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Turkish Source Alert! However, the
following is written brilliantly, and the footnotes indicate excellent
documentation. Judge for yourself. In addition, Professor Ataöv's
interpretation on the Armenians' rabid Turcophobia is the most sensible and best explanation I have come across.
While preparing this web site, I
included writings by Ataöv that I now realize were excerpted from this
article; this is the full account.
After this mother of all Ataöv
articles, another Ataöv article follows, entitled, " A "Statement" Wrongly Attributed to
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk."
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The 'Armenian Question' Conflict, Trauma &
Objectivity
By Türkkaya ATAÖV*
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Preface
THE 'ARMENIAN QUESTIONS'
Conflict, Trauma and Objectivity
Center For Strategic Research Sam Papers No. 1 /
99
Footnotes
PREFACE
SAM PAPERS is an English-language publication series of the Center for Strategic Research
(Stratejik Araştırmalar Merkezi, SAM), affiliated with the Turkish Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. It is being published irregularly based on events composed of monographs,
critiques, seminar minutes and the like that follow.
Türkkaya Ataöv, professor of international relations recognized for his numerous
thought-provoking published works, not only on the Armenian question, but also on various
aspects of past and contemporary conflicts, reacts this time to a group of articles which
have appeared in the Summer 1994 issue of the Journal of Political and Military Sociology.
Judging by the criticisms that he offers or the new points that he brings to attention,
one may quote, James Russell Lowell, that "a wise scepticism is the first attribute
of a good critic."
Professor Ataöv's treatise, entitled The
'Armenian Question': Conflict, Trauma and Objectivity, as the previous printed monograph,
should be considered a contribution to the evaluation of the subject.
THE 'ARMENIAN QUESTIONS'
Conflict, Trauma and Objectivity
The Journal of Political and Military Sociology (Illinois, U.S.A.) printed in one of its
recent (22/1, Summer 1994) issues five articles on the "Armenian question" by
Professor Vahakn N. Dadrian, an Armenian-American researcher. It stated that four of the
essays were "adapted" from former prints elsewhere.1 Dr. Richard Falk, Professor
of International Law and Practice at Princeton University, and Dr. Roger Smith, Professor
of Government at the College of William and Mary and the "special guest editor"
of this issue, present the topic seemingly in full agreement with author Dadrian.
None of the three writers employs a wide
historical perspective. They seem to have closed the door to almost a thousand years of
Armenian-Turkish relations, most of which, whether acknowledged or not by Professors
Dadrian, Smith and Falk, had been amicable, even brotherly. The literature on the
"lean years", that is, of the early 20th century, is already stupendous in
volume, although adding up to few reliable data. Comparatively, there is so little in
print on the centuries of coexistence and cooperation. The Turks, who faced Byzantium, and
not the Armenians, at the Battle of Malazgirt (Manzikerd, 1071), recognized (1461) the
Armenian (Gregorian) Church, when it was rejected by established Christian centers.
None of the three writers presents a combination
of interrelated factors. Scholars are, not only expected to keep in mind opposing views,
but also to utilize interdisciplinary approaches. Final judgment in history, especially in
a very controversial case like the Armenian-Turkish conflict, cannot be surrendered to an
ethnic participant in a dispute. In most cases, one side will be painted as an
"idealized white", and the other as a "gruesome black."
In all his presentations. Professor Dadrian
portrays the Turks as wild, cruel, ferocious, uncivilized and barbarous savages, and the
Armenians as simple victims, prey in the hands of their fierce enemies. In the
publications of many Western authors, like Dadrian, the Turks are never the sufferers.
This approximation is an oversimplification inconsistent with historical phenomena. After
centuries of peaceful coexistence, on which Dadrian does not dwell in any of his writings,
the Armenians, supported by foreign circles, considered their Muslim neighbours as rivals
in Eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus, where the majority was made up of the latter. The
Armenians, who had no majority in Eastern Anatolia, cooperated during the First World War,
with the aggressive and expanding Russians, without whose active cooperation, they
thought, they had no chance of a homeland. The territory, whether in Eastern Anatolia or
most of the Caucasus, which the Armenians claimed as their own, was largely inhabited by
non-Armenians. The demographic reality that disproved Armenian aspirations could be
changed by foreign support and ethnic cleansing.
Much of the history of Anatolia, the Caucasus, the Balkans and southern Russia cannot be
understood without a proper assessment of the Muslim dead and Muslim refugees.2 Only about
two centuries ago, the Muslims, mostly Turks, constituted the overwhelming majorities,
pluralities or sizable minorities in these territories. Ottoman weakness in the 19th
century, especially after the 1877-1878 Russo-Turkish War, however, encouraged Armenian
terrorism and separatism as well as the expansionism of some neighbours, principally
Russia and the Christian Balkan peoples. The Turks were either massacred or forced to
migrate. Millions were killed, and millions fled.3 The population of the contemporary
Turkish Republic consists mostly of the descendants of the surviving immigrants. A host of
Western writers, including Dadrian, Smith and Falk, ignore the massacre and the forced
exile of Muslims, predominantly Turks, from the Balkans, the Crimea and the Caucasus.
Whenever there is an attempt to challenge this
one-sided and biased approach, there is an almost unanimous accusation of
"revisionism", as if to revise an entrenched interpretation is scholarly
impermissible. Falsifiability is a criterion in scholarship. All theories should be
checked for correctness. All existing literature relevant to a problem have to be located
and analyzed, and when sufficient new clues are obtained, the validity of former
generalizations have to be re-tested. There is no need to cling to the original lopsided
hypotheses. Scholarship is like a building in perpetual repair. Perpetuating the existing
set of beliefs is not necessarily a scientific approach. Not only a totality of facts, but
also how a problem is formulated at the very beginning is very crucial. New dimensions,
such as the ones some Turkish scholars have introduced, may change the focus and
parameters. Contrary to what Professor Falk writes, some Turkish accounts are not just
"shoddy propaganda" and "inept or disingenuous scholarship". I proved,
for instance, beyond any doubt, that a picture presumably a photograph of heaps of skulls
of "massacred Armenians" in 1915 was actually an oil painting by a Russian
artist (The Apotheosis of War by Vassili Vereshchagin) who died in 1904.4
Dadrian gives no credit to views that do not serve
his particular purpose. For instance, the Ottomans, through the millet system, allowed
considerable autonomy to all religious communities. The Turks did not pursue a policy of
religious conversion, except in the special case of the Janissaries, Dadrian neither gives
credit to this long Ottoman tradition of toleration, nor does he assess the heavy price
the Turks paid for it. He does not also mention the intervention of the foreign powers in
Ottoman domestic affairs, under the pretext of protecting the minorities, principally the
Armenians. Foreign missionaries created in the Christian minorities of the Ottoman Empire
a sense of community with the Christian imperialist powers. They even gave the Christian
minorities a posture of superiority.
* * *
 |
Professor
Vahakn Dadrian
|
Dadrian's assumptions
go back to the 1894-96 and the 1909 periods, during which he states "over one million
Armenians were put to death". He calls the trials of the Sultan Abdülhamid era as
"farcical" (p. 133), and maintains that the Turks had "received mild
punishments" (p. 134). He makes no reference, for instance, to a report of a British
captain, Charles Boswell Norman, who says the Osmanlı (Ottoman) has yet to be heard.
Norman cites "facts" which shifts the blame "on the shoulders of the real
originators of the rebellion in Anatolia"5. Sent to Turkey, as an officer in the
Royal Artillery, Captain Norman says that hitherto the British have had "only the
Armenian version of the disturbances embellished with the hysterical utterances of their
English confreres". He maintains that England has yet to leam that "the
disturbances in Asia Minor are the direct outcome of a widespread anarchist movement of
which she has been the unconscious supporter". Noting that so much has been written
"for the avowed purpose of proving the Armenian to be a model of all meekness and the
Turk a monster of cruelty", Captain Norman deemed it necessary "in the interests
of peace, of truth and of justice to point out the aims and objects of the Armenian
Revolutionists". He records that the Hunchak Committee was "directly responsible
for all the bloodshed in Anatolia for the last five years". He underlines: "To
pretend that these regrettable occurrences that deluged Anatolia with blood were
unprovoked assaults by Mohammedans on Christians is untrue... The disturbances were
commenced by the Armenians". He refers to a Manifesto, dated 19 November 1895, and
addressed to the Armenians of the Adana region: "Arm yourselves now for the battle...
Let us draw our swords and fall on the foe". Referring to another Manifesto on behalf
of the Zeitoun Armenians, he says that "it fully proves that the disturbances there
were originated by the Armenians". He adds that the British correspondents, reporting
on the "so-called Sassoun atrocities, were hopelessly duped by Armenian
romancers". Noting that the touching story of the "Armenian matrons throwing
their children over the cliff on the Antokh Dagh and their jumping over themselves to
avoid dishonour, is an absolute myth", he writes that, not only the Armenian
population figures were very much exaggerated, but also the number of victims. For
instance, at Berecik, where 2,000 Armenians were supposed to have been murdered, Captain
Norman says that "five lives were lost."
The Armenian Troubles and Where the Responsibility
Lies is the title of a booklet by a correspondent of a New York newspaper, who apparently
reproduced in 1895 in pamphlet form the five letters he had written in and sent from
Istanbul.6 Believing that the whole atmosphere on the Sassoun events of 1894 has been
"polluted with falsehoods and exaggerations", he states that the disturbances
were "brought about by the Armenian revolutionary committees". He quotes the
Rev. Cyrus Hamlin's article in the Congregationalist of 23 December 1893: "An
Armenian revolutionary party...a secret organization...managed with a skill in
deceit...[has] the strongest hopes of preparing the way for Russia's entrance into Asia
Minor to take possession...These Huntchaguist bands...will watch their opportunity to
kill..., set fire to their [Muslim] villages and then make their escape into the
mountains. The enraged Muslims will then rise and fall upon the defenceless
Armenians...[and] Russia will enter in the name of humanity...This Huntchaguist
revolutionary party...is of Russian origin; Russian gold and craft govern it." The
author quotes the AP correspondent who says that the Armenian conspirators murdered the
Rev. Edward Riggs and two other American missionaries and fastened the blame on the Turks.
As to the story that Armenian women, who, rather than "suffer dishonor at the hands
of (their) Turkish persecutors", threw themselves into an abyss until the ravine was
filled with corpses, the American correspondent says that "the horrible narrative is
a reproduction, with additions and embellishments to suit the occasion, of an old tale in
poetry by Mrs. Hemans years ago, under the title of 'The Suliote Mother'." He writes:
"Provocation and intimidation seem to be the plan of the Armenian
revolutionists."
The Armenian terrorist groups continued to attack,
assassinate and murder. But each event of such a nature was presented to world public
opinion as one-sided "extermination", the propagated figures running into
thousands. For instance, the Armenian author H. Pastermadjian writes that 3,500 Armenians
were killed in the Sassoun rebellion of 1894.7 The Rev. A. W. William, in association with
an Armenian writer, quotes a larger figure-6000.8 The Protestant missionary Edwin Bliss
states that the Armenian losses were "at least 6,000."
However, the first combined report of the foreign
consuls establishes a much lower figure, i.e., 265 — with no mention of the Turkish
losses.10
The Ottoman authorities tried both Armenians and
Turks for defying the law. Frequently, the Sultan pardoned the convicted Armenians. This
was the case even when a group of Armenians planned to assassinate him on 21 July 1905.
***
No balanced account of Armenian-Turkish relations
can be formulated without a general presentation of the fate of the Turks as well. The
Greek revolt set an example (1821) for other uprisings against Ottoman rule. The Greeks
murdered virtually every Turk they encountered. The whole Turkish population of many
cities, towns and villages were marched out and slaughtered. The Turks "stood in the
way" of minorities who wanted to create their own states on territories where the
Muslims constituted the majorities. The policy of eliminating the Turks, either through
murder or ethnic cleansing, was repeated during and after several other armed conflicts
carried out under the slogan of national independence." The Muslim peoples, mostly
Turks, of the Balkans, the Caucasus and southern Russia were either killed or forced to
migrate to Anatolia. The Turks of Anatolia also suffered overwhelming mortality. This does
not mean, however, that it was only the Muslims who suffered. But that one-sided
interpretation of Ottoman history has to be corrected.
It is unscientific as well as unfair to describe
as "revisionists" all those who challenge the one-sided traditional view that
considers the non-Muslims as victims and the Turks as brutal victimizers. There is also a
history of Turks as victims, a role in which they are not usually seen. Had the Turks done
the same to the Christian minorities when they had first encountered them, they could have
survived on lands where they had lived for centuries as majorities. The Ottoman millet
system allowed each religious community great self-government under their own leaders.
Each millet, which enjoyed religious freedom, established and maintained its own
institutions, including courts, schools and welfare systems.
 |
Professor
Richard Falk |
During and after each war the Ottoman armies
fought in the 19th century and the early 20th century, minority groups, supported by the
great powers of the day, revolted. The Ottomans, who got little credit for their tradition
of religious toleration, paid a heavy price for it. Various foreign governments intervened
in Ottoman domestic affairs, ostensibly to protect the Christian minorities. Missionaries
gave the latter a sense of partnership with the imperial powers.
A vast area from the environs of Bosnia all the
way to Central Asia via southern Russia and the Caucasus was, not only territories where
Muslims ruled but also a wide world where the Muslims constituted the majority, plurality
or sizable minority. The Ottoman Empire, struggling to survive, was trying to defend its
Muslim citizens against massacre and to find shelter for those who managed to escape from
the recurring butchery. This is the reason why so many citizens of the contemporary
Turkish Republic are sons and daughters of immigrants from Yugoslavia to Armenia. Western
publications record, in exaggerated form, only the sufferings of the Armenians,
Bulgarians, Greeks and other Christian peoples.
For about a whole century (1821-1922), it was the
Turks who were the main victims. The Turkish losses began with the Greek revolt, which set
a pattern for the rest of the Christians in the Ottoman Empire. The Greek revolution
started with the murder of the Ottoman officials and continued with the wholesale killing
of the Muslim inhabitants of various cities, towns and villages, such as Kalavryta,
Kalamata, Missolonghi and Vrachori. Even those Turks who were given promises of safety
were slaughtered in quiet comers. The Turks of Greece were "in the way" of an
independent Greece. When the Greek Kingdom in the Morea was established (1830), "a
Greek state now existed, but a Greek nation still had to be made".12
Armenians and others followed the Greek example of
"creating a nation-state" by murdering and expelling Turks and other Muslims.
