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  • Ankara's Unacknowledged Genocide

    Ankara's Unacknowledged Genocide

    The Middle East Quarterly
    Winter 2013
    Volume XX: Number 1
    pp. 17-26

    by Efraim Karsh

    It is commonplace among Middle East scholars across the political
    spectrum to idealize the Ottoman colonial legacy as a shining example
    of tolerance. "The multi-ethnic Ottoman Turkish Empire," wrote
    American journalist Robert Kaplan, "was more hospitable to minorities
    than the uni-ethnic democratic states that immediately succeeded it
    ... Violent discussions over what group got to control which territory
    emerged only when the empire came to an end, after World War I."[1]

    Bernard Lewis went a significant step further, ascribing the wholesale
    violence attending the collapse of the Ottoman Empire to attempts to
    reform its Islamic sociopolitical order. "The classical Ottoman
    Empire enabled a multiplicity of religious and ethnic groups to live
    side by side in mutual tolerance and respect, subject only to the
    primacy of Islam and the supremacy of the Muslims," he wrote. "The
    liberal reformers and revolutionaries who abolished the old order and
    proclaimed the constitutional equality of all Ottoman citizens led
    the Ottoman Empire into the final bitter and bloody national
    struggles-the worst by far in the half-millennium of its history."[2]
    And Edward Said, in an exceptional display of unanimity with his
    intellectual foe, was similarly effusive. "What they had then seems a
    lot more humane than what we have now," he argued. "Of course, there
    were inequities. But they lived without this ridiculous notion that
    every millet has to have its own state."[3]

    Even Elie Kedourie, whose view of Ottoman colonialism was far less
    sentimental, could see some advantages in the empire's less than
    perfect sociopolitical order: "Ottoman administration was certainly
    corrupt and arbitrary, but it was ramshackle and inefficient and left
    many interstices by which the subject could hope to escape its
    terrors, and bribery was a traditional and recognized method of
    mitigating severities and easing difficulties."[4]

    While there is no denying the argument's widespread appeal, there is
    also no way around the fact that, in almost every particular, it is
    demonstratively wrong. The imperial notion, by its very definition,
    posits the domination of one ethnic, religious, or national group over
    another, and the Ottoman Empire was no exception. It tolerated the
    existence of vast non-Muslim subject populations in its midst, as did
    earlier Muslim (and non-Muslim) empires-provided they acknowledged
    their legal and institutional inferiority in the Islamic order of
    things. When these groups dared to question their subordinate
    status=80'let alone attempt to break the Ottoman yoke-they were
    brutally suppressed, and none more so than the Armenians during World
    War I.

    Historical Context

    An important strand in Ottoman idealization has been the charge that
    it was the importation of European ideas to the empire, notably those
    of nationalism and statehood, that undermined the deeply ingrained
    regional order with devastating consequences to subjects and rulers
    alike. In Kedourie's words: "A rash, a malady, an infection spreading
    from Western Europe through the Balkans, the Ottoman empire, India,
    the Far East and Africa, eating up the fabric of settled society to
    leave it weakened and defenceless before ignorant and unscrupulous
    adventurers, for further horror and atrocity: Such are the terms to
    describe what the West has done to the rest of the world, not
    wilfully, not knowingly, but mostly out of excellent intentions and by
    example of its prestige and prosperity."[5]

    Evocative of the fashionable indictment of nationalism as the scourge
    of international relations, this prognosis is largely misconceived.
    For it is the desire to dominate foreign creeds, nations, or
    communities, and to occupy territories well beyond the "ancestral
    homeland" that contains the inevitable seeds of violence-not the wish
    to be allowed to follow an independent path of development. In each of
    imperialism's three phases-empire-building, administration, and
    disintegration-force was the midwife of the historical process as the
    imperial power vied to assert its authority and to maintain its
    control over perennially hostile populations; and while most empires
    have justified their position in terms of a civilizing mission of
    sorts, none willfully shed its colonies, let alone its imperial
    status, well after they had outlived their usefulness, or had even
    become a burden. Hence the disintegration of multinational,
    multidenominational, and multilingual empires has rarely been a
    peaceful process. On rare occasions-the collapse of the Soviet Union
    being a salient example-violence has followed the actual demise of the
    imperial power. In most instances, however, such as the collapse of
    the British, the French, and the Portuguese empires, among others,
    violence is endemic to the process of decolonization as the occupied
    peoples fight their way to national liberation.

