The greatest genocide of the 20th century: Little Asia, 1900-1955..
The Armenian Genocide took place under cover of World War I and
had four major stages. In the first stage, all able-bodied Armenian men aged 20 to 45 were conscripted into the Ottoman army. They
served as soldiers at first, but in early 1915 they were disarmed and reduced to laborers toiling under brutal conditions, even working as pack animals. Many were bound and shot.
In the second stage, Armenian politicians, community leaders,
educators, intellectuals, and leading priests were arrested in April
1915 and soon deported and executed. In the third stage, beginning
in May and June of 1915, the remaining Armenian population was
deported, supposedly for relocation in the deserts of Mesopotamia,
then part of the Ottoman Empire. Large numbers of the deportees
in the eastern and central provinces of Trabzon, Sivas, Harput,
Erzurum, Van, and Bitlis were killed at the outset in mass executions.
Others died on the forced marches due to exposure, starvation,
dehydration, or mistreatment. But contrary to expectations,
about 200,000 to 300,000 Armenians-mainly from Turkey's western,
northwestern, and southwestern provinces-survived the long trek.
These wretched survivors, reduced by starvation to skin and bones,
faced another series of massacres in the areas of Dayr az
Zawr and Ra's al 'Ayn in Syria. Three primary methods were used
in the massacres: blunt instruments; mass drownings
in the Black Sea and tributaries of the Euphrates River; and
incineration in stables, haylofts, and specially dug large pits
in the provinces of Bitlis, Harput, and Aleppo.
A group of turkish party functionaries, mostly former military
officers, were given sweeping authority to organize and supervise
the killing of Armenians, including veto power over provincial
governors who might object. Local party leaders and hardened criminals
assisted party functionaries in this task. The criminals, released
from the empire's several prisons for massacre duty, functioned
as an indispensable instrument in carrying out the Armenian Genocide.
The main rationale of the perpetrators was that the Armenians were
internal enemies of the Ottoman Empire, had engaged in acts of sabotage
and espionage, had rebelled in Van province, and were fighting against
the Turks as volunteers in Russia's Caucasus army. In April 1915
the Armenians had risen up in Van province in a desperate last-ditch
attempt to resist deportation and certain destruction, as they also
had resisted in Mussa Dagh (now Musada?i), Shabin Karahisar (now
Kara Hissar Sahib), and Urfa. Successive military setbacks prevented
the Young Turks from completing the deportations and massacres in
the rest of the country, mainly Constantinople (Ystanbul), Smyrna
(now Yzmir), and Aleppo.
Surviving official Ottoman documents as well as documents from
the archives of the empire's wartime allies-Germany and Austria-Hungary-indicate
that the extermination of the Ottoman Armenians was premeditated
and centrally organized by the Young Turk regime. As many as 1.2
million Ottoman Armenians perished, out of a prewar Armenian population
estimated at 1.8 million. A postwar Ottoman interior minister
revealed in 1919 that 800,000 of the Armenian victims were killed
outright. Of the survivors, some 250,000 managed to escape to the
Caucasus, primarily to what is now Armenia but also to Georgia,
and about 100,000 women and children were forcibly converted
to Islam. The remaining survivors dispersed in every direction.
Many immigrated to the United States. Today, about 60,000 Armenians
live in Turkey, most of them in Istanbul.
Despite the Allies wartime pledges, at the end of World War
I they failed to prosecute and punish the authors of the Armenian
Genocide. A Turkish military court held a series of courts-martial
from 1919 to 1921 that sought to hold the CUP responsible for the
massacres. Although the court convicted a number of officials, including
cabinet ministers, many of those involved escaped punishment or
fled the country. The sentences of the court, mostly rendered in
absentia, bore little relationship to the enormity of what British
historian Arnold Toynbee called "this gigantic crime." The United
States ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Henry Morgenthau described
that crime as "the murder of a nation." With the triumph of Turkish
wartime hero and nationalist insurgent Mustafa Kemal, later known
as Ataturk, the Republic of Turkey was created and the courts-martial
were abruptly discontinued.