The Crimean Tatars, a Turkic people, were the first to suffer on account of Russian
expansion. The notable exception to the general wholesale murder or forced migration of
Muslims was the Turkish War of National Liberation (1919-22). But even in its initial
period the Greeks had attempted ethnic cleansing of Turks in Western Anatolia. Very few
Western sources acknowledge Armenian attacks on Muslims. It was Russian expansion and
assistance principally to the Armenians that brought to the Caucasus Christian demographic
and political domination. Just as it was the case in the Balkans and the Crimea, the
Muslims were pushed out, and Christians brought into new areas. Similar to the case of
Sofia in the Balkans, Erevan was (until 1827) a province with a Muslim majority. The
brochure, entitled Eliminate Turkey and signed by Vahan Cardashian, an Armenian living in
New York, in the year 1918, is another example of the same "traditional"
attitude.13
***
Dadrian overlooks the crucial fact that a
substantial number of Armenians, sympathizing with the objectives of the Russian
Government, have fought against the Ottomans (and the Persians) since the last century.
The Armenian political parties14 worked like terrorist organizations resorting to
assassinations and mass violence. They acted as spies, received arms from abroad'5 and
eventually welcomed invading armies. The Armenians programmed, with the Russians nearby,
the massacre of Turks and the forced migration of the remainder, until vast lands would be
emptied for the sovereignty of the Armenian people. Waves of Muslims such as the Abkhaz,
the Chechen, the Circassians, the Daghestanis, the Ingush and others had no alternative
but to escape to Anatolia.
The Armenian-Turkish conflict escalated on the eve
of the First World War and reached a climax during the white heat of war conditions. It
may be appropriate to refer, at this point, to two important Armenian sources. Hovhannes
Kachaznouni, one of the prominent leaders of the Dashnak Party and the first Prime
Minister of the independent Armenian Republic, wrote: "...When Turkey had not yet
entered the war...Armenian volunteer groups began to be organized with great zeal and pomp
in Trans Caucasia. In spite of the decision taken a few weeks before at the General
Committee in Erzurum, the Dashnagtzoutune actively helped the organization of the
aforementioned groups, and especially arming them, against Turkey. In the Fall of 1914,
Armenian volunteer groups were formed and fought against the Turks...16 Another Armenian
wrote: "...The leader of the Turkish-Armenian section of the Dashnagtzoutune did not
carry out their promise of loyalty to the Turkish cause when the Turks entered the
war...They were swayed in their actions by the interests of the Russian government...A
call was sent for Armenian volunteers to fight the Turks on the Caucasian front."17
When the Armenian Catholicos of Etchmiadzin wrote
to Count Illarion Ivanovich Vorontsov-Dashkov, the Russian Governor-General of the
Caucasus, on 5 August 1914, and offered him, in addition to his congregation in Russia,
"the sincere devotion of the Armenians in Turkey",18 the Russian official wished
that the actions of the Armenians on both sides of the border would be in accordance with
his "instructions". He added: "I should like to request you, through the
exertion of your influence on your congregation, in case of a Russo-Turkish war, to ensure
that our own Armenians, together with the Armenians inhabiting the border regions, perform
the duties that will be given to them, both under the present circumstances prevalent in
Turkey and also in the future."19
Dadrian quotes U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau
who wrote that "the Armenians all over Turkey sympathized with the Entente" (p.
186). This is not the whole truth. Armenian "sympathy" entailed, according to
Armenian sources in addition to a wealth of Ottoman documents, systematic, and not just
sporadic, resort to sabotage and armed revolt. The Armenians deserted the Ottoman armies
en masse. They revolted in a number of places, destroying telegraph lines, killing
officials, soldiers and civilians, and looting arsenals. They formed troops under the
command of their own men and also under that of Russian officers. They facilitated the
advance of Russian armies, and obstructed the retreat of Turkish troops. They attacked
Muslim quarters and villages, burning houses, and tearing down everything Muslim.
Dadrian's totally misleading assertion that when
the Turks began to "rape Armenian girls and women" these clashes were reported
to Ottoman authorities "as instances of Armenian 'rebellion'" (p. 185) is
negated by a wealth of even Armenian documents. There are ample Armenian publications to
prove their extensive involvement in the war on the side of Turkey's enemies. For
instance, Garo Pasdermadjian, former Armenian deputy in the Ottoman Parliament, who
defected to become the commanding general of the sizable Armenian troops, argued later
that Armenian participation in armed hostilities was the leading factor in the winning of
the war.20 In another book, he defended the view that there ought to be an independent
Armenia because of Armenia's role in the war.21 Pasdermadjian's books tell, from
first-hand experience, Armenian belligerency in contradiction to Dadrian's terribly
minimizing assertions. Armenian General Gabriel Gorgarian also published a series of
articles on the subject.22 Several regiments and battalions were formed under the command
of Garo, Antranik, Kari, Vartan, Hamazasp, Dro, Khatcho, Mourat and others.
Many civilian Armenians expose the same undeniable
fact. For instance, Bogos Nubar, the head of the Armenian delegation to the Paris Peace
Conference, in an official letter dated 30 November 1918, and addressed to the French
Foreign Minister S. Pichon, states that the "Armenians, since the beginning of the
war, had been de facto belligerents" (... les Armeniens, des Ie debut de la guerre,
ont ete des belligerents de facto). Bogos Nubar's separate letter on the same subject was
printed in The Times of London.23 A.P. Hacobian, another Armenian writer, admits that the
Armenians cut through the Turkish lines and helped the "Russian cause". He adds
that the "Armenian support contributed very materially to the success of Russian arms
in the Caucasian theatre of the war."24 There are also sufficient Western
publications, for instance, British and French books and articles,25 proving Armenian
belligerency, and not just ostensibly misunderstood isolated events of minor importance.
Dadrian writes that Turkey entered the First World
War "by a preemptive attack on Russian seaports" (p. 7), hinting that its
government was eager to participate in the armed hostilities to start the relocation of
its Armenian citizens. In fact, it was Admiral Souchon, the German commanding officer of
the Battleship Goeben (renamed Yavuz), who opened fire on Russian positions in the Black
Sea, destroying several ships and dragging Turkey into the war. Several Ottoman cabinet
members "were furious and got Enver Pasha to send a ceasefire order to Souchon as
well as apologies to the Entente governments. But it was too late."26
While quoting Cemal Pasa, who stated in his
Memoirs27 that their objective was to free Turkey from measures which constituted a blow
to internal independence, Dadrian construes it to mean to be free to deal with the
Armenian minority. It was, in fact, the elimination of the Public Debt (Duyun-u Umumiye),
which had a monopoly over the revenues of the country, that the Turkish leaders had in
mind. The revenues were turned over to that commission to help pay off the foreign
bondholders. The representatives of Europe's financial and political leaders were given
control over Ottoman revenues, which they would administer and collect. The first
agreement to this effect was reached with Sultan Abdulhamid II in 1879 and supported by a
series of decrees between then and 1882. When the famous Decree of Muharrem (1881) was
announced, the Public Debt Commission was established outside the Ministry of Finance with
one delegate each from six foreign states and one from the Ottoman Empire, as well as a
special representative of the Galata bankers. Thus, a foreign commission was created as a
separate Ottoman treasury to collect taxes. The measure in the minds of the Young Turk
leaders, and later the Kemalist government, concerned the fiscal privileges of foreign
circles which reduced governmental income and contradicted the principle of sovereignty.
Whatever the subject matter may be, it is the
prerogative of any government to prevent foreign powers from interfering in domestic
affairs, now a principle of international law, explicitly expressed in Article 2/7 of the
United Nations Charter. Almost endless examples may be cited from recent history of Asian,
African and Latin American countries proving such interferences. Especially the 19th
century is full of them, Russia pursuing its own objectives in the Balkans and the
Caucasus, France in the Levant, Germany in the Drang Nach Osten policy, and Britain in
overseas areas.
Dadrian also conveniently eliminates from his
narrative the very crucial Armenian revolt in Van, the massacre of the Turks in that far
eastern city, and the Armenian cooperation with the approaching Russian army. Such
actions, apart from being against law, national and international, triggered the reaction
of relocating the Armenians.
The Armenians of Zeitun rebelled immediately after
the Ottoman Government decreed mobilization (3 August 1914). While the Russians started
distributing arms to the Armenian deserters, the first Ottoman report (29 November 1914)
focused on the planned Van rebellion. The Turkish governor there suggested sending Muslim
{not Armenian) families to safer areas in Western Anatolia to protect them from Armenian
assaults. Turkish men were at the fronts facing the enemy. The Van rebellion finally
occurred on 17 April 1915. The rebels opened fire on Ottoman police stations and on the
Muslim quarters. The Turkish governor ordered the evacuation of Van. After the Russians
entered Van, the rebellion spread to neighbouring Mus. The Russians, who nevertheless
exploited Armenian violence and separatism for their own ends, frequently moved towards
areas within Ottoman sovereignty but with some Armenian population.
It is important to remember at this point that the
British began the naval action against the Dardanelles on 19 February 1915, and occupied
the island of Lemnos as a base, four days later. It was on the 18th of March that Admiral
de Robeck and eighteen warships tried to force the Turkish Straits. About a month later,
75,000 men under the command of Sir lan Hamilton succeeded in landing at several places at
the tip of the Gelibolu (Gallipoli) peninsula, while Australian troops made a feint
farther north, and a French force landed on the Asiatic side. There was a landing at Suvia
after many additional divisions had been sent out from Britain.
The Anglo-Indian forces took Quma from the Turks
in the Mesopotamian theater (9 December 1914). Sir John Nixon repulsed Turkish attacks on
British positions near Basra (11-13 April 1915). General Charles V.F. Townshend took the
town of Amara (3 June 1915) on the Tigris, and then Nasiriya on the Euphrates (25 July
1915). A general British advance toward Baghdad started, and the Turkish retreat as far as
Aziziya took place after the Battle of Kut-al Amara (28 September 1914). The Turkish
forces near the Suez Canal, the Sinai Peninsula and Palestine retreated during the
campaigns of 1915 and 1916.
It was during the climax of Armenian-Russian
cooperation against the Turks that the British and the French warships were trying to pass
through the Dardanalles, the Suez Canal operation was progressing in the Palestine front,
and the British had started moving upward from Basra and Baghdad, both Ottoman provinces.
What Dadrian never mentions is the fact that every part of Eastern Anatolia was subject to
attacks by Armenian brigands while Turkish men capable of bearing arms were fighting at
Gelibolu, the Caucasian front, Palestine and Mesopotamia.
* * *
There are numerous Western sources that prove
Armenian desertions to the Russian army, series of local revolts, and Armenian cooperation
with Turkey's wartime enemy in various ways. Clair Price28 writes that the Armenian bands
"captured Van...and having massacred the Turkish population, they surrendered what
remained of the city to the Russian armies." He adds: "The news from Van
affected the Turks precisely as the news from Smyrna affected them when the Greeks landed
there in May 1919." In his words, "streams of Turkish refugees were pouring
westward into central Asia Minor. The British had launched their Dardanelles campaign at
the very gates of Constantinople." The British appealed, in the meantime, "for
funds to equip these [Armenian] volunteers."
Rafael de Nogales29 states that Garo Pasdermadjian,
the Armenian deputy in the Ottoman parliament, "passed over with almost all the
Armenian troops and officers of the Third Army to the Russians...burning hamlets and
mercilessly putting to the knife all of the peaceful Musulman villagers that fell into
their hands." He adds: "The altogether unjustifiable desertion of the Armenian
troops, united to the outrages they committed outwards, on their return,...did not fail to
alarm the Turks and rouse their fear lest the rest of the Armenian population in the
frontier provinces of Van and Erzurum revolt likewise, and attack them with the sword.
This indeed is precisely what happened."
Stating that "thousands of Russian bombs and
muskets were found" in the hands of the Dashnag members, Felix Valyi also concurred30
that the Armenians "seized the town of Van, established an Armenian 'General Staff
there under the command of Aram and Vardan, which delivered up the town to the Russians
troops." M. Philips Price also says: "When war broke out, the Armenians of these
regions made secret contact with the Russian authorities in the Caucasus."31 Philip
de Zara, then, asks: "How can anyone deny that, in the opinion of the Turks,
according to the law of all states, the conduct of the Armenians, facilitating during the
war the task of the adversary, can be recognized as anything but a crime of high
treason?"32 French General M. Larcher observed that
19 (?) "the Armenian population in the zone of
operations overtly exhibited a common cause with the Russians...some migrating to
Transcaucasia... [and] frequently attacking Turkish convoys." He noted that "the
loyalty of the Armenians recruited in the Turkish troops seemed doubtful."33
***
The articles in the Journal of Political and
Military Sociology frequently refer to a number of oft-used sources, such as Morgenthau,
Bryce, Lepsius and Werfel. They treat such sources, and others inspired by them, as
authoritative and trustworthy.
It is quite possible to disagree with them. Ambassador Morgenthau's Story, for instance,
is a book by a former New York real estate developer who was rewarded by President Woodrow
Wilson, a year after his election, with a political appointment to Istanbul. His book,
written in 1918, and focusing on the Armenian episode, had great impact. Reprinted several
times, it is still in print, and is cited on the floor of the U.S. Congress. There are
frequent references to it, including quotations of passages that appear even in American
high school texts.
Dr. Heath W. Lowry is an American scholar and a
leading Turcologist, who published a brilliant academic monograph entitled The Story
Behind Ambassador Morgenthau's Story.34 Utilizing the public collection of papers relating
to Morgenthau, he ably questioned the credibility of the Morgenthau book as a source to
explain the events of 1915. They are in the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress
and consist of 30,000 items in 41 reels of microfilm. He consulted the Morgenthau Papers
in the F.D. Roosevelt Presidential Library in New York, and analyzed the personal papers
of the late Burton J. Hendrick who "ghosted" the Morgenthau book. He traced
sons, cousins and other relatives to check information. But he relied on first-hand
material, such as Morgenthau's "Diary", his family "Letters", his
cabled dispatches and written reports. These materials present another story, much more
reliable than that wartime printed propaganda piece.
Ambassador Henry Morgenthau's book was also a key
source for three influential wartime anti-Turkish books — the publications by Lord
Bryce, the German Pastor Dr. Johannes Lepsius and young Arnold J. Toynbee. The so-called
"Blue Book" was an important British war propaganda publication. Toynbee, later
a celebrated historian but then a young man, worked in the preparation of this biased
work. In his later book, The Western Question in Greece and Turkey, he confessed that the
"Blue Book" was a piece of war propaganda." Many of the stories published
by Toynbee in the wartime period were apparently supplied through Ambassador Morgenthau.
