• AliiA AND . TA Jr. F i GilTi NG I>'j-tO?PED OFF TO OCCASIONAL RIFLZ AND MAC!'" INZGUl! : ; ' •• ;yTZL:ZPKONES^AiJD\ELECTRiI CITY"fo'ilJE VILLAGE WERE CUT BY GREEK • V -AUTHORITIES ill NICOSIA CAUSING SOLDIERS TO SCAMPER FOR COLD DRINKS .- MA BEING- -SOLD AT -A GASOLINE STATION. ''•''•:. •-•'"•••'TURK I S.i RED CRZ.SCENT (RES CROSS) AMBULANCES I GNORED TRZ FIRING TO '-":' PICK-UP WOUNDED TROOPS AND EVACUATE .SOME FAMILIES FROM TRZ FRONT - '• ••'.-—;D.URING -A;LULL IN TRZ BATTLE A U. N. JEEP"' UND ERGOING REPAIRS IN A •-'•' -••.DESERTED GARAGE PROVED TO BE A HANDY WAY TO CROSS BACK INTO TRZ GREEK : ^'-.-SECTION OF NICOSIA. ,,.. • •• " " ':-• .-ROARING''TR'ROU QM THE DESERTED STREETS OF TRZ.TURKISH AREA' OF TOWN •."••; --AND THROUGH .THE CHECKPOINT^ WE-STARTLED GREEK NATIONAL GUARDSMEN •^,.-'ENFORCING THZ' TOT-AL CURFZW/- ' : •;:"-:'^'.- ,:'AT THZ LEDRA PALACE H OF EL . NO OiE WAS IN A MOOD TO TALK. .;...;' ONE S:OLDlER. CRASiiED BACK-FROM A GROUND FLOOR WINDOW CLUTCHING A ::'.':•• BULLET-SHATTERED. ARM. ' - '- - •:\ ,;-^ ;_rpNZ.":OF HIS BUDDIES H AD .BEEN 'KILLED EARLIER, AND TWO OTHERS •:V-:.:.;:MR.ONEROF ;THZ' GIHL RECEPTIONISTS BURST INT'O. TEARS AS THZ POLDIZR LAY \ ' -.-'GROAIIINTV .:.•••.-• ::•-•-•. '•'?TH IS' IS DREADFULL. VJH ERE-WILL IT ZND ?" SHE SOBBED. ••-•': -:--H-0- ONH/COULD 'TELL HER..-FOR PVT, SZLIM GAVUS THERE WAS NO DANCING :. :T,N'- "I CO-SI A- SATURDAY' III GIT. ' •; •' • .•.,::-, -V.' ;j.p! '07-20 Ofi'j4t TJ; ^E-i'I^J ABOUT THE RECENT 'DEV^ELOFMENTS IN CYPRUS, nAVl^G^ Jf.RD SfiTEMENTS MADE BY i.iE PRESIDENT OF THE_REPUBLIC OF CYPRUS AN;D Tii E .STATEMENTS BY THE REPRE'SENTATIV ES OF CYPRUSj TURKEY. • : H AViNG CONSiD EKED AT ITS PRESENT MEETING FURTHER DEVELOPMENTS IN i-L-Ji.-- J.'co-'rti'jjJ-tf------^-,..-..:-.r-.- ..-«,--- - „______. ^ .,.______'^.v..______.:-_.... .' , _ .... ^, DEEPLY DEPLORING THE OUTBREAK 'OF VI OLZHCE" AND" C011TIHUIIJG "' LY COHCERIJ-ED -ABOUT TH E 'SITUATI OH "lUi ICIi LED TO A SERIOUS • THREAT TO'-'I'i_iTERiIATI01JAL PEACE A ID _ SECURITY A!!D WHICH CREATED A ilOST E/IPL 0 SIV E SiTU ATI OM I ii THE Wh OLE hASfiriiJ n^D iriRRAiiiAi,' ARiirij : EQUALLY CONCERNED ABOUT TK E'' HECESSI TY TO RESTORE THE CON!S'riTUTIOIJAL STRUCTURE Of. THE REPUBLIC OF CYPRUS ESTABLISHED A;ID ' GU AriAMT EED ''BY. If-iTERI; ATI Oi'iAL • AGREEi-iEi'iTS, ' RECALLING SECURITY COUNCIL ' RESOLUTION 136 OF 13^4, OF NA^CH 43 1964 •' AI£> SU3:SEOUENT RESOLUTIONS OF THE" SECURITY COUNCIL ON THIS i'lATTER: CONSCIOUS OF ITS PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY f OR' THE MAINTENANCE OF NATTONAL PEACE AND SECURITY IN ACCORD A NCE WITH ARTICLE 24 OF THE GiARTER OF THE UNIT'ED NATIONS, 1) CALLS UPON ALL STATES TO RESPECT THE SOVEREI GNT Y , INDEPEid) ENCE' AND- TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OF CYPRUS:, • 2) CALLS UPON ALL PARTIES TO THE PRESENT FIGHTING AS A FIRST STEP TO CI£A,SE_ ALL FIRING AND REQUESTS ;ALL STATES^TO ^XERCI SE THE__UTNOST RESTRAIN^ AiJD TO REFRAIN JROi'i ANY ACTlOr; WHICH MIGHT FURTHER -AGGRAVATE. THE SITUATION, 3) DEMANDS AN IMMEDIATE EID TO- FOREIGN MILITARY INTERVENTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF CYPRUS THAT IS IN CONTRAVENTION OF TH-E OPERATIVE • PAR^GRAHN, •-• ' ••" ' . : : .4) REQUESTS THE WITifDRAUAL WITHOUT DELAY FROM THE REPUBLIC OF CYPRU-S OF 'FOREIGN MILITARY PERSONNEL PRESENT OTHERWISE THAN UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS INCLUDING THOSE bnOSE WITHDRAWAL WAS REQUESTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CYPRUS ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS IN HIS LETTER OF JULY 2, 1974« 5):"CALLS ON GREECE, TURKEY AND TNE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORT;IERN IRELAND TO ENTER INTO IE GOTI ATI on s" WITHOUT 'DEL AY FOR THE RESTORATION OF PEACE IN THE AREA AND CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN .CYPRUS AND TO-'-'KZEP.THE SECRETARY GENERAL INFORMED. : . ' 6) CALLS ON ALL -PARTIES TO COOPERATE FULLY WITH UNFICYp (THE U.I!. P'EACEKEEPTN FORCE) TO ENABLE -IT TO CARRY OUT ITS MANDATE, . 7) DECIDES TO KEEP THE SITUATION -JIEER CONSTANT REVlEvJ AND ASKS " Til E SECRETARY GENERAL TO REPORT AS APPROPRIATE WITH A VI Ew TO AD OPT rNG FURTHER MEASURES IN ORDER TO INSURE THAT PEACEFUL CONDITIONS ARE RESTORED' AS. SOON AS .-POSSIBLE, UJPI 07-20:Q6;55 PED r^n , •••••. ••• . .:•-... •*) REa JESTS T^E WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT DELAY FROM THE REPUBLIC OF rJUS OF FOREIGN IILIFARY PERSONNEL PRESENT OTHERWISE THAN UNDER TH HORITY QT I..TERNATI CNAL AGREEMENTS INCLUDING THOSE WHOSE JAS REQUESTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CYPRUS uAKnRlOS 113 ^IS LETTER OF JULY 2» 1974, , TURKE niH NORTHERN IRELAND 10 ENTER INTO HEGOTlATIonS"WITH OUT DELAY FOR THE