    The Ottoman Empire clearly belonged to the latter category. A far cry
    from the tolerant and tranquil domain it is often taken for,
    Turkey-in-Europe was the most violent part of the continent during the
    century or so between the Napoleonic upheavals and World War I as the
    Ottomans embarked on an orgy of bloodletting in response to the
    nationalist aspirations of their European subjects. The Greek war of
    independence of the 1820s, the Danubian nationalist uprisings of 1848,
    the Balkan explosion of the 1870s, and the Greco-Ottoman war of
    1897-all were painful reminders of the cost of breaking free from an
    imperial master.[6] And all pale in comparison with the treatment
    meted out to the foremost nationalist awakening in Turkey-in-Asia: the
    Armenian.

    Prelude to Catastrophe

    Unlike Europe, where the rise of nationalism dealt a body blow to
    Ottoman imperialism, there was no nationalist fervor among the Ottoman
    Empire's predominantly Arabic-speaking Afro-Asian subjects. One
    historian has credibly estimated that a mere 350 activists belonged to
    all the secret Arab societies operating throughout the Middle East at
    the outbreak of World War I, and most of them were not seeking actual
    Arab independence but rather greater autonomy within the Ottoman
    Empire.[7] This made the rise of Armenian nationalism the foremost
    threat to Ottoman integrity in that part of the empire.

    By the second half of the nineteenth century, the Armenian population
    of the Ottoman Empire totaled some two million persons, three-quarters
    of whom resided in so-called Turkish Armenia, namely, the vilayets of
    Erzerum, Van, Bitlis, Sivas, Kharput, and Diarbekir in eastern
    Anatolia. The rest, about half a million Armenians, were equally
    distributed in the Istanbul-eastern Thrace region and in Cilicia, in
    southwestern Anatolia.[8]

    As a result of Russian agitation, European and American missionary
    work, and, not least, the nationalist revival in the Balkans, a surge
    of national consciousness began to take place within the three
    Armenian religious communities-Gregorian, Catholic, and Protestant. In
    the 1870s, Armenian secret societies sprang up at home and abroad,
    developing gradually into militant nationalist groups. Uprisings
    against Ottoman rule erupted time and again; terrorism became a common
    phenomenon, both against Turks and against noncompliant fellow
    Armenians-before it was eventually suppressed in a brutal campaign of
    repression in 1895-96, in which nearly 200,000 people perished and
    thousands more fled to Europe and the United States.

    Turkish Armenia did not remain quiet for long. By 1903, a vicious
    cycle of escalating violence was in operation yet again, and two years
    later, Turkish sultan Abdul Hamid narrowly escaped an assassination
    attempt by Armenian nationalists. In the early 1910s, despite years of
    cultural repression, including a ban on the public use of the Armenian
    language and a new round of horrendous massacres (in the spring of
    1909), Armenian nationalism had been fully rekindled. In April 1913,
    for example, Armenian nationalists asked Britain to occupy the
    southern region of Cilicia, from Antalya to Alexandretta, and to
    internationalize Istanbul and the straits as a means of "repairing the
    iniquity of the [1878] Congress of Berlin," which had stipulated
    Ottoman reforms "in the provinces inhabited by the Armenians." At
    about the same time, a committee of the Armenian National Assembly,
    the governing body of the Apostolic Ottoman Christians, submitted an
    elaborate reform plan for Ottoman Armenia to the Russian embassy in
    Istanbul.[9]

    Bowing to international pressure, in February 1914, the Ottoman
    authorities accepted a Russo-German proposal for the creation of two
    large Armenian provinces, to be administered by European
    inspectors-general appointed by the great powers. This was a far cry
    from the Armenians' aspirations for a unified independent state as its
    envisaged territory was partitioned into two separate entities rather
    than creating a cohesive whole, yet it was the most significant
    concession they had managed to extract from their suzerain, and most
    of them were anxious to preserve this gain come what may. Hence, when
    the Ottoman Empire entered World War I on the side of the
    German-Austro-Hungarian Triple Alliance, the Armenians immediately
    strove to demonstrate their loyalty: Prayers for an Ottoman victory
    were said in churches throughout the empire, and the Armenian
    patriarch of Istanbul, as well as several nationalist groups,
    announced their loyalty to the Ottoman Empire and implored the
    Armenian masses to perform their obligations to the best of their
    ability.