History of the massacres
By the late 1800s the Ottoman Empire was seriously weakened. Various
Balkan Christian peoples under Ottoman rule had gained independence
as a result of a series of Greek and Serbian insurrections and the
Russo-Turkish war of 1877 and 1878. Russia, the victor in that war,
had imposed harsh terms on the Ottoman Empire in the peace treaty.
Alarmed at Russia's growing strength, other European powers, notably
Austria-Hungary and Britain, insisted upon a new treaty. In doing
so they invoked the 1856 Treaty of Paris, which ended the Crimean
War. That treaty stipulated that all six Great Powers must be involved
in negotiations with the Ottoman government. The Great Powers met
in 1878 at the Congress of Berlin to draw up a new treaty. Article
61 of the Treaty of Berlin called for the Ottoman sultan to immediately
put into effect reforms needed to protect the security of Armenians.
It also authorized the European powers to "superintend the application"
of these reforms.
Despite pressure from Britain, reforms were not undertaken by the
defeated Ottoman Empire, which protested that an empty treasury
prevented it from policing its eastern provinces. The sultan, however,
strongly opposed these reforms on behalf of Armenians in the belief
that they would lead to autonomy (self-government) and ultimately
to independence for the Armenians. This process had been the
pattern in the Balkans.
At this time Muslim Kurdish tribes, spurred by the sultan's
policy of Islamic patriotism, were raiding Armenian villages
in the eastern provinces of the empire. Corrupt tax collectors also
harassed villagers. Conflict with the Armenians intensified when
certain Armenian groups that despaired of peaceful reforms abandoned
that quest and resorted to confrontation. Three revolutionary
parties sprang up as a result. Ottoman Armenians led one party,
the Armenakans, which formed in 1885 in the eastern Van province.
The other two were rather militant and combative parties founded
by Russian Armenians. In 1887 emigrants from Russian Armenia founded
the Hunchak party in Geneva, Switzerland. Three years later Russian
Armenians in Tbilisi, Georgia, founded the Dashnak party.
Armenian demonstrations against Ottoman authorities took place
in 1890 and 1895 in the Ottoman capital, Constantinople (now Istanbul).
The Hunchaks organized uprisings in the towns of Sason, in 1894,
and Zeytun (now Suleymanl?), in 1895. The Dashnaks mounted an unsuccessful
expedition across the Russian border into Ottoman territory in 1890
and occupied the Ottoman Bank in 1896. These revolutionary undertakings
led to counterattacks against the empire's general Armenian population.
Empire-wide massacres of Armenians from 1894 to 1896 claimed
approximately 200,000 victims, either directly or as a result
of associated hardships. Under the banner of Islam, Sultan Abd al-Hamid
II had enlisted the help of several Kurdish tribes in the eastern
part of the empire. They acted as quasi-military detachments and
played a critical role in the destruction of property and lives.
These attacks became known as the Sultan Abd al-Hamid-era Armenian
massacres.
Some of the Armenian revolutionaries and others hoped that the
massacres would provoke the intervention of the European powers
(Britain, France, Austria-Hungary, and Germany). Although the leaders
of the European powers publicly condemned the actions of the sultan,
they failed to intervene. Mutual rivalries and suspicions, as well
as the imprecise terms of Article 61 of the Treaty of Berlin, helped
produce this inaction. But these bloody episodes soon paved the
way for the rise of a new nationalist movement in the Ottoman Empire
that would displace Islam as the main rallying force.
Upset by Abd al-Hamid's increasingly autocratic rule and alarmed
by threats to the empire's survival, a group of civilian and military
revolutionaries known as the Young Turks, combined their
resources and efforts, inside and outside the empire, to overthrow
the sultan and his regime. The Young Turk Revolution of 1908
and 1909 restored the empire's constitution and parliament
and deposed Abd al-Hamid. By ending the sultan's 33-year despotic
reign, the Young Turks hoped to stop the empire's decay and disintegration.
Although Abd al-Hamid's brother retained the title of sultan, a
group of Young Turks operating under the name Committee of Union
and Progress (CUP) dominated the government in one way or another,
except for a brief period. Eager to infuse the empire with a new,
progressive spirit, the CUP embraced the ideals of the French
Revolution: liberty, equality, and fraternity. Despite success
in enacting certain legal and administrative reforms, however, the
CUP's foreign policies and domestic nationality policies soon drove
the empire into an abyss.