At times, Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey's signature was added to such publicity
material to give it an official look. Grey was a total ignoramus with respect to
Armenian-Turkish relations.
With regard to the Armenians, Lord Bryce was also
a propagandist. Morgenthau became acquainted with him during the course of a trip to
Palestine (1914). In a letter (7 August 1915) to Morgenthau, Bryce asked the U.S.
ambassador to provide him with material that he could use in Wellington House's propaganda
schemes. This "house" was actually a secret office for a committee, headed by
C.F.G. Masterman, to serve war propaganda. It issued 17 million copies of such
publications only in the United Kingdom.
Morgenthau was also the main source for the German
Lepsius. Who was Dr. Johannes Lepsius? Having decided on a strategy to further German
influence among the Armenians of the Caucasus, the Germans searched for ways and means,
during the war, of being popular in some Armenian circles. They were planning a
"White Book" to impress, not only the Armenians, but also the Germans and Allied
public opinion. No one could be a better instrument than Lepsius, who, in the words of
Frank G. Weber, was not objective,36 his sources of information being the Armenians in
Istanbul and Ambassador Morgenthau. Having dined with Lepsius (3 August 1915), having had
several other talks and having received the authorization of Washington, D.C. to pass
material to him, Morgenthau was certainly a key source for the Lepsius work.
Morgenthau was also influential in creating
pro-Armenian and anti-Turkish public opinion in the United States. He achieved these
purposes initially through his role as a provider of one-sided information to Toynbee,
Bryce and Lepsius, and then publishing a book that bears his name. He had returned to the
United States in early 1916. In a letter to President Wilson (26 November 1917), he
expressed the desire to write an anti-German and anti-Turkish book to increase support for
Wilson's war effort. It was intended as wartime propaganda. When he was about to give up
the idea, he received the president's blessing, and started serious negotiations with the
printers. The book was finished within a year of Morgenthau's letter to Wilson. It was
first serialized in-The World's Work (circulation: 120,000), then appeared in the largest
newspapers (combined circulation: 2,630,256), and was finally published in book form by
Doubleday, Page and Company (22,234 copies). Morgenthau also received a Hollywood offer
for film rights. But Wilson disapproved, saying that they had gone far enough.
It is the duty of scholars to establish how
credible that book is as a source of history. It is still a primary source, as the
"observation of a bystander" who asserts a "premeditated massacre or
genocide." This book has served to shape public opinion in the world. Decades later
after its first appearance, it is still being reprinted, and quoted in speech and in
writing. Not only has it been used as reference by politicians and writers, it has
probably influenced many young Armenians who assassinated Turkish diplomats and
bystanders.
Dr. Lowry's monograph is a fine example of
scholarly investigation and the desire to find out the truth. In the world of academics,
after Lowry's book, the Morgenthau propaganda should be laid to rest. Lowry exposes
concrete clues right from primary sources as to who wrote the Morgenthau book, and how it
was written.
Among the collections of Morgenthau papers, there
is a transcript called "Diary", which apparently was typed by Hagop S. Andonian,
a Turkish-Armenian. Morgenthau also wrote lengthy weekly letters to members of his family.
They were likewise prepared by the same Andonian. The American ambassador writes that this
relieved him "of all responsibility for any errors." These writings formed the
basis of the future book that created a sensation and which is still regarded in some
quarters as if it is a reliable source of history.
Andonian, formerly a student at the (American) Robert College, had become Morgenthau's
personal secretary. He bears the same family name with Aram Andonian, who published the
so-called "official documents"37 that the Turkish scholars proved to be
forged.38 Hagop Andonian left Turkey with the ambassador to assist him with the book.
Morgenthau writes that his services were "indispensable."
Another key Armenian was Arshag K. Schmavonian,
interpreter and advisor. Morgenthau knew none of the languages spoken in Istanbul. He
accompanied the ambassador on almost every official visit and also to meetings with
American businessmen and missionaries. He assisted the ambassador in the writing of his
cables. He was also transferred to Washington, where he remained "Special
Advisor" in the employ of the U.S. State Department.
Still another participant was U.S. Secretary of
State Robert Lansing, who read and commented upon every page of the manuscript before it
was published in installments or in book form. He made notes suggesting alterations or
omissions. Lansing asked Morgenthau, in a letter dated 2 October 1918, not to mention his
name in connection with the book. The book itself came from the skilled hand of the
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Burton J. Hendrick, in whose mind the actual concept of
the book, according-to Hendrick's letter of 7 April 1916 to Morgenthau, seems to have
originated. As another letter, dated 5 July 1918, proves, Hendrick was guaranteed,
throughout the lifetime of the book, forty percent of the profits. Some months before he
died (1949), Hendrick stated that he had the job of 'ghosting' Morgenthau's book.
Then, what may more or less be called a
"committee", composed of two Armenians, the eyes and ears of Morgenthau,
Secretary Lansing and journalist Hendrick collectively brought out a publication, which
includes "statements" also by the Ottoman Ministers Talat and Enver, given in
quotation marks. The latter look as if they want to condemn themselves which certainly
suits the tastes of Andonian, Schmavonian, Lansing and Hendrick, but which has no basis in
reliable records. Hendrick portrayed the Turkish leaders as thoroughly inhuman characters.
Author Dadrian has a similar disposition. Alleged conversations have no foundation even in
Morgenthau's "Diary" and the "Letters". Dr. Lowry, who carefully
examined everything written by Morgenthau, could not locate a single reference to some
very important alleged conversations. Apart from outright inventions, the
"authors" take rumors and put them in the mouths of Turkish leaders - moreover,
in quotation marks. The authors, united in anti-Turkish propaganda and "victory for
war policies", try to portray the Ottoman ministers as criminals publicly boasting of
their crimes. They take rumors, through interpreter Armenians, and credit them to the
Turkish leaders. They feel utterly free to change, add, subtract and quote. An example of
a Lansing contribution in pencil: "...with the usual insincere oriental
politeness." Consequently, there are also out-and-out contradictions between two
statements signed by Morgenthau. In one (Ambassador Morgenthau's Story, p. 20) Talat Pasa
is made to say that he "scoffed at all religions and hated all priests, rabbis and
hodjas", but in another ("Diary" for 10 July 1914) that he is "the
most religious" in the Ottoman Cabinet.
There is at least one other book by George A.
Schreiner, who was also in Turkey as Morgenthau's contemporary and who finds the American
ambassador's books "remarkably unreliable".39 He adds that Talat Pasa was
"on the best terms" with Morgenthau.40
* * *
 |
Franz Werfel
|
There are likewise frequent references to the events at Musa Dagh and to
a certain Franz Werfel who wrote a novel about it. Werfel's now-famous novel, Die vierzig
Tage des Musa Dagh, is supposed to be a modem saga of a persecuted minority, determined to
fight back. Roger W. Smith writes: "The evidence Dadrian presents attests to the fact
that the Armenians were defending themselves from exterminatory assaults" (p. vi).
Werfel's American edition41 brought the novel worldwide fame. His book is not a
documentary, not meant to be a scholarly work. It is a tale, in which he makes Enver and
Talat Paşas
converse, according to Werfel's own perception and fancy, planning the
"genocide." Werfel writes that Talat's "fat fingers... composed...
[the] order, sent out to all valis (governors) and mutasarnfs: The goal of these
deportations is annihilation.'" There is not a single genuine document bearing the
signature of Talat Paşa
or of any other Ottoman dignitary to that effect. The assertion of anyone that this was in
the mind of Talat Paşa
is not an acceptable argument.
People "learn", nevertheless, not from
dispassionate and non-partisan studies, but from sensational fancy work. For instance,
although the Hollywood movie (Amadeus) on composer Mozart, granted a successful piece of
drama, depicts Salieri as a minor but ambitious and wicked man in the world of music, the
latter, far from being a black character, was a first rate man of this branch of art, who
had given lessons to Schubert. Very few interested people will endeavour to read enough of
history of music to place Mozart and Salieri in a fair perspective.
Werfel records the Armenian uprising in Van
occurring after the relocation order. The truth is just the opposite. The uprising was not
a desperate attempt of self-defence. It took place about two months before the relocation,
which developed as a consequence of the revolt. This crucial historical fact is presented
head over heels by Werfel, who relied on Armenian sources and Johannes Lepsius's book
Deutschland und Armenien.42 Although shockingly biased, Lepsius, nevertheless, presents
Cemal Paşa,
one of the ruling Ottoman Triumvirate, in a comparatively better shade. So does Werfel in
the German original. But the American "censor" apparently crossed out, in the
English translation, even that minute point. After all, there should be no favourable
reference, even if a small one, to someone (Cemal Paşa)
assassinated by the Armenians.
An Austrian writer quotes Abraham Sou Sever, a
Sephardic Jew born in Izmir (Turkey) and later emigrated to the United States (Holdwater note: He is talking about Albert Amateau): "My dear departed friend, Franz Werfel,
who wrote that book, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, never was in that region to investigate
what he wrote. He wrote it as his Armenian friends in Vienna had told him. Before his
death, Werfel told me that he felt ashamed for the many falsehoods and fabrications the
Armenians had foisted on him. But he dared not confess publicly for fear of death by the
Dashnag terrorists."43 Sever also said that thousands of Armenians, all armed,
ascended the summit of that mountain after provisioning it to withstand siege. Daily
sallies from that summit of armed bands attacked the rear of the Ottoman armies, and
disappeared into the mountain. It stood siege for forty days, an indication of the
preparations the Armenians had made. They had been fostered, organized, financed and
supplied with arms by the Russians. The thousands who occupied the summit escaped by
descending the mountain and reaching the Mediterranean coast, where they communicated with
the French and the British naval ships. They were taken aboard, only a small contingent of
Armenians remaining behind, who finally surrendered to the Turks.
***
Dadrian does not make it clear that it was under
these circumstances that the ringleaders of the Armenians were arrested on 24 April 1915,
in Istanbul, and the decision to relocate them taken afterwards. They were not deported or
expelled to a foreign country. Wherever they were sent, be it Aleppo, Damascus or Musul,
all of these cities were then within the Ottoman frontiers. They were not headed for a
camp or prison. In some areas, individuals who had not taken part in any terrorist or
treasonable activity were also transferred from one place to another, and even arrested.
But, on the other hand, on some occasions, this was cause for instructions from the
Ottoman Government to avoid their repetition.44 However, as Enver Pasa's communication,
dated 2 May 1915, to Talat Pasa indicates, the Armenians were relocated in such a way that
they would not form large communities, minimizing the chance of a rebellion.45
The 24th of April was the day when 235 people were
arrested in the Ottoman capital. The Council of Ministers adopted, on 30 May 1915, the
temporary law to "transfer and settle Armenians in other quarters". The law was
temporary because the Ottoman Parliament was not in session. It opened on 15 September,
and approved the temporary law, which included provisions that should the relocated be
attacked, the assailants would be court-martialed. The elaborate procedures to govern the
forced migration could not be properly applied. When news that some convoys were attacked
reached the Ottoman authorities, written messages were sent, stating that every possible
measure ought to be taken to protect the Armenians, and those guilty of violence be
punished. No less than 1,397 individuals who failed to comply with these instructions were
indeed punished, including executions. Their conviction proves that the Ottoman
authorities were willing to call to justice those responsible, at least many of them, for
the deaths. Those convicted may not be as many as some people may desire, or punishments
may not be as severe as some would prefer. It is unfortunate that there are always some
who escape justice. But there were trials, accusations and punishment - all taking place
in Ottoman courts.
A national court was set up to try and punish its
own nationals. An Inquiry Commission was also formed in the Ottoman Chamber of Deputies.
This occurred while parts of the country, including the capital, were under foreign
occupation. While it was true that some individuals, officials as well as some private
citizens were guilty of neglect, mismanagement or outright murder, there was, in addition,
a tendency especially in the governmental circles of the capital to appease the victorious
powers. Alt Kemal, Behramzade Nusret and Abdullah Avni, the first two
lieutenant-governors, and the third gendarmerie commander, were condemned to death and
executed. All of the condemned men who had fled, except Dr. Nazım, were assassinated
by Armenians - Talat Pasa and Bahaeddin §akir in Berlin, Cemal Pasa in Tbilisi, and Enver
Pasa in Central Asia.
No matter what kind of terminology may be used by
some writers, the event that they are supposed to describe is the transfer or relocation
of the bulk of the Armenian population, most of whom, as Bogos Nubar admitted in his
aforementioned written statement to the French Foreign Minister, have reached their
destinations, but some unfortunately perished from general war conditions as well as
attacks of criminals. The Armenians participated, in addition, in about a dozen armed
conflicts between the years 1914 and 1922, costing Armenian and non-Armenian lives.
Relocation took place for reasons of security. It
also involved some Armenians residing in Bursa, Eskisehir or Konya and even in Istanbul,
none of which are in Eastern Anatolia, not because they were Armenians but because they
had, or believed to have had, connections with terrorist or treasonable acts in the east.
Security forces, generally well-informed, may have erred in some cases. Some reactions
might be uncalled for, some acts may be overzealous, and circumstances may provoke
criminally inclined or revenge seeking people to indulge in murder and robbery. The
descendants of the Armenians in Istanbul today prove that not everyone was involved in the
relocation.
One cannot generalize on the basis of fanaticism
or intrigues of certain individuals, Bahaeddin Şakir for instance, that the whole
relocation was actually a cloak for ultimate destruction. There were also other Turks who
made accusations and helped sentence the culprits, except those who eluded justice by
flight or other tricks. No matter how some writers (including the celebrated Turkish
professor Tank Zafer Tunaya) might have translated certain Ottoman words
("taktil", for instance, meaning "killing," Dadrian's articles in the
Journal of Political and Military Sociology, pp. 35 and 130), the only possible conclusion
still stands true that there is no evidence in the Ottoman archives supporting the view
that the central Ottoman Government planned or executed the massacre of the Armenians.
There are also frequent references to Pan-Turkism
as an argument for the removal of the Armenians from places of origin. To properly gauge
the weight of this argument, it is important to remember that the ideas related to Turkism
did not even originate in the Ottoman Empire or later in the Republic of Turkey, but in
the diaspora. In this way, it differs from Pan-Hellenism, Pan-Germanism or Pan-Italianism.