    Not everyone complied with this wish. Scores of Ottoman Armenians,
    including several prominent figures, crossed the border to assist the
    Russian campaign. Others offered to help the Anglo-French-Russian
    entente by different means. In February 1915, for example, Armenian
    revolutionaries in the Cilician city of Zeitun pledged to assist a
    Russian advance on the area provided they were given the necessary
    weapons; to the British, they promised help in the event of a naval
    landing in Alexandretta.[10]

    Although these activities were an exception to the otherwise loyal
    conduct of the Armenian community, they confirmed the Ottoman
    stereotype of the Armenians as a troublesome and treacherous
    people. This view was further reinforced by a number of crushing
    defeats in the Caucasus, in which (non-Ottoman) Armenians were
    implicated in the Russian war effort. Above all, as the largest
    nationally-aware minority in Asiatic Turkey, the Armenians constituted
    the gravest internal threat to Ottoman imperialism in that domain; and
    with Turkey-in-Europe a fading memory and Turkey-in-Africa under
    Anglo-French-Italian domination, the disintegration of Turkey-in-Asia
    would spell the end of the Ottoman Empire, something that its rulers
    would never accept.

    Before long, the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to the kind of
    retribution that had been inflicted on rebellious Middle Eastern
    populations since Assyrian and Babylonian times: deportation and
    exile. Having been rendered defenseless, they were uprooted from their
    homes and relocated to the most inhospitable corners of Ottoman Asia,
    with their towns and villages swiftly populated by new Muslims
    arrivals, and their property seized by the authorities or plundered by
    their Muslim neighbors.

    The Ethnic Cleansing of Turkish Armenia

    The first step in this direction was taken in early 1915 when Armenian
    soldiers in the Ottoman army were relegated to "labor battalions" and
    stripped of their weapons. Most of these fighters-turned-laborers
    would be marched out in droves to secluded places and shot in cold
    blood, often after being forced to dig their own graves. Those
    fortunate enough to escape summary execution were employed as laborers
    in the most inhumane conditions.

    At the same time, the authorities initiated a ruthless campaign to
    disarm the entire Armenian population of personal weapons before
    embarking on a genocidal spree of mass deportations and massacres. By
    the autumn of 1915, Cilicia had been ethnically cleansed and the
    authorities turned their sights on the foremost Armenian settlement
    area in eastern Anatolia. First to be cleansed was the zone bordering
    Van, extending from the Black Sea to the Iranian frontier and
    immediately threatened by Russian advance; only there did outright
    massacres often substitute for otherwise slow deaths along the
    deportation routes or in the concentration camps of the Syrian
    desert. In other districts of Ottoman Armenia, depopulated between
    July and September, the Turks attempted to preserve a semblance of a
    deportation policy though most deportees were summarily executed after
    hitting the road. In the coastal towns of Trebizond, for example,
    Armenians were sent out to sea, ostensibly for deportation, only to be
    thrown overboard shortly afterward. Of the deportees from Erzerum,
    Erzindjan, and Baibourt, only a handful survived the initial stages of
    the journey.[11]

    The Armenian population in western Anatolia and in the metropolitan
    districts of Istanbul was somewhat more fortunate as many people were
    transported in trains-although grossly overcrowded-for much of the
    deportation route, rather than having to straggle along by foot. In
    Istanbul, deportations commenced in late April when hundreds of
    prominent Armenians were picked up by the police and sent away, most
    of them never to be seen again; some five thousand "ordinary"
    Armenians soon shared their fate. Though the majority of the city's
    150,000-strong community escaped deportation, Armenians were squeezed
    out of all public posts with numerous families reduced to appalling
    poverty. Deportations in Ankara began toward the end of July; in
    Broussa, in the first weeks of September; and in Adrianople, in
    mid-October. By early 1916, scores of deportees, thrown into a string
    of concentration camps in the Syrian desert and along the Euphrates,
    were dying every day of malnutrition and diseases; many others were
    systematically taken out of the camps and shot.[12]

