-16- # 680, Nineteenth, from London offers for perhaps a further delegation to go from thifs House to Greece. We have nothing to hide. If Honorable Members here had seen what the Prime Minister and I had Seen I am sure that many of the speeches and criticisms we have heard would never have been made. What I have said about the Greek Socialist Party applies also to the Agrarian Party and to the Popular Democrats. I believe that they too have flaked away from EAM. I cannot prove it; I have not the documents to show it but I can tell the House that that is our belief which the HOUSE will find justified in the next few weeks. But what I do know is that representatives of the Agrarian Party from Salonika have definitely broken away from EAM and have taken refuge in Athens. Mr. James Griffiths Llanelly: I gather that these defections if they be so must have taken place since the Right Honorable Gentleman last spoke. The last time he spoke he wanted EAM in the government. Mr. Eden: They have taken place since we were in Athens. Now I come to the events on which I have been Challenged and the position of the government in the present situation. I must remind the committee that for months before we went into Greece we labored to bring about unity in the Greek political parties. We got all the parties together and we got a document signed at Caserta agreed by the rival commanders-in-chief. We have been |