Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia's Tears

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia's Tears

    FrontPage magazine.com, CA
    May 2 2005


    Armenia's Tears

    By Alyssa A. Lappen
    FrontPageMagazine.com | May 2, 2005

    April 24, 2005 marked the 90th "anniversary" of the Armenian
    genocide. With the purpose of decapitating the Armenian community, on
    April 24, 1915, Turkish Interior Minister Mehmed Talaat ordered the
    arrest of all Armenian political and community leaders suspected of
    opposing the Ittihad (~SYoung Turk~T) government, or favoring Armenian
    nationalism. In Istanbul alone, 2,345 seized leaders were
    incarcerated, and most were subsequently executed. None were
    nationalists, political or charged with sabotage, espionage, or any
    other crime. None were even tried.1 According to Turkish author Taner
    Akcam, systematic plunder, raids, and murders of Armenians were
    already occurring daily, under the pretexts of ~Ssearching for arms,
    of collecting war levies, or tracking down deserters...~T 2 Within a
    month, the final, definitive mass deportations of the Armenian
    genocide would begin.3

    In recognition of that anniversary, I interviewed Vahakn Dadrian,
    the world's preeminent scholar of the Armenian genocide. The author
    of Warrant for Genocide and The History of the Armenian Genocide in
    March and April alone received two lifetime achievement awards~Wfrom
    the Annual Scholars' Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches,
    and from the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles. Dadrian studied
    mathematics, history and international law at the Universities of
    Berlin, Vienna and Zürich before earning his Ph.D. in sociology from
    the University of Chicago. He has been a Research Fellow at Harvard
    University, a guest professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology and a visiting professor at Duke University, received two
    large National Science Foundation grants and for years headed a
    genocide study project for the H. F. Guggenheim Foundation. From 1970
    to 1991, he taught sociology at the State University of New York. In
    1998, he received the Khorenatsi Medal, Armenia's highest cultural
    award. He currently heads Genocide Research at the Zoryan Institute.

    *

    Q. I'd like to know about your recent lifetime achievement award.



    A. Which one there are many.



    Q. The recent one.



    A. The work by the specialists of the Holocaust [in Los Angeles] was
    a lifetime achievement in the area of the general genocide studies
    and the Armenian genocide in particular. Five years ago, the same
    assembly of Holocaust scholars had invited me to deliver a keynote
    address on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the Holocaust
    conference, along with the Nobel prize laureate, Eli Wiesel and
    distinguished Holocaust scholar Yehuda Bauer. When I finished my
    recent delivery to the holocaust scholars, I got a standing ovation.
    Several people were unhappy that I couldn't speak longer. One female
    graduate student came to me, it is very funny, it never happened, and
    said at her table, they were betting that I was reading rather than
    speaking and she asked me to verify. I said, no, I never read, I
    always speak, I never read from notes.



    Q. Does Yehuda Bauer recognize the Armenian genocide.



    A. Bauer is one of the few holocaust scholars who does recognize the
    Armenian genocide, and tells everybody that whatever he knows about
    the subject comes from Dadrian.



    Q. Well it's true, you have written an encyclopedia. What are the
    most important sources for your study, because I noticed in the
    background, you try not to use British, French, Russian sources.



    A. You are so prepared. It is a pity this is for Internet.



    Q. Most readers are not familiar with the historical background, so
    could you briefly review the Abdul Hamit era, and the triumvirate of
    the Young Turks or the Ittihad, in other words, the origin of the
    genocide.



    A. The Armenian genocide was the culmination of a decades long
    process of persecution of the Armenians in the Ottoman empire. That
    persecution was punctuated in the last two decades of the 19th
    century during the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamit, the so-called Red
    Sultan.



    Q. Red for blood?



    A. Yes. In the period of 1894-1896, some quarter of a million
    Armenians fell victim, directly and indirectly, victim to a series of
    atrocious massacres, and what is significant about these pogroms was
    that there was no retribution against the perpetrators. In other
    words, impunity became the hallmark of the history of the Armenian
    persecution and it is the dominant feature of the tragedy of the
    Armenian people. We have yet to appreciate the incredible
    ramifications of the problem of impunity in international conflicts.
    In the most recent three volume Encyclopedia of Genocide, I have a
    separate article analyzing this problem in order to emphasize [its]
    immense destructive potential.