    The Ottoman authorities tried to put a gloss of legality and innocence
    on their actions. The general deportation decree of May 27, 1915, for
    example, instructed the security forces to protect the deportees
    against nomadic attacks, to provide them with sufficient food and
    supplies for their journey, and to compensate them with new property,
    land, and goods necessary for their resettlement. But this decree was
    a sham. For one thing, massacres and deportations had already begun
    prior to its proclamation. For another, as is overwhelmingly borne out
    by the evidence, given both by numerous firsthand witnesses to the
    Ottoman atrocities and by survivors, the rights granted by the
    deportation decree were never followed.

    Consider the provisions for adequate supplies for the journey and
    compensation for the loss of property. After the extermination of the
    male population of a particular town or village, an act normally
    preceding deportations, the Turks often extended a "grace period" to
    the rest of the populace, namely, women, children, and the old and the
    sick, so they could settle their affairs and prepare for their
    journey. But the term normally given was a bare week, and never more
    than two, which was utterly insufficient for all that had to be
    done. Moreover, the government often carried away its victims before
    the stated deadline, snatching them without warning from streets,
    places of employment, or even their beds. Last but not least, the
    local authorities prevented the deportees from selling their property
    or their stock under the official fiction that their expulsion was to
    be only temporary. Even in the rare cases in which Armenians managed
    to dispose of their property, their Muslim neighbors took advantage of
    their plight to buy their possessions at a fraction of their real
    value.[13]

    Nor did the deportees receive even a semblance of the protection
    promised by the deportation decree. On the contrary, from the moment
    they started on their march, indeed even before they had done so, they
    became public outcasts, never safe from the most atrocious outrages,
    constantly mobbed and plundered by the Muslim population as they
    straggled along. Their guards connived at this brutality. There were,
    of course, exceptions in which Muslims, including Turks, tendered help
    to the long-suffering Armenians, but these were very rare, isolated
    instances.

    Whenever the deportees arrived at a village or town, they were
    exhibited like slaves in a public place, often before the government
    building itself. Female slave markets were established in the Muslim
    areas through which the Armenians were driven, and thousands of young
    Armenian women and girls were sold in this way. Even the clerics were
    quick to avail themselves of the bargains of the white slave market.

    Suffering on the deportation routes was intense. Travelers on the
    Levantine railway saw dogs feeding on the bodies of hundreds of men,
    women, and children on both sides of the track, with women searching
    the clothing of the corpses for hidden treasure. In some of the
    transfer stations, notably Aleppo, the hub where all convoys
    converged, thousands of Armenians would be left for weeks outdoors,
    starving, waiting to be taken away. Epidemics spread rapidly, chiefly
    spot typhus. In almost all cases, the dead were not buried for days,
    the reason being, as an Ottoman officer cheerfully explained to an
    inquisitive foreigner, that it was hoped the epidemics might get rid
    of the Armenians once and for all.[14]

    As the deportees settled into their new miserable existence, they were
    forced to work at hard labor, making roads, opening quarries, and the
    like; for this, they were paid puny salaries, which effectively
    reduced them to starvation; work in the neighboring villages that
    could earn them some livelihood was strictly forbidden. Water was
    normally brought to the camps by trains; no springs were to be found
    within a radius of miles. The scenes at the arrival of the water
    trains, by no means a regular phenomenon, were
    heartbreaking. Thousands of people would rush toward the stopping
    place, earth-jars and tin cans in hand, in a desperate bid for their
    share of this elixir of life. But when at long last the taps were
    opened, people would often be barred from filling their vessels,
    having to watch the precious water running out on the sun-baked
    ground.