R_STOitArion OF PErCZ II. THE ARE1 A AND CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN uiri\ i _j i*w\T/ r oc* i*/MI iJ"\ *ri »w -\ is.!-^r •"" -»T~! \ "7,L* j^ bioJi.il.r*—• ^ '••) —"ri M-iv .-, T. - 1v* uii,i-iji.iwAi.-• —*? : r-"n :» aT li-;T" '""r *UiU'irJ -V"*. * ' ^'"" •, C) CA^LS ON uLL PARTIES-TO COOPERATE FULLY WITH UNFICY? (THE U.M. PLAC^EIPIiJ T DRCE) TO INA3LE IT TO CARRY OUT ITS MANDATE. 7) DL::DJS TO AEE? TYZ SITUATION UIDER CONSTANT RZVIZ^ AND ASKS ' Ti[E.,SZC-RZTARY.;GENZRAL TO REPORT AS APPROPRIATE WITH A VlEv; TO AD OPTING,FURTHER MEASURES', IK ORDER TO INSURE THAT PEACEFUL CONDITIONS v1^ v'"1 - "! —"'fT* '"• •"* —T^ ^ r^ r^ ^ •J iiilJl,. i\H,:bi-.WrC£jj i^b OU'- •7•J r"Qr .T1. J?*•. —/} -^r^rg^ • Uor> /••2 ft r

; "V-'i'sr CYPRUS'7-2NLGHT LD 2330 A . '.•. • • •":... BY UNITED^ PRESS INTERNATIONAL ,~ TURKISH LAIS V"" AIR AND SEA FORCES IIV AD ED CYPRUS SATURDAY AND • WITHIM HOURS- CLAIMED CAPTURE OF THE CAPITAL OF NICOSIA. THE UNiTED NATIONS'SECURITY COUNCIL CALLED UNAMIMOU SL Y FOR A CEASE-FIRE. THE FIGHTIM.G, WHICH PLUNGED THE WESTERN ALLIANCE IliTo ITS WORST CRISIS SINCE THE-195S SUEZ INVASION., WAS GREETED BY A MASSIVE DIPLOMATIC EFFORT TO PREVENT FULL-SCALE WAR BETWEEN GREECE AND TURKEY. - • v . ^ ' ' " - .TH'E SECURITY COUNCIL VOTE, WHICH CALLED FOR THE RESTORATION OF CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT l.N CYPRUS, WAS 15-0. IT INCLUDED BOTH T^ UNITED STATES: AND THE SOVIET" "UNI ON. HOWEVER., THE '^UNITED STATES SENT "70 THE AREA TO STAND 3Y . TO EVACUATi -AMERICANS Ai'D ALERTED AMERICAN PARATROOPERS STATIONED I i,: ITALY : AS .A' PRECAUTIONARY HOVE. . 'A SHAKY CASE-FIRE WAS ARRANGED. BY UNITED NATIONS PEACE-KEEPING FORCES.; BUT'HEAVY-Fi-GHTING-'WA'S REPORTED RAGING IN MANY jTH^R PARTS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN- i SAND.. : : ON CYP;RUS,'PRESIDENT tilCOS SAMPSON, SWORN IN MONDAY AFTER PRESIDENT 'MAl('ARlOS WAS OVERTHROWN* SAID IN A RADIO AND TELEVISION BROADCAST THAT-GREEK. CYP'RIOTS WOULD KEEP FIGHTING "UNTIL WE THROW THE INVADING TURKS: INTO THE SEA, *' ' • ^ _^ . ii'j- v'j 0 SCO v.! j TilE TASS NEl^S ^AGENCY DEi^OUilC^D AS "AN UTT^R F ABRIC ATIOi'r' A RL? ORT ' Til AT T;'i E . SOVIET Ui-JIOi-j HAD n3BiLI^.cD FOR Tii E

Hi-iD A N i_i Oi -iD VJi j e, . ij~L jl. JDi\-L 1 J. O/l lj .il-.M1' i-jiJOjl i'JANX^jiiv.^ riiii^WiJaJ^IljU Or^tiu i"t.iJ fi 1 A i HAD BEGUl-fAlRLIFtlNG l^OOO COMMAiiDOS AND ARMORED TROOPS TO REINFORCE :fHE_g.;pqO_ BRITISH^ SERVICEMEN MANNING BRITISH BASES ON^CYPRUS.^ . ' THE _INV,ASION PROMFJ^""'PRESIDENT NIXON TO CONFER WITH SECRETARY OF A PENT AGON* -SPOKESMAN SAID THE PLACED SEVEN OF ITS AIRBORNE' -.DIV TSI ON S ON ALERT EVEN BEFORE THE FIGHTING BEGAN BUT THE OFF 1C I.AL. SOVIET NEWS AGENCY TASS'LATER DENIED THAT ANY ALERT HAD 3ZZN ORDERED./'RUSSIAN' WARSilPS WERE IN THE AREA* HOWEVER, PICK-UP STH'PGHs SEVEN HOURS UPi 07-20 07 201