    Q. Well was the Armenia genocide the first time this happened.



    A. No, I will explain what happened. The subsequent 1909 Adana
    massacres was a byproduct, in my judgment, of this phenomenon of
    impunity, even though it was carried out by a successor regime,
    namely the Young Turk, Ittihad triumvirate, [Constantinople military
    governor Ahmed Djemal Pasha, war minister Enver Pasha and interior
    minister Mehmed Talaat] and I maintain that the world war and the
    Armenian genocide is the culmination of the consequences of impunity
    accruing to the perpetrators of the massacres of the previous
    decades.



    Q. Please elaborate.



    A. As I see it, impunity is intimately linked to the problem of
    vulnerability that has been the curse of minorities, such as the
    Armenians and the Jews. I believe that impunity lies at the heart of
    the vulnerability of the potential victims. If you examine the two
    most prominent vulnerable minorities in modern history, that is the
    Armenians and Jews, you will see that the vulnerability was of dual
    character. First internally, which is associated with the status of
    minority. Minority status implies a number of disabilities that make
    them vulnerable. But equally and perhaps more importantly, both
    victim groups were vulnerable also externally, that is, they did not
    have a parent state to protect them. So I therefore maintain that
    genocide is intimately linked with the problem of vulnerability of
    the victim population.



    Q. One thing I did before I came was to look at some maps, and
    Salonika is Greece, but it was part of the Ottoman empire. Can you
    talk about the changes of the map from 1910 to



    A. There was very little change, because, geographically, the
    Armenian population remained constant within the confines of the
    Ottoman empire. In other words, there was a heavy concentration of
    the Armenian population in the 6 eastern provinces of the empire. It
    was historically and geographically Armenia, but it was never
    politically a separate Armenian state. Ottoman Armenians were a
    subject population. There was one minor change in boundaries. That
    was at the end of the 1877-78 Russo Turkish war, when Russia occupied
    the provinces of Kars and Ardahan, and therefore presently, Armenian
    territorial claims have relevance only with respect to those two
    provinces that they have considered part of Southeast Russia since
    1877-78. So therefore the Armenians claim that it was reoccupied
    illegally by the Ottomans at the end of World War I, even though it
    was Ottoman territory before the 1877-78 war that Ottoman Turks had
    lost to the Russians.



    Q. But Greece was part of the Ottoman empire, Syria was part of the
    Ottoman empire, all these countries that are now separate, were part
    of the empire. It was huge.



    A. It was a huge empire, and the tragedy of the Armenian genocide is
    intimately linked to the massive shrinking of that empire.



    Q. Explain.



    A. Beginning with the end of the Russo Turkish war, one by one, the
    Christian nationalities of the Balkan peninsula emancipated
    themselves from the yoke of the Ottoman empire, and that process of
    emancipation reached its acme in the 1912 first Balkan war. It was in
    the fall of 1912 that the Ottoman Turks were literally expelled from
    Europe with grave consequences involving demography, human misery,
    destitution, frustration and anger against Christianity. I believe
    that this cumulative hatred against Christians very significantly
    played out in the World War I genocide, because many of the
    organizers and the perpetrators of the genocide were destitute
    refugees of the first Balkan war. All their cumulative hatred against
    non-Muslims and Christians was transferred into anti-Armenian
    savagery. We call this in social psychology displaced aggression. And
    even some Turkish historians recognize that in this sense the
    Armenians were the unfortunate targets, the scapegoats.



    Q. Talk about it please.



    A. The Bulgarians and Greeks were the main driving force in pushing
    the Ottomans out of the Balkans. This problem has not been
    sufficiently appreciated. Namely, the instrumental role of refugees
    of the first Balkan war in the Armenian genocide. For example,
    interior minister Talaat appointed 5,000 of them exclusively as
    gendarmes, and the gendarmes were the main escort personnel of the
    deportee convoys. Thousands of them were escorts.



    Q. The Kurds, the Circassians.



    A. The Kurds played a role in the utmost eastern provinces,
    particularly in Van and Bitlis. So in the Van and Bitlis segments,
    the Kurdish tribes were the principal instrument of the genocide. To
    illustrate the point, Mush city and Mush plain is the heart of
    historic Armenia. The golden age of Armenian civilization in the 5th
    century, Christianity, monasteries, the discovery of the Armenian
    alphabet, were all concentrated in that Mush plain. Mush city had
    about 15,000 Armenians and Mush plain is about 90 miles in length and
    had about 100,000 Armenian population. The overwhelming majority of
    this Armenian population experienced the most gruesome form of
    genocide, namely being herded into stables and burned alive. A
    veritable holocaust. So this is the real holocaust, burning alive,
    and this was done by the area's Kurdish tribes.