    Independent estimates of the precise extent of Armenian casualties
    differ somewhat, but all paint a stark picture of national
    annihilation. In his official report to the British parliament in July
    1916, Viscount Bryce calculated the total number of uprooted Armenians
    during the preceding year as 1,200,000 (half slain, half deported), or
    about two thirds of the entire community. Johannes Lepsius, the chief
    of the Protestant Mission in the Ottoman Empire who had personally
    witnessed the atrocities and had studied them thoroughly, put the
    total higher, at 1,396,000, as did the American Committee for Armenian
    and Syrian Relief, which computed the number of deaths at about
    600,000 and of deportees at 786,000. Aaron Aaronson, a world-renowned
    Zionist agronomist who set up the most effective
    pro-Anglo-French-Russian entente intelligence network in the Middle
    East during World War I, estimated the number of deaths at between
    850,000 and 950,000.[15]

    Genocide or "Collateral Damage"?

    Turkey has never acknowledged any wrongdoing vis-Ã -vis the
    Armenians. While some leaders and administrators of the Young Turks
    regime, which ruled the empire since July 1908, were court-martialed
    immediately after the war for crimes committed during their ten-year
    rule, including the Armenian atrocities, this was done in deference to
    the victorious Allied powers rather than out of true conviction. Even
    the newly-established Turkish republic (1923), despite its
    renunciation of much of the Ottoman imperial legacy, would not disown
    its arguably most heinous crime since its founding father,
    Gen. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk "whatever his disagreements with the Young
    Turks leaders ... was after all imbued with Young Turk ideas."[16] Not
    only did Ankara fail to acknowledge any intention or plan to destroy
    Armenian nationalism, but the deportations and killings were presented
    as a natural act of self-defense against a disloyal population. In the
    words of Yusuf Hikmet Bayur, doyen of Turkish historians: "It's one
    thing to say that the Turks killed the Armenians spontaneously, and
    another to say that, when the Armenians revolted, the Turks, who were
    locked in a life or death struggle, used excessive force and killed a
    good many people."[17]

    Given their idealization of the Ottoman legacy, it was only a question
    of time for Western scholars to adopt this narrative.[18] "The Turks
    had an Armenian problem caused by the advance of the Russians and an
    anti-Ottoman population living in Turkey, which was seeking
    independence and openly sympathized with the Russians coming from the
    Caucasus," argued Lewis.

    "There were also Armenian gangs - the Armenians boast of the heroic
    feats performed by the resistance, and the Turks certainly had
    problems of maintaining order under wartime conditions. For the Turks,
    it was a matter of taking punitive and preventive measures against an
    unreliable population in a region threatened with foreign
    invasion."[19]

    The distance from here to the substitution of perpetrators for victims
    and vice versa is short. In Lewis's words: "No one disputes that
    terrible things happened [and] that many Armenians - and also Turks -
    died. But the exact circumstances and the final tally of the victims
    will doubtless never be known."[20] Elsewhere, he described the
    episode as a result of "a desperate struggle ... between two nations
    for the possession of a single homeland, that ended with the terrible
    slaughter of 1915, when, according to estimates, more than a million
    Armenians perished, as well as an unknown number of Turks."[21]

    The nature of the conflict was of course quite different. Far from "a
    desperate struggle between two nations for the possession of a single
    homeland," it was a brutal repression by an imperial power of a
    subject population; and while Armenian national aspirations
    undoubtedly posed a grave threat to the integrity of the Ottoman
    Empire, there can be no moral or political equivalence between these
    aspirations and their repression.

    Moreover, even if most Armenians helped the Russian war effort, which
    they most certainly did not, there was no military =80' let alone
    moral - justification for the uprooting of almost an entire nation
    from its ancestral habitat, not to mention those communities that were
    far removed from the war zone (e.g., Cilicia, western Anatolia,
    etc.). Even the Nazis, who exacted horrendous collective punishment
    for acts of resistance, did not exile a single occupied nation from
    its homeland (apart, of course, from their Jewish citizens, singled
    out for collective destruction).

    Nor for that matter is there any symmetry between the military (and
    other) resources at the empire's disposal and those available to its
    subjects, not least since states by definition control the means of
    collective violence. In the Armenian case, this inherent inequality
    was aggravated by the comprehensive disarming of the community; and
    while some "gangs" may have retained their weapons, the vast majority
    of Armenians surrendered them to the authorities despite their stark
    realization that the 1895-96 massacres had been preceded by very
    similar measures.

