by  Craig Stockings and Eleanor Hancock
                 Leiden / Boston: E.J. Brill, 2013.  Leiden / Boston: E. 
                 Pp. xviii, 646.  $249.00.  ISBN: 9004254579
                
	  
               
  
    Commonwealth Operations during the German Invasion of Greece
  
  
    Profs. Stockings (Australian Defence Force Academy) and 
    Hancock (New South Wales) 
     give us a
     very detailed, thought
    -provoking
    , and rather revisionist 
    account of Commonwealth operations during the Greek Campaign of April 1941. 
  
  
    Stockings and 
    Hancock open with a critical 
    looking at earlier works on the campaign and particularly British official accounts. They argue
    
    
     that the British intervention was never intended to “save” Greece, but rather to make diplomatic and political points, and was essentially a fighting withdrawal rather than a retreat under pressure. 
     Stockings and Hancock
     present evidence that the defending forces were by no means outnumbered by the Germans and that the role of German armor and air power has been much overrated. They also note that the Greeks performed much better than generally been claimed, particularly given that most of their best troops forces were in Albania, holding back a renewed Italian offensive.   
  
  
    Despite this, 
    since 
    their account is largely about Commonwealth forces fighting Germans, 
    the
     operations 
    of 
    the Greek Army 
    are 
    only covered as they affect those actions, and 
    there is little 
    about 
    the 
    Italian or Bulgarian 
    Fronts (which together get just two of 25 chapters), and oddly not much about naval operations
    . 
    There is, however, a useful chapter on the influence, real or perceived, of the German campaign in Greece on preparations for Operation Barbarossa, Hitler’s invasion of Russia.
  
  
    Despite this Swastika Over the Acropolis, a volume in the Brill series “History of Warfare,” is a good account of the campaign in Greece, given the limitations of earlier ones. 
  
  
    
      Note:
    
     Swastika Over the Acropolis is also available as an e-Book, ISBN 978-9-0042-5459-6.
  
  
     
  
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