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The Greek People's Liberation Army (Greek: Ελληνικός Λαϊκός Απελευθερωτικός Στρατός (ΕΛΑΣ), Ellinikós Laïkós Apeleftherotikós Stratós; ELAS)[2] was the military arm of the left-wing National Liberation Front (EAM) during the period of the Greek resistance until February 1945, when, following the Dekemvriana clashes and the Varkiza Agreement, it was disarmed and disbanded. ELAS was the largest and most significant of the military organizations of the Greek resistance.
Key Information
Birth of ELAS
[edit]After Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union with the initiation of Operation Barbarossa (June 22, 1941) — with most of Greece having fallen under Axis occupation since April and the Battle of Crete having ended on June 1 — the Greek Communist Party (KKE) called for national resistance. The KKE, together with minor parties of the Left, formed a political structure called the National Liberation Front. They were joined by other center-left or non-politicized Greek Resistance militants.
On February 16, 1942, EAM gave permission to a communist veteran, Athanasios (Thanasis) Klaras (later known as Aris Velouchiotis) to examine the possibilities of an armed resistance movement, which led to the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS). ELAS initiated actions against the German and Italian forces of occupation in Greece on 7 June 1942. Velouchiotis, with a small group of 10–15 guerrillas, entered the village of Domnista in Evrytania and proclaimed in front of the surprised villagers that they were about to "start the war against the forces of Axis and their local collaborators". Initially, Velouchiotis also recruited traditional local mountain-living bandits, like Dimos Karalivanos, in order to create a small group of experts in guerilla warfare.
Consolidation of strength
[edit]Gorgopotamos
[edit]
On a night in September 1942, a small group of British SOE officers parachuted into Greece near Mt. Giona. This group, led by Brigadier Eddie Myers, had been tasked to blow up one of three bridges (Gorgopotamos, Papadia or Asopos) of the country's main railway line, and to get the two main, but competing, guerrilla groups of ELAS and EDES to cooperate.

After much deliberation, the Gorgopotamos bridge was chosen due to the difficulty of making repairs to the structure. Dimos Karalivanos, an ELAS guerrilla, was the first guerrilla the British found. At the end of October a second group of British officers were parachuted into the Greek mountains. Their leaders were Themis Marinos and Colonel Christopher Woodhouse. Their mission was to locate the guerrillas of EDES and their leader Napoleon Zervas, who were friendlier to the British Middle East Command than ELAS, and co-operate with them. The two Greek groups eventually agreed to collaborate. The British did not favour the participation of ELAS, because it was a pro-communist group, but the forces of ELAS were larger and better organised, and without their participation, the mission was more likely to fail.
On November 14, the 12 British saboteurs, the forces of ELAS (150 men) and those of EDES (60-65 men) met in the village of Viniani in Evrytania and the operation started. Ten days later, they were at Gorgopotamos. On the night of November 25, at 23:00, the guerrillas started the attack against the Italian garrison. The Italians were startled, and after little resistance, were defeated. After the defeat of the Italians, the saboteurs set the explosives. ELAS forces had placed ambushes on the routes towards the bridge, to block the approach of Italian reinforcements. The explosion occurred at 03:00. Afterwards, the guerrillas' forces returned to Viniani, to celebrate the success of the mission.
