Title of article
Historical, Tactical, and Strategic Lessons from the Partition of Cyprus
Author/Authors
DAN LINDLEY، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
18
From page
224
To page
241
Abstract
This article surveys the history of Cyprus’s conflict and partition to derive
historical, tactical, and strategic lessons about how the Cyprus
problem should be resolved and about the value of partitions more
generally. Cyprus is complex. Tensions between North and South are
very low, in part because the partition has been a cause of peace. However,
both sides remain pervaded by antagonistic and one-sided biases,
histories, and myths. Moreover, almost every plausible solution, including
the Annan Plan, that proposes to unite the island also incorporates
the group-based and gridlock-prone characteristics of the conflict-generating
1960 constitution. A Cyprus solution solves little and creates
risks. A better plan to create a permanent peace is to recognize a much
smaller North, and bring all sides including Turkey into the European
Union. This would create peace, give most Greek Cypriot refugees their
land and homes back, and restore all freedoms throughout the island
Keywords
Partition , Cyprus , Turkey , GREECE , EuropeanUnion , United Nations , security dilemma
Journal title
International Studies Perspectives
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
International Studies Perspectives
Record number
713817
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