    Q. A lot of the methodologies were later used in the Nazi period.
    Burning and drowning.



    A. There was some of this in the Jewish holocaust, but in the
    Armenian genocide, it was massive. It was the main instrument but
    also in Harput, and Mush were massive episodes of burning. There is a
    description by a Jewish eyewitness of the massive burning of Armenian
    orphans.



    Q. I recall this from your article.



    A. Of course, speaking of methods of genocide, another ghastly method
    that is unique to the Armenian genocide is the massive drowning
    operations. In particular in the Black sea coast, involving such
    cities as Trabzon, Samsun and Ordu, and many of the tributaries of
    the Euphrates River, in particular there is a spot of the Euphrates,
    north of Erzurum city, called the Kemach Gorge, where nearly 20,000
    to 25,000 were mutilated and thrown into the river. And Ambassador
    Morgenthau says in his memoirs that at that spot in the river, the
    corpses were so massive that the river changed course for about 100
    meters.



    Q. Clearly there is a dispute about the statistics. What are your
    estimates and how do you source that.



    A. I am glad that you used the word estimates, because given the
    primitive conditions of the empire and the statistics, there are no
    definite and reliable statistics. They are all estimates. I estimate
    that the number of dead as a result of the deportations and massacres
    [during the World War I genocide] was 1.2 million and an additional
    several hundred thousand succumbed subsequently to their deprivations
    and hardships. Included in that category are also tens of thousands
    of forcible conversions to Islam of children and women, orphans and
    harem victims. And I rely mostly on German estimates, and this is
    more acceptable because, unlike the British and the French, Germany
    was the military ally of the Ottoman empire.



    Q. Does that include the massacres of 1894 to 1896?



    A. No. My estimates for the victims of the Abdul Hamit era massacres,
    direct and indirect, is some 200,000 because large numbers of
    Armenians succumbed to the wounds inflicted in the massacres. There
    is one more thing. During the same massacres, in the aftermath of
    them, many Armenians died of famine. Indeed, because of the
    cataclysmic events of the massacres, tens of thousands of other
    Armenians succumbed to famine, starvation.



    Q. Now, let's discuss the importance of Islam in these events.



    A. Now we come to the delicate issue of Islam.



    Q. It's pretty clear in Warrant for Genocide that Islamic teaching
    and practice is a problem and that religion played a big role in
    this.



    A. A very big role. First of all, Islam played a major role both in
    the period of the Abdul Hamit massacres [1894-1896] and the 1909
    Adana massacres and the World War I genocide. During the Abdul Hamit
    era, Islam was the main impetus, the direct impetus of the massacres,
    because 90 percent of the massacres took place on Fridays, which is
    the religious holiday. Immediately at the end of the religious
    ceremonies in the mosques, the mobs, harangued by Muslim clerics,
    were incited and as a result the motivation was reinforced to attack
    and massacre the Armenian population of the respective regions. In
    other words, Islam as an institution, and champions of Islam, the
    Muslim clerics, played a major role in the organization and execution
    of the series of massacres. In World War I, Islam also was exploited
    by way of formally declaring jihad, the main target of which became
    the Christian Armenians. Holy War can only be proclaimed by the
    sultan who is also the Khalif, the supreme religious authority, and
    the Sheikh ul Islam, the religious head of Islam. One of the greatest
    incentives of jihad for motivating people to kill is the promise of
    celestial bliss, and other kinds of rewards in heaven. This played a
    major role in mobilizing the masses, the naïve masses. In Archbishop
    Balakian's book, the Armenian Golgotha, there are scenes in which,
    after every massacre, the head of the gendarmes units, spread his
    prayer rug and thanked god for serving him through jihad-borne
    massacres massacres.



    Q. Was Islam the state ideology during the Ittihadists rule?



    A. Let me move to the era of World War I, and Islam, there is a very
    significant aspect to it. The authors of the Armenian genocide, the
    Young Turks, were almost entirely either atheistic or agnostic, they
    did not believe in religion, but they had to exploit the religious
    beliefs of the masses. So Islam was instrumental in this condition of
    paradox of irreligious leaders are seen exploiting religion.



    Q. So they used Islam.



    A. They exploited Islam and in both instances, the Abdul Hamid era
    and the World War I era, many many times victims were given the
    option of converting to Islam or to be killed instantly. And in that
    connection, I consider the condition of the Armenians very very grave
    when projecting into the future.