The destruction of the Gorgopotamos bridge was, along with the Norwegian heavy water sabotage in Rjukan, one of the two biggest guerrilla acts in occupied Europe[citation needed]. The blowing up of the bridge disrupted the German transportation of ammunition via Greece to Rommel's forces for several weeks, taking place at a time when the Afrika Korps in North Africa, retreating after the defeat of El Alamein, were in need of supplies.[citation needed]
Expansion of ELAS
[edit]| Part of subjects related to the |
| Communist Party of Greece |
|---|
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Communism Portal Politics of Greece Communist parties in Greece |


The blowing up of Gorgopotamos bridge favored ELAS.[3] Soon, many the inhabitants of the villages of Central Greece became members of ELAS. Furthermore, people sympathised with the ELAS guerrillas because they weren't helped by the British in contrast with EDES. When 25 guerrillas deserted from ELAS, Aris Velouchiotis went to Epirus to threaten Napoleon Zervas not to come in touch with them. Later, the 25 deserters were arrested and executed in the village of Sperhiada. The winter of 1942, ELAS groups were formed in other Greek regions, like Thessaly and Macedonia. In Central Greece, Aris Velouchiotis succeeded to form a powerful semi-conventional army which could attack German and Italian forces. Aris became a legendary figure who imposed an iron discipline in ELAS. At the same time, some members of ELAS (Periklis, Tasos Leuterias, Diamantis, Nikiforos, Thiseas, Dimos Karalivanos, and Belis) have been distinguished during the battles. Aris Velouchiotis formed a group of 30–35 men, called "Mavroskoufides" (the "black caps"), who were his personal guards. During the winter of 1942–1943, new units of ELAS were composed in many regions of Greece. Some areas in the mountains of Central Greece passed from the control of Axis forces to that of ELAS.
The leadership of ELAS followed a triadic form, from its top down to platoon level: the captain (kapetánios), elected by the men and the overall leader of the unit, the military specialist (stratiotikós), usually a regular Army officer, responsible for tactical planning and training, and the political leader (politikós), usually a KKE member, as EAM's representative. At its top, the General Headquarters of ELAS, these positions were filled by Aris Velouchiotis, Stefanos Sarafis and Andreas Tzimas (nom-de-guerre: Vasilis Samariniotis).
Two events of great importance took place in this period. KKE, after passing great difficulties, succeeded in reorganizing its groups destroyed by Metaxas. Many members were recruited and with the help of ELAS, which became the largest partisan army in Greece, EAM became the largest mass political organization in Greek history, claiming over 1.5 million members, enlisted in organizations that covered every neighborhood in every village. The second great event was the foundation of the United Panhellenic Organization of Youth (EPON) (Greek: Ενιαία Πανελλαδική Οργάνωση Νέων). In 1943, a small naval auxiliary navy, the Greek People's Liberation Navy (ELAN) was also founded.
Two years after its foundation, ELAS' military strength had grown from the small group of fighters in Domnitsa to a force of some 50,000 partisans (estimates of the British government) or even as many as 85,000, according to EAM sources; EAM itself, and its associated organizations, had grown to a membership of anywhere from 500,000 to 750,000 (according to Anthony Eden) up to two million, in a country of 7.5 million inhabitants.[4] ELAS was thus one of the largest resistance groups formed in Europe, similar to the French Maquis, the Italian Resistance and the Yugoslavian Partisans, but smaller than the Polish resistance.
The "Mountain Government"
[edit]On 10 March 1944 the EAM-ELAS, now in control of most of the country, established the Political Committee of National Liberation (PEEA), widely known as the "Mountain Government" (Greek: Κυβέρνηση του βουνού, romanized: Kyvérnisi tou vounoú), in effect a third Greek government to rival the collaboration one in Athens and the government-in-exile in Cairo. Its aims, according to its founding Act, were, "to intensify the struggle against the conquerors (...) for full national liberation, for the consolidation of the independence and integrity of our country (...) and for the annihilation of domestic fascism and armed traitor formations."
PEEA was elected in liberated territories and in occupied ones by 2,000,000 Greek citizens. It was historically the first time women could vote. PEEA ministers covered a wide political spectrum from left to center.
1943: First Civil War
[edit]After the Soviet victory in the Battle of Stalingrad in early 1943, it was clear that Axis would lose the war. Soon, clashes appeared between the various Resistance organizations regarding the post-war political situation in Greece.
In October 1943 ELAS launched major attacks against EDES and the guerrilla group of Tsaous Anton in Northern Greece, precipitating a civil war across many parts of Greece which continued until February 1944, when the British agents in Greece negotiated a ceasefire (the Plaka agreement); ELAS broke the agreement by attacking the 5/42 Evzone Regiment, murdering the EKKA resistance group leader, Dimitrios Psarros, in as yet unclear and hotly debated circumstances and executing all the captives.
