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  • History Confronted

    Financial Times, UK
    June 23 2012

    History confronted
    Review by Delphine Strauss

    A fresh perspective on the Armenian tragedy


    ?The Young Turks' Crime Against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and
    Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire, by Taner Akçam, Princeton
    University Press, RRP £27.95/$39.50, 528 pages

    `The dead who remain on the roads are to be removed and their corpses
    are to be thrown into the valleys, lakes or rivers, and the
    possessions that they have abandoned on the roads are to be taken and
    burned.'

    So wrote Talat Pasha, Ottoman minister of the interior, in a telegram
    sent on July 21 1915 to provincial governors carrying out the
    deportation of Anatolia's Armenian population. It is bureaucratic
    asides such as this that shock in a newly translated book by Taner
    Akçam, known as one of the first Turkish academics to challenge
    Turkey's official denial that the resulting mass killings represented
    genocide.

    Bitter divisions over this bloody episode, which Armenians claim led
    to the deaths of up to 1.5m people, have long poisoned Turkey's
    overseas relations. Here, Akçam attempts to break the deadlock in the
    historical debate. He underlines the futility of the frequent focus on
    a `hunt for one Holocaust-style final decision', arguing that the
    Armenians' annihilation was rather `the cumulative outcome of a series
    of increasingly radical decisions'.

    Instead of seeking evidence of a single, central order to exterminate
    the Armenians in Ottoman archives ` from which incriminating evidence
    may well have been removed ` Akçam argues that there is no real
    discrepancy between the Ottoman documents that do survive and the
    accounts of Armenian and foreign observers.

    The cables and court records he cites, many unpublished until now,
    show consistently that the central authorities ` whether or not they
    ordered the massacres ` were aware of the scale of the killings
    carried out by armed gangs, as well as of the deaths from hunger and
    exposure among Armenians forced on to the roads under inhuman
    conditions.

    Yet their concern was with clearing the corpses, or preventing local
    officials embezzling Armenian property, not with stopping it. They
    also sent continual requests for statistics on the number of Armenians
    remaining in each area, which they wanted to reduce to no more than 5
    or 10 per cent of the local population ` a policy, Akçam argues, that
    could only have been achieved by killing.

    Yet perhaps as important as such indications of official intent is
    Akçam's lucid account of the pressures driving Ottoman policy in the
    run-up to 1915. As the Ottoman empire ceded one western province after
    another to emerging nations in the Balkan wars of 1912-13, Muslim
    refugees flooded eastward into Anatolia. There were population
    exchanges with Bulgaria and Greece, and attacks on Greek villages
    intended to persuade the Christian population to emigrate.

    The Armenians, however, came to be seen as an existential threat to
    the survival of the Ottoman state. The fear was that, with Russian
    support, they could unite to form an autonomous government in eastern
    Anatolia ` and this fear became acute in 1915 as Russian troops
    crossed the Ottoman border.

    Akçam stresses that this in no way justifies the official Turkish
    version of events, which implies that when an ethnic group is seen as
    a threat to the state, its wholesale deportation and the deaths that
    inevitably result are acceptable. `The current framing of this debate,
    especially in Turkey, shows that the fundamental moral issue has yet
    to be addressed,' he writes, criticising the endless tug-of-war over
    whether the word `genocide' should apply. `Regardless of the term
    used, it is necessary to fully confront the immense human tragedy
    whose repetition must absolutely be prevented.'

    Akçam has long courted controversy in Turkey, where he was jailed as a
    student activist in the 1970s before claiming asylum in Germany, but
    his intellectual courage is beyond question. Moreover, while Turkey's
    official account of what happened in 1915 is unchanged, Turkish public
    and intellectual opinion is now much more open to debate. This
    dispassionate, scholarly study is a valuable contribution to help that
    debate move on.

    Delphine Strauss is the FT's deputy comment editor and a former Ankara
    correspondent

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/38ede876-bb0e-11e1-81e0-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1yeI01AUk



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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