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What has Britain contributed to Cyprus??????

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What has Britain contributed to Cyprus??????

Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:22 am

Britain has recently upgraded and escalated its intelligence-gathering operations in Cyprus.
According to CyBC information released late last night, the Ayios Nikolaos (or Ay-Nic) installations, operating on a round-the-clock basis on the island for a many years now, have been upgraded and are now used to tap telephone, wireless and satellite communications originating in Cyprus itself, as well as in Greece, Turkey, the Middle East and the Balkans.

In addition, the BBC's relay station at Zygi, equipped with the most powerful transceivers in the Eastern Mediterranean, can, at any time, be used to jam Cypriot communications, both civil and military.
CyBC's report further mentioned that British intelligence had also closely monitored this month's "Nikiphoros-Toxotis" military exercise, having brought over to the island specialized personnel with a fluent knowledge of the Greek language.


I consider Britain to be an integral obstacle to the Cyprus problem. As a guarantor power, what has Britain done or achieved in helping the Republic of Cyprus? Absolutely nothing at all!!

And exactly what is the role of the British Bases? Is it to spy on the CNG and it's military exercises and establish the infrastructure that can jam all CNG communications. Are they gathering intelligence and assisting the Turkish Occupation Army.

It is high time that The Cyprus Government removes the British Bases from Cyprus. They have breached their lease and are not their to assist Cyprus by cooperating and sharing intelligence. :?

BRITAIN HAS CONTRIBUTED NOTHING TO CYPRUS. Turkey's ally must be removed from Cyprus immediately!!
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:28 am

Meanwhile, it was also disclosed today that at least two U2 recognizance aircraft are stationed at the Akrotiri airbase, from where they regularly patrol the skies over Cyprus at altitudes of 60-70 thousand feet, enabling them to maintain radio silence as regards the island's Civil Aviation Authority.
The U2's are equipped with high-resolution cameras and high-tech monitoring devices, while any information gleaned is transmitted, in scrambled form, to earthbound British bases.

http://www.hri.org/news/cyprus/riken/19 ... riken.html


Britain's espionage capabilities against the Republic of Cyprus has been quite advanced. They even utilised high flying UC reconnaissance aircraft, overflying Cyprus with high resolution cameras.

What is their objective? Is Britain also planning it's own invasion of Cyprus? Why are they so eager to gather intelligence about the CNG? Are they supplying this intelligence to the Turkish Army. :?
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:31 am

Reacting to the disclosures, House Defence Committee Chairman Takis HjiDemetriou today asked the Cyprus Government for a full briefing on British intelligence operations in Cyprus.
Speaking on CyBC's Third Radio Channel this morning, the EDEK deputy also referred to the presence of the Russian-made TOR-M1 missiles during the National Guard's recent military parade, and said that certain aspects of the force's weapons systems should be kept secret.

Mr HjiDemetriou requested that the official briefing on the part of the Government be held by Thursday at the latest.

http://www.hri.org/news/cyprus/riken/19 ... riken.html ]


Britain's espionage activities against Cyprus must be stopped!!
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:48 am

Last week we learned that the US Central Intelligence Agency directed the US Embassy in Cyprus to instruct the Criminal Investigation Division of the police in Cyprus to investigate an IMCista who is politically active both in the US and in Cyprus. Petros Evdokas has been living in Portland, Oregon, USA recently and is one of the volunteers and journalists for Cyprus Indymedia
The intelligence investigation is based on an article he wrote for Cyprus Indymedia documenting some of the manipulations by US intelligence operations using the United Nations to influence the recent referendum in Cyprus on the "Annan Plan" (the UN's plan to reunite the island in an apartheid-style arrangement). The article has just been republished by IndyMedia due to renewed interest by newspapers and other political organizations.

http://www.indymedia.org/en/2004/07/111480.shtml



More claims of British and US (CIA) collusion in plotting the destruction of the Republic of Cyprus in 2004!! :?
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:57 am

Britain’s plan to build six massive radio antennae at its Akrotiri military base on Cyprus has sparked protests by local residents.

On Tuesday July 3, Democratic Party (DIKO) member of parliament Marios Matsakis was arrested as he tried to cut open a perimeter fence surrounding the Akrotiri base. Military police took Matsakis, a member of the House Environment Committee, to their station at Episkopi, where he was detained along with a TV journalist.

As news of Matsakis’ arrest spread, protesters gathered outside the police station where he was being held. When the protesters tried to enter the building to free the MP, a riot developed, the Episkopi police station was ransacked and 35 vehicles outside were torched. The protesters then moved to the adjacent Akrotiri base, where water cannon were used against the crowd, as police in riot gear fought to expel the protesters.