    Q. From now.



    A. Yes, because Armenia is literally surrounded by Moslem populations
    and the growing trend of Islam renders the condition of Armenia very
    very precarious.



    Q. What's the population now.



    A. I think in a few months there will be a census. Unofficially,
    right now it's 3.2 million, but officially maybe 2.5 million. So
    Armenia is shrinking, because of economic conditions, but I will also
    add that recourse to exodus has been the curse of Armenian history.
    Armenians tend to migrate, and it is very significant that
    historically the largest Armenian populations in the Caucasus have
    been concentrated in Georgia and Azerbaijan, , i.e. Tbilisi and Baku,
    more than in Armenia proper. This is a weakness of the Armenians, not
    to hold on to their natural habitat, and to seek fortunes abroad.
    Thousands now, some of them justifiably, but some of them
    unjustifiably, are abandoning Armenia.



    I believe that the greatest danger to Armenia comes from Islamic
    Turkey. I think the Turkish government that is also essentially
    Islamic, even though the Turkish government is going through the
    motions of embracing European values, I call this expedient
    adaptiveness. That is, to accede to the European Union, and then to
    use sheer demography, to become a dominant force in the future in
    Europe. By sheer demography, I mean by rapid population growth,
    Europe may be inundated by Moslem Turks, who then are bound to change
    the nature and design of European civilization. It should be noted
    that the present Turkish government is a reflection of an
    overwhelming ascendancy of Islam in Turkey, in particular in terms of
    the Islamic Turkish masses, The proliferation of mosques in Turkey
    today is a signpost of the ascendancy of Islam; the same
    proliferation is observable in those European countries with sizable
    and growing Muslim populations.



    Q. Really a bad thing for Turkey to be admitted to the EU.



    A. It is a major liability for Europe to embrace Turkey [but] I am
    not sure that the prospects are favorable for Turkey. It may well be
    that European leaders are using the prospects of accession to the
    European Union as a device to transform Turkey into a democratic
    country, but it's an attempt with dubious prospects of success. I
    think Europe may be using the prospects of [Turkey's] accession as a
    subterfuge.



    Q. Interesting that you talked about the present government.



    A. The present government is secular, but on the surface. They are
    essentially Islamic people with Islamic ambitions. I call this
    adaptive expediency. The tremendous political rapprochement of the
    present [Islamist] Erdogon government demonstrates immense agility,
    but which, I think, is superficial. All the reforms that the Turkish
    government is adopting now are essentially meant to accommodate
    Europe expeditiously.



    Q. Reflective of history isn't it. This is what happened in the 19th
    Century and 20th Century reforms that were in name only.



    A. Tanzimat reforms [forced on the Ottomans by Europe from 1839 to
    1876] never gained a foothold in Anatolia amongst the masses. It was
    a superficial phenomenon limited to the Europeanized leadership in
    Istanbul. There was massive resistance to the Tanzimat reforms in the
    provinces. But bear in mind that the Ottoman empire during the reign
    of sultan Hamit had very little connection to Turks or Turkey, but
    rather to Islam. Up to that time, there was no Turkish nationalism.
    And it is very significant that in all the discussions of the
    Armenian question in the 19th Century, they always use the sentence
    Armenians versus Moslem's, never Turks. So as a result, non-Turks,
    i.e., Kurds, Circassians, Chechens, were subsumed under Muslims
    without differentiating them ethnically or nationality.



    Q. But they had pretense historically, to reform on the surface, but
    nothing really changed. It's like now.



    A. You have to differentiate between European capital of the Ottoman
    Empire, Istanbul, and the backward provinces of Turkey. There was
    always a cleavage, a gap, between the capital of the empire and the
    coastal cities like Smyrna, Adana and Trabzon on the one hand, and
    the rest of the empire on the other. Indeed, the interior underwent
    very little change.



    Q. And that is true now also. A. To some extent, yes.



    Q. Would you say that now, there is a call to jihad.



    A. Jihad is a byproduct of warfare and hence it is a call to war;
    presently, only terrorists are using it. This is the most belligerent
    aspect of Islam, the provision for holy war, to which it
    differentiates from Christianity. The propensity for lethal violence
    is a central element.



    Q. Jihad is not a big factor now.



    A. No, Jihad is a condition of warfare. It sanctifies murder with a
    promise of rewards. This is the most interesting part of jihad, that
    it holds out rewards, celestial bliss.