    The ethnic cleansing of a virtually unarmed nation cannot, therefore,
    but indicate that, in the words of Turkish-American scholar Taner
    Akçam, "the wartime policies of the Ottoman government toward the
    Armenians were never ... the result of military exigencies" but were
    rather the culmination of a preconceived design to destroy Armenian
    nationalism, for which war provided the ideal pretext.[22]

    Drawing on a wealth of Ottoman, German, British, and U.S. documents,
    Akçam unveils a disturbing picture of elaborate planning and
    meticulous execution of Ottoman Armenia's ethnic cleansing. He traces
    this design to the Ottomans' defeat in the Balkan wars of 1912-13,
    which sealed their creeping expulsion from Europe and convinced the
    Young Turks leadership, dominated since January 1913 by the radical
    triumvirate-minister of war Enver Pasha, minister of the interior
    Talat Pasha, and minister of the navy Djemal Pasha-of the empire's
    imminent demise absent drastic homogenization of the Anatolian
    homeland: "The Christian population was to be reduced; that is,
    removed, and the non-Turkish Muslim groups were to be
    assimilated."[23]

    This resulted in a campaign of massacres and expulsions against the
    Ottoman Greeks, suspended after November 1914 under German pressure,
    and culminating in the cleansing of the Armenians. The six
    historically Armenian provinces of eastern Anatolia were emptied of
    their inhabitants, who either perished on the harrowing track to exile
    or were resettled in the deserts of present-day Syria and Iraq. Most
    of the Cilician and West Anatolian Armenians endured a similar fate.

    Akçam identifies a "dual track mechanism" used for the ethnic
    cleansing of the Armenians, and Christians more generally:

    =80¢ A legal track, comprising official state acts such as the
    bilateral population exchange agreements of 1913-14 with Serbia,
    Bulgaria, and Greece, or the May 1915 decree authorizing the Armenian
    deportation. Representing Atatürk's subscription to the Young Turk
    belief in the need to homogenize the fatherland, the "legal" ethnic
    cleansing of the Anatolian Greeks was eventually completed by the 1923
    population exchange that drove some 1.3 million Greeks out of Turkey
    (and about 400,000 Turks out of Greece).

    =80¢ An unofficial track, consisting of extrajudicial acts of
    violence, including forced evacuations, killing orders, and massacres.
    Maximum effort was expanded to create the impression that none of
    these actions were ever connected to the government, both during the
    war and in subsequent decades through systematic destruction of
    archival source material, yet the massive documentation provided by
    Akçam proves beyond a shadow of a doubt the deep involvement of the
    Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the Young Turks' ruling
    party-from local administrators and bureaucrats all the way to senior
    members, including Talat-in the orchestration and implementation of
    extrajudicial violence and massacres.[24]

    Not that these findings should surprise anyone. For one thing, the
    "dual track mechanism" described by Akçam has remained a lasting
    feature of Turkish political life to this very day. In republican
    Turkey, this phenomenon has been known as the "deep state"-an opaque
    underworld where powerful elements within the state, especially the
    military and security services, act in conjunction with violent
    extremist groups and the apolitical criminal underworld to undertake
    special, illegal operations in the political interest of the country's
    ruling elite. For another, the antique imperial practice of exiling
    entire nations and communities has become an extreme rarity in modern
    times, precisely because of its deliberate genocidal intent to destroy
    "a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group, as such."[25] It
    must have occurred to the Ottoman leadership that the exiling of
    almost an entire nation-over a million men, women, and children=80'to
    a remote, alien, and hostile environment amidst a general war without
    the minimal provisions for surviving the harrowing voyage and its
    aftermath, was tantamount to a collective death sentence.[26] In the
    end, whatever their initial intention, the Ottoman actions amounted to
    nothing short of genocide.

    Conclusion

    Few crimes against humanity have been so widely and so comprehensively
    ignored as the Ottoman Empire's ethnic cleansing of its Armenian
    population during World War I.

