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Greece and the issue of Terror

In 1981, Andreas Papandreou and his radical Panhellenic Socialist Movement


(PASOK) won the national general elections. A spellbinding orator, he rode a
political platform pledging to remove U.S. military bases from Greece and to take
Greece out of both NATO and the then European Community. Since then,
Athens and her surrounding towns have played host to a variety of conferences
and meetings by terrorist representatives and spokesmen, including PLO
officials, Hamas, Sinn Fein, and Libyan terrorists.

In 1986 Papandreou, himself addressed one such meeting, calling "liberation


movements" the "instruments for the historical change and progress of our
times." In fact, Papadreou's 1981 election victory was in part underwritten by
Qaddafi, who secretly transferred as estimated $4 million via a major Greek bank
to help finance the campaign. Eventually, Qaddafi's economic largess towards
the Greek socialist grew to as much as $20 million yearly.

PASOK itself is an outgrowth of an underground organization called


the Panhellenic Liberation Movement (PAK), which Papandreou created while in
exile in Sweden and Canada to fight the military dictatorship then in power in
Greece (1967-1974). Several former PAK radicals, trained and indoctrinated in
Middle East terrorist camps, and eventually became member of the various
Socialist administrations.

One of them is Kostas Tsimas, then head of the Greek Information Service--the
Intelligence Agency and, as such, in control of the country's principal intelligence
apparatus. Tsimas trained in Palestinian terrorist camps in Syria and Lebanon.
He has retained close contacts with them and has been among their most
influential protectors in the Greek political establishment.

Sifis Valyrakis, second in command of the Ministry of Public Order in the 1980s,
which controls Greece's national police, trained at camps in Lebanon. In 1976,
two years after the overthrown of the Greek military dictatorship, he was arrested
by authorities and sentenced to seven months in prison for smuggling forty
Kalashnikov assault rifles into Greece. He never served a day, and the following
year Papandreou nominated him as PASOK candidate for parliament. Citing
intelligence files, former Athens police detectives claim that Valyrakis is one
of several PASOK associates who are tied to November 17.

Another Greek official linked with international terrorism Vassilis Konstantineas,


a senior foreign-ministry official and influential member of PASOK's international-
relations committee. Western intelligence sources and Greece's own police files
revealed that in 1983 Konstantineas and Tsimas secretly met Abu Nidal upon
his arrival at Athens Airport (Nidal was reportedly disguised as a Greek Orthodox
priest). Later they held negotiations in a small hotel in downtown Athens. On the
table was an arrangement under which the Abu Nidal organization would have
residency and transit privileges in Greece, and could operate a clandestine
headquarters in Athens.

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Since then, various terrorists have traveled via Athens. The aforementioned
names are still play influential role in Greek politics. Another influential socialist
politician with dubious contacts is Costas Laliotis. Specifically, he is the
president of extreme guy groups and anarchist groups in Greece. In addition, he
served as top minister in various ministerial posts.

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