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・ Operation Judgement
・ Operation Judgement (1945)
・ Operation Julie
・ Operation Julin
・ Operation Jumelles
・ Operation Jump Start
・ Operation Junction City
・ Operation Juneau
・ Operation Hardboiled
・ Operation Hardnose
・ Operation Hardtack
・ Operation Hardtack (commando raid)
・ Operation Hardtack I
・ Operation Hardtack II
・ Operation Harekate Yolo
Operation Harling
・ Operation Harmony
・ Operation Harness
・ Operation Harpoon
・ Operation Harpoon (1942)
・ Operation Harpoon (2002)
・ Operation Harpune
・ Operation Hastings
・ Operation Hasty
・ Operation Haudegen
・ Operation Haven Denial
・ Operation Hawthorn
・ Operation Hawthorne
・ Operation Haze
・ Operation Head Start


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Operation Harling : ウィキペディア英語版
Operation Harling

Operation ''Harling'' was a World War II mission by the British Special Operations Executive (SOE), in cooperation with the Greek Resistance groups ELAS and EDES, which destroyed the heavily guarded Gorgopotamos viaduct in Central Greece on 25 November 1942. This was one of the first major sabotage acts in Axis-occupied Europe, and the beginning of a permanent British involvement with the Greek Resistance.
== Background ==
Operation ''Harling'' was conceived in late summer 1942 as an effort to stem the flow of supplies through Greece to the German forces under Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in North Africa. To this end, the Cairo office of the SOE decided to send a sabotage team to cut the railway line connecting Athens with Thessaloniki.〔Clogg (1986), pp. 142–143〕〔Papastratis (1984), p. 129〕 Three viaducts were targeted, all in the Brallos area: the Gorgopotamos, Asopos and Papadia bridges. The destruction of the Asopos viaduct was preferable, since it would take longer to rebuild, but the choice would be ultimately left to the mission's leader.〔McGlynn (1953), pp. 3–4〕 The team would be under the command of Lieutenant Colonel (later brevetted to Brigadier) E. C. W. "Eddie" Myers of the Royal Engineers, "the only parachute-trained professional sapper officer in the Middle East", according to his second-in-command, Major (later brevetted to Colonel) Chris Woodhouse. After completion of the mission, the British team would be evacuated, leaving only Woodhouse, the Greek 2nd Lieutenant Themis Marinos and two radio operators to establish a liaison with the fledgling Greek Resistance movement.〔〔Woodhouse (2002), p. xi〕
In Greece meanwhile, the first attempts at armed resistance in Greek Macedonia were quelled in the summer of 1941 by the Germans and Bulgarians. The spring and summer of 1942 however saw the birth of the first armed guerrilla units in the mountainous interior of Central Greece and Epirus. From the beginning, the largest among them was the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS), founded by the Communist-led National Liberation Front (EAM) and headed by Aris Velouchiotis. The second largest were the forces of the National Republican Greek League (EDES), headed by Colonel Napoleon Zervas.〔Woodhouse (2002), p. xii〕〔Clogg (1986), pp. 140–141〕 The ''Harling'' mission's British officers were largely ignorant of the realities on the ground in occupied Greece, or of the precise nature, let alone the strength and political affiliation of the emerging resistance groups.〔〔Clogg (1986), p. 143〕

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