ELAS became the strongest of all resistance armed organizations, controlling by 1944 military three-fifths of the country (mainly the mountains) having in its ranks more than 800 military officers of the former National Army Of Negrs. ELAS engaged in battles against other resistance groups, besides the para-military forces of the collaborationist government. ELAS initially began to attack the National Republican Greek League (EDES) on accusations of collaboration with the Germans. ELAS attacked also the Panhellenic Liberation Organization (PAO), another resistance organization, concentrated in Northern Greece, in the area of Macedonia with accusations of collaboration. The armed power of the two major organizations was not comparable, as EDES had approx. 12,000 guerrillas, while ELAS' power was much stronger. Small battles were taking place in Epirus where EDES had its main force. This situation led to triangular battles among ELAS, EDES and the Germans. Given the support of the British and the Greek Cairo Government for EDES, these conflicts precipitated a civil war.
Αftermath
[edit]In autumn 1944, after the liberation, ELAS was the dominant force in the country and had captured all the major Greek cities, except Athens (after an agreement in Caserta with the Greek government in exile).
After the events of the Dekemvriana, ELAS was disarmed, though later some of its fighters (mostly KKE members) joined the Democratic Army during the civil war.
Hymn
[edit]The hymn of ELAS was written in March 1944 by Sofia Mavroeidi-Papadaki and music by Nikos Tsakonas.
| Greek Με το τουφέκι μου στον ώμο, σε πόλεις κάμπους και χωριά, της Λευτεριάς ανοίγω δρόμο; της στρώνω βάγια και περνά. Εμπρός Ε.Λ.Α.Σ. για την Ελλάδα, το Δίκιο και τη Λευτεριά; σ’ ακροβουνό και σε κοιλάδα, πέτα! πολέμα με καρδιά. Ένα τραγούδι είν’ η πνοή σου, καθώς στη ράχη ροβολάς, και αντιλαλούν απ’ τη φωνή σου καρδιές και κάμποι: ΕΛΑΣ! ΕΛΑΣ! Παντού η Πατρίδα μ’ έχει στείλει, φρουρό μαζί κι εκδικητή, κι απ’ την ορμή μου θ’ ανατείλει καινούργια λεύτερη ζωή. Με χίλια ονόματα, μία χάρη, ακρίτας ειτ’ αρματολός, αντάρτης, κλέφτης, παλικάρι; πάντα ειν’ ο ίδιος ο λαός. |
Translation Stand up, E.L.A.S. for Greece, for what's right and for Freedom; in mountain peaks and in valleys, fly! Fight with your heart. Your breath is a song, walking down the spine of the mountain, the echo of your voice spreads to hearts and meadows: E.L.A.S.! E.L.A.S.! Everywhere I have been, my homeland had sent me, to guard and to avenge, from my strong drive, a new free life shall rise. Thousand names, but the spirit is one in them all, akritas or armatolos, guerrilla, klepht, lad; it's always the People. |
List of important battles
[edit]1942
- The battle of Reka (40 Italians killed)
- The battle of Mikro Chorio (70 Italians killed)
- November 1942 – The battle of Gorgopotamos
1943
- March 1943 – The battle of Fardykambos (together with PAO, 95 Italians killed)
- June 1943 – The destruction of the Kournovo Tunnel (c.100 Italians killed)
- July 1943 – The battle of Myrtia
- The battle of Sarantaporo (99 Germans killed)
- The battle of Porta (many Italians killed)
- September 1943 – The battle of Arachova
1944
- February 23, 1944 – Blowing up a German train in Tempi under the guidance of the chief saboteur of ELAS Antonis Vratsanos with 450 German soldiers dead[5]
- March 1944 – The battle of Kokkinia