2S3A CEASE 7-H.J "" IT^ ^CYPRUS^ _ ^ ,_,,,_.,,.,:..,,.,..,,, _c, ^v.^ _„ ..,..., i^.v_/v/j_^ti( i_» 11 .. i. J O vLji •*-••• -sj_x .i_. Ilji\ ^~i i 'jj_j ivJ*xix^.-^ii ^-f •*• .1 ." 1,.*.' W1 O i' L ^vJ i L j_i -~-_.v (""• / •"" r —^ j. i i—i ^ i T ^ ^ — •— [j ^-i -> '. |^< •-< •-• f *• "~* -r • - ' T V" '~i 's f~* "•",'. ""I"1 -\ • * —' ' ~, " T ' r1 • T •••:••• r^ -• • -.

uiiii'ijii1 3 1 ."x:J Ui" "j 10 _l*y iiL*-JJ*Hi^- J \J. i ii« i u I; ^ -i-V -^ /•* — ^i''-' 5 ^"' ^ » »«• oi"UiV.— »~»*'j nlj Kj^jLi/* IN^T^TM "GREE^'ENT WAS" OILY" ON THE "LOCAL 'LEV ELV ANF; ''APPLIED OHLY TO " THE "GREEN LINE" SEPARATING THE GREEK AJS .'JRKI SH SEClJ.iS :i: . ICOfl... T;;ELIKE WAS SET UP BY THE u. M. FORCE WHEN IT FIRST CAL-IZ TO CYPRUS IN 1964TAND IS REGULARLY MANNED BY U,N. TROOPS. THE SPOKESHAN SAID THAT EhRLIER IN THE DAY GREEK AND TURKISH CYPRIOTS AGREED TO A LOCALIZED CEaSE-FIRE IH THE SOUTHERN PORT OF .LIiiASSOL. THIS CEASE-FIRE LASTS 2 1/2 HOURS TO PERMIT U.N. TROOPS TO EVACUAT-E j,OQO DEPENDENTS OF BRITISi 'TROOPS BASED IN CYPRUS TO ONE OF 'THE TUO.TJRrflSH BASES ON THE SOUTH" S^fORE OF THE ISLAND. " "

"•FORCES 7-20

•*J~ ' ^ *f c j—i-iLt^ ~j O ci «' Yw O w" i \.+J i i •t 'CJ i. w l^i xli ' • O-l- ,''«"* 'H f^T*11 "T^ "T "~" ^^ T '.-t : • '.'".• ^> j. f: L^ \ •' •'. IT j f. ^i I ' -'. J i i' '•-, '"T1" " •"* -^~ f T ^'T1 'T H"* ^ r T1 ^~" O "^" 1 " —' C1 '*:-1" T "-"^ T' "T" ? r —' T * 'O ('"'•'^ •"* ("> ~j .'"i —' C* '• C1 '~* ,•"'1 T "F •'"*! ~ ' C1 -

. Aiti'Fi --' o63 c GOO _TRO OPS UlTH_ f«400 TANi\S OF V ARi OU^TjPES AND TWO _ 1 < -LOl'iiSi- ci-'Jliiv . ojits •riO.ili — 1 U"""-'biC r.U1 i. i J1 -..' Si i^ ±j D/i i i J'iij —-Ji. O» ; i.lriV i- —— ^JU n (JW ;J i"j ;r• Lr i —-^'r.IL i-,- 1 — TT*.---i. i ii v_' , T7ij JT I"•'."/ J. i;• u i; ^ *-n jTj _r", o i" ; ir i, J^ ' iT'" ^.: i iC. 'o -"!i-.i~'i. iJ '. ~^ ^/ cr ;-.••.: .vo'Ti/vq ' •:w_> _'* Ji-l^t ii . ^.O...... r, T '-": • •-* A\ •••! j-^ """ """I * ' 1~>T™1 *=• -i i~* • / -t ,<~1 "\ ~ " "*•, "71 ^i"1 ."• ™ '"i "i ~' " 1—* ' ' *" • T '-I r ' T "^ ?• " !~* alii1 J UAvz. ' -- i 3 ij r

' i.i^i1-1. -— 120 '-000 /'EN. t.'lTH coJ i/U'.-iiS 0.* v'^Rj-Ou'S Hi NU^ <-, j.Oi-^Si JOH;.

cfc^'j C vJ. u'j : i i j'\ J..vC-v:i.i- i i i i o^ J_/l j. u o^V ^.^ ,-i ~,T,-;. ••; IT1 •..--; .-< \r:Dr:' -i r. c"-T' r'* r; ^ ,"i;" c" ".r -\ T r T^3 ',"• ~"7^ T.7TV' LI .' _.'LJiv J-i I i _,il.._. ^i liji'k 04 U i-lj .\.ij i . O ^-.4'-1 — *• " -J^ iJ-tl-i Hi'iJ »' --ct^r.i,«, ,.. --, , ~, - •. •i.iii.i. .^ .^ — ip. , ;Yir,-.-..;, i-;.'-ij.:;- .- ^. ^^ i —i - , /-uliS... *.T» j - .„ • ir^ tv rT;^ u -^-_1'ilL, i~ ii — , ;.:-•:,, — \ ~;. f iAS^*-, f, f~t — -S f-j .\,-:i.i,^«• .7 * T - T ; —J' — \ L"\; T i." " ~o«* w.— i "SOLDIERS AND AIRriEN .' UEF.ENSE HINISTRY. • "_ __ ; -'SRITAIN SUPPLIES ANOTHER 300 SOLDIER TO TH PEACEKEEPING 'I'OPV^P T^r-r FQ"-' NUi-'H^'^S /'PPROKJi'iA ' ' J p V fi -7 _ C- ^ '" v:

__^ _ ^ -_.._ _ ,_, •'•' 1 bi .ADD" N1_LC-;T_^LD IIJV ADE. i-JiC OSIA 2J.OA X X X FURTHER VORD. ' iiEUSHEi'!;wno REACHED KYREMIA REPORTED THE TOWJJ ii-< THE HAJJDS OF THE ~p; r *rt '/• <-'• ^ T T-!-, ••- r*"~j T^ —'• f- n - T '-"^ ~1T ~ r ^ -^ •' 1;-\ * T~~' ' v""; *-»^-?"~l i r-r ~r\ n-1 r^1 ' ' "T ' 7 - "• ' "~• ^ '• " ~ i ~ T ' f ''-*. V !~r'- r ~x ~*~ ~ f* " i-UAiiO i-iliJJ K b;m^A iurrL, i liUHD i^HUDi U i-;D rJ'i il_fiV 1 DOf.Jli-;^ J 1 iJ^CAiS,i CT'V'•• A TT-,- r -r-'r c On J.J1 niJi'V

/V-APOLLO 7-20

s c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: 17 JULY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRANITSAS - OPI PPSG

SUBJECT: OBJET: CYPRUS

.JCEVIT LEFT UNEXPECTEDLY FOR LONDON. HE WILL MEET WILSON, MAKARIOS. UK STILL RECOGNIZES MAKARIOS (WQXR).