    Q. Well it is also the assets of the murdered people, their land,
    their property.



    A. Yes, in addition to the celestial promises, there are mundane
    rewards, i.e. plunder, enrichment, sexual gratification, sexual
    designs. Rape has been a major ingredient of all massacres in the
    Ottoman empire, which is of course a common phenomenon in all
    episodes of atrocities.



    Q. Can you talk about your family and your background. What
    interested you in the first place.



    A. I was a student of mathematics in Berlin, but then I went to the
    University of Vienna, since it is customary in Europe to change
    universities after two or three semesters. And I went to the
    University of Vienna and my teacher upon learning that I am an
    Armenian, told me that he was a classmate of Franz Werfel, the author
    of Forty Days of Musa Dagh. So he urged me to read Forty Days of Musa
    Dagh, and I read it. Forty Days of Musa Dagh was a turning point in
    my education. I read it twice in its original German, and this was
    the first time that I had a powerful sense of injustice that has been
    afflicting my people. Such a crime of magnitude, and no retributive
    justice. That was my main and powerful experience of rebellion at the
    time.



    Q. How old were you.



    A. I was 21. Then I read a second book, Archbishop Balakian's
    Armenian Golgotha, a book full of graphic descriptions of atrocity.
    Then another thing that was really final straw was a scene that is
    deeply ingrained in my psyche. It was a book by Leon Surmelian,
    titled I Ask you Ladies and Gentlemen. He was adopted as a young
    child to serve, tending animals, as a shepherd to a Muslim family,
    and there was a scene of a massacre nearby, and a woman in the throes
    of dying recognized that this boy was an Armenian and said, my child,
    if you ever manage to survive, please see to it that our martyrdom is
    not consigned to oblivion, that we are remembered. This impressed me
    terribly: the last wish of a dying victim of a massacre is not to be
    consigned to oblivion but to be remembered. It is a very powerful
    thing. So after that, I relinquished my interest in math and became
    fully engrossed in the history of the Armenian genocide. So after
    reading these books, my first step was to branch off into archive
    research. I visited the state archives of the German republic almost
    14 times, digging into every possible German document, then I went to
    the Austrian state archive several times, collecting hundreds and
    hundreds of other documents, fully cognizant of the fact that these
    two countries were the military allies of Ottoman empire during the
    war. Then I studied the Jerusalem archives of the Armenian
    Patriarchate because the Armenian Patriarch after the armistice had
    collected many many documents of the Turkish military tribunal that
    was set up during the armistice. The Turks in the post-war period had
    initiated courts martial against perpetrators and during the courts
    martial, many documents came into the possession of the tribunal. And
    Armenian employees of the court martial at night stole the documents
    and copied them and then returned them in the morning. Then of
    course, there are surviving Ottoman documents. As I mentioned many
    times, a crime of such great magnitude is impossible to have all the
    documents disappear. Almost always, some documents survive. So there
    is a considerable body of authentic Ottoman documents that the
    military tribunal acquired, authenticated and used.



    Q. What about your own family experience.



    A. My family largely survived the genocide, because my father was
    very popular among the Turks. He was a judge, and I understand that
    he was very respected for his sense of probity and justice. At one
    time, he was even urged by his Turkish colleagues to become a deputy
    of Chorum, and he refused. I understand also that I come from a very
    wealthy family. My grandfather erected the church of Chorum, and my
    father built the school at Chorum, as a result the Patriarch issued
    an encyclical declaring the Dadrian family national benefactors. I
    have lots of title deeds documenting amassed wealth in Chorum
    involving Dadrian family properties. But I am prepared to relinquish
    any claim on property if the Turks recognize the genocide. A sizable
    portion of the city of Chorum was owned by the Dadrian family but I
    am an academician, and I have an aversion against wealth and greed.



    Q. It's very striking to read about the Constantinople Conference and
    the pressure to accommodate Turkey on reforms, so they watered
    everything down.