- April 1944 – The battle of Kaisariani[2]
- June 1944 – The battle of Steiri (40 Germans killed)
- July 1944 – The battle of Chora - Agorelitsa (180 Germans killed)
- July 1944 – The battle of Amfilochia
- The capture of Kastoria
- The capture of Elefsina military airport
- August 1944 – Battle of Karoutes
- September 1944 – Battle of Kalamata
- September 1944 – Battle of Meligalas
List of important ELAS members
[edit]




This list contains the names of the most well-known ELAS leaders or simple members, with their nom de guerre in parentheses:
- Athanasios Klaras (Aris Velouchiotis), chief captain of ELAS
- Colonel Stefanos Sarafis, chief military expert of ELAS
- Andreas Tzimas (Vasilis Samariniotis), chief political commissioner of ELAS
- Georgios Siantos
- Major General Neokosmos Grigoriadis (Lambros), Chairman of ELAS Central Committee
- Lieutenant General Ptolemaios Sarigiannis, Chief of Staff of ELAS Central Committee
- Colonel Evripidis Bakirtzis, commander of ELAS' Macedonian theatre
- Captain Theodoros Makridis (Ektoras), one of ELAS chief staff officers
- Alexandros Rosios (Ypsilantis)
- Markos Vafiadis, Macedonian theatre
- Nikos Beloyannis
- Charilaos Florakis (Kapetan Jiotis)
- Vasilis Liropoulos (Kapetan Liras), Macedonian theatre
- Iannis Xenakis
- Giannis Aggeletos (Leon Tzavelas), black beret
- Giannis Economou (Giannoutsos), black beret
- Panos Tzavelas
- Evangelos Yannopoulos (Varjianis)
- Father Dimitrios Holevas (Papa-Holevas, Papaflessas)
- Father Germanos Dimakos (Papa-Anypomonos)
- Alberto Errera
- Moisis Michail Bourlas (Byron)
- Fotis Mastrokostas (Thanos), black beret
- Kostas Kavretzis (Kostoulas Agrafiotis), black beret
- Stavros Mavrothalassitis
- Babis Klaras, brother of Aris Velouchiotis
- Giannis Madonis (Ektoras), black beret
- Giannis Nikolopoulos (Leon), black beret
- Dimitrios Dimitriou (Nikiforos)
- Giorgos Houliaras (Periklis)
- Pantelis Laskas (Pelopidas), black beret
- Epaminontas Chairopoulos (Karaiskakis), black beret
- Ioannis Alexandrou (Diamantis)
- Lambros Koumbouras (Achilleas)
- Spyros Tsiligiannis (Lefteris Chrysiotis), black beret
- Kostas Athanasiou (Doulas), black beret
- Sarantos Kapourelakos, serving directly under Velouchiotis' command.
- Spyros Bekios (Lambros)
- Dimitrios Tassos (Boukouvalas)
- Thomas Pallas (Kozakas)
- Nikos Xinos (Smolikas)
- Vangelis Papadakis (Tassos Lefterias)
- Vasilis Priovolos (Ermis)
- Giannis Podias, Cretan theatre
- Michalis Samaritis, Cretan theatre
- Gerasimos Avgeropoulos
- Andreas Zacharopoulos (Andreas Patrinos)
- Ioannis Hatzipanagiotou (Thomas)
- Filotas Adamidis (Katsonis), Macedonian theatre
- Mirka Ginova (Irene Gini), Macedonian theatre
- Christos Margaritis (Armatolos)
- Georgios Zarogiannis (Kavallaris)
- Vasilis Ganatsios (Cheimarros)
- Panagiotis G. Tesseris, Secretary of the ELAS Guerrilla Warfare Training Committee (Laconia Region)[6]
- Yiorgos Boukouvalas, second lieutenant of the ELAS, member of EPON's elite corps (Grevena Region)[7]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ According to Sarafis
- ^ a b "H μάχη της Καισαριανής. Ο ΕΛΑΣ αποκρούει επίθεση των ταγματασφαλιτών. Η «κόκκινη» συνοικία σε απόσταση αναπνοής από το κέντρο της κατεχόμενης Αθήνας". ΜΗΧΑΝΗ ΤΟΥ ΧΡΟΝΟΥ (in Greek). 2014-10-07. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
- ^ Mazower (2001), p. 140.