Lacking leaders experienced in the art of government, the Young
Turks continued to conduct themselves as a secret revolutionary
organisation in the years following the revolution. They became
increasingly intolerant of criticism and dissent and resorted to
tactics of intimidation and terror. When rebellions broke out
in various parts of the empire, the government responded with repression
by military force. Their greatest blunders related to nationality
conflicts, which culminated in the Balkan Wars in 1912 and 1913,
conflicts that cost the Ottomans their remaining territory in the
Balkans. The First Balkan War (1912) was especially devastating
to the empire. The substantial territorial and human losses from
the war led to a national crisis during which the radical wing of
the Young Turk party maneuvered itself into a position of party
dominance in the spring of 1913. Thereafter, authoritarian elements
of the Young Turk party controlled the central and provincial governments
of the empire. A new policy of nationalism was adopted, which
emphasized Turkism (the culture and traditions of the Turks)
as a substitute for multiethnic Ottomanism. On the one hand it sought
to replace Islam as the empire's unifying force, but on the other
it used Islam as an instrument against non-Muslim elements. Christian
minorities especially were viewed as an obstacle to Turkification.
As the Ottoman Empire crumbled under the pressures of spreading
nationalism among its subject nationalities and as a young government
took power, several factors favored targeting the Armenian community
for destruction. The first factor was renewed pressure from the
Great Powers in 1912 and 1913 for Armenian reforms to be carried
out under direct European control. The Ottoman government resented
this interference and blamed the Russians in particular for the
initiative, but the Ottoman government found it more convenient
to direct its anger at the vulnerable, essentially powerless Armenians.
A second factor was the relatively dense concentration in the eastern
provinces of Armenians who were clamoring for reforms. The Armenians
were the last major non-Muslim nationality under Ottoman rule still
seeking the types of reforms that the CUP government understood
to mean autonomy and eventual independence. The Ottoman government
subsequently declared the Armenians a danger to the empire's security
and feared they might aid the Russians, with whom the empire was
at war. A third factor was the 1909 massacre in the town of Adana
and its environs, which had claimed some 23,000 Armenian victims.
Because that massacre had been executed swiftly and without
intervention from the Great Powers, whose warships stood idly by,
it encouraged the Young Turks to contemplate a more radical and
sweeping scheme.
Shortly before World War I began in 1914, the Ottoman Empire signed
a secret treaty with Germany. Enver Pasha, a CUP leader who directed
Ottoman military efforts, had faith in Germany's military prowess
and ability to win a war against the other Great Powers. In addition,
Germany and the Ottomans shared a long-standing hostility toward
Russia. Three months after the outbreak of World War I the empire
entered the conflict on the side of the German and Austro-Hungarian
empires. Their crushing military defeat precipitated the Ottoman
Empire's ultimate demise in 1922. But the war also provided the
pretext for a campaign of extermination against the empire's Armenian
population, which was denounced as a traitorous group.
Consequences of the Armenian Genocide
As the victim of the first major genocide of the 20th century,
the Armenian nation not only lost nearly 60 percent of its population
but also was shut out of its ancestral territories. Countless
monuments and institutions testifying to the legacy of a several
thousand-year-old civilization were obliterated in the process,
as were thousands of churches and monasteries identified with the
Armenian Church, one of the world's oldest Christian institutions.
The persistence with which Turkish governments, past and present,
deny the crime has severely aggravated the trauma of this catastrophe
for the Armenians. The fact that the perpetrators escaped an international
trial has made it easier for them to deny the crime. The Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) compounded the problem by imposing
a decades-long silence on the subject upon Armenian survivors who
had gathered in Soviet Armenia in the aftermath of the genocide.
The Turkish government's success in escaping punishment for
the Armenian Genocide likely contributed to German dictator Adolph
Hitler's defiance in initiating his wartime crimes, including
the Holocaust, during World War II (1939-1945). Shortly before the
invasion of Poland in 1939, Hitler reportedly exhorted his
military commanders to be merciless, saying to them, "Who, after
all, speaks today about the annihilation of the Armenians."
|