_ROSSIDES ORDERED HOME BY NICOSIA. HE WILL NOT GO, HE SAID. (R),

.FIGHTING CONTINUES (TASS).

_REBELS TAKE CONTROL OF ENTIRE ISLAND (R).

MUNOZ* WECKMAN ORDERED OFF THE ISLAND (WEVT>). (a New York City radio station)

SADAT IN A MESSAGE TO MAKARIOS PLEDGED HIS FULL SUPPORT (AFP).

_NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN COMMUNIQUEfeUPPOR TMAKARIO S (AFP) .

NATO IN EXTRAORDINARY MEETING IN BRUSSELS "A MANIFESTS SON PLUS LARGE SOUTIEN AU REGIME DU PRESIDENT MAKARIOS" (AFP). c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM ~^^~ MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: 17 JULY 197l| A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL REFERENCE: 13 * QQ

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: s.N. GRANITSAS - OPI PPSG

MAKARIOS ARRIVING PROBABLY AT U.N. TOMORROW (SEE PAGE TWO) SUBJECT: ' OBJET: CYPRUS LE5DALL CYPRUS ' " • LONDON , JULY 17, REUTER - WHILE CYPRUS RADIO DECLARED THAT LIFE ON THE ISLAND HAD RETURNED TO NORMAL FOLLOWING MONDAY S COUP, OUSTED CYPRIOT PRESIDENT ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS ARRIVED IN ' LONDON TODAY DECLARING THAT HE WAS STILL HIS COUNTRY S LEGAL RULER. AFTER TELLING NEWSMEN AT AN AIREASE NEAR LONDON "AS YOU CAN SEE I AM ALIVE. I AM THE ELECTED RULER OF CYPRUS ,"_THE_ ARCHBISHOP WENT TO NUMEER 13 DOWNING STREET FOR TALKS WITH

LONDONERS CHEERED THE

Oj1 *' j. W jL i~\}~* i\iLi O _L i~J .'Jj i"'j L^rJlj & MEANWhiLE , ^'-iil]£^2i^llJj^Jl^IXlllSJj!;jl^S]&

ALLEGEDLY PLOTTED 3Y GREEK OFFICERS OF^THE CYPRIOT NATIONAL GUARD AFTER MAKARIOS RULED OUT EVENTUAL UNION WITH GREECE FOR HIS ISLAND TROUBLED BY COMMUNAL FIGHTING BETWEEN ITS GREEK MAJORITY AND TURKISH MINORITY. LEADALL CYPRUS 2 LONDON 1 BRITISH FOREIGN MINISTER JAMES CALLAGHAN YESTERDAY CALLED' FOR A WITHDRAWAL OF GREEK OFFICERS FROM CYPRUS, A NOVE WHICH IF ACCEPTED WOULD MEAN A REVERSAL OF THE COUP. MEANWHILE SOURCES IN BRUSSELS REPORTED TODAY THAT ALL NATO COUNTRIES EXCEPT GREECE HAVE CALLED FOR A RETURN TO POWER OF PRESIDENT MAKARIOS AND A WITHDRAWAL OF THE GREEK OFFICERS. _..HAS-.G IVEN SEND MINISTERS TO BRITAIN FOR TALKS, HAS SO FAR NOT ANNOUNCED GFrrn7iL"i?rco^TrrTGir'o'F'>T]iE COUP. BUT THE GREEK STATE RADIO Ni; WAS IN FULL CONTROL AMD HAD H}{!CK REFLECTS THE VIEWS OF THE MILITARY-BACKED GREEK GOVERNMENT, CRITICIZED MAKARIOS AND CLAIMED HE HAD CREATED AN ATMOSPHERE OF CIVIL WAR ON THE ISLAND. CYPRUS RADIO, MONITORED ON THE GREEK ISLAND OF RHODES,

TO THE RADIO, AFFECTED ONLY GREEK f ... r c LEAD ALL CYPRUS 3 LONDON THE RADIO ALSO WARNED ALL CITIZENS TO TURN IN THEIR ARMS -OR FACE COURT-MARTIAL. IT SAID THAT POLICE WOULD EE SEARCHING ALL HOMES ON THE ISLAND IN A HUNT FOR WEAPONS BELIEVED HELD BY THE ARCHBISHOP SUPPORTERS. IN LONDON, THE ARCHBISHOP TOLD OF HIS ESCAPE FROM THE COUP LEADERS, WHO HE SAID DESTROYED HIS PRESIDENTIAL PALACE IN A BID TO KILL HIM AMD THINKING THEY HAD SUCCEEDED BROADCAST HIS OBITUARY ON THE STATE RADIO. • _ _ MAXARIOS FLED TO MALTA AND FROM THERE WENT TO LONDOM. HE SAID HE WILL GO ON TO MEW YORK, PROAEL'Y TOMORROW, TO ADDRESS THE UNITED NATIONS SECURITY COUNCIL. THE PEO?LE OF c 1> V.