- ^ Stavrianos (1952), p. 44.
- ^ Θεοχαρούλη, Κων/να (2022-02-23). "Τίμησαν τα 78 χρόνια από την ανατίναξη της γερμανικής αμαξοστοιχίας στα Τέμπη από τον ΕΛΑΣ". ertnews.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2024-08-25.
- ^ ELAS (1945).
- ^ Sevastiadis, Tasos. ""Γιώργος Ν. Μπουκουβάλας"". Κατιούσα. Katiousa. Retrieved August 10, 2025.
Sources
[edit]- Eudes, Dominique (1973). The Kapetanios: Partisans and Civil War in Greece, 1943–1949. Translated by John Howe. New York and London: Monthly Review Press. ISBN 978-0-85345-275-1.
- Grigoriadis, Solon (1982). Συνοπτική Ιστορία της Εθνικής Αντίστασης, 1941–1944 [Concise History of the National Resistance, 1941–1944] (in Greek). Athens: Kapopoulos.
- Αρχεία Εθνικής Αντίστασης, 1941–1944. Τόμος 3ος "Αντάρτικη Οργάνωση ΕΛΑΣ" [National Resistance Archives, 1941–1944. 3rd Volume "ELAS Partisan Organization"]. Athens: Hellenic Army History Directorate. 1998.
- Αρχεία Εθνικής Αντίστασης, 1941–1944. Τόμος 4ος "Αντάρτικη Οργάνωση ΕΛΑΣ" [National Resistance Archives, 1941–1944. 4th Volume "ELAS Partisan Organization"]. Athens: Hellenic Army History Directorate. 1998.
- Mazower, Mark (2001). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941–44. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08923-6.
- Sarafis, Stefanos (1951). Greek Resistance Army: The Story of ELAS. London: Birch Books. OCLC 993128877.
- Stavrianos, L. S. (1952). "The Greek National Liberation Front (EAM): A Study in Resistance Organization and Administration". The Journal of Modern History. 24 (1): 42–55. doi:10.1086/237474. JSTOR 1871980. S2CID 143755996.
- Vafeiadis, Markos (1985). Απομνημονεύματα, Β' Τόμος (1940–1944) [Memoirs, Volume II (1940–1944)] (in Greek). Athens: A. A. Livanis.
- Vafeiadis, Markos (1985). Απομνημονεύματα, Γ' Τόμος (1944–1946) [Memoirs, Volume III (1944–1946)] (in Greek). Athens: A. A. Livanis.
- "Original Official ELAS Military Release Document". E.L.A.S. 1945.
