On 4 March 1964, Security Council Resolution 186 was approved by the UN Security Council. This decision established the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP). Following the decision, the Canadian government, under Prime Minister
Lester B. Pearson, approved the commitment of the Canadian troops on 13 March 1964. The primary contingent was formed with 709 personnel from the (Vandoos) and 91 personnel from the
Royal Canadian Dragoons. For the deployment of the soldiers and equipment, the aircraft carrier was loaded with 56 vehicles, 70 tons of stores and ammunition, and 95 men from the Vandoos, the Royal Canadian Dragoons, and the
Royal Canadian Army Service Corps.
Bonaventure left Halifax, Canada, on 18 March 1964, and arrived in
Famagusta Bay, Cyprus, on March 30. Following the aircraft deployment, the
Royal Canadian Air Force also prepared and dispatched
Hercules and
Yukon aircraft of Nos.
435 and
437 Squadrons. The air force transported about 900 soldiers and 400 tons of equipment between 15 March and 22 March. On 4 April 1964, UNFICYP was formed at
Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus. The peace-keeping operation initially began with troops from Ireland, Finland, Denmark, and Canada. The Canadian and Finnish contingents were deployed to the
United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus, which included Nicosia and the surrounding northeast and northwest areas. The Canadian operation’s goal was to oversee and maintain the neutrality of the Green Line, the demarcation zone between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities within the city. The Canadian peacekeeping operation was titled “Operation Snowgoose” in July 1974 when the Canadian involvement increased during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. The Canadian force was originally composed of around 1,100 personnel, but this number was reduced to 900 by November 1967 and then further to 480 in 1974. After 1974, the number of Canadian contingent personnel in Cyprus gradually reduced, falling to 520 in December 1992. On 15 June 1993, the Canadian contingent relinquished control to Britain, and by then, there were only 117 Canadians left on the ground. Between 1964 and 1993, the Canadian government deployed 59 groups, approximately 25,000 Canadian Armed Forces, as a part of the Operation Snowgoose and UNFICYP. More than 33,000 Canadians have served in Cyprus and there were 28 casualties during the operation. Currently only one or two Canadian soldiers remain in Cyprus as part of UNFICYP. == Controversies ==