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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
I read with considerable interest Naomi Rosenbaum's article on the British in Cyprus in the December 1970 issue of this Journal. In her first footnote she refers to several publications including my own Cyprus: Conflict and Conciliation, 1954–58. She notes that I use Greek sources extensively and in the process cast a good deal of light on both Greek and Greek Cypriot perceptions and actions. This is so. As I made clear in my preface, the story is told as seen mainly through the eyes of the Greek “external decision-maker.” “Mainly,” however, is not synonymous with “exclusively.” The book also sheds light on the perceptions and actions of other parties to the Cyprus conflict.
1 “Success in Foreign Policy: The British in Cyprus, 1878–1960,” this Journal, III, no. 4 (Dec. 1970), 605–27.
2 (Columbus, Ohio, 1967).
3 Foreign Policy in the Sixties: The Issues and Instruments (Baltimore, Md., 1965).
4 Greece and the Great Powers, 1944–7: Prelude to the Truman Doctrine (Thessaloniki, 1963).
5 The Second World War, VI, Triumph and Tragedy (Boston, 1953), 112–14.
6 Greece and the Great Powers, 50.
7 Cyprus: Conflict and Conciliation, 168, 172, and 181.