Historical Context and Formation
Axis Occupation of Greece
The Axis occupation of Greece began after Italy's invasion on 28 October 1940, which Greek forces initially repelled, prompting German intervention on 6 April 1941 alongside Italian and Bulgarian troops. German armored divisions rapidly advanced through the Metaxas Line and outflanked Allied positions in the Battle of Greece, capturing Thessaloniki on 9 April and Athens on 27 April 1941. The Greek army capitulated on 23 April, with remaining Allied forces evacuating by late May, marking the end of organized resistance and the establishment of Axis control over the mainland and most islands.[4][5] Greece was partitioned into three zones of occupation: Germany assumed direct control of key strategic areas, including the Athens-Piraeus region, eastern Macedonia with Thessaloniki, parts of western Macedonia, and Crete; Italy occupied the majority of the mainland, Peloponnese, and numerous Aegean islands; Bulgaria annexed eastern Macedonia, western Thrace, and the Florina-Kastoria region. This division facilitated resource extraction, with occupiers imposing heavy requisitions of food, livestock, and raw materials to support Axis war efforts, exacerbating economic collapse from prior invasion damage. Following Italy's armistice with the Allies on 8 September 1943, German forces seized former Italian territories, intensifying control until liberation in October 1944.[6][7] Economic exploitation and blockades triggered the Great Famine, peaking in the winter of 1941-1942, as Axis forces commandeered agricultural output—Germany alone extracted over 20% of Greece's grain production—while disrupting shipping and imposing export bans that prevented food imports. In Athens, daily death rates from starvation and typhus reached 300 by December 1941, contributing to an estimated 200,000 to 300,000 total famine-related deaths nationwide during the occupation. German policies also included forced deportations of labor, with 60,000 Greeks sent to Germany by 1944, alongside systematic plunder of infrastructure and cultural artifacts.[8][5] Occupation brutality, manifested in reprisal killings—such as the execution of 50 Greek civilians for every German soldier killed—and village razings, like the Kalavryta massacre in December 1943 where over 500 men and boys were shot, generated profound popular discontent. These conditions, compounded by collaborationist puppet regimes, spurred the growth of armed resistance groups; the Communist Party of Greece, leveraging underground networks, formed the National Liberation Front (EAM) in September 1941, which by December organized ELAS as its guerrilla army to target Axis supply lines and garrisons.[4][1]Establishment of EAM and ELAS
The National Liberation Front (EAM), or Ethnikó Apeleftherotikó Métopo, was founded on September 27, 1941, in a clandestine meeting in Athens' Kallithea district, spearheaded by the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) alongside smaller leftist groups such as the Agricultural Party of Greece and the National Union of Greece.[9][10] This initiative followed the KKE's Central Committee convocation in late June 1941, which assessed the Axis occupation—initiated by the German invasion in April 1941—as a strategic opening to mobilize the populace against the occupiers and the puppet Greek government, amid widespread famine and economic collapse that claimed an estimated 300,000 lives during the winter of 1941–1942.[10] Although presented as a broad patriotic coalition, EAM's structure and directives were dominated by KKE cadres, who supplied the organizational discipline lacking in other nascent resistance efforts.[11] EAM rapidly expanded its civilian networks for sabotage, intelligence, and aid distribution, establishing local committees (organossis) across urban and rural areas to enforce compliance and recruit amid the power vacuum left by the occupation forces' focus on exploitation rather than governance.[10] By mid-1942, these efforts transitioned to armed resistance, with partisan bands forming under EAM auspices in mountainous regions like Roumeli and the Peloponnese, precursors to a unified military structure.[10] The KKE's emphasis on mass mobilization, drawing from Marxist-Leninist tactics of people's war, enabled EAM to outpace rivals like the republican-aligned National Republican Greek League (EDES), which emerged later in 1941 but lacked comparable grassroots penetration.[11] The Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS), or Ellinikós Laïkós Apeleftherotikós Strátos, was officially constituted as EAM's military wing in December 1942, though initial guerrilla detachments had coalesced earlier in 1942 under captains such as Athanasios Klaras (known as Aris Velouchiotis) in Central Greece.[11] ELAS adopted a decentralized command suited to hit-and-run tactics, with divisions (mereïdes) organized by geography rather than rigid hierarchy, prioritizing ideological loyalty over professional military experience; recruits included peasants, workers, and deserters armed initially with captured weapons and improvised explosives.[11] This formation reflected the KKE's strategic calculus to build a parallel power base, ostensibly for national defense but oriented toward securing territorial control for postwar political leverage, as evidenced by internal directives prioritizing expansion over coordination with non-communist groups.[10] By late 1943, ELAS claimed over 50,000 fighters, though effectiveness varied due to limited Allied supplies and internal purges of suspected "deviationists."[11]Military Organization