Moreover, Turkism, which originated among the Turkic peoples living outside the Ottoman
Empire, emphasized similarity in language, literature, folklore and history. Further, its
propagators felt themselves justified because they had more than their share of
competitors or opponents in the forms of Pan-Slavism of Tsarist Russia, the Megali Idea of
the Greeks and the racism or the irredentism of some other neighbours. Many other nations
usually had only one "opponent image". Finally, Pan-Turkism never went beyond
acknowledging the fact that there is an obvious cultural affinity among all
Turkic-speaking peoples.
It should be well-known that it originated in the
diaspora, mainly in response to the pan-ideologies of other nations. The official Tsarist
policy of Russification, often accompanied with Christianization, provoked the Turkic
groups in the Tsarist empire, principally the Tatars, to be increasingly aware of common
ties with each other. The spokesman for the Tatars was Ismail Gaspirah (1851-1914), the
mayor of the Crimean town of Bab.9esaray (?), who founded a
Turkish newspaper (Tercüman) and devised a new standard school curriculum introducing the
Turkish language as a means of instruction. His ideas were repeated by other Turkic
intellectual circles in Azerbaijan and Central Asia. These ideas were carried to Istanbul
by leading Tatars and Azerbaijanis, who had left Russia. But the Turks, influenced by
these ideas to a certain extent, never totally abandoned Ottomanism or Pan-Islamism.
On the other hand, much of the history of the
Balkans, Anatolia, the Crimea and the Caucasus cannot be understood without discussing
systematic Muslim (mostly Turkish) massacres and forced migrations. The unity of the other
ethnic and religious groups was accomplished through the expulsion of the Muslims. For
about a century, the new states were founded on the suffering of the Muslims, mainly
Turks.
* * *
Contrary to what Dadrian asserts, "intercommunal clashes" and "wartime privations" (p. 100) are not irrelevant. The view that many Armenians perished on account of epidemics and general war conditions is not a propaganda to belittle the events of 1915. In the past centuries, considerably more soldiers died from sickness and contagious diseases than from enemy weapons during wars. This was also true for the Ottoman scene during the First World War, and affected both Turks and Armenians.46 The Turkish army losses in the war were tremendous, the number of dead from disease reaching figures unheard of in the 20th century wars. The Armenians lived and fought on Ottoman territory almost under the same conditions, suffering huge losses, just like the Turks. For instance, a Frenchman's article in the Paris-based journal Turcica47 informs us hat when the French, evacuating the Turkish town of Maras[h] in February 1920, took with them about 5,000 Armenians, half of the latter died on account of exceptional difficulties connected with the journey.
One should also add that Talat Pas[h]a allowed the American missionaries to do relief work among the Armenians, in spite of the fact that Turkey and the United States were on the opposing camps during the war. How many examples are there in history of a combatant country permitting the citizens of another country fighting in the other camp to stay, feed, cloth and educate the people it is accused of exterminating?
Several civil and conventional wars took many more
Armenian lives than generally acknowledged by contemporary Armenian writers. Plentiful
evidence support the view that there had been an armed Armenian uprising behind the
Turkish Eastern Front, and that Armenian guerillas, assisted by the Russians, fought on
the side of the Tsarist armies. Hostilities continued between the Turks and the Armenians
after the Bolshevik Revolution. Sections of Armenians participated in the civil war in the
Caucasus during and after the triumph of Communism in Russia and the adjacent territories.
There had been a conventional war between the Ankara government and the independent
Armenian Republic immediately after the creation of the latter. There have also been
conventional wars between the same independent Armenian Republic, on the one hand, and
Georgia and Azerbaijan, on the other. Professor Falk writes (p. ii) in the Journal that
the Armenians have "reexperienced the reality of atrocity in relation to the
unresolved fight over the future of Nagomo-Karabagh region." That region is legally a
part of Azerbaijan, and the Armenians are holding it as occupied territory, contrary to
international law. Back in the 1920s, while the Armenians conducted a war against the
Azeris, some Armenians revolted against the authority of the newly-created Armenian Soviet
Republic. The Armenians joined forces with the French against the Turks in Southern
Anatolia. Armenian irregular units have also participated in the Turco-Greek War of
1919-1922.
In all these armed conflicts, whether civil wars,
guerilla warfare, underground fighting or outright conventional wars, the Armenians
inflicted sufferings on other peoples, but they themselves also died in the process. A
consequence of these conflicts was that many Turks lost their lives as well. Some Turks
were also victims during the whole duration of the First World War and after. While whole
Turkish cities, towns and villages became ruins, and Muslim corpses filled ditches and
wells, before the Bolshevik Revolution, the dramatic events following 1917 left the armed
Armenians, whether regular soldiers or irregular bands, as the only authority in parts of
Eastern Anatolia. The whole region was a graveyard after the Armenian retreat. The
Armenians destroyed everything on their road. A number of foreigners witnessed these
pillages and murders.48
While Professors Dadrian, Falk and Smith do not
see the evidence of Armenian crimes, especially some recent Turkish publications include
interviews with elderly people as well as a host of new documents prove Armenian mass
murder of Turks in various comers of Eastern Anatolia, principally in Van, Kars, Bitlis
and Erzurum.49 The Turkish documents complement grandiloquence in the memoirs of Armenian
commanders or spokesmen that they have wiped out enemy forces or groups.
* * *
Professor Falk further states that the Turkish
state has "outrageously muddied the waters of truth by obscuring and distorting the
story of Armenian genocide in the 1915-18 period" and that the "shameful"
ongoing campaign of the same disseminated "various fabrications of the historical
record, and through cajolery and intimidation." He adds that Turkish accounts were
"shoddy propaganda" or "inept or disingenuous scholarship" (p. i).
An appropriate reminder in respect to
"intimidation": Fred C. Ikle, United States Under Secretary of Defence for
Policy defined the Armenian terrorist attacks against Turkish diplomats and property as
"one of the most dangerous and most neglected of all terrorist movements."50 In
the past, Armenian terrorists murdered official diplomatic representatives of the Turkish
state and members of their families as well as non-Turks. Turkish embassies and consulates
in Athens, Beirut, Beme, Brussels, Lisbon, Los Angeles, Lyons, Madrid, Ottowa, Paris, The
Hague, and Vienna, as well as Turkish delegations in various places, including the Turkish
center at the United Nations, have been attacked. Some Turkish consulates have been
seized, occupied and officials inside have been killed and wounded. Turkish Airlines
offices in Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Frankfurt, Geneva, London, Milan, Paris and Rome as well
as non-Turkish airline offices such as Air France, Alitalia, British Airways, El Al, KLM,
Lufthansa, Pan Am, Sabena, Swissair, and TWA were bombed, the latter for their commercial
relations with Turkey. Several foreign governments such as Canada, France, Italy,
Portugal, Sweden, and Switzerland were threatened for having brought legal proceedings
against Armenian terrorists. The Turkish folk dances had to be cancelled in California on
account of various intimidations, and Armenian groups broke up a Turkish history class in
Los Angeles and bombed the residence of an university professor (Stanford J. Shaw), who
went into hiding. Dr. Falk, as professor of international law and practice, knows that all
of these activities are against accepted legality. The legal evidence of all these events
and others are available. But Dr. Falk mentions so-called "intimidation" of the
Turkish Government without bothering to explain what he means.
Quite a few Turkish publications on this issue are
compilations of reliable documents, (exposing several Armenian falsifications), and
individual scholarly works. I am aware from personal experience as well that Armenian
propagandists frequently demanded the "release of Ottoman documents" but
resisted using them when they contradicted their choice of conclusions. I participated, on
the basis of invitation by two French courts, as a "witness of authority"
(temoin d'autorite) in the trials of Armenian terrorist groups, one concerning the
occupation of the Turkish Consulate-General, the murder of a Turkish official and the
wounding of another, and the other involving the explosion of a bomb at the Orly Airport
shedding the blood of some sixty people. I was asked by the lawyers of the defendants as
to when the Ottoman documents would be available. A vast amount of Ottoman documents are
indeed available in the form of series of printed material, often with transliterations
and translations, or in microfilm, distributed world-wide, including various governments
and leading libraries.51 Thousands of reliable Ottoman documents, printed by Turks and
setting the issue in a balanced perspective, are not utilized by those who wish to persist
in presenting the Turks only in an adverse light.
The Turks have also published various studies
exposing a number of falsifications. For instance, one of my publications carries this
very title: The Andonian "Documents", Attributed to Talat Pasha, Are
Forgeries!52 An Armenian writer, Aram Andonian, who had separately published (1920) a book
in three languages (English, French and Armenian), either referred to or printed 48-50
so-called "documents" that he attributed to the Ottoman leaders, principally to
Talat Pasa, war-time (1914-18) Ottoman leader. Turkish scholars analyzed them and
concluded that the book was based on forgeries. Andonian has never been able to show the
originals of the so-called "documents", because there are no such documents.
What he calls "telegrams" have been fabricated by him and his circle. He later
said that he "lost" them. Some circles entertain the wrong conviction that the
German court, which tried Soghomon Tehlirian, Talat Pasa's assassin, had accepted these
"documents" as authentic and as evidence (1921). Even Tehlirian's counsel (Von
Gordon) had to withdraw them, and the German prosecutor said that he knew of
"documents", carrying the signatures of high dignitaries, later proved to be
falsifications. While the victors of the First World War were searching all comers for
such documents to accuse the Ottoman leaders, then detained in the Island of Malta, they
chose not to assess the "telegrams" fabricated by Andonian.
The British could not also use the so-called
"Ten Commandments" which Professor Smith rashly considers as "further proof
of the existence of a central plan for genocide" (p. vi). What Dadrian presents as a
Turkish "document" is a correspondence between the British High Commission in
Istanbul (which Dadrian still calls Constantinople) and the Foreign Office in London in
early 1919 (p. 173f). Where is the original of that "document"?
Forgeries are too common in history to be
considered impossible. Referring to writer Gwynne Dyer, Dadrian says that "the British eventually ignored
the document" (p. 193). They chose to ignore it while they were searching the whole
Ottoman archives for a single reliable document to be used against Turkish leadership and
moreover reaching to other archives in search for similar material. The British, in fact,
did everything they could, but the 118 individuals, including the former Ottoman premier
and other high dignitaries, had to be released from Malta.53
The British knew that these so-called
"documents" could not be relied upon. For instance, Aram Andonian himself
admits, in a letter (26 July 1937) to an Armenian lady (Mary Terzian) residing in Geneva
(Switzerland) that his book was not an historical piece, but a propaganda work, and that
others used it freely in the way that they preferred. In terms of appearance and contents,
the Andonian "documents" abound in various factual errors, omissions and
contradictions that give him away. These supposed papers, in the way they were printed in
Andonian's books, are not the kind used by the old Ottoman bureaucracy. In fact, no papers
were used but various cryptogram systems at different times, during the war. But
Andonian's ciphering does not agree with the coding complex that we have in the Ottoman
archives. Apparently, the Armenian writer has made up a cipher system of his own. The
dimensions of the forgery gain more gravity especially when the confusion involving dates
and numbers of the "documents" that Andonian seems to have fixed are analyzed.
He has committed blunders on account of his ignorance concerning the difference between
the Julian and the Gregorian calendars. Not knowing the intricacies of this system,
Andonian made miscalculations in putting "appropriate" dates. Sometimes, he errs
with a margin of nine months. He habitually forgets to add the 13 days to find the
Gregorian date. There is an utter confusion in terms of the numbers of the
"documents". The numerals on the forged "documents" do not coincide
with the numbers (and the dates) of authentic documents. The corresponding documents in
the Ottoman archives concern the digging up of new artesian wells in the Sinai Peninsula
or the condition of railroad workers. The signatures are forged. At times, a governor is
supposed to have signed an official document before taking up that post. There are notable
differences between the English and the French texts, words altering, sentences and
paragraphs changing places, and certain phrases disappearing or replaced by others. The
Turkish used is poor at times.
Falsifications in respect to the "Armenian
question" are not confined to the Andonian "telegrams". Another
falsification concerns a "statement" wrongly attributed to Adolf Hitler. While
talking to his generals in Obersalzburg a week before (22 August 1939) the attack on
Poland, the German dictator is supposed to have said: "I have given orders to my
Death Units to exterminate without mercy or pity men, women and children belonging to the
Polish-speaking race-After all, who remembers today the extermination of the
Armenians?" This quotation has appeared in hundreds of publications. Dadrian also
asserts that Armenian-Turkish relations during the First World War "served to
stimulate Hitler to embark upon his own initiatives of genocide" (p. 31). Although
even this forged statement makes reference to Poles, and not the Jews, Dadrian frequently
uses terminology of the Jewish genocide. In Dadrian's choice of words, even the
"responsible secretary" of the ruling Ottoman party is comparable to the Nazi
Gauleiter (p. 99).
This is an attempt to link the planned extermination of European Jewry in the course of
the Second World War to the events connected with Armenians. First of all, there is no
historical basis for attributing such a statement to Hitler.34
I have traced in a booklet that the Nuremberg
Tribunal accepted two versions of this Hitler talk, initially numbered as USA-29 and
USA-30, refusing to approve a third one. None of these texts contains such a statement.
Likewise, Dr. Lowry traces, in a scholarly article, the manner in which this purported
quote has entered the lexicon of U.S. Congressmen, and the manner in which it continues to
be used by Armenian-Americans in their efforts to establish a linkage between their own
history and the tragic fate of European Jewry."
Further, there has been an anti-Jewish sentiment
with roots in the past. Much has been written about anti-Semitism. There are even full
bibliographies on the subject, especially in the European context. Its roots should be
traced to the early forms of sentiments of the pre-Christian world. In Hellenic times, the
Jews, who believed in monotheism and shared certain ethical considerations, were quite
apart from other groups. Hellenism, with its family of gods and goddesses, and other sets
of values, was a rival to, if not an opponent of, Judaism. In Roman times as well, Judaism
was still a vigorous religion, "horrifying" many Romans threatened by potential
changes in their imperial civilization. Even when Christianity became the official
religion of the Roman Empire, some of the old prejudices were carried on into the
"Christian" attitudes towards the Jews, and new misconceptions were added. Apart
from the old pagan notion that the "gods" hated the Jews because the latter did
not recognize them gave way to "collective responsibility" for the crucifixion
of Jesus. The entire Jewish community was considered to be the "culprit."
 |
Professor Türkkaya Ataöv |
Discrimination intensified with the First Crusade,
leading to Jewish massacres and ridiculous accusations of ritual murders, supposedly
carried out by Jews. Renewed and intensified anti-Jewish prejudice was part of an overall
campaign of discrimination, plunder and exploitation. Government services being closed to
them, the Jews indulged more and more in trade, becoming distinguished as
"usurers" and hence target of further resentment. Such "theological
hatred" of the Jews frequently led to demands that they wear a mark on their clothes.