    Mesmerized by the myth of a benevolent Ottoman colonialism (in stark
    contrast to their scathing indictment of the Western colonial legacy),
    Western scholars and intellectuals have turned a blind eye to the
    overwhelming body of evidence of Ottoman genocidal intentions and
    practices. For their part, Western politicians and leaders were loath
    to bring the Armenian skeleton out of the closet given Turkey's
    position as an important anti-Soviet bastion and an alluring bridge to
    the Muslim Middle East. And while the end of the Cold War has
    increased Western propensity to address the issue-in 2005 the European
    parliament conditioned Turkey's accession to the European Union on its
    recognition of the Armenian genocide[27]-Ankara has remained as
    defiant as ever.

    When in March 2010 a U.S. congressional committee passed a resolution
    branding the Armenian massacres as "genocide," over the objections of
    the Obama administration, Turkey recalled its ambassador for
    "consultations."[28] In his 2008 election campaign, presidential
    hopeful Barack Obama stated that "America deserves a leader who speaks
    truthfully about the Armenian Genocide and responds forcefully to all
    genocides. I intend to be that President." As president, he chose to
    make Turkey the site of his first overseas trip ignoring the Armenian
    genocide altogether in his address to the Turkish parliament.[29] When
    in December 2011, France's lower chamber approved a bill making denial
    of any genocide a criminal offence, Ankara froze relations with Paris,
    recalling its ambassador and suspending all economic, political, and
    military meetings.[30]

    With its strategic significance made more complex by recent Middle
    Eastern upheavals, and the ruling Justice and Development Party
    (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP) openly pining for lost Ottoman
    glories, Turkey is unlikely to shed this longtime denial and own up to
    its painful past.


    Efraim Karsh, editor of the Middle East Quarterly, is professor of
    Middle East and Mediterranean studies at King's College London.

