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A Clash Of Opinions On Armenians: Two British About Karabakh

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  • A Clash Of Opinions On Armenians: Two British About Karabakh

    A CLASH OF OPINIONS ON ARMENIANS: TWO BRITISH ABOUT KARABAKH

    Noyan Tapan
    Sept 10 2007

    We present a unique example of discussion on Armenian issues in a
    foreign newspaper. The British Independent newspaper has placed
    two materials touching upon the Karabakh issue. Both authors,
    the newspaper's famous Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk, and
    Baroness Caroline Cox, are known as friends of Armenia. However,
    they differ in their viewing of the Nagorno Karabakh issue. And this
    difference provides a serious ground for us, the Armenians, to assess
    how correct and efficient our activity is.

    Robert Fisk: The forgotten holocaust

    The killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks during the
    First World War remains one of the bloodiest and most contentious
    episodes of the 20th century. Robert Fisk visits Yerevan, and unearths
    hitherto unpublished images of the first modern genocide

    Published: 28 August 2007

    The photographs, never before published, capture the horrors of the
    first Holocaust of the 20th century. They show a frightened people on
    the move - men, women and children, some with animals, others on foot,
    walking over open ground outside the city of Erzerum in 1915, at the
    beginning of their death march. We know that none of the Armenians
    sent from Erzerum - in what is today north-eastern Turkey - survived.

    Most of the men were shot, the children - including, no doubt, the
    young boy or girl with a headscarf in the close-up photograph - died
    of starvation or disease. The young women were almost all raped, the
    older women beaten to death, the sick and babies left by the road to
    die. The unique photographs are a stunning witness to one of the most
    terrible events of our times. Their poor quality - the failure of the
    camera to cope with the swirl and movement of the Armenian deportees
    in the close-up picture, the fingerprint on the top of the second -
    lend them an undeniable authenticity. They come from the archives of
    the German Deutsche Bank, which was in 1915 providing finance for the
    maintenance and extension of the Turkish railway system. One incredible
    photograph - so far published in only two specialist magazines, in
    Germany and in modern-day Armenia - actually shows dozens of doomed
    Armenians, including children, crammed into cattle trucks for their
    deportation. The Turks stuffed 90 Armenians into each of these wagons -
    the same average the Nazis achieved in their transports to the death
    camps of Eastern Europe during the Jewish Holocaust.

    Hayk Demoyan, director of the grey-stone Museum of the Armenian
    Genocide in the foothills just outside Yerevan, the capital of
    present-day Armenia, stares at the photographs on his computer screen
    in bleak silence. A university lecturer in modern Turkish history,
    he is one of the most dynamic Armenian genocide researchers inside
    the remains of Armenia, which is all that was left after the Turkish
    slaughter; it suffered a further 70 years of terror as part of the
    Soviet Union. "Yes, you can have these pictures," he says. "We are
    still discovering more. The Germans took photographs and these pictures
    even survived the Second World War. Today, we want our museum to be
    a place of collective memory, a memorization of trauma.

    Our museum is for Turks as well as Armenians. This is also [the
    Turks'] history."

    The story of the last century's first Holocaust - Winston Churchill
    used this very word about the Armenian genocide years before the
    Nazi murder of six million Jews - is well known, despite the refusal
    of modern-day Turkey to acknowledge the facts. Nor are the parallels
    with Nazi Germany's persecution of the Jews idle ones. Turkey's reign
    of terror against the Armenian people was an attempt to destroy the
    Armenian race. While the Turks spoke publicly of the need to "resettle"
    their Armenian population - as the Germans were to speak later of the
    Jews of Europe - the true intentions of Enver Pasha's Committee of
    Union and Progress in Constantinople were quite clear. On 15 September
    1915, for example (and a carbon of this document exists) Talaat
    Pasha, the Turkish Interior minister, cabled an instruction to his
    prefect in Aleppo about what he should do with the tens of thousands
    of Armenians in his city. "You have already been informed that the
    government... has decided to destroy completely all the indicated
    persons living in Turkey... Their existence must be terminated, however
    tragic the measures taken may be, and no regard must be paid to either
    age or sex, or to any scruples of conscience." These words are almost
    identical to those used by Himmler to his SS killers in 1941.