What became tragically required much later in Nazi Germany had its roots in the Middle
Ages. Centuries before they were hunted in Germany, the Jews were expelled from a number
of European cities, and finally from the Iberian peninsula (1492). Already held
responsible for the "poisoning of wells" and the plague epidemic, the expelled
Jews were welcomed by the Turks of the Ottoman Empire. Jak V. Kamhi, the President of the
Quincentennial Foundation (1492-1992) in Turkey, said the following at the "Seminar
on Racism and Anti-Semitism" in Istanbul (1995): "The Muslim and the Jewish
faiths managed to live together in peace and without any kind of clashes for eight
centuries in Spain and six-hundred years in the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of
Turkey."56
The Reformation, and especially Calvinism, was
more understanding towards the Jews in Protestant areas. Some other "Christians"
did not stop believing in the "inherent evil of the Jews". This general picture
continued until the 19th century, when the able and hard-working Jews became part and
parcel of the economic, cultural and scientific life of Europe. It was inevitable that the
Jews would create their own capitalist class in the process. The new allegation that there
was an essential link between Judaism and capitalism, and that the Jews as such were
essentially the exploiting capitalists only missed the point once more. Capitalism is a
socioeconomic formation, replacing feudalism, with no direct connection with any race or
religion. But this basic truth did not prevent some romantic German nationalists from
considering even assimilated Jews as "aliens" in their homeland, as well as
supporters of left causes from describing them as the enemies of the working classes, and
rightists from seeing a Jewish influence in every leftist move. All these extremists
provided part of the background for the murder of German and European Jewry in the coming
1930s and the 1940s.
Germany was not the only country where
anti-Semitism was rampant. In France, the allegation that the Jews benefited most from the
fruits of the French Revolution gave way to accusations that they were plotting to destroy
Christian culture. Such discriminatory sentiments were fanned by influential publications
after the notorious Dreyfus affair, which helped to institutionalize anti-Semitism in
France. Tsarist Russia gave the world anti-Semitic pogroms, which made life unbearable for
the Jews. These events were parallelled all over Europe by the emergence of pseudo-racial
theories, justifying inequality, and even wars. Racists divided human beings into
"higher" and "lower" races, which in theory gave the former the
"right" for mass annihilation.
It was this historical accumulation that provided
the National Socialists in Germany with the opportunity to use every accusation and tool
of oppression, culminating first in the Nuremberg laws, and then in genocide. The
Nuremberg trials were inevitable. Hundreds of thousands of captured Nazi documents were
assembled as evidence in the trial of the major Nazi war criminals. One cannot find the
oft-repeated Hitler "statement" among these documents.
Even then, some Armenians and their like-minded colleagues cling to this so-called
"statement" because they wanted to set it into motion as a "connecting
link" with the Jewish genocide. Reliable methodology in historiography contradicts
such a pursuit. It is tremendous injustice to the Jews and the Turks alike. The Jews have
gone through a genocide another example of which is very difficult to find. Moreover,
apart from the extraordinarily good relations between the Jews and the Turks since the
Middle Ages, Turkey's role in helping European Jews during the Holocaust has been largely
ignored. As Professor Shaw notes, the world does not realize the extent to which Turkey,
and the Ottoman Empire which preceded it, over the centuries served as major places of
refuge for people suffering from persecution, Muslims and non-Muslims alike.57 Turkey was
a haven, not only for those who escaped the Inquisition, but also hundreds of well-known
intellectuals during the 1930s58 and thousands of other less well known persons were
rescued.
Extreme right-wing political movements in Western
Europe, previously fringe phenomena, have once again become much more significant.59 The
Jews and the Turks are among the victims of present-day racism, xenophobia, and
intolerance. Some Westerners, apparently, externalize and project their own unwanted
"bad" parts onto the Jews, Turks and others to make themselves appear"
good."
Still another falsification is a so-called
"statement" attributed to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. This founder of the Turkish
Republic is supposed to have confessed Ottoman state responsibility for the "Armenian
genocide". This statement is false, probably initially stemming from confusing the
celebrated Turk with someone from the Istanbul military court bearing the same first name.
This error, which might have started as an oversight, a mere misunderstanding or a simple
lapsus linguae, is repeated in print and in word, with the hope of strengthening a case by
"quoting" against the Turks no less an authority than the founder of their
state. While fancy escalates, falsity itself develops from misapprehension to fraud and
trickery. Some Armenian authors have already printed articles calling the story a
"fiction", and requesting that "this fable die". I offered in a
booklet60 a summary of the origins of this apocryphal episode, tracing its growth through
some Armenian and foreign sources, quoting Atatürk as well as the Armenian writers who
have established this fallacy. I reproduced there genuine Mustafa Kemal letters, among
other evidence, to clarify several points surrounding the untruth in question.
A separate booklet 61 of mine aims to expose yet
another Armenian falsification, which attempts to use the name of the same statesman. The
Los Angeles Examiner published (1 August 1926) an article, announcing simultaneously that
it was written "by Mustafa Kemal Paşa," and that it was also "an
interview with Emile Hilderbrand, a Swiss artist and journalist." Some Armenian
circles have been using this article, expecting others to believe that the words have
fallen from the mouth of the Turkish leader. In view of the evidence I presented in the
booklet, I conclude that no such interview has ever taken place with Turkey's Mustafa
Kemal. (Holdwater Note: I have examined the details of this
booklet here.)
There are also a number of works by Turks,
available in foreign languages, which compare authentic documents with forged ones.62
Several forged "documents" were presented to world public at a time when schemes
to dismember Turkey had reached its climax. There are enough authentic documents in print
now, whose numbers will increase, shedding light to the issue in conflict. These are all
contributions to the study of Armenian-Turkish relations and not "muddling the waters
of truth". Exposure of forgeries and falsifications, such as the one connected with a
well-known Vereshchagin painting presented as a massacre photograph, cannot be briskly
described in a few phrases as "shoddy propaganda" or "inept or disingenuous
scholarship."
* * *
 |
Professor Roger K. Smith |
The approach of the Journal of Political and
Military Sociology brings to mind the need for interdisciplinary analysis. The latter is
especially appropriate since the review is presented on the cover pages as an
"interdisciplinary" publication. There are many factors that influence who we
are, and how we act, both individually or as members of groups. Hence, one's ethnic or
national identity is determined by a complex interaction of causes and effects, ranging
from individual psychodynamic mechanisms to broad historical events. The interdisciplinary
analysis offers insights into the underlying psychopolitical factors that affect
interactions between groups, especially those in conflict. Conversely, emphasis on a
selected logic of events, which are, in fact, the results as well as the moulders of far
more complexities than offered, reveals an identity formation, more and more sustained by
repetitive one-sidedness to the exclusion of other crucial facts.
It may be proper to recall the following statement
by Erik H. Erikson, who was a psychoanalyst distinguished by his prevailing studies"
outlining the relationship between culture and the individual: "We cannot leave
history entirely to non-clinical observers and to professional historians who often too
nobly immerse themselves into the very disguises, rationalizations, and idealizations of
the historical process from which it should be their business to separate themselves. Only
when the relation of historical forces to the basic functions and stages of the mind has
been jointly charted and understood can we begin a psychoanalytic critique of a
society..."64
Groups need others to define themselves, in the process of which they
learn how to hate out-groups. Vamik D. Volkan introduced the subject of the human need for
enemies and allies.65 He underlined that people sometimes have a psychological investment
in the continuation of a given conflict, and that they actually use them as external
stabilizers of their sense of identity and inner control. Not only they have an investment
in the continuation of this enmity, but their militancy partly marks their internal
conflicts. Since they need the enemy, they are afraid to lose it. Although a number of
other scientists had previously served the development of pertinent knowledge and
literature in the general field of political psychology, Volkan's contributions bring
forth the relevance of anxieties in a people or nation. His approach, shared by some other
scholars, encourages one to go beyond the surface phenomena in history and politics.
Volkan uses the term "chosen trauma" to
refer to the mental representation of an event that causes a group to feel victimized.66
The group mythologizes an event, and draws it into its identity, passing the mental
representation, along with associated feelings and defenses, from generation to
generation. For each generation, the event is modified. What remains is the central role
it plays in the group's identity, even though the modified version of the event is
different from the historical truth. This tendency goes hand in hand with the temptation
to seek out a scapegoat. For groups of Armenians, that scapegoat are the Turks.
Groups also have "chosen glories", which
are also part of the identity. For some Armenians, these glories may be how a handful of
them stood against the attacks of so many, how they drove their enemies back inflicting
heavy losses on them, how they contributed to the victory of freedom and democracy or how
modest and humanitarian they were while there were no limits to the cruelty of their
enemies!
Both chosen traumas and chosen glories support the
group's sadism and masochism. The enemy is imagined as a stereotype of negative qualities.
The stereotyped enemy is frequently referred to in non-human terms.67 For instance, in
Dadrian's articles the "evil" is projected onto the Turks, to such an extent
that there is no sympathy for the enemy's losses. There is no consideration of the
possibility that an ethnic group's unwanted aspects may well be projected to another
group. Instead, the chosen trauma is passed to the new generation, which mythologizes the
original trauma, and replaces historical truth by one-sided, sensational narrative.68
Various ritualistic outlets, such as demonstration on the 24th of April, supposedly the
beginning of "Armenian genocide", also provide further opportunities to
accentuate the same chosen trauma and pass it on, once more, to the next generation, which
will be more and more removed from what really occurred, whether a trauma or a glory.
Dadrian joins a number of other writers who seem to project onto the Turks almost all of
the unwanted aspects of the Armenians.
Why and how does this transformation come about?
It is necessary to know the histories of the parties in conflict, and the characteristics
of their respective cultures. While the details of these ingredients may be the topic of a
full-sized book, it is at least necessary to underline the significance of
constantly-motivated forces which define much of group interactions. Volkan compares
ethnic identity to a "tent", which ordinarily provides a stable and functional
habitat, but which may "shake", rendering the self vulnerable.69 The Ottoman
tent provided stability for the Armenians as well for some centuries. The tent is a
covering into whose fabric chosen traumas and chosen glories are woven. The individuals
will go about their business if the tent is strong, but they will be preoccupied with
repair and restoration when the tent is shaken. The more the instability, the more the
desire to prove the identity. A group may need to rediscover and reformulate its identity
each time its "tent" is shaken.70
Several Armenian writers resorted to the
"enemy Turk" image to sustain the self. But this change occurred, not when the
Ottoman Government recognized the rights of the Armenian community in the 15th century or
the few centuries that followed, but at the time of the shaking of the same tent, forcing
many Muslim intellectuals to redefine their selves as well. The Armenians apparently felt
this need, initially after the 1877-78 Ottoman-Russian War, not only disastrous for the
Turks, but also destabilizing the identity of many nationalities with in the Ottoman
Empire, which asked in anguish, "what will happen to us?" The "Armenian
tent" was shaken several times afterwards with the end of the First World War (1918),
the installation of the Bolshevik rule in Armenia (1920), the Lebanese Civil War (1975),
and the disintegration of the Soviet Union (1991).
The psychodynamics of ethnic terrorism, which some Armenians resorted to in the recent
past as well as decades before that, is also related to the "shaking of the
tent". It is an undeniable fact that the Armenian terrorists were rampant during the
last decades of the Ottoman Government, and that they have also murdered Turkish diplomats
or members of their immediate families and a number of non-Turks who happened to be in
their line of attack.71 Heath W. Lowry convincingly argues that each succeeding Armenian
generation produced and nurtured a new group of terrorists.72 The appallingly minimizing
tendency of some writers, David Marshall Lang for instance, that the Armenians "were
not all angels"73 represents a shocking under-statement. Dadrian severely undermines
the obvious phenomena of Armenian treason and terrorism by casually referring to
"sporadic acts of sabotage" and "alleging treasonable acts" (pp. 6-7).
Even the 15-year old Mardiros Jamkotchian, apprehended by Swiss authorities after he
assassinated (1981) the Turkish diplomat, Mehmet Yerguz, in Bern, told the court that he
shot him in the back because this was a war, and that they were both "soldiers."
Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire were the
allies of the Ottomans during the First World War. This does not automatically convey the
thought that they peel off, at once, their age-old bias and produce impartial opinions to
be relevant eternally. The whole Western world knew that the Ottomans had expanded their
holdings to the outskirts of Vienna, and some European parents intimidated their children
with the threat that "the Turks are coming!" These stereotyping of Turks by
Westerners, including the Germans and the Austrians, stems from a number of recurring
events - for instance, "the loss of Constantinople". This is another chosen
trauma, shared by several European peoples. Moreover, the Germans and the Austrians, with
whom the Ottoman Turks frequently came into conflict even during the First World War,
eventually needed potential friends from the rival camp, just in case they would be
defeated. It was especially Berlin's policy to cultivate good relations with quarters
close to the decision-makers among the opposing group of states.
***
While presenting Professor Vakakn N. Dadrian's
articles in the collective volume of the Journal of Political and Military Sociology,
Professor Roger Smith describes them as a model historical and sociological narrative and
analysis, and states that certain lessons may be drawn from the topic in question. I
consider Professor Dadrian's approach a one-sided presentation of a complex phenomenon. In
his appraisal, questioning the authenticity of documents supposedly proving the existence
of genocide, testimony of authentic Ottoman documents challenging the genocide assertion,
legal scrutiny in the light of the 1948 Genocide Convention, mention of general war-time
conditions or any reference to Armenian participation in armed conflicts and terrorism are
attempts of "revisionism."
Some Armenians cannot abandon a series of myths,
such as past "wide frontiers", ethnic "homogeneity" on those lands,
"continuous" Armenian-Turkish conflict or Armenian "innocence" against
untold "cruelty" of their enemies. The truth, documented by abundant sources, is
that it was the ten-or of organized Armenian bands, their seizure of power in parts of
Eastern Anatolia, their co-action with invading foreign troops, and the expulsion of the
Muslim population that led to the Ottoman decision to relocate the Armenians in the
southern portions of the state.
The defeat of the Ottoman state at the end of the
First World War, and the very likely prospect of harsh conditions to be imposed on the
Turks fed the resurgence of a strong anti-Ittihadist sentiment, in spite of the adherents
of the former ruling group, and played a role, not only in the decision to hold trials,
but also in the proceedings and verdicts. Dadrian, on the other hand, considers the
designation of some Ittihadist leaders as the culprits as "a convenient device to
exonerate the Turkish people as a whole" (p. 133). No matter to what degree a writer
may entertain ethnocentric views, to search for ways to involve a -whole nation in a
one-sided evaluation of a dramatic event brings to mind a racist approach, especially
incompatible in the United Nations' Year of Tolerance (1995), and the Third Decade To
Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination (1993-2003).