According to press reports, 34 base police officers, 10 British soldiers and five protesters were injured.

The day before, protesters had climbed onto a 60-foot mast (18 metres) at the RAF Akrotiri base, refusing to come down for six hours. Those involved included Matsakis who told the press, “the local population will be bombarded with electromagnetic radiation and the risks of that will be cancer, leukaemias and brain tumours, particularly among children”.

According to Reuters news agency, London has rejected a request from the Cyprus government to halt work on the antennae while environmental impact reports are considered, or to wait for the results of new tests on existing masts in the area.

As well as being motivated by health and environmental concerns posed by the six planned radio masts, many of those protesting also denounced Britain’s continued military presence on Cyprus.

Remarks made by Foreign Secretary Jack Straw epitomised Britain’s colonial attitude to its possessions on the island. Following the protests at Akrotiri, Straw told the BBC, “These bases are British sovereign bases, British territory,” adding that the Cyprus government had been “consulted” about the plans for the antennae.

Standing in front of a smashed jeep, military police Commander Jim Guy denounced the protesters as “criminals and hooligans”. The British High Commissioner to Cyprus described Matsakis disparagingly as “a medical monkey stuck up a stick”.

The six planned masts will be 190 feet (58 metres) high, and will be sited at a large salt lake within the Akrotiri base that is also home to much wildlife, particularly flamingos. London says the antennae should go into service in 2003, and are needed for the UK’s military global communications network.

Under the terms of the treaty granting Cyprus independence in 1960, Britain retained sovereignty over nearly 100 square miles of the island, some three percent of its entire land area. The British presence mainly comprises the so-called Sovereign Bases Areas (SBAs) of Akrotiri, in southern Cyprus, and Dhekalia, in the east. The UK also retains the use of a listening post at the top of Mount Olympus, the island’s highest peak. The treaty grants Britain sovereignty over the sites in perpetuity. The SBAs have the status of a British Overseas Territory, with supreme authority vested in the Commander of British Forces Cyprus, Air Vice-Marshall Bill Rimmer. The SBAs also retain the services of a resident Judge and Chief Constable appointed by London.

Built when Cyprus was still a British colonial possession in the 1950s, shortly after the Suez crisis, the Akrotiri facility formed a strategic part of the West’s nuclear capacity against the Soviet Union. Up to seven squadrons of Vulcans equipped with nuclear bombs were stationed there at any one time during the Cold War.

Akrotiri is strategically located for reconnaissance aircraft, which can be mobilised quickly to monitor developments in the Middle East, and the base is also an operational centre for America’s U-2 spy planes.

The base’s key role is for gathering British military intelligence, and providing a staging post for interventions in the Middle East and North Africa. “It was the hub of British operations during the Gulf War,” a defence ministry spokesman said, adding, “It is also a very convenient holding base for any special forces operations”.

Nick Cook, an aviation expert with Jane’s Defence Weekly told the press that given the location of Cyprus at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, Britain and the RAF were “particularly interested in maintaining a presence there... It is the jumping off point for the Middle East”.

There are currently 3,325 British military personnel stationed on the island, along with some 5,000 dependants. The Army presence includes two 600-strong infantry battalions, tasked with protecting the SBAs, 16 Flight Army Air Corps (equipped with Gazelle helicopters) and supporting arms such as the Royal Logistics Corps, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, medics and military police. RAF units on the island include 84 Squadron, based at Akrotiri, which is equipped with Wessex Mark 2 helicopters. There is also a Joint Service Signals Unit, as well as personnel specifically tasked to operate and evaluate intelligence gathered from Britain’s listening posts on the island.

The two RAF bases and ground forces stationed on the island will cost £168 million this year, “a price worth paying” according to a Ministry of Defence spokeswomen. “It is used continuously as a staging point for operations east of Suez and for training purposes,” she said.

Although Cyprus President Glafcos Clerides and other government spokesmen condemned the protest, the Cyprus Mail noted that “many Cypriots viewed the riots as a justifiable reaction to British antennae plans and what is often seen as a ‘colonial’ attitude among bases authorities.”

One local resident is quoted saying, “Last night’s demonstration began as an anti-antennae demonstration but then it turned into an anti-bases protest because people have just had enough. The British just do what they want. They pollute us with their planes, they stationed nuclear weapons here in the past, and now they say they will put up an antennae that could poison the whole area.”