, / y

A UY 20 (PRESS) CAIRO 530 16 1248Z =

PRESS • • W C

OMNIPRESS "

NEWYORK =

229 POWELL/YACOUB FROM AZOUMI . ' CYPRUS COUP DETAT IS SPLASHE UNDER RED BANNER HEADLINES BY ALL

CAIRO NEWSPAPERS TUESDAY STOP ALAHRAM QUOTE CIVIL WAIT IN CYPRUS '

FOLLOWS MILITARY COUP DETAT AGAINST MAKARIOS UNQUOTE SEMICOLON

ALGOMHOURIA QUOTE INCREASING POSSIBILITY OF WAR BETWEEN TURKEY AND

GREECE UNQUOTE SEMICOLON ALAKHBAR QUOTE CYPRUS =

P2= • S ";'

COUP TURNS INTO INTERNATIONAL CRISIS UNQUOTE CYPRUS COUP DETAT 1% •.':': r—• • ',- ALGOMHOURIAS VIEW IS QUOTE A LINK IN A LONG CHAIN OF DESPERATE — '"'^ 'ATTEMPTS WHEREBY IMPERIALIST FORGES TRIED.TO OUST MAKARIO.S FOR nig •; VIOLENT OPPOSITION TO THEIR PLANNINGS UNQUOTE FOREMOST AMONG THOs| FOR : -CES 'PAPER ADDS ARE QUOTE NATO AND MILITARY GOVERNMENT IN =

P3= GREECE. THEY SEEK'TO TURN'CYPRUS INTO AN ADVANCE BASE TO STRIKE AT MOVEMENTS OF NATIONAL LIBERATION IN MIDEAST IN GENERAL AND ARAB AREA IN PARTICULAR UNQUOTE PARA ISRAELS STAND TOWARDS PALESTINE POLITICAL ENTITY AND NEXT PHASE OF GENEVA CONFERENCE PROVIDES MAIN TOPIC FOR CAIRO PRESS EDITORIALS DURING LAST TWO =

PA-

DAYS STOP ALAKHBAR SAYS THAT QUOTE DESPITE CONTRADICTION IN ISRAELI

OFFICIALS DECLARATIONS, THE REPEATED REFERENCES IN THOSE DE-

CLARATIONS TO PALESTINE CAUSE AND PALESTINE NATIONAL ENTITY CLEARLY

INDICATE THAT PALEST ININA CAUSE HAD IMPOSED ITSELF ON POLTICAL

SCENE IN ISRAEL AND ON ISRAELI- LEADERS THEMSELVES UNQUOTE THOSi:

EFERENCES PA PER_ADD_S__ __= , __ _„.______,______. _ _ ;

AFFIRM THAT ISRAEL HAS COME TO BE QUOTE INCAPABLE OF IGNORING PALE-

STINE CAUSE OR CONTINUING TO SPEAK OF IT AS MERELY A CASE OF

REFUGEES UNQUOTE PARA MEANWHILE AtAHRAM EDITORIALLY AFFIRMS THAT

QUOTE NO PEACE TALKS STAND ANY CHANCE OF SUCCESS UNLESS PALESTINE

PEOPLES RIGHTS TO SELF DETERMINATION ANF ESTABLISHMENT =

PS- OF AN INDEPENDENT PALESTINE STATE HAS BEEN RECOGNISED UNQUOTE . PARA INOTHER ARTICLE, ALAKHBAR TAKES UP AS A TOPIC OF DISCUSSION 'PERES STATEMENTS CALLING FOR BRACKET MORE AMERICAN ARMS .AS A PRICE FOR RESUMPTION OF GENEVA MIDEAST TALKS UNBRACKET STOP PAPER SAYS •TMA'T ISRAEL QUOTE LIKE ALL IMPERIALIST FORCES KNOWN =

P7=

TO HISTORY, WISHES TO EMBARK ON GENEVA CONFERENCE FROM A POSITION OF "•'" FOR RESUMPTION OF GENEVA MIDEAST TALKS UNBRACKET STOP PAPER SAYS •THffi[ ISRAEL QUOTE LIKE ALL IMPERIALIST FORCES KNOWN =

P7=

TO HISTORY, WISHES TO EMBARK ON GENEVA CONFERENCE FROM A POSITION OF POWER AND THUS DICTATE ITS TERMS AND ACHIEVE ITS EXPANSIONIST AMBITIONS UNQUOTE PARA ARAB PETROLEUM 'MINISTERS DECISION TO LIFT

OIL EMBARGO ON HOLLAND IS ANOTHER TOPIC TAKEN- UP BY ALAHRAM STOP PAPER CONSIDERS THIS MEASURE IS SIGNIFICANT =

PARTICULARY IN THAT 'it" PROVES QUOTE ARAB STATES GENUINE DSSIRF. TO PROMOTE THEIR DIALOGUE WITH EUROPE UNQUOTE EUOPES INTEREST PAPER

ADDS QUOTE IS NO LESS THAN THAT OF ARAB PEOPLE IN REMOVING ALL IMPEDIMENTS TO THEIR COOPERATION NOT ONLY TO PUT^A FINAL END TO THE EXPLOSIVE MIDEAST CRISIS , =

P9 = • . • BUT ALSO TO / LAY BASES OF PEACE AND SECURITY AND THUS ENSURE

DEVELOPMENT AND PROSPERITY FOR ALL UNQUOTE PARA COMMENTING ON _ POSTPONEMENT 0_F j-QR_EMINISTER_FAHMY_S VISIT TOJ»10SCOW, MOSTAPHA AMIN, AKHBAR ELYOMS CHIEF EDITOR BELIEVES THAT MOSCOW QUOTE MUST HAVE GOOD REASONS FOR ASKING FOR POSTPONEMENT OF THE =

P10= VISIT IT HAD BEEN KEEN ON HAVING 'TAKEN PLACE ON SCHEDULE UNQUOTE WRITERS BELIEF IS BASED ON QUOTE EGYPTS KEENNESS ON MAINTAINING BEST RELATIONS WITH MOSCOW UNQUOTE WE ARE ALSO CONCERNED

THAT WORLD SHOULD KNOW THAT QUOTE ''IMPROVEMENT OF OUR RELATIONS WITH UNISTATES WAS NOT AT EXPENSE OF SOVUNION UNQUOTE =

PI 1/30= EGYPT, WRITER ASSERTS HAS INFORMED SOVUNION OF ALL STEPS IN RELA- TIONS WITH UNISTATES CONCERNING DISENGAGEMENT OF FORCES JUST AS

SHE HAS INFORMED ARAB SISTER STATES UNQUOTEEND = OMNIPRESS CAIRO +

COL '229 + r o UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES ^!W INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR v TO: THE SECREMRY GENERAL DATE: JULY 16. 1974 A: 12.15 REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: s.N. GRANITSAS - OPI

SUBJECT: OBJET:

RNR 194 SNAP CYPRUS -DEPARTURE

LONDON, JULY 16, REUTER — ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS. HAS__LE£T

THE 60-YEAR-OLD ARCHBISHOP -- DECLARED OVERTHROWN AS PRESIDENT YESTERDAY BY THE GREEK-LED CYPRIOT NATIONAL GUARD LEFT THE ISLAND AFTER BEING GRAMTED TEMPORARY REFUGE IN THE BRITISH MILITARY BASE AREAS. A FOREIGN OFFICE SPOKESMAN COULD NOT SAY WHERE THE ARCHBISHOP WAS HEADING OR GIVE ANY FURTHER DETAILS.