Not only one-sided victimization in
Armenian-Turkish relations fail to reflect historical facts, but chosen traumas,
persistently presented from a lopsided viewpoint, prevent reconciliation. Insistence on
the victimization of the Armenians only delays mutual benefits which should outweigh the
advantages to the Armenians of continued enmity. While old habits contradict future
relations of trust, a cure favors fair diagnosis. The disintegration (1991) of the Soviet
Union motivated Turkey to embark on a new policy in the Caucasus, the Black Sea and the
Balkans. Turkey suggested the membership of Armenia (and Greece) in the cooperation scheme
around the Black Sea, although none of the two is a riparian state. All parties interested
in cure and peace may utilize new circumstances to replace decades of old assumptions and
interpretations. Since 1991 the Turks have taken steps to overcome barriers that
imprisoned relations with Armenia behind unsurmountable bars. One needs fresh definitions.
FOOTNOTES
|
*.The author is professor of international relations at Ankara University, Turkey.
1.Armenian Review, 44/1-173 (Spring 1991),
1-36; Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 7/2 (Fall 1993); The International Journal of
Middle East Studies, 23/4 (November 1991); The Yale Journal of International Law,
14/2 (Summer 1989), 221-234.
2.Justin McCarthy exposes this little known
fact in his latest scholarly work: Death and Exile, Princeton, The Darwin Press,
1995.
3. Bilal Şimşir, Rumeli'den Türk
Göçleri, Ankara, Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1968.
4.Türkkaya Ataöv, An Armenian
Falsification, Ankara, Sevinç Matbaası, 1985.
5.Captain C.B. Norman, "The Armenians
Unmasked," copy of a hand-written manuscript (1895) at the Institute of the
Turkish Revolution, Faculty of Languages and History-Geography of Ankara University.
Also see: Türkkaya Ataöv, A British Report (1895): "The Armenians
Unmasked", Ankara, Sevinç Matbaası, 1985.
6 Turkkaya Ataöv, An American Source (1895)
on the Armenian Question, Ankara, Sistem Ofset, 1986.
7 H. Pastermadjian, Histoire de I'Armenie,
Paris, 1949, p. 384.
8 A.W. William and M.S. Gabrielian, Bleeding Armenia, New York, 1896, p. 331.
9 Edwin Bliss, Turkey and the Armenian
Atrocities, Philadelphia, 1896, pp. 370-371.
10.Kamuran Gih-un, The Armenian File: the
Myth of Innocence Exposed, London, K. Rustem and Bro. and Weidenfeld and Nicholson
Ltd., 1985, p. 142.
11.McCarthy, op. cit.
12.Hugh Seton-Watson, Nations and States,
London, Methuen, 1977, pp. 110-117.
13.New York, The American Defense Society,
1918.
14.Louise Nalbantian, The Armenian
Revolutionary Movement: The Development of Armenian Political Parties, through the
Nineteenth Century, Berkeley and Los Angeles, University of California Press, 1963.
15.Türkkaya Ataöv, "The Procurement
of Arms for Armenian Terrorism: Realities Based on Ottoman Documents,"
International Terrorism and the Drug Connection, Ankara, the University of Ankara
Press, 1984, pp. 169-177.
16.Hovhannes Kachaznouni, The Armenian
Revolutionary Federation Has Nothing to Do Any More, New York, Armenian Information
Service, 1955, p. 5. Also: Türkkaya Ataöv, An Armenian Source: Hovhannes
Katchaznouni, Ankara, Sistem Ofset, 1984, p. 4.
17.K.S. Papazian, Patriotism Perverted,
Boston, Baikar Press, 1934, pp. 37-38. Also: Türkkaya Ataöv, An Armenian Author on
"Patriotism Perverted", Ankara, Sistem Ofset, 1984.
18.Esat Uras, The Armenians in History and
the Armenian Question, Istanbul, Documentary Publications, 1988, pp. 843-845.
19.Ibid., p. 845.
20.Garo Pasdermadjian, Armenia: A Leading
Factor in the Winning of the War, New York, American Community for Armenia, 1919.
21.Garo Pasdermadjian, Why Armenia Should Be
Free? Armenia's Role in the Present War, Boston, Hairanik, 1918.
22. "Armenian Participation in World
War I on the Caucasian Front," The Armenian Review, 82 (Summer 1968) and the
following issues.
23.30 January 1919, p. 6.
24.A.P. Hacobian, Armenia and the War,
London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1917, pp. 66 f.
25.For instance: G. Kotganoff, La
Participation des Armeniens a la guerre mondial sur Ie front du Caucase: 1914-1918,
Paris, Imp. Massis, 1927; A. Poidebard, Le Role militaire des Armeniens sur le front
du Caucase apres la defection de I'armee russe, Paris, Imp. Nationale, 1920; R.
Pinon, "L'Armenie belligerante, " La Voix de I'Armenie, Paris, Annee 1
(1918); E.J. Robinson, "The Case of Our Ally Armenia," Asiatic Review.
London, Vol. XV (1919); F.R. Scatchard, "Armenia's True Interests and
Sympathies in the Great War," Asiatic Review, Vol. VI (1914).
26.Stanford J. Shaw and Ezel Kural Shaw,
History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, Vol. II, Cambridge. Cambridge
University Press, 1977, p. 362.
27.Cemal Paşa, Hatıralar,
Istanbul, 1977, p. 438.
28.Clair Price, The Rebirth of Turkey, New
York, 1923, pp. 86-87.
29.Rafael de Nogales, Four Years Beneath the
Crescent, tr. Muna Lee, New York, 1926, p. 45.
30.Felix Valyi, Revolutions in Islam,
London, 1925, pp. 233-234.
31.M. Philips Price, A History of Turkey,
London, 1956, p. 91.
32.Philippe de Zara, Mustafa Kemal,
Dictateur, Paris, 1936, pp. 159-160.
33.Commandant M. Larcher, La Guerre turque
dans la guerre mondiale, Paris, E. Chiron-Berger Levrault, 1926, pp. 395-396.
34.Heath W. Lowry, The Story Behind
Ambassador Morgenthau's Story, Istanbul, Isis Press, 1990.
35.New York, 1970, p. 50.
36.Eagles on the Crescent, Ithaca, Comell
University Press, pp. 150-152,187.
37.Aram Andonian, Documents officiels
concernant les massacres armeniennes, Paris, Imp. Turabian, 1920.;
38.Şinasi Orel and Sureyya Yuca,
Ermeriilerce Talat Pasa'ya Atfedilen Telgraflann Gercek Yüzü, Ankara, Türk Tarih
Kurumu, 1983. Also: Türkkaya Ataöv, The Andonian "Documents", Attributed
to Talat Pasha, are Forgeries! Ankara, Siyasal Bilgiler Fakültesi, 1984.
40.George A. Schreiner, The Craft Sinister:
A Diplomatico-Political History of the Great War and Its Causes, New York, G. Albert
Geyer, 1920, p. xxxi.
41.Ibid., p.126.
41.The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, New York.
Carroll and Graft Publishers.
42.Potsdam, Tempelverlag, 1919.
43.Erich Feig], A Myth of Terror o Armenian
Extremism: Its Causes and Its Historical Context, Freilassing-Salzburg, Edition
Zeitgeschiechte, 1986, pp. 87-88.
44.Gürün.op.cit.,p. 211.
45.Ibid., pp. 199,204-205.
46.Türkkaya Ataöv, Deaths Caused by
Disease, in Relation to the Armenian Question, Ankara, Sevinç Matbaası, 1985.
47.Georges Boudiere, "Notes sur la
Campagne de Syrie-Cilicie: L'Affaire de Maraş," Turcica, Vol.
IX/2-X(1978),p.l60.
48.For instance: Justin McCarthy,
"American Commissions to Anatolia and the Report of Niles and Sutherland,"
report to the Turkish Historical Society, General Conference, Ankara, 1990; Türkkaya
Ataöv, The Reports (1918) of Russian Officers on Atrocities by Armenians, Ankara,
Tmaz Matbaası, 1985.
49.For instance: Azmi Süslü, Gülay Öğün,
Mehmet Törehan Serdar, Genocides commis par les Armeniens Van, Bitlis, Mus et Kars:
interviews des temoins vivants. Van, Universite Yüzüncü Yıl, 1995; Enver
Korukçu, Ermenilerin Yesilyayla'daki Türk Soykırımı: 11-12 Mart
1918, Ankara, Atatürk Universitesi, 1990; Cezmi Yurtsever, Kalekilise, Ankara, Kamu
Hizmetleri Araştırma Vakfı, 1995; Hüseyin Çelik, Görenlerin
Gözüyle Van'da Ermeni Mezalimi, Ankara, 1994; M. Fahrettin Kirzioğlu, Kars
İli ve Çevresinde Ermeni Mezalimi: 1918-1920, Ankara, 1970.
50.Testimony by the Honorable Fred C. Ikle,
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, Before the Subcommittee on Security and
Terrorism of the Senate Judiciary Committee," Washington, D.C., mimeographed,
March 11,1982, p.6. Also: Michael M. Gunter, "Pursuing the Just Cause of Their
People": A Study of Contemporary Armenian Terrorism. New York, Greenwood Press,
1986.
51.For instance: The Foundation for
Establishing and Promoting Centers for Historical Research and Documentation,
Ottoman Archives: Yıldız Collection, the Armenian Question, Vols, I-XV,
Istanbul, 1989-; Askeri Tarih ve Stratejik Etüd Başkanlığı.Askeri
Tarih Belgeleri Dergisi, No. 81 (1982) and the following, Ankara. For a general
review of the value, diversity and features of the Ottoman archives, see: Türkkaya
Ataöv, The Ottoman Archives and the Armenian Question, Ankara, Sistem Ofset, 1986.
52.See supra., fn. 38.
53.Bilal Şimşir, Malta
Surgiinleri, Ankara, Bilgi Yayınevi, 1985.
54.Türkkaya Ataöv, Hitler and the
"Armenian Question", Ankara, Sistem Ofset, 1984.
55.Heath W. Lowry, "The U.S. Congress
and Adolf Hitler on the Armenians," Political Communication and Persuasion,
Vol. 3/2 (1985), pp. 111-139.
56.Jak V. Kamhi,
"Racism...Anti-Semitism," Seminar on Racism and Anti-Semitism, Istanbul,
19-20 January 1995 (under the auspices of the Council of Europe), p. 3. Also:
Stanford J. Shaw, The Jews of the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic, London,
Macmillan; New York, New York University Press, 1991; Mehmet Suphi, "The
Expulsion of Safarad Jews: Regression in the Development of Modem Society,"
Mind and Human Interaction, Vol. 4, No. 1 (December 1992), pp. 40-51.
57.Stanford J. Shaw, Turkey and Holocaust:
Turkey's Role in Rescuing Turkish and European Jewry from Nazi Persecution,
1933-1945, New York, New York University Press, 1993.
58.For instance: Horst Widmann. Exile und
Bildungshiife: Die deutschsprachige akademische Emigration in die Turkei nach 1933,
Bern, Frankfurt, 1973; Fritz Neumark, Zuflucht am Bosphor, Frankfurt, 1980.
59.Ruth Gruber, Right-Wing Extremism in
Western Europe, New York, the American Jewish Committee, 1994.
60.Türkkaya Ataöv, A 'Statement' Wrongly
Attributed to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, 3rd pr., Ankara, Meteksan, 1992.
61.Türkkaya Ataöv, Another Falsification:
"Statement" (1926) Wrongly Attributed to M. Kemal Atatürk, Ankara, Sistem
Ofset, 1988.
62.For instance: Turkkaya Ataöv, Documents
on the Armenian Question: Forged and Authentic, Ankara, Barok Ofset, 1985.
63.Erik H. Erikson, Young Man Luther, New
York, W. W. Norton, 1958; ______, Gandhi's Truth, New York, W. W. Norton, 1969.
64.Erikson, Young Man Luther, op. cit., p. 21.
65.Namık D. Volkan, The Need to Have
Enemies and Allies: from Clinical Practice to International Relationship, Northvale,
New Jersey; London, Jason Aronson Inc., 1994. As J. V. Montville states in the
presentation of the book, with the publication of Volkan's work psychological
elements in political analysis can no longer be overlooked (p. x). Volkan was the
first president of the International Society of Political Psychology to come from a
medical background. He is now the Director of the Center for the University of
Virginia's School of Medicine. The center, which publishes the quarterly Mind and
Human Interaction, focusses on the psy-chodynamics of large group processes or
studies history with a psychoanalytic point of view. It sheds light on the hidden
underpinnings of relations between neighbours in conflict. See: Vamik D. Volkan,
Cyprus-War and Adaptation, Charlottesville, University Press of Virginia, 1980;
------ and Norman Itzkowitz, Turks and Greeks: Neighbours in Conflict, Cambridge,
U.K., the Eothen Press, 1994. These studies suggest new methods to improve our
understanding of the complex human dimensions of some ethnic/religious problems.
66.Vamık D. Volkan, "On Chosen
Trauma," Mind and Human Interaction, Vol. 3, No. 1 (1991), p. 13.
67.W. W. Bernard, P. Ottenberg and F. Redl,
"Dehumanization: a composite psychological defence in relation to modern
war," Sanctions for Evil: Sources of Social Destructiveness, ed., N. Sanford
and C. Comstock, San Francisco, Jossey-Bass, 1973, pp. 102-124.
68.R. R. Rogers, "Intergenerational
Exchange: Transference of Attitudes Down the Generations," Modern Perspectives
in the Psychiatry of Infancy, ed., J. Howells, New York, Brunner-Mazel, 1979, pp.
339-349.
69.Vamık D. Volkan, "The Dynamics
of Global Ethnic Conflict: General Reflections and Specific Cases," paper for
conferences at Havenford and Bryn Mawr Colleges, 1-2 October 1993.
70.Vamık D. Volkan and Max Harris,
Shaking the Tent: the Psychodynamics of Ethnic Terrorism, Virginia, Center for the
Study of Mind and Human Interaction, 1993.
71.See supra., fn. 50.
72.Heath W. Lowry, "Nineteenth and
Twentieth Century Armenian Terrorism: 'Threads of Continuity,'" International
Terrorism and the Drug Connection, Ankara, the University of Ankara Press, 1984, pp.
71-83.