    Taner Akcam, a prominent - and extremely brave - Turkish scholar who
    has visited the Yerevan museum, has used original Ottoman Turkish
    documents to authenticate the act of genocide. Now under fierce attack
    for doing so from his own government, he discovered in Turkish archives
    that individual Turkish officers often wrote "doubles" of their mass
    death-sentence orders, telegrams sent at precisely the same time that
    asked their subordinates to ensure there was sufficient protection
    and food for the Armenians during their "resettlement".

    This weirdly parallels the bureaucracy of Nazi Germany, where officials
    were dispatching hundreds of thousands of Jews to the gas chambers
    while assuring International Red Cross officials in Geneva that they
    were being well cared for and well fed.

    Ottoman Turkey's attempt to exterminate an entire Christian race in
    the Middle East - the Armenians, descended from the residents of
    ancient Urartu, became the first Christian nation when their king
    Drtad converted from paganism in AD301 - is a history of almost
    unrelieved horror at the hands of Turkish policemen and soldiers,
    and Kurdish tribesmen.

    In 1915, Turkey claimed that its Armenian population was supporting
    Turkey's Christian enemies in Britain, France and Russia. Several
    historians - including Churchill, who was responsible for the doomed
    venture at Gallipoli - have asked whether the Turkish victory there
    did not give them the excuse to turn against the Christian Armenians
    of Asia Minor, a people of mixed Persian, Roman and Byzantine blood,
    with what Churchill called "merciless fury". Armenian scholars
    have compiled a map of their people's persecution and deportation,
    a document that is as detailed as the maps of Europe that show the
    railway lines to Auschwitz and Treblinka; the Armenians of Erzerum,
    for example, were sent on their death march to Terjan and then to
    Erzinjan and on to Sivas province. The men would be executed by firing
    squad or hacked to death with axes outside villages, the women and
    children then driven on into the desert to die of thirst or disease
    or exhaustion or gang-rape. In one mass grave I myself discovered on
    a hillside at Hurgada in present-day Syria, there were thousands of
    skeletons, mostly of young people - their teeth were perfect. I even
    found a 100-year-old Armenian woman who had escaped the slaughter
    there and identified the hillside for me.

    Hayk Demoyan sits in his airconditioned museum office, his computer
    purring softly on the desk, and talks of the need to memorialise this
    huge suffering. "You can see it in the writing of each survivor,"
    he says. "When visitors come here from the diaspora - from America
    and Europe, Lebanon and Syria, people whose parents or grandparents
    died in our genocide - our staff feel with these people. They see
    these people become very upset, there are tears and some get a bit
    crazy after seeing the exhibition. This can be very difficult for
    us, psychologically. The stance of the current Turkish government
    [in denying the genocide] is proving they are proud of what their
    ancestors did. They are saying they are pleased with what the Ottomans
    did. Yet today, we are hearing that a lot of places in the world are
    like goldmines of archive materials to continue our work - even here in
    Yerevan. Every day, we are coming across new photographs or documents."

    The pictures Demoyan gives to The Independent were taken by employees
    of Deutsche Bank in 1915 to send to their head office in Berlin as
    proof of their claims that the Turks were massacring their Armenian
    population. They can be found in the Deutsche Bank Historical Institute
    - Oriental Section (the photograph of the Armenian deportees across the
    desert published in The Independent today, for example, is registered
    photo number 1704 and the 1915 caption reads: "Deportation Camp
    near Erzerum.")

    A German engineer in Kharput sent back a now-famous photogaph of
    Armenian men being led to their execution by armed Turkish police
    officers. The banking officials were appalled that the Ottoman Turks
    were using - in effect - German money to send Armenians to their
    death by rail. The new transportation system was supposed to be used
    for military purposes, not for genocide.

    German soldiers sent to Turkey to reorganise the Ottoman army also
    witnessed these atrocities. Armin Wegner, an especially courageous
    German second lieutenant in the retinue of Field Marshal von der
    Goltz, took a series of photographs of dead and dying Armenian women
    and children. Other German officers regarded the genocide with more
    sinister interest. Some of these men, as Armenian scholar Vahakn
    Dadrian discovered, turn up 26 years later as more senior officers
    conducting the mass killing of Jews in German-occupied Russia.

