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ID090405
Title ProperValue to CENTO of UK bases on Cyprus
LanguageENG
AuthorDimitrakis, Panagiotis
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The British sovereign bases on Cyprus, granted with the 1960 treaty establishing the Republic of Cyprus, played a key role in maintaining the fragile military structure of the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO). Although Britain and the United States urged the alliance to play a more active role, CENTO degenerated into an organization with no assigned forces with the exception of RAF bombers carrying nuclear weapons, stationed on Cyprus. Thus, Britain's contribution in political and military terms became vital for CENTO's deterrence capability. The Shah of Iran, one of the key regional leaders, was interested in the RAF bombers on Cyprus; the FCO and the MoD were always cautious over how force restructuring would be presented to the Iranians. Eventually, the need for cutting defence spending for non-NATO purposes made Whitehall decide in 1975 to withdraw the bombers permanently based in Cyprus. Britain could not be the only power paying for this 'alliance of the unwilling', as CENTO could be called with the benefit of hindsight. In 1976, Whitehall started scaling down financial support of military exercises; by 1983 they had planned to spend nil on the alliance. The British disengagement policy proved the correct one since this alliance had only a few years of life left. After the fall of the Shah, CENTO collapsed in 1979.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 45, No. 4; Jul 2009: p.611 - 624
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 45, No. 4; Jul 2009: p.611 - 624
Key WordsCENTO ;  UK Bases ;  Cyprus ;  Central Treaty Organization ;  United States ;  Nuclear Weapons