In Greece, some of the press were also critical of Britain. Simerini wrote that on Tuesday night “Colonialism rose from the grave”, and Politis headlined “Shame—Like British in Colonies”. The paper blamed British deception for the events, saying London had said Monday that work on the antennae would be suspended, only then to go ahead with it. “Serious injuries and countless damage at the bases were the result of the provocation of the British”.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/jul2001/cyp-j07.shtml



It is time to rid ourselves of the British parasite that only undermines our nation and it's security!!!
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Postby 74LB » Thu Jul 24, 2008 12:13 pm

It seems you're getting a little paranoid with the British and their intelligence and for some reason have dug out artlcles that are years old. I know you have a military background which gives you good insight onto what is or what may be going on, but I would calm down if I were you as it doesn't do your blood pressure any good :wink:
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 12:20 pm

How electronic eavesdropping keeps a small part of Cyprus forever British

By Robert Fisk, Middle East Correspondent
Published: 05 July 2001

Why are the British in Cyprus? Long after two world wars and a Cold War and a miserable adventure in Suez, still we do not seem to be able to shake ourselves off the island and our dreamy, largely empty sovereign military bases.

Almost half a century ago, we had 40,000 troops on the island. Today, just 4,500 are left to man its desolate air base at Akrotiri and, along with tens of thousands of British, German and Swedish tourists, drink the island's execrable wine. So why are we there?

In Ottoman times, the Turkish fleet would fire a salute each time it passed the Teke Mosque on the edge of the Larnaca salt lake in honour of the Prophet's aunt, Um Haram, who was buried beneath the delicate brown dome. From the Crusades, Cyprus had always inspired military and political hopes.

Long before the British turned it into a colony after the First World War, Theodore Herzl had suggested to the British colonial secretary Joseph Chamberlain that the island ­ rented from Turkey under an 1878 agreement ­ could become a provisional Jewish homeland before Palestine became available. For the British, however, it was always a strategic imperial asset.

They offered the island to Greece in the 1914-18 war in a vain attempt to bring the pro-German king on to the Allied side. In the Second World War, as 30,000 Cypriots volunteered for the Allied cause ­ believing this would earn them independence after the war ­ the Italians bombed Nicosia airport.

But when the Cold War began, the Foreign Office decided that British "defence interests" meant the island could never expect its freedom. It was this that started Eoka's uprising for independence.

In 1956, even as British sentries manned road-blocks across the island, RAF bombers were taking off from Cyprus to bomb Suez. Egyptian guerrillas were flown into Larnaca for interrogation and ­ according to at least one survivor ­ to be tortured.

Even after a cruel war of independence, the British clung on to their three bases. Anachronism though they were, they came to be seen as R-and-R operations, the garrisons more interested in drinking ­ and sometimes fighting ­ in the beach resort of Ayia Napa. In the worst case of its kind, in September 1994, a young Danish tour guide called Louise Jensen was dragged from her boyfriend by three members of the Royal Green Jackets, raped and murdered. Allan Ford, Justin Fowler and Geoff Pernell were convicted less than two years later amid much bitterness among the Cypriots. Had the girl been a Cypriot, it was said, the three would have been lynched.

If Cyprus was a low-grade staging post during the 1991 Gulf War, however, the real reason for the British presence today has nothing to do with colonial power. The domed listening station on the top of Mount Troodos and the Dhekelia and Akrotiri listening bases ­ their electronic eavesdropping apparatus can penetrate as far as Siberia and Iran ­ are the cause of "our" continued miniature rule on the island.

In this context, it is not surprising that the British are determined to construct their new antenna: "security" comes first; even if it's not Cypriot security.

http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article232357.ece


All of the above contributes absolutely nothing to the security of our small island nation!!!! :?
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:21 pm

74LB wrote:It seems you're getting a little paranoid with the British and their intelligence and for some reason have dug out artlcles that are years old. I know you have a military background which gives you good insight onto what is or what may be going on, but I would calm down if I were you as it doesn't do your blood pressure any good :wink:


Whether these articles are years old, does not matter at all. Britain has been gathering intelligence in Cyprus since the early 50's and continue to do so today. They may not be using US U2 Reconnaissance aircraft any more, as their methods have now evolved into using Satellite Imagery that can actually distinguish car number plates.

My issue is not the fact that Britain is gathering this intelligence. If they actually cooperated with The Cyprus Government by providing some of this intelligence to Cyprus, for it's own security, then I would not have a problem. Unfortunately, I know full well, that this intelligence is shared only with certain NATO members (Turkey Included), Australia, Canada, Israel and USA. Why don't the British share this valuable information with Cyprus?
Last edited by Paphitis on Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby murf62 » Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:22 pm

You ever get the feeling you're talking to yourself?
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Postby Paphitis » Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:29 pm

murf62 wrote:You ever get the feeling you're talking to yourself?


Do you have any feeling as to how much I care? :lol:

My only objective is for people to read the material and for Britain to play a role in the island's security needs. If Britain is unable to do this, then the SBA presence needs to be questioned.
Last edited by Paphitis on Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:36 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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