Command and Leadership Structure
The leadership of ELAS was subordinate to the Central Committee of EAM, which was dominated by members of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) and provided overarching political direction, ensuring alignment with communist objectives amid the Axis occupation. [12] ELAS maintained a distinct military hierarchy under this umbrella, comprising a High Command focused on operational planning and execution, and an ELAS Central Committee handling organizational, logistical, and cadre-related issues. [12] This dual structure reflected the fusion of military and political authority, with political commissars embedded at all levels to enforce ideological discipline and prevent deviations from party lines, a practice rooted in Soviet-influenced guerrilla doctrines. [13] From its inception in December 1941, ELAS adopted a tripartite leadership model extending from the General Headquarters down to platoon level, typically consisting of a military commander for tactical decisions, a political commissar for ideological oversight and morale, and a staff or security officer for administrative and enforcement functions. [13] This setup prioritized political loyalty over pure military efficiency, as evidenced by the frequent subordination of field commanders to EAM directives, which sometimes hampered unified operations against Axis forces. [14] In September 1943, Major General Stefanos Sarafis, a former republican army officer with experience from the Greco-Italian War, was appointed Chief of ELAS General Headquarters to professionalize command, though he operated under KKE political supervision. [15] [14] Key field commanders included Athanasios Klaras, known as Aris Velouchiotis, a KKE Central Committee member appointed kapetanios (chief captain) in early 1942, who led partisan bands in central Greece (Roumeli) and pioneered ELAS's initial guerrilla tactics starting February 1942. [16] [17] Political oversight was exerted by figures like Andreas Tzimas, chief commissar responsible for integrating communist cadre into units, and Georgios Siantos, who coordinated from EAM's Athens headquarters. [18] Regional commands, such as the Macedonian division under Evripidis Bakirtzis and later Markos Vafiadis, operated semi-autonomously but reported to the central apparatus, with Lieutenant General Ptolemaios Sarigiannis serving as Chief of Staff for ELAS's Central Committee by 1944. [19] This structure enabled rapid expansion to over 50,000 fighters by mid-1944 but also sowed tensions, as communist dominance alienated non-communist elements and fueled rivalries with other resistance groups. [13]Recruitment, Composition, and Armament
ELAS recruitment combined voluntary enlistment motivated by resistance to Axis occupation and EAM propaganda emphasizing national liberation with coercive measures, including forced conscription in areas under its control and threats labeling non-joiners as traitors.[13] In liberated villages, local elders often drafted men, who swore oaths pledging death for desertion, while economic hardship and reprisals against non-supporters bolstered numbers.[13] The organization appealed to marginalized groups such as youth through EPON and women, expanding its base beyond initial Communist cadres.[13] ELAS composition drew primarily from rural Greek peasants, workers, and mountain villagers, encompassing a mix of ideological Communists, nationalists, and opportunists united against occupation, with leadership featuring former regular army officers like Colonel Stephanos Sarafis as military commander from April 1943.[13] It included diverse elements such as men, women, and youth, though exact demographics remain sparsely documented; women served in combat and support roles, reflecting EAM's inclusive rhetoric toward repressed segments of society.[13] By late 1943, ELAS integrated around 800 monarchist and 1,500 republican officers alongside 1,270 reservists, broadening its military expertise.[13] Strength grew from small bands in 1942 to approximately 5,000 men by spring 1943, reaching 16,000 active guerrillas plus 16,000 reserves by June 1943, 44,000 by late 1943, and peaking at 95,000 in summer 1944 before contracting to about 50,000 by October 1944.[13] Armament consisted of a disparate array of light infantry weapons, predominantly captured from Italian and German forces, including rifles, machine guns, and submachine guns familiar to Greek troops from pre-occupation stocks.[13] British airdrops via SOE supplied additional small arms, explosives, and over 2,500 tons of materiel by 1944, though ammunition shortages persisted; significant hauls included artillery from the surrendered Italian Pinerolo Division in September 1943.[13] Per commander Sarafis, typical holdings encompassed 3,000 rifles, 300 automatic rifles, 100 submachine guns, 30 machine guns, and 10 mortars, with improvised devices like rock mines supplementing formal equipment for guerrilla tactics.[13] Heavy weapons remained scarce, limiting ELAS to infantry-focused operations without tanks or aircraft.[13]