73.David Marshall Lang, The Armenians: a
People in Exile, London, Alien and Unwin, 1981, p. 7
From mfa.gov.tr/grupe/eg/eg38/default.htm
|
A "Statement" Wrongly Attributed to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk |
This is an important article (by Professor Ataöv)
that shows not only what Mustafa Kemal did not say about the Armenians, but what he
did say.
This is the Mustafa Kemal, universally known as "the Father of the Turks", who
created a compact Turkey from the wide-strewn fragments of the Ottoman State, who gave the
nation a new political system and who created a new generation with self-respect. There
were, of course, others named as "Mustafa" or "Kemal" or both, not
only during Atatürk's life-time but since the Turks adoption of Islam as their religion.
It will be recalled that Muhammed Mustafa was the Prophet of Islam, and his name appeared
in all Moslem countries as frequent as "François" in France.
The "Mustafa Kemal" that several Armenian and some foreign writers or spokesmen
mix up, on account of lack of proper knowledge or sufficient good will, with the founder
of the Turkish Republic is a namesake. The "error" may initially be traced to a
French author, a certain Paul du Véou, who in his Le Désastre d'Alexandrette (34) wrote,
in a footnote, that "Mustafa Kemal" had appeared before a tribunal in Istanbul
on January 27, 1920, and had made a statement that placed responsibility on the shoulders
of the Ottoman State for the "Armenian massacres", (For a photostatic
reproduction of this source, see Annex 1 on page 6.)
It was common knowledge then, as it is now, that Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was already in
Samsun on May 19, 1919, and was ordered to return to Istanbul as early as June 23 of the
same year, an order which he disobeyed, resigning from the army on July 8, 1919. The
Nationalist Congresses of Erzurum and Sivas were held under his presidency, in August and
September of 1919 respectively. Mustafa Kemal established his headquarters at Ankara on
December 27, 1919, about three weeks short of the "statement" he is supposed to
have made at the Istanbul tribunal. Soon the Turkish Grand National Assembly met in
Ankara. He was later condemned to death by the Sultan's Government in Istanbul, curiously
enough by the same tribunal he is supposed to have appeared as a witness. Mustafa Kemal
was in Ankara on January 27, 1920. How could he be in the Ottoman capital, especially
under the conditions now known to the whole world? The chronology of events may easily be
traced in several foreign sequential studies as well, such as Professor Gotthard
Jaeschke's Die Türkei seit dem Weltkrige: Geschichtskalender, 1918-1920 (35) or the
Documents on British Foreign Policy: 1919-1939, First Series, issued by the Foreign
Office.
The "error" was repeated in a book entitled Les Memoires de Mgr. Jean Naslian by
an Armenian Catholic Bishop. There is a reference on page 43 in the first volume of that
publication, printed in Vienne in 1951, to a statement by "Mustafa Kemal". (See
Annex 2) Bishop Naslian might have been misled by Paul du Véou's book or better by
reference to a "Mustafa Pasha statement" in Le Bosphore, La Renaissance or other
Armenian newspapers printed in Istanbul in 1919 and 1920. Le Bosphore was published by the
occupying authorities in the Ottoman capital to further Armenian interests. Likewise, La
Renaissance was a French-language paper, under the editorship of Hagopian Chaian, an
Armenian, to serve the same interests. These papers and perhaps several others referred to
a statement by "Nemrud" Mustafa Pasha. Bishop Naslian, however, confused him
with the Mustafa Kemal. Armenian author Guerguerian advised Bishop Naslian to correct his
memoirs before publishing; he never did. Moreover, it was translated into Armenian by Haik
Stephanian as Arhi Hovhaness Arkyebiskopos Nasliani Housheruh. (36) The same error was
reproduced in the Armenian version. It kept being repeated, for instance, by Jean
Mécérian in his Le Génocide du peuple Arménien. (37) (See Annex 3.)
Author G. Guerguerian (referred to above), an American cleric with residence at Forest
Hills (New York), might have been the first to correct this "error" with his
article in Massis Weekly (1967), published in Beirut. The warning, however, went
unnoticed. Armenian author Leon Surmelian, in his Preface to Andonian Shiragian's The
Legacy: Memoirs of an Armenian Patriot, wrote: "The present Turkish Government and
press seem to forget Mustafa Kemal Pasha's testimony before the Turkish war tribunal in
Constantinople on January 28, 1919." He categorically adds: "The founder of the
Turkish Republic spoke as an eyewitness of the Armenian horrors he personally witnessed.
(38) On the heels of Surmelian, let me quote another Armenian, publisher Tashjian:
"... There is no evidence at all in any source other than the suspect Naslian-based
passage that he (Mustafa Kemal Pasha, the founder of modern Turkey) attended, testified or
even addressed a memorandum on the Armenian case." (39)
Picking from sources like Naslian, the same error was repeated in Soviet Armenia. G.
Arutyunov and G. Episkoposov, for instance, (the former a full Professor of History and
the latter a PhD.) in a letter to the Novoye Vremya of December 4, 1981, published in
several languages, once more quoted the same statement, falsely attributed to Atatürk.
Further, the article of Mari Kochar, from the Yrevan State University (Armenian S.S.
Republic), which appeared in the January 15, 1982 issue of the Karakan Tert (Literary
Paper), has been extensively used in the Armenian press abroad. Yet again, Jon Kirakosian,
from Soviet Armenia, repeated the same error in the April 1982 issue of the monthly
Sovetaken Haiastan. (40) (See Annex 4). The same article is reprinted in many
Armenian-language reviews all over the world-for instance, in the Baykar of Boston, June
(Hunis) 1982. (41) A book, entitled The First Holocaust and edited by Hagop Terjimanian,
an Armenian, carries the same false statement. (42) (See Annex 5.) The error, at times,
stretches to sections of the Greek press as well.
Samples above in terms of "historicisme à l'Arménienne" may be sufficient. It
was another Armenian writer, James H. Tashjian, the Editor of the Armenian Review,
published in Boston, Mass., U.S.A. in a letter printed in March 20, 1982 issue of the
Armenian Weekly, again brought out in Boston, who wrote that Mustafa Kemal "never
appeared before such a tribunal, nor did he render such a statement". (See Annex 6).
He called this an "astonishingly hard dying disorder" caused by
"similarities in the names" and "questionable scholarship". Informing
his readers that this matter would be subject of a corrective paper in his own journal, he
urged that interested parties abstain from attributing to Mustafa Kemal Pasha the
statement on the Armenians. Neither this announcement, nor his 18-page article (pp.
227-244) in Vol. XXXV, No. 3-139 (Autumn 1982) issue of the Armenian Review prevented the
lawyers of the four accused Armenian terrorists at the Paris trial (January 1984), nor
their associates in the French press, from presenting it to the Court or to public opinion
as a "document". (For the first page of publisher Tashjian's article, see Annex
7).
Author Tashjian determines that on January 20, 1920 (and not on January 28, 1919),
"Nemrud" Mustafa (Kemal) Pasha, an entirely different person read or submitted a
memorandum to the very tribunal, where he was previously the chief but now replaced by a
certain Esad Pasha. If Nemrud Mustafa has ever submitted such a memorandum to the summary
court, he is supposed to have accused, according to Tashjian, some people of atrocities.
Tashjian states that Nemrud Mustafa, now a defendant, was later absolved of charges and
re-appointed as chief of the same court. What should interest us here is that Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk was condemned to death in May 1920 by the same court, presided over by
Nemrud Mustaa Pasha, with whom the founder of the Turkish Republic is so liberally
"confused". Tashjian, who describes the disorder an "unhappily durable
fiction", states that the aim of his paper is "to clear up this confusion once
and for all". (As to the other points that publisher Tashjian is trying to make in
the same article, he may read, by way of introduction, the books on Atatürk mentioned
above. (43)
Corrections even by Armenians have failed to move other Armenians, who opportunistically
placed their hope on slander, forgery and false propaganda. A most recent example is the
reference to it on January 24, 1984, by a certain M. Aslanian, a member of the Paris Bar
Association, during the trial of the four accused Armenians, guilty of carrying arms and
explosives, attacking the Turkish Consulate-General in Paris, invading its premises,
taking hostages, wounding and killing people, Aslanian's statement was apparently shared
and approved by the other four lawyer-associates, who expected a cheap reward from a
fallacy. Endeavouring to defend the four accused. M. Aslanian addressed a question to me
in the court room, where I happened to be as a "Witness of Authority", as to
what I had to say to that "statement by Mustafa Kemal, the founder of the Turkish
Republic". When I replied that this statement was being wrongly attributed to the
first President of our country, that even an Armenian source such as the Armenian Review,
published in the United States of America, recently carried an article ascribing it to
another person by the same name, and that I was in a position to submit the particulars of
that article to the court, an uproar was heard from the defence bench, attempting to
impress the judges and the members of the jury that the Turks were "denying"
even such an authority as Mustafa Kemal. But I happened to be right and soon submitted a
written statement to the court, quoting the author, title, date, number and pages of the
Armenian article in question. It will be remembered that this article, as well, described
the allegation as "fiction" and "confusion" and pleaded at the very
end: "Let this fable die." I am reproducing my letter (see Annex 8.), addressed
to M. Guy Floch, the President of the Court, who read it aloud to the defence lawyers. The
five counsels of the accused Armenians subsequently read in private a letter meant for
them all, in which I expressed readiness to tender my resignation from the university if
the statement in question belonged to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, but that one would expect M.
Aslanian to do the same and resign from the Bar Association, if the statement was not made
by Atatürk, for submitting forgeries and trying to mislead justice. (See Annex 9.).
But this was not the end of the "acrobatics". Witness Yves Ternon also used the
same fake statement for his own ends. And more importantly, not only the columns of
several French papers preferred silence in terms of such corrections, but some referred to
an Atatürk "statement", pretending as if it had not been proved false. A
certain Charles Blacnhard of Le Matin apparently chose to re-write history, in his article
on January 28, 1984, for the satisfaction of his associates when he continued to attribute
the same false statement to "the father of modern Turkey". Some
"erudition", some "reporting"! Antoine de Rivarol's dictum inevitably
comes to mind here: "Ce qui n'est pas clair n'est pas Français". "Oublié
tout cela", he categorically stated. (See Annex 10.) But he demonstrated undeniable
"forgetfulness" when he was reminded by letter (See Annex 11) of the particular
facts of his material error. I have also enclosed a copy of the communication pertaining
to this point and addressed to the President of the Court, which was publicly disclosed by
the latter. Reference to Reporter Blanchard's professional conscience having ailed to move
him, I have ventured to send to the gentlemen another letter (See Annex 12), assessing his
"methodology" of writing. To make an understatement, in no textbooks of
journalism are such distortions and evasions described as truthful reporting.
The "error", nevertheless, still continues. Ankara article by Nishan Nercessian,
entitled "Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and the Armenian Genocide", published in the
Armenian Observer as recent as February 29, 1984 (See Annex 13) refers to the same
statement, allegedly made by "the hero of the Gallipoli campaign". (44) Such
repetitions, bound to come to an end, nevertheless, expose the prejudice, lack of
erudition and sometimes even deceitfulness of its author.
Having established what Mustafa Kemal Atatürk has not said, one may proceed to see what
he has said on the issue. To quote some important statements would be adequate. One is an
interview on February 24, 1921, with columnist Clarence K. Streit of the Public Ledger,
published in Philadelphia, in its March 27, 1921 issue. (See Annex 14.) The text of the
interview may also be found in the archives of the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It
was lately printed in the first volume of a Ministry of Culture publication, entitled The
National Foreign Policy of Atatürk. (45) When asked his government's comment on the
transfer of the Armenians, Mustafa Kemal replied:
"After making allowance for the enormous exaggerations always made by those who
accuse their enemies, the transfer of Armenians reduces itself to his - The Armenian
Dashnak Committee, then in the service of the Tsar, had caused the Armenian population
behind our troops to revolt when the Russian Army began its great 1915 offensive against
us.
"Obliged to retreat before the superior numbers and material of the enemy, we found
ourselves constantly between two fires. Our convoys of supplies and wounded were
pitilessly massacred, roads and bridges destroyed behind us and terror reigned the Turkish
country-side. The bands, which committed these crimes and which included in their ranks
Armenians able to bear arms, were supplied with arms, munitions and provisions in Armenian
villages where, thanks to the immunities accorded in the capitulation's, certain foreign
powers had succeeded during peacetime in establishing enormous stocks for this purpose.
The world, which regards with indifference the fashion in which England, in peacetime and
far from the battle field, treats the Irish nation, can not in all justice complain of the
resolution we were obliged to take relative to the transfer of Armenian population.... The
massacres and devastation's caused by Armenian bands while the Russians were evacuating
our eastern provinces are sufficiently known. The American General Harbord, with whom I
talked at Sivas and who after having visited these regions and having made edifying
observations on the conduct of the Armenian bands, wrote to tell me that all I had related
to him was true, is a witness from whom American opinion can usefully inform itself. The
Dashnaks, moreover, continued their crimes in the zone of Kars and Oltu until the
conclusion of the Alexandropol Treaty..."
The full quotation has been reproduced above on account of its authenticity and
straight-forwardness. Mustafa Kemal underlines the conspiratorial nature of Armenian armed
attacks, the bloodshed and massacre caused by them, endorsed by General Harbord as well.
When asked about his opinion on the "Wilsonian boundaries" of Armenia, Mustafa
Kemal retorded: "I find Mr. Wilson's project, tending to place several million Turks
under the domination of several thousand Armenians, simply ridiculous."
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's reference to the Armenian massacres of the Moslem population is a
reflection of a fact, an echo of the "other side of the coin". The curious
phenomenon of suppressing all publication and talk about the massacre of Turks by various
Armenian bands is a monstrous one-sidedness that approaches the limits of racism.
Publications devoted solely to this discriminatory "scholarship" and
"reporting" will certainly reach the world public in due time.
