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Calling a Crime by its Name; America and the Armenian Genocide

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  • Calling a Crime by its Name; America and the Armenian Genocide

    Opinion Editorials, VA
    April 29 2005


    Calling a Crime by its Name; America and the Armenian Genocide
    Sean Gannon

    Regrettably, the United States has once again allowed the April 24th
    commemorations of the Armenian Genocide to pass without calling the
    crime by its name. On that date in 1915, 250 Armenian leaders and
    intellectuals were
    deported from Constantinople and subsequently tortured and killed,
    the beginning of a campaign which resulted in up to one and a half
    million Armenian Ottoman subjects dead and a further one million in
    exile. While Turkish threats to cancel lucrative defence contracts
    and curb use of military airbases kept Bill Clinton onside, it was
    rumoured that President Bush would use this year's 90th
    anniversary to end U.S. appeasement of Ankara by recognizing these
    deaths as genocide. Sadly, such speculation appears to have been
    unfounded.

    Turkey, of course, strenuously rejects the genocide charge and
    accuses Armenia, and in particular America's sizeable Armenian
    community, of wilfully disseminating an inaccurate picture of what
    happened in the World War I period and why. And to be fair, there is
    an element of truth in Ankara's claim that the situation in Anatolia
    in 1915 was not as clear cut as is generally presented today.
    For instance, it is rarely acknowledged that the rise of Armenian
    nationalism in the 19th century led to enormous tensions between
    Armenians and their Ottoman overlords with the result that many took
    sides against the Empire in 1828, 1854 and 1877. It is also
    infrequently admitted that although 250,000 Armenians were
    conscripted into the Ottoman armies during World War I, another
    150,000, out of
    a sense of religious affinity with the Orthodox Slavs and in the hope
    that a Russian victory would lead to an independent Armenian state,
    volunteered to serve in the Czarist forces while a further 50,000
    joined various guerrilla groups such as the Dashnaks and the Huchnaks
    who openly sided with Nicholas II against the Central Powers. And
    seldom spoken of is the fact that about 200,000
    Moslems, Greeks and Jews died directly at their hands.

    But while it is then perhaps understandable that the Ottomans came to
    view the Armenians as a fifth column within the Empire, there was no
    justification for their
    response to this perceived problem. Aside from the fact that the
    treasonable tendencies of a substantial minority can never be used to
    justify the wholesale slaughter of the substantial majority, it is
    clear from non-partisan sources that the massacres and deportations
    of Armenian civilians began before the rampages by Armenian regular
    and irregular forces through Anatolia. As David Fromkin,
    who studied German sources for his acclaimed book on the period
    writes; "There are historians today who continue to support the claim
    of Enver and Talaat that the Ottoman rulers acted only after Armenia
    had risen against them. But observers at the time who were by no
    means anti-Turk reported that such was not the case. German officers
    stationed there agreed that the area was quiet until the deportations
    began."

    In any case, Ankara continues to deny that a substantial majority of
    Armenians were actually murdered during the War. While some Turkish
    historians go so far
    as to allow that up to 600,000 Armenians died during the period in
    question, the semi-official Turkish Historical Society maintains that
    the figure is closer to 300,000 and that, of these, only 10,000 were
    massacred, the remainder dying of the starvation and disease which is
    the inevitable accompaniment of war. It further claims that these
    10,000 were killed, not as the result of any master plan to rid the
    Empire of a turbulent minority, but in the heat of battle and more
    often than not by non-Turkish Kurds.

    But it is a matter of historical record that there existed the
    "Special Organization," an official department of the Central
    Government which oversaw the activities of Einsatzgruppen-style
    killing squads which, in the words of one American diplomat,
    travelled around Anatolia "massacring men, women and children and
    burning their homes. Babies were shot in their mothers' arms, small
    children were horribly mutilated, women were stripped and beaten."

    Furthermore, Turkey's claim that the Kurds were primarily responsible
    for the killing is disingenuous in the extreme. For a start, the mass
    murder of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks was not unprecedented, having occurred between 1894
    and 1896 and again in 1909. Certainly Kurds were involved in the
    events of 1915-1923 but they were consciously co-opted by Enver Pasha
    for the purpose of
    massacring Armenians in the knowledge that their historic blood
    enemies would lose no opportunity to avenge ancient and
    not-so-ancient grudges. Therefore, the army command in Constantinople
    was fully culpable for the anti-Armenian
    activities of its Kurdish battalions.

    In addition, Turkey's drawing of a distinction between those who died
    directly at the hands of the Ottomans and indirectly from starvation,
    exposure and disease
    is entirely unsustainable. With no provisions made for clothing, food
    or shelter, the anticipated outcome of the forced deportations of
    Armenians into the Syrian deserts was obviously death. Indeed, Talaat
    Pasha termed them "marches to eternity" and his meaning was
    manifestly clear to his appalled Austrian and German allies who went
    to great lengths to distance themselves from the policy.
    To say that the Armenians who died during the deportations were not
    deliberately killed by the Ottomans is akin to claiming that no
    intentional Jewish deaths occurred during 'relocation to the East'
    during the Second World War or on the 'death marches' to the West
    which followed the Russian advances in 1944 and
    1945.

    So, by any international standard, the events of 1915-1923
    constituted genocide, the Ottoman campaign against the Armenians in
    this period conforming to the accepted 1948 U.N. definition in having
    being "committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
    national, ethnical, racial, or religious group." An American
    acknowledgement of this fact is long overdue and, with U.S./Turkish
    relations in the doldrums since the invasion of Iraq, President Bush
    has for once little to lose by extending it.

    http://www.opinioneditorials.com/freedomwriters/sgannon_20050429.html
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