REUTER '1212 c

QYXU TA5S 4-25 V u MEETING TO BE CALLED NEW YORK JULY U.No SECRETARY-GENERAL KUR tfALDHE ASKED TODATOwiY THE SECURITY COUMCIL'S PRESIDEMT TO \ll AN UR MEETING OF TH COUNCIL TO DISCUSS THE SITUATION IN CYPRUS. KIN' HIS LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE SECURITY COUNCIL URT UALDHEIM SAYS THAT HE HAS TAKEN THIS DECISION BECAUSE THE LATEST EVENTS IN CYPRUS MAY HAVE SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE'AND SECURITY AND BECAUSE OF U.N. COMMITMENTS ON THE ISLAND, K. UAIJ7HELN IS GOING TO REPORT TO THE SECURITY COUNCIL ON THE SITUATION IN CYPRUS ON THE DAEIS OF INFORMATION HE REC: IVED T.TTTO '/'..•; <<••-' FRO •1 HIS SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE IN CYPRUS LOUIS Vi iHs i\i lh.i-1 All THE COMMAND: OF THE U PEACE-KEEPING FORCE IN CYPRUS pRE M CHAND. I TEN J QOQR QR v c c. UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR //;zo

TO: DATE: A: JULY 197*1 THE SECRETARY GENERAL REFERENCE:

THROUGH: 1 IMMEDIATE ATTENTION S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRAKITSAS - DPI PPSG-

SUBJECT: OBJET: CYPRUS - MAKARIOS

CYPRUS DOES WOT REPEAT DEATH OF MAKARIOS WHILE BROADCASTS RECEIVED IN ISRAEL DO REPEAT MAKARIOS ESCAPED AND THAT HE IS AT U.N. HEADQUARTERS.

MEANWHILE, CYPRUS AND TURKEY PUT THEIR ARMED FORCES ON ALERT. (WQXR. AFP),

C.C. NORMAN HO C c UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: JULY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL IMMEDIATE ATTENTION lo:oo A.M. REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S. N. GRANITSAS - OPI PPSG

SUBJECT: OB JET: CYPRUS COUP

BULLETIN JUST RECEIVED: MAKARIOS TOOK REFUGE AT U.N. HEADQUARTERS.

FIRST INFORMATION RECEIVED FROM WASHINGTON AT 5:30 A.M. CONGRESSIONAL SOURCES TELEPHONED AT 9:50 A.M. ANB SAID THAT A BROADCAST RECEIVED IN TURKEY ASSERTED THAT MAKARIOS IS ALIVE AND ASKING FOR U.N. HELP.

IN THE MEANTIME, CYPRUS SAYS IN AN ENGLISH LANGUAGE BROADCAST THAT MAKARIOS IS DEAD AND ALL RESISTANCE SEIZED.

C.C, NORMAN HO

MAKARIGs VIVS1T sELGR HIE STATION GRECUUE DE LILE.

TEL AVIV, QT JUILLET (AFP) ' -* AUX GRECS DE CHyPRE, A: TQUs LEs GREGs DU MOW DE LIBRE, : A TQUs LES DIPLQMATES DU MCN DE LIBRE? A'TOUTES LES ORG#TIS ATICNs DES NATIONS UN IEs 2ANS LILE DE" CH ^PRE, NOUS LANCCWs GET APPEL : LE PRESIDENT MAKARIOS EST VI VAN T, IL EST TOUJOURS VJVWT, ET LES OFFICIERS aUI- SE S^NT EM PARES CE MATIN DE LA STATION DE RADIO DE LILE NE DIFFUSED T aUE DES ME^SONGEs. MAKARIOS EsT VlV/WT. ET LILE DE CH.YPRE Es T TOUJOURS UNE REPUBLI&UE LIBRE. GET APPEL DIFFUSE EH ANGLAIS PAR UNE STATION GRECSUE DE LILE DE CHYPRE^ DUNE VOIX TREMBLES, BOULEVERSEE DEMOTICN, A ETE ! CAPTEE LUNDI APRES MIDI A TEL AVIV. CA SUIVRE) MMMMMMT/AFP/MPD &22 i3.34 c r UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: 15 JULY A: THE SECRETARY GENERAL REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: DE: S.N. GRANITSAS - OPI PPSG

SUBJECT: MAKARIOS KILLED OBJET: 002 JNAP CYPRUS -COUP ' j RHODES, DODECANESE ISLANDS, JULY 15 REUTER -- TH^ CYPRUS j ^kliUffij509MlfS^fSDK^pFUP AND SEIZED POWER, ACCORDING1 RES10LNT HAKARIOS WKS fOD'AND THE NATIONAL GUARD WAS IN FULL CONTROL OF THE SITUATION. IT SAID. RNR 003 CYPRUS -COUP 2 RHODEE ' - THE RADIO BEGAN TO BROADCAST MARTIAL MUSIC AT 1005 LOCAL TIME (0805 GMT). LATER IT BROADCAST AN ANNOUNCEMENT SAYING THE NATIONAL GUARD HAD INTERVENED TO PREVENT BLOODSHED. CYPRUS - COUP 3 RHODEE THE NATIONAL GUARD WARNED CITIZENS NOT TO PUT UP ANY RESISTANCE. IT SAID THAT IT HAD THE POWER TO MASTER THE SITUATION AND ANYONE WHO MOVED AGAINST IT WOULD BE EXECUTED. THE ISSUE WAS AN INTERNAL CYPRUS ONE WHICH CONCERNED THE T ffiES^?TONAL GUARD WOULD BE BROADCAST CYPRUS -COUP 4. RHODEE THERE WAS NO IMMEDIATE INDICATION OF THE CIRCUM STANCES OF LREEIDENT MAKARIOS S DEATH . THE BEARDED 60-YEAR -OLD CHURCHMAN -POLITICIAN HAD BEEN ARCHBISHOP OF CYPRUS SINCE 1950 AND PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC SINCE 1960. HE WAS REELECTED FOR AN ADDITIONAL FIVE YEAR TERM IN FEBRUARY LAST YEAR. RNR 034 URGENT CYPRUS -- EMBASSIES: BEIRUT, JULY 15, REUTER -- CYPRUS. RADIO TODAY REPORTED THAT DISSIDENT POLICE HAD ENTERED SOME FOREIGN EMBASSIES IN NICOSIA AND BEGUN RADIO TRANSMISSIONS FROM THEM, PRESUMABLY AGAINST THIS MORNING S COUP D ETAT. THE BROADCAST ANNOUNCEMENT DID NOT IDENTIFY THE EMBASSIES BUT CALLED ON THEM TO DRIVE OUT THE POLICEMEN.