    A. In the Abdul Hamit era, the Constantinople Conference was a
    failure because Abdul Hamit absolutely refused to grant European
    control over Ottoman reforms in the provinces. The European powers
    insisted that the reforms be supervised by the powers, and the sultan
    said, this is a sticking point; he said that this is an encroachment
    on Ottoman sovereignty. Another delicate point in the Constantinople
    Conference was the issue of non-Muslims, Christians, having the
    right to bear arms. And the Sheikh ul Islam said categorically no,
    our subjects, non-Muslims can never be armed, and this is the heart
    and soul of Armenian vulnerability. When you are surrounded by people
    armed to the teeth and you have no way of defending yourself, you
    learn the art of submissiveness as a means of survival. This was the
    case with the Jews. Submissiveness becomes a survival technique,
    because if you don't submit, you are done. So five centuries of
    abject submissiveness nipped in the bud the Armenian spirit of
    combativeness and self-defense. And it is very significant that the
    few citadels of Armenian heroism and self-defense were locations
    where Armenians were armed, such as Sassun and Zeitun, this is north
    of Hajun near Adana. And other ones, such as Shabin Karaisor, and
    Urfa and Musa Dagh, of course. So mountain Armenians took advantage
    of the landscape and mounted self-defense. They had been armed for
    centuries, primitive, very primitive arms.



    Q. What would you say were the most important factors were the
    warrant for genocide.



    A. Two factors stand out. The extreme vulnerability of the Armenians,
    and the constancy of impunity with which the perpetrators have been
    rewarded, vulnerability and impunity.



    Q. Do you have any optimism that Turkey will recognize the genocide
    for what it was.



    A. No. Because as I said, vulnerability is a function of power
    relations. Vulnerable means that you are impotent, and the
    perpetrators are powerful. This is the relationship between victims
    and perpetrators. And today, Turkey is even more powerful than during
    the massacres, and as long as that power position holds, there is
    very little incentive for any perpetrator to concede guilt. The only
    prospect of recognition by the Turks can be if there is a civil war,
    Turkey is terribly weakened, destitute, as was the case at the end of
    the war, in the two years before the rise of Kemalism. Turkey was
    completely ready to acknowledge guilt and to compensate.



    Q. So why didn't they.



    A. The ascendancy of Kemalism changed the picture dramatically.
    Abject weakness was transformed into defiant power.



    Q. Some would say that if the U.S. and Israel accepted the genocide,
    then Turkey would recognize it, and they should.



    A. I doubt it. As long as Turkey has the power and leverage it has,
    not even God can change the conditions. We cannot afford to
    underestimate the leverage of power. Power tends to make people
    arrogant, willfully deceitful and manipulative, especially in the
    Orient.



    Q. But Israel should recognize the genocide. There are Zionists who
    recognize the genocide.



    A. There is one remote possibility of recognition by Turkey, and that
    is if and when there emerges in Turkey today what we call a potent
    civil society that can challenge the omnipotent state. Turkey has
    always been ruled by an omnipotent state. In Turkey, the concept of
    devlet, state, is an all-embracing concept. Turks worship their state
    and they have always been submissive. But now, there are signs of the
    development of a middle class civil society that is posed to question
    and challenge the omnipotence of the state, in particular as regards
    the Armenian genocide. Next month, in Istanbul, three major
    universities will conduct a conference focusing on the Armenian
    genocide in which they will challenge the doctrines of the Turkish
    Historical Society, which is an arm of the state. In no democratic
    country can you see an academic organization such as a historical
    society being an arm of the state. They mimic, they copy, they
    emulate, they reflect the position of the state. Now these
    universities are saying enough is enough. Historical study should be
    detached from the state.



    Q. So the factors behind the genocide were the Armenian victims'
    vulnerability and the perpetrator power of the Turks.



    A. Genocide almost always presupposes the power of the perpetrator
    against the vulnerability of the victims.



    Q. Could it happen again.



    A. Only if there is an armed conflict. I think, I am convinced that
    deep in their hearts, the Turks would like to do away with Armenia,
    because it is a constant reminder of this terrible blot in Turkish
    history. In fact, I think they would have achieved their goal of
    wiping out Armenia completely in the Fall of 1920 if it weren't for
    the intervention of the 11th Red Army that marched into Armenia and
    imposed communism. In 1920, the fledgling and ill-equipped Armenian
    army was defeated by the Turkish armies, and Armenia, or what was
    left of it, wouldn't have survived but for the intervention of the
    Red Army that preempted the Turkish conquest of Armenia by marching
    into Armenia and for all practical purposes rescuing it from near
    obliteration.



    1. Uras E., The Armenians and the Armenian Question in History, 2nd
    ed., (Istanbul, 1976), p.612.

    2. Akcam T., Turkish National Identity and the Armenian Question,
    (Istanbul, 1992), p. 109.

    3. Hovanissian R., Armenia on the Road to Independence, (Berkeley,
    CA, 1967), p. 51.

    http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17910

    --Boundary_(ID_Io0lE7tEOCdn6VPLvPGwIw)--
Working...
X