    Computers have transformed the research of institutions like the
    Yerevan museum. Poorly funded scholarship has been replaced by a
    treasure-house of information that Demoyan is going to publish in
    scholarly magazines. "We have information that some Germans who were
    in Armenia in 1915 started selling genocide pictures for personal
    collections when they returned home... In Russia, a man from St
    Petersburg also informed us that he had seen handwritten memoirs from
    1940 in which the writer spoke of Russian photographs of Armenian
    bodies in Van and Marash in 1915 and 1916." Russian Tsarist troops
    marched into the eastern Turkish city of Van and briefly liberated
    its doomed Armenian inhabitants. Then the Russians retreated after
    apparently taking these pictures of dead Armenians in outlying
    villages.

    Stalin also did his bit to erase the memory of the massacres. The
    Armenian Tashnag party, so prominent in Armenian politics in the
    Ottoman empire, was banned by the Soviets. "In the 1930s," Demoyan
    says, "everyone destroyed handwritten memoirs of the genocide,
    photographs, land deeds - otherwise they could have been associated by
    the Soviet secret police with Tashnag material." He shakes his head
    at this immeasurable loss. "But now we are finding new material in
    France and new pictures taken by humanitarian workers of the time. We
    know there were two or three documentary films from 1915, one shot
    approvingly by a Kurdish leader to show how the Turks "dealt" with
    Armenians. There is huge new material in Norway of the deportations
    in Mush from a Norwegian missionary who was there in 1915."

    There is, too, a need to archive memoirs and books that were published
    in the aftermath of the genocide but discarded or forgotten in the
    decades that followed. In 1929, for example, a small-circulation book
    was published in Boston entitled From Dardanelles to Palestine by
    Captain Sarkis Torossian. The author was a highly decorated officer
    in the Turkish army who fought with distinction and was wounded
    at Gallipoli. He went on to fight the Allies in Palestine but was
    appalled to find thousands of dying Armenian refugees in the deserts
    of northern Syria. In passages of great pain, he discovers his sister
    living in rags and tells how his fiancee Jemileh died in his arms. "I
    raised Jemileh in my arms, the pain and terror in her eyes melted
    until they were bright as stars again, stars in an oriental night...

    and so she died, as a dream passing." Torossian changed sides,
    fought with the Arabs, and even briefly met Lawrence of Arabia -
    who did not impress him.

    "The day following my entry into Damascus, the remainder of the Arab
    army entered along with their loads and behind them on a camel came one
    they called... the paymaster. This camel rider I learned was Captain
    Lawrence... Captain Lawrence to my knowledge did nothing to foment the
    Arab revolution, nor did he play any part in the Arab military tactics.

    When first I heard of him he was a paymaster, nothing more. And so he
    was to Prince Emir Abdulah (sic), brother of King Feisal, whom I knew.

    I do not write in disparagement. I write as a fighting man. Some must
    fight and others pay." Bitterness, it seems, runs deep. Torossian
    eventually re-entered Ottoman Turkey as an Armenian officer with
    the French army of occupation in the Cilicia region. But Kemalist
    guerrillas attacked the French, who then, Torossian suspects,
    gave weapons and ammunition to the Turks to allow the French army
    safe passage out of Cilicia. Betrayed, Torossian fled to relatives
    in America.

    There is debate in Yerevan today as to why the diaspora Armenians
    appear to care more about the genocide than the citizens of modern-day
    Armenia. Indeed, the Foreign minister of Armenia, Vardan Oskanian,
    actually told me that "days, weeks, even months go by" when he does
    not think of the genocide. One powerful argument put to me by an
    Armenian friend is that 70 years of Stalinism and official Soviet
    silence on the genocide deleted the historical memory in eastern
    Armenia - the present-day state of Armenia. Another argument suggests
    that the survivors of western Armenia - in what is now Turkey - lost
    their families and lands and still seek acknowledgment and maybe even
    restitution, while eastern Armenians did not lose their lands. Demoyan
    disputes all this.