MORE 0848 c

SAGB7!? - J;3) URGENT -,TRADIO CH VPRIOTE - LA GARDE N ATIQN ALE A PR Is LE PQUVOIR ATHENESj 15 -(AFP) ;; - LA RADIO CKyPRIOTE CAFTEE A RHODES? /WNON CE SUE LA GARDE NATIONALS A PRIs TE POUVOIR A CH YPRE FOUR SAUVER L ILE DE LA GUERRE CIVILE. CELUI aUI RESlSTERAJT AUX FORCES ARMEES CHYPRIOTES SERA EXECUTE sUR PLACE, AJQUTE LA RADIO HE CESSE DE DlFFUsER DE LA MUsIflUE MILITAIRE. AFPGB &22 08.30

I 43

WM AFP029 WOC H Y R E URGENT ' J J LA KORT DE MAKARIOs ET LES TROUBLES A CHYPR BEYROUTH, ar JUILLET CAFP) - - L A G AR DE N ATI ON ALE . CK ^>R 1 0 TE C L ARKEE CH YPR 1 0 TE GR E C3. UE 5 A ANN ONCE LUNDI MATIN, D/^s UN COMMUNiaUE RADIODIFFUsE PAR RADIQ- raPREj aUE MGR.-MAKARIQs Es T MORT. . IL AOUTE aUUH APPEL' AU PEUPLE HELLENiaUE' DE CHYPRE" SERA DIFFUSE IN CESS AM HEN T. - AUCUNE PRE'CIsICM NA ETE DONNEE PAR' R ADIO-CH YPRE SUR LES CIR - CffiJs TA^J CES D/WS LEsaUELLES LE PRESlEENT DE LA REPUBLiaUE CKYPRIOTE A TROUVE LA KORT. TOUTEFOISS LE COMMUN laUE DECLARE aUE LARMEE EST MAITRE DE LA 5 ITU ATI CN ET PRECISE aUIL RES TE ENCORE SUEL- aUES WIDs DE RESISTANCE 0UE LES FORCES ARMEES SEFFORCEJJT DE NEUTRALIsER. TOUT INDIQUE SUE LA CRIcE 0UI OPPOsAJT DEPUIS PLUsIEURs SEMAINES LE PRESIDENT MAKARIOs A' LA GAR DE N ATI CN ALE, EN CADREE P'AR DEs QFFI- CIERS GRECs VET^US DATHENEs> EST ALORIGJNE DEs EVEJIE MINTS QUJ SE DEROULENT D/Ws LILE. T.- SUIVRA; os.55 c

RNR 041 CYPRUS -TURKEY | ANKARA , JULY 15, REUTER — PRIME MINISTER BULEMT ECEVIT , AFTER CONFERRING WITH HIS DEFENSE MINISTER , WAS DIlE TO RETURN HERE SHORTLY TO TAKE PERSONAL CHARGE OF THE NEW CRISPIN TURKISH-GREEK RELATIONS CAUSED BY THE UPHEAVAL IN CYPRUS. MR ECEVIT ISSUED A STRONGLY-WORDED WARNING THAT TURKEY WOULD NOT ALLOW ANY NATION TO INFRINGE ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CYPRIOT TURKS, A REMARK CLEARLY AIMED AT THE GREEK GOVERNMENT. TURKEY HAD TAKEN "NECESSARY MEASURES," HE SAID. THE PRIME MINISTER SPOKE IN AFYON, IN SOUTHWEST ANATOLIA, DURING A TOUR OF POPPY GROWING CENTERS. HE IMMEDIATELY CANCELLED THE TOUR AND ANNOUNCED HE WAS RETURNING TO ANKARA. "WE WILL BEVER ACCEPT A FAIT ACCOMPLI," ACEVIT TOLD A THRONG IN AFYON. "WE WILL NEVER LET ANYONE TOUCH THE RIGHTS OF THE TURKS. " THE CROWD OF SEVERAL THOUSAND APPLAUDED WHEN HE TOLD THEM THAT CYPRIOT PRESIDENT MAKARIOS HAD BEEN ASSASSINATED. BUT MR ECEVIT SILENCED THEM SAYING, "WE DO NOT BELIEVE ANYTHING CAN BE SOLVED BY PEOPLE TRYING TO BUMP OFF ONE ANOTHER." HE WAS TOLD OF THE DEATH OF PRESIDENT MAKARIOS IN ANKARA BEFORE SETTING OUT ON THE TOUR. HE CONFERRED WITH DEFENSE MINISTER HASAN ISIK AT A MILITARY AIRPORT BEFORE DEPARTURE.

REUTER 0958

RNR 042 SNAP . CYPRUS -PRESIDENT: RHODES,DODECANESE ISLANDS, JULY 15, REUTER--CYPRIOT PUBLISHER NICHOLAS SAMPSON, WAS TODAY SWORN IN AS THE NEW PRESIDENT OF CYPRUS FOLLOWING THE OVERTHROW OF ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS, NICOSIA RADIO SAID.