In the meantime, one may quote, within the general framework of this booklet, five
original letters of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, some of which are being published here for the
first time. A Mustafa Kemal telegram (See Annex 15.), (46) marked "very urgent",
dated March 16, 1920 and addressed to the representatives of the Entente Powers in
Istanbul and to Admiral Bristol, the U.S. High Commissioner, well expose the nature and
the real causes of anti-Turkish propaganda based on alleged, new "massacre of 20,000
Armenians". He states that the Turkish nation is "grieved to see the occupation,
under various pretexts, of most important portions of its lands left over from the Mondros
(Mudros) Armistice", that it "expected modifications in accordance with our
legitimate wishes and requirements of justice" but that "certain circles in
Europe, which consider the furthering of a negative drive as imperative for their own
interest" now have "fabricated the hated and most unjustified lie that there has
been a new massacre of 20,000 Armenians in Anatolia". He further states that the
Turks had found it "entirely unnecessary even to issue an official denial of this
wholly untruthful falsification, on account of the presence of several persons and agents
in the whole of Anatolia, representing the Entente Powers and the American
Government". He points out that "there had been loss of life among the Turks,
the French and the Armenians participating with the French troops, during clashes in and
around Maras and Urfa". He underlines, however, that "this was not a massacre of
Armenians". The Armenians brought to Cilicia from outside and those armed local
Armenians had "carried out unbearable acts of aggression, continually sought the
enlargement, with no reason whatsoever, of the area of occupation" and that the
commanders of the occupation forces had "tolerated the Armenian attacks on the Moslem
population". He adds:
"It is essential to add that, had the persons commanding the forces of occupation in
and around Cilicia refrained from arming, conferring duties on and championing the
Armenians, had they administered the various sections of the local population with justice
and equity and had they desisted from expanding, with no grounds and remittingly, the
territory, which was under the British at the end of the Armistice, now changed and
occupied, these unfortunate clashes, having led to the loss of life of so many people,
would never have taken place".
Mustafa Kemal further adds that this was "the real nature of the lies on the
so-called massacre of Armenians in Anatolia" and that "the declaration already
made by the Armenian representatives and notables of the people of Maras, supposedly
massacred, absolutely supports this fact". He asks the Entente Powers and the U.S.
Government to assist in the formation of an "international supreme council to
investigate on spot and at once this fabricated story of the Armenian massacres and
illuminate the world.... on the nature.... of this propaganda.... aiming to mislead public
opinion."
In another letter to the Ministry of War on February 29, 1919 (See Annex 16) (47) Mustafa
Kemal relates that a "British officer, accompanied by an Armenian interpreter, has
come to Beyazit from Igdir and spoke to the Lieutenant Governor there, telling him that
Beyazit and its environs have been assigned to Armenia under British custody and that
15,000 Armenian refugees, under the protection of regular Armenian troops, would be
transferred to the liva (subdivision of a vilayet or province) of Beyazit". He adds
that the Turkish Lieutenant Governor informed the British officer that he had "not
received any official communication from his own government in respect to measures
pertinent in this case", that "the number of the refugees ought to be
7-8,000" instead of 15,000 and that there was "no need for them to come under
the protection of Armenian troops". He also quotes the Turkish Lieutenant Governor's
figure as to "the Moslem population of Beyazit being 80,000" and stresses
himself that "a concession of even an inch of land to Armenia in the Eastern Vilayets
is unthinkable".
Mustafa Kemal's letter of June 5, 1919 (see Annex 17), (48) written from Havza (No.343451)
and addressed to the Office of the Prime Minister, states, inter alia, that within the
borders of the liva of Amasya, there had been "no Moslem attacks on the
Christians", but Christian bands have carried five consecutive raids on the Moslem
population, that "certain Greek and Armenian provocateurs continue their policy and
attitude to create events directed against the Islamic peoples in order to show the
administration as defective, to invite occupation and intervention and especially applying
directly to foreign officers and entirely bypassing the government, at places where such
foreign army personnel may be found". He emphasizes that the Moslem citizens, though
regretful about it all, nevertheless, "keep quiet". Underscoring that "the
leaders of the Armenian and the Greek bands are spoiled by the British officers and some
American personnel whom they invariably contact", he adds that these foreigners are
"misled and deceived". He further states, in the last paragraph of his
communication, that the Armenians are "active and in preparation" in Caucasia
and in the east of Erzurum, Erzincan and Van.
In a letter to the General Staff on May 25, 1919, (see Annex 18), (49) Mustafa Kemal
informs that "three-hundred Armenians with three heavy machine guns and considerable
explosives" have been penetrating from the north-east corner of Erzurum, that they
were expected to become active in the interest of their "political objectives"
as soon as the climate allows and hence that "the 15th Army Corps should not only be
left intact, but even enlarged in accordance with circumstances".
Still another Mustafa Kemal documents (see Annex 19) is a draft of a telegram sent to the
Italian representative at Alanya (south-western Turkish port in the Mediterranean), to be
dispatched to the Paris Peace Conference, the Entente Powers, the American Government and
the diplomatic representatives of the neutrals. The statement refers to the "Armenian
destruction of forty Moslem villages", where a portion of the "civilian
population was subjected to slaughter" and "belongings openly sold in the
markets of Kars". His report also informs the foreign representatives that armed
Armenian bands of similar make-up were preparing attacks on other regions to be followed
by similar bloodshed. Mustafa Kemal forcefully protests against such aggression.
The above appraisal of affairs, chosen to be ignored by militant Armenians and
consequently not properly acknowledged by the rank and file, is, nevertheless, shared by
no less than Hovhannes Katchaznouni, the first Prime Minister of the independent Armenian
Republic, a pillar of Dashnagtzoutiun and certainly someone who should know. His talk at
the Convention of foreign branches of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, convened in
1923 in Bucharest, was also partly printed in New York in 1955 by the Armenian Information
Service. Translated from the original by Matthew A. Callender, it is interestingly
entitled as The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnagtzoutiun) Has Nothing To Do Any
More. Difficult to find copies of the book nowadays in the libraries of the world (from
where they have probably been systematically eliminated and destroyed), I shall take the
liberty to summarize in the near future, in the form of a separate booklet, some of the
ideas and evaluations in it, along with another important work, entitled Patriotism
Perverted by another Armenian author, K.S. Papazian. I do believe, however, that it is
appropriate here to make brief references to a few statements of H. Katchaznouni. He
admits, for instance, that in 1914 when Turkey had not yet entered the war, the Dashnags
were forming bands for future military action against Turkey, contrary to the decision and
the will of the General Meeting of the Party. (50) He confesses that, having embraced
Tsarist Russia wholeheartedly, they had created a dense atmosphere of illusion and had
lost all sense of reality. (51) He adds that they should have used peaceful language with
the Turks. (52)
The Armenian statesman and author further says: "When the skirmishes had started, the
Turk proposed that we meet and conter. We did not do so and defied them". (53) The
result was the Gümrü (Alexandrropol, Leninakan) Treaty of December 1 (or November 30)
1920 with the Turks, establishing the border.
Another Armenian, K.S. Papazian published his Patriotism Perverted in Boston in1934, with
the purpose of presenting to the English-speaking Armenians and to the American public in
general, a clear picture of the organization called the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.
Leaving aside for the time being many interesting evaluations of the Dashnags background,
past activities, purposes and methods, one may quotea few statements, pertinent to the
topic of this booklet. Papazian admits that the Dashnags gave assurances that in the event
of a war between Russia and Turkey, "they would support Turkey as loyal
citizens". (54) He adds, however, that they "did not carry their promise".
He says that "they were swayed in their actions by the interests of the Russian
Government". He accepts the fact that "the methods used.... were so open and
flagrant, that it would not escape the attention of the Turkish authorities". (55) He
states that the war with Turkey was the outcome of the Act of May 28, 1919, by which the
government of the Armenian Republic claimed possession of certain provinces in Eastern
Republic the readers that the existing Republic was recognized by the Turks under the
Treaty of Batoum, he says that one can readily comprehend why the Turks regarded the Act
of May 28, 1919, as a provocation for war. He also reminds that the men who signed the
Treaty of Sevres on August 10, 1920, were the same who repudiated it and the claims of the
Armenians in Turkey by signing the Treaty of Gümrü. (56)
The Dashnags were driven out of authority when the Soviet Armenian Republic was formed.
Hatchaznouni and Papazian both state that Simon Vratzian, the last Prime Minister of the
Armenian Government, sent on March 18, 1921, a formal appeal to Mustafa Kemal's government
in Ankara seeking military assistance from it. (57). In the words of author Papazian, this
appeal of Vratzian was the "ratification of the Treaty of Alexandropol, by which the
Dashnag leaders declared to the whole world that Armenia has renounced all her demands on
Turkey and has no more cause of dispute". (58)
FOOTNOTES
|
- Açiklamali Atatürk Kaynakçisi, Ankara, Türkiye Is
Bankasi, 1981
- Sami N. Özerdim, 10 Kasim-31 Aralik 1938 Günlerinde Türk
Basininda Türkiye için Yazilmis Yazilarin Bibliyografyasi, Ankara, Türk Tarih
Kurumu, 1958.
- Atatürk: Biography, Ankara, Turkish National Commission
for UNESCO. 1981 (French: Atatürk: Vie et Oeuvre; German: Atatürk: Sein Leben
und sein Werk).
- Nimed Arsan, ed., Atatürk'ün Söylev ve Demeçleri, Vol.
I, 2nd Pr., Ankara, Türk Inkilap Tarihi Enstitüsü, 1981, p. 380.
- Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1965.
- Atatürk the Birth of a Nation, Nicosia, K. Rustem and
Brother, 1981, p.140.
- Ibid., p. xviii.
- Original Spanish: Jorge Blanco Villalta, Kemal Atatürk: El
Constructor do la Nueva Turquia. Buenos Aires, Claridad, 1939; 2nd Pr., 1945;
English ed.: Atatürk, tr. By Willam Campbell, Ankara, Türk Tarih Kurumu, 1979,
pp. xi-xiii.
- Türkkaya Ataöv, "Atatürk-More Than a National
Leader", Darshana International, Moradabad, India, Vol. XXII, No. 1
(January 1982), pp. 16-20.
- Atatürk'ün Söylev ve Demeçleri, op.cit., Vol.II, p.21.
- Delhi, Macmillan, 1983.
- Ibid., p. 73.
- R.K. Sinha, Kurtulus Savasi, Devrimler: Mustafa Kemal ve
Mahatma Gandi, 1919-1928, Istanbul, Milliyet, 1972.
- Kemal: Maker of Modern Turkey, London H. Joseph, 1934.
- For reference to this talk, see: Türkkaya Ataöv,
"Atatürk: Pioneer Against Oppression",. The Standart, Nairobi, Kenya,
November 2, 1981, p.4.
- Reveil d'une race: dans la Turquie de Mustafa Kemal,
Paris,Nouvelle Société d'Edition, 1927.
- Turquie d'Atatürk, Paris, E.Ray, 1935.
- l'Europe et la Turquie nouvelle, Paris, Presses
Universitaires de France, 1922.
- Moustapha Kemal Atatürk: Créateur de la Turquie moderne,
Paris. Nouvelles Editions Latines, 1958.
- Moustapha Kemal ou la rénovation de la Turquie, Paris,
Bibliothèque Charpentier, 1921.
- Nationalisme turc, Paris, Plon, 1921.
- For instance: Bernard Lewis. The Emergence of Modern
Turkey, London, Oxford University Press, 1968.
- Karel Pravec, Kemal Atatürk, Praha, Nakladatelstvi
Svoboda, 1967.
- For instance: Zoran Tomic, Kemal Atatürk: Tvorats Nove
Turske, Beograd, Planeta, 1939.
- Petro Ghiata, Atatürk, Bucurexti, Editura Enciclopedica
Romana, 1975.
- For instance: Thomas A. Vaidis, Kemal Atatürk: O
Demiourgos tes Neas Tourkias, Atenai,Akropolis, 1936.
- For instance Stefan Velikov, Kemalistkata Revolutsiya:
Bilgarskata Obstestvennost, 1918-1922, Sofya Institut po Balkanistika, 1966.
- For instance: Aziz Hanki, Etrak ve Ataturk, El-Kahire,
1939.
- A Year's Embassy to Mustafa Kemal, New York and London, C.
Scribner's, 1934.
- Das Land Kemal Ataturk's: der Werdengang der Modernen
Türkei, Wien-Leipzig, W. Braumüller, 1935.
- Kemal Atatürk un die moderne Türkei, Berlin, VEB
Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, 1971.
- Kemal Atatürk: Untergang und Aufstieg der Türkei,
Frankfurt/Main Societats Verlag, 1937.
- Leipzig, P.List, 1935.
- Paris, Editions Baudinière, 1938,p. 121.
- Berlin, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Islamkunde, 1929.
- Beirut, Armenian Catholic Press, 1960.
- Beirut, 1965, pp. 50-51.
- Boston, (Hairenik, 1 1976, pp. xii-xiii, Emphasis mine.
- James H. Tashjian, "On a Statement Condemning the
Armenian Genocide of 1915-18 Attributed in Error to Mustafa Kemal, Later
"The Atatürk", The Armenian Review, Boston, Mass., Vol. XXXV,
No.3-139 (Autumn 1982), p.230.
- Yerevan, No. 4 (April 1982), pp. 14-15.
- The article, "amusingly" entitled "Badbutyan
Pasteri a la Turc" (or History-Writing in the Turkish Fashion), itself
reproduces a false statement.
- Pasadean, California, Siran Editions, 1982, p.4.
- Apart from his serious misconceptions and misjudgments,
Tashjian has also committed various factual errors as well. For instance, Halide
Edip, Turkey's leading woman intellectual of the time, was not the wife of Ziya
Gökalp. (See Tashjian op.cit., p. 242, footnote 24).
- See the center-spread of the Armenian Observer, Los
Angeles, California, Vol. XIV. No. 14 (Wednesday, February 29, 1984).
- Atatürk'ün Milli Dis Politikasi, Vol. I, Ankara, Kültür
Bakanligi, 1981, pp. 257-276: Hakimiyeti Milliye, Ankara, 8 Temmuz 1921; Sami N.
Özerdim., "Kurtulus Savasimiz Içinde Bir Amerikali Gazetecinin
Izlenimleri", Türk Dili, Ankara, No:22 (Subat 1970), pp. 367-369
- T.C. Genelkurmay Baskanligi, Askeri Tarih ve Stratejik
Etüd Baskanligi, Atatürk Arsivi, K. 23, D. 1336/13-1, F.32-1.
- Ibid., D. 167,F. 43-1.
- Also printed in: T.C.; Basbakanlik Osmanli Arxivi Daire
Baskanligi, Atatürk ile Ilgili Arsiv Belgeleri: 1911-1921 Tarihleri Arasina Ait
108 Belge, Ankara, 1982, pp. 34-36, 138-140.
- Askeri Tarih ve Stratejik Etüd Baskanligi, op. Cit., A.
1/1, D. 164, F. 47-1.
- P. 5 and f.
- Ibid., p. 6.
- Ibid., p. 9.
- Ibid., p. 10.
- p. 37.
- Ibid., p. 38.
- Ibid., p. 44-45.
- Ibid., p.50.
- Ibid., p. 51.
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