    "The fundamental problem, I think, is that in the diaspora many don't
    want to recognise our statehood," he says. "We are surrounded by two
    countries - Turkey and Azerbaijan - and we have to take our security
    into account; but not to the extent of damaging memory. Here we
    must be accurate. I have changed things in this museum. There were
    inappropriate things, comments about 'hot-bloodied'people, all the
    old cliches about Turks - they have now gone. The diaspora want to
    be the holders of our memories - but 60 per cent of the citizens
    of the Armenian state are "repatriates" - Armenians originally
    from the diaspora, people whose grandparents originally came from
    western Armenia. And remember that Turkish forces swept though part
    of Armenia after the 1915 genocide - right through Yerevan on their
    way to Baku. According to Soviet documentation in 1920, 200,000
    Armenians died in this part of Armenia, 180,000 of them between 1918
    and 1920." Indeed, there were further mass executions by the Turks
    in what is now the Armenian state. At Ghumri - near the centre of
    the devastating earthquake that preceded final liberation from the
    Soviet Union - there is a place known as the "Gorge of Slaughter",
    where in 1918 a whole village was massacred.

    But I sensed some political problems up at the Yerevan museum -
    international as well as internal. While many Armenians acknowledge
    that their countrymen did commit individual revenge atrocities - around
    Van, for example - at the time of the genocide, a heavy burden of more
    modern responsibility lies with those who fought for Armenia against
    the Azeris in Nagorno- Karabakh in the early 1990s. This mountainous
    region east of the Armenian state saw fierce and sometimes cruel
    fighting in which Armenians massacred Turkish Azeri villagers. The
    Independent was one of the newspapers that exposed this.

    Yet when I arrive at the massive genocide memorial next to the museum,
    I find the graves of five "heroes" of the Karabakh war. Here lies,
    for instance, Musher "Vosht" Mikhoyan, who was killed in 1991, and
    the remains of Samuel "Samo" Kevorkian, who died in action in 1992.

    However upright these warriors may have been, should those involved
    in the ghastly war in Kharabakh be associated with the integrity and
    truth of 1915? Do they not demean the history of Armenia's greatest
    suffering? Or were they - as I suspect - intended to suggest that
    the Karabakh war, which Armenia won, was revenge for the 1915 genocide?

    It's as if the Israelis placed the graves of the 1948 Irgun fighters
    - responsible for the massacres of Palestinians at Deir Yassin and
    other Arab villages - outside the Jewish Holocaust memorial at Yad
    Vashem near Jerusalem.

    Officials later explain to me that these Karabakh grave-sites were
    established at a moment of great emotion after the war and that today -
    while they might be inappropriate - it is difficult to ask the families
    of "Vosht" and "Samo" and the others to remove them to a more suitable
    location. Once buried, it is difficult to dig up the dead.

    Similarly, among the memorials left in a small park by visiting
    statesmen and politicians, there is a distinct difference in tone.

    Arab leaders have placed plaques in memory of the "genocide". Less
    courageous American congressman - who do not want to offend their
    Turkish allies - have placed plaques stating merely that they "planted
    this tree". The pro-American Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri
    left his own memorial less than a year before he was assassinated in
    2005. "Tree of Peace," it says. Which rather misses the point.

    And yet it is the work of archivists that will continue to establish
    the truth. In Yerevan you can now buy excellent witness testimonies
    of the genocide by Westerners who were present during the Armenian
    Holocaust. One of them is by Tacy Atkinson, an American missionary
    who witnessed the deportation of her Armenian friends from the town
    of Kharput. On 16 July 1915, she recorded in her secret diary how "a
    boy has arrived in Mezreh in a bad state nervously. As I understand
    it he was with a crowd of women and children from some village... who
    joined our prisoners who went out June 23... The boy says that in the
    gorge this side of Bakir Maden the men and women were all shot and the
    leading men had their heads cut off afterwards... He escaped... and
    came here. His own mother was stripped and robbed and then shot... He
    says the valley smells so awful that one can hardly pass by now."