REUTER 0958 c

I UPIOS2 t (MAKARIOS) ' ': , STOCKHOLM (UPI) — THE SWEDISH DEFENSE/STAFF SAID CYPRIOT PRESIDENT ARCHBrSHOP MAKARIOS WAS STILL ALIVE MONDAY AND HAD SOUGHT UNITED NATION'S PROTECTION. A CABLE FROM THE SWEDISH U.N. BATTALION AT FAMAGUSTA AT 4.30 P.M. (11:30 A.M. EDT) SAID MAKARIOS HAD SOUGHT REFUGE IN A BRITISH CYPRUS BASE AND HAD CABLED U.N. HEADQUARTERS IN NEW YORK FOR U.N. "T^"> " " INTERVENTION. AT STAFF SPOKESMAN SAID. ' ' ' THE 215 SWEDISH TRflOFS ON CYPRUS WERE PUT ON ALERT THIS MORNING AND 'HAD THEIR LEAVES CANCELED. SOME UNITED NATIONS PATROLS HAD BEEN STOPPED"AT CYPRIOT ROADBLOCKS, HE SAID. UPI 07-15 12J44 PED *

UPIQ63 (CYPRUS) • . ' ' ' ' HELSINKI (UPI) -- LT. COL. JORMA PULLINEN, COMMANDER OF FINNISH UNITED NATIONS'TROOPS ON CYPRUS, CABLED TODAY THAT U. N. TROOPS WOULD NOT INTERFERE IN" THE FI'GHTIN'G AND SAID TURKISH CYPRIOTS HAVE PROMISED NOT TO INTERVENE. ' ' " ' ' M " HE SAID HE HAD NO DIRECT INFORMATION ON THE FATE OF ARCHBISHOP PRESIDENT MARKARlOS. BUT HE BELIEVED RADIO REPORTS OF HIS DEATH WERE ACCURATE. SOME REPORTS SAID MAKARIOS HAD TAKEN REFUGE WITH THE U.N. FORCES. . •-.. , - . - - PULLIMEM SAID FIGHTING IN NICOSIA'IN THE AFTERNOON WAS SPORADIC" FOLLOWING EXTREMELY HEAVY FIGHTING IN THE MORNING. HE SAID THE FIGHTING BEGAN MEN THE NATIONAL GUARD LAID SIEGE TO THE AIRPORT. THE UNITED 'NATIONS H AS A PEACE FORCE"OF ABOUT 1,6)0 MEM ON CYPRUS, SENT THERE IN 1964 FOLLOWING A WIDE SERIES OF DISORDERS. SOME MEMBERS OF THE FORCE, KNOWN AS UNFICYP FOR UNITED NATIONSTFORCES IN CYPRUS; WERE SENT TO TRE*'RIDDLE EAST TO OVERSEE THE CEASE-FIRE." UPI 07-15 12:47 PED " <•; / .: :jt . ' •"•-/,* *-.•; >•. Jr. '. :, :'-~^ * •> rt' *" ; •,:"'', .f. .'.'• - '. < • #- UN 7-lS • :•- r y% ,• WITH CYPRUS . • ' ;'•,•' ''••;,; BY BRUCE W. MUNN .' .'.."• ; UNITED NATIONS (UPI) •:--" THE UNITED NATIONS SECURITY COUNCIL CALLED

AN .EMERGENCY SESSION TODAY TO CONSIDER THE DEEPENING CRISIS IN

.:..-'.".'•< ••'•'-. - ' A,U.N. OFFICIAL SAIDw , . THE OFFICIAL SAID THE REQUEST HAD BEEN MADE BY DEPOSED ARCHBISHOP MAKARIOS THROUGH A BRITISH OFFICER STATIONED IN THE CYPRUS RESORT ClfY;OF PAPHOS SHORTLY AFTER REBEL ARMED FORCES STAGED A COUP MONDAY. THE; OFFICIAL SAID U.N. SECRETARY GENERAL KURT WALDHEIM HAD AGREED TO THE REQUEST AND 'CALLED:THE SESSION "FOR TODAY. NO TIME WAS SET. THE U.N. OFFICIAL, IN'ANNOUNCING'.THE SECURITY COUNCIL MEETING, ALSO DISCLOSED FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE THE COUP BEGAN MONDAY THAT MAKAfilOS WAS ALIVE, CONTRADICTING REPORTS BROADCAST BY THE OFFICIAL NICOSIA RADIO. ( ' * ^ , AT THE'WORLD BODY MONDAY, SPOKESSMAN SAID 2,1S7-MAN U.N. PEACEKEEPING FORCE ON CYPRUS HAS NOT INTERVENED IN THE COUP AGAINST •'"•"•.' - •• - : • ,-,""' " .... -: • .: PRESIDENT. MAKARIOS. - > > •- . ' -v L (, WALDHEIM KEPT IN CLOSE TOUCH WITH* THE 'SITUATION,; A SPOKESMAN SAID WALDHEIM WAS IN TOUQH ¥ITH CYPRIOT AMBASSADOR 2ENON ROSSIDES AND •''••.' • . .• ' <, i • ' , , _V. • -.;•;; ,• . » ^ ^ , - . • ^ ,• WITH ENVOYS OF 'MOST OF THE SEVEN COUNTRIES CONTRIBUTING PEACEKEEPING FORCES ONrCY^PRUS. , vl- / }, . A y.N^OFFICER FROM TIHL AND CABLED HELSINKI TO SAY U.N. FORCES HAD NOT INTERVENED IN THE F,I§HT^WG. ' '[ -

*TH\ • E ' U.N- /!'i*, ;'/FORC' • ' E WAS SEN*T> TO CYPRUS,""* 10^ YEART S AGO TO KEEP THE PEACE BETWEEN GREEK AND TUKKlSlI CYPRIOTS. BUT THE 'STRUGGLE THAT CLIMATED ,. .o? '^'•>:.:- '• - ' ' \ •.••,-.•' MONDAY 'WAS :AMONG THE "GREEKS THEMSELVES 'OVER WHETHER TO UNITE WITH • .--; • '.-^::>r ••*'•.• ', < ^ ^ .-'.•.•• GREECE. .'^V^v1' • . \ ' • •;<..•/.. v 4 • : ^ :!(.•.."".-- •• '.•:- •'••'^" ' „•: . , " J ' '~ ' '' , ''•"•' ' '' ' ." . '' ' •

? THE or'iSiAt*'' " ' s SA!D THERE WA'$ NO REPORT OF ANY CASUALTIE" S AMONG THE FORCES MONDAY A!^D NO PROPOSAL HAD'BEEN MADE FROM ANY SIDE FOR •, ' '.'.". .<...•'•~>'i.

:^mi^Si^' ' ' ' ^ '