    [1] Robert D. Kaplan, "At the Gates of Brussels," The Atlantic
    Monthly, Dec. 2004.
    [2] Bernard Lewis, The Multiple Identities of the Middle East (New
    York: Schocken Books, 1998), pp. 129-30.
    [3] Moustafa Bayoumi and Andrew Rubin, eds., The Edward Said Reader
    (London: Granta Books, 2001), p. 430.
    [4] Elie Kedourie, The Chatham House Version and other Middle-Eastern
    Studies (Hanover and London: Brandeis University Press, 1984), p. 293.
    [5] Ibid., p. 286.
    [6] Efraim Karsh and Inari Karsh, Empires of the Sand: The Struggle
    for Mastery in the Middle East, 1789-1923 (Cambridge: Harvard
    University Press, 1999), chaps. 2, 5, 6.
    [7] Eliezer Tauber, The Emergence of the Arab Movements (London: Frank
    Cass, 1993), chap. 28.
    [8] For population figures, see, for example, Mallet to Grey, Oct. 7,
    1914, British Foreign Office (hereafter FO), FO 371/2137/56940;
    "Turkey: Annual Report, 1913. By the Embassy," FO 371/2137/79138, 25.
    [9] See Fontana to Lowther, Mar. 25, 1913, FO 371/1773/16941; Lowther
    to Grey, Apr. 5, 10, 1913, FO 371/1773/16736; Admiralty to FO,
    Apr. 15, 1913, FO 371/1775/17825.
    [10] Ironside to Foreign Office, Mar. 3, 1915, and War Office to the
    Foreign Office, Mar. 4, 1915, FO 371/2484/25073 and 25167; Foreign
    Office to Ironside, Mar. 9, 1915, FO 371/2484/28172 and 22083.
    [11] Karsh and Karsh, Empires of the Sand, chap. 10.
    [12] Viscount Bryce, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire:
    Documents Presented to Viscount Grey of Fallodon, Secretary of State
    for Foreign Affairs. Laid before the Houses of Parliament as an
    Official Paper and Now Published by Permission (London: Hodder and
    Stoughton, 1916), pp. 645-9.
    [13] Ibid., pp. 641-2; Johannes Lepsius, Der Todesgang des armenischen
    Volkes (Potsdam: Missionshandlung und Verlag, 1930), pp. 301-4.
    [14] Aaron Aaronson, "On the Armenian Massacres: Memorandum Presented
    to the War Office, London, Nov. 1916," Aaronson Archives (Zichron
    Yaacov, Israel), File 2C/14.
    [15] Bryce, The Treatment of Armenians, pp. 649-51, "Annex F:
    Statistical Estimate Included in the Fifth Bulletin of the American
    Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief, Dated New York, 24th May
    1916"; Johannes Lepsius, Deutschland und Armenian, 1914-1918 (Potsdam:
    Tempelverlag, 1919), pp. lxv, 256; Lepsius, Der Todesgang, pp. 301-4;
    Aaron Aaronson, "Pro Armenia," Nov. 16, 1916, p. 13, Aaronson
    Archives, File 2C/13; Aaronson, "On the Armenian Massacres."
    [16] Elie Kedourie, Politics in the Middle East (Oxford and New York:
    Oxford University Press, 1992), pp. 95-6.
    [17] Taner Akçam, The Young Turks' Crime against Humanity: The
    Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire
    (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012), p. xi.
    [18] See, for example, Stanford J. Shaw and Ezel Kural Shaw, Reform,
    Revolution, and Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey, 1808-1975,
    History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey, vol. II (Cambridge:
    Cambridge University Press, 1977), p. 315; Guenther Lewy, "Revisiting
    the Armenian Genocide," Middle East Quarterly, Fall 2005, pp. 3-12;
    Michael Gunter, Armenian History and the Question of Genocide (New
    York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011). See also Michael M. Gunter, Middle
    East Quarterly, Winter 2013, pp. 37-46.
    [19] Bernard Lewis, interview with Le Monde, Nov. 16, 1993.
    [20] Ibid.
    [21] Bernard Lewis, The Emergence of Modern Turkey, 3rd ed. (New York
    and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 356. Interestingly, in
    the first and second editions of the book (1961, 1968), Lewis
    described these tragic events as "the terrible holocaust of 1915, when
    a million and half Armenians perished." (p. 356). In his Le Monde
    interview, he reduced the fatality figure to "hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians [who] died of hunger and cold," dismissing the description
    of these deaths as genocide as "the Armenian version of this event."
    While he raised the figure to more than a million in the third edition
    of The Emergence, he still put Armenian casualties on a par with those
    of their Ottoman oppressors.
    [22] Akçam, The Young Turks' Crime against Humanity, p. xix.
    [23] Ibid., p. xv.
    [24] Akçam's research also reaffirms the validity of early
    documentation of the Armenian atrocities whose authenticity has
    subsequently been questioned, notably Aram Andonian's 1920 book The
    Memoirs of Naim Bey, as many newly discovered documents echo their now
    discredited predecessors.
    [25] Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
    Genocide, 78 U.N. Treaty Series (UNTS) 277, entered into force on
    Jan. 12, 1951, art. 2.
    [26] It has been argued (see Michael Gunter's article in this issue)
    that the claim of an Armenian genocide "rests on a logical fallacy and
    ignores the huge loss of life among Turkish civilians, soldiers, and
    prisoners-of-war. ... that surely cannot be explained in terms of a
    Young Turk plan of annihilation." Of course, the Young Turks'
    indifference to their own people's suffering and mortality does not
    preclude the existence of an annihilationist plan vis-Ã -vis the
    Armenians, just as Hitler's readiness to sacrifice millions of German
    lives did not preclude his annihilationist design vis-Ã -vis the Jews.
    [27] "European Parliament resolution on the opening of negotiations
    with Turkey," Sept. 38, 2005.
    [28] "Armenian genocide resolution passes US Congress Committee,"
    Voice of America, Mar. 3, 2010.
    [29] "Barack Obama calls for passage of Armenian genocide resolution,"
    Armenian National Committee of America, Jan. 20, 2008; remarks by
    President Obama to the Turkish parliament, Ankara, Office of the Press
    Secretary, Apr. 6, 2009.
    [30] The Guardian, Dec. 22, 2011.

    Image Caption: "The ethnic cleansing of Turkish Armenia was
    accomplished in a variety of ways including deportations and outright
    massacres. Here, Armenian deportees struggle to survive in makeshift
    tents erected in the Syrian desert to which they were deported in
    1915."

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