    For fear the Turkish authorities might discover her diaries, Atkinson
    sometimes omitted events. In 1924 - when her diary, enclosed in a
    sealed trunk, at last returned to the United States, she wrote about
    a trip made to Kharput by her fellow missionaries. "The story of this
    trip I did not dare write," she scribbled in the margin. "They saw
    about 10,000 bodies."

    Anatomy of amassacre: How thegenocide unfolded By Simon Usborne

    An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died between 1915 and 1917, either
    at the hands of Turkish forces or of starvation. Exact figures are
    unknown, but each larger blob - at the site of a concentration camp or
    massacre - potentially represents the deaths of hundreds of thousands
    of people. The trail of extermination, and dispute about exactly what
    happened, stretches back more than 90 years to the opening months of
    the First World War, when some of the Armenian minority in the east of
    the beleaguered Ottoman Empire enraged the ruling Young Turks coalition
    by siding with Russia. On 24 April 1915, Turkish troops rounded up and
    killed hundreds of Armenian intellectuals. Weeks later, three million
    Armenians were marched from their homes - the majority towards Syria
    and modern day Iraq - via an estimated 25 concentration camps. In
    1915, The New York Times reported that "the roads and the Euphrates
    are strewn with corpses of exiles... It is a plan to exterminate the
    whole Armenian people." Winston Churchill would later call the forced
    exodus an "administrative holocaust".

    Yet Turkey, while acknowledging that many Armenians died, disputes
    the 1.5 million toll and insists that the acts of 1915-17 did not
    constitute what is now termed genocide - defined by the UN as a
    state-sponsored attempt to "destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
    ethnic, racial or religious group". Instead, Ankara claims the deaths
    were part of the wider war, and that massacres were committed by both
    sides. Several countries have formally recognized genocide against the
    Armenians (and, in the case of France, outlawed its denial), but it
    remains illegal in Turkey to call for recognition. As recently as last
    year, the Turkish foreign ministry dismissed genocide allegations as
    "unfounded".

    One authority on extermination who did recognise the Armenian genocide
    was Adolf Hitler. In a 1939 speech, in which he ordered the killing,
    "mercilessly and without compassion", of Polish men, women and
    children, he concluded: "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihi-
    lation of the Armenians?"

    And Caroline Cox's reaction...

    The Editor, The Independent August 30 2007 Dear Sir, I have always
    appreciated the integrity of Robert Fisk's analysis of the genocide
    of the Armenians by Turkey in 1915: his well-informed argumentation
    has been incontrovert- ible and important - for every geno- cide which
    is not acknowledged not only prevents healing for the sur- vivors but
    is also an encouragement to potential perpetrators of other genocides.

    However, I must challenge the grossly inaccurate analogy between the
    Armenian genocide and the recent war in the predominantly Armenian
    enclave of Nagorno Karabakh. The Armenians were not the aggressors:
    Azerbaijan initiated a self-avowed policy, 'Operation Ring', of ethnic
    cleansing of the Armenians who live in this histori- cally Armenian
    enclave, given by Stalin to Azerbaijan.

    I have visited the region 63 times since Azerbaijan carried out
    mas- sacres of Armenians in Baku and Sumgait in the late 1980s
    and then unleashed full-scale war against the 150,000 civilians
    in the enclave. In July 1991, I visited Azerbaijan, with an inter-
    national group of inde- pendent human rights experts, to ascertain
    the Azeri viewpoint. We were left in no doubt of their policy of
    intended ethnic cleansing of all Armenians from Karabakh - a policy
    sub- sequently publicly affirmed by successive Azeri Presidents and
    senior politicians. I was in Karabakh virtually every month during the
    height of the war; I counted 400 'Grad' missiles a day fired by Azeris
    on the capital city, Stepanakert; I witnessed aerial bom- bardment
    and the use of cluster bombs on civilian targets and mas- sacres of
    indescribable brutality - documented irrefutably in our publi- cation
    'Ethnic Cleansing in Progress: The War in Nagorno Karabakh'.

    It would be a great pity if Robert Fisk were to lose credibility of
    his main thesis by such an inappropriate comparison.
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