The Thirty-Year Genocide

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The Thirty-Year Genocide Page 48

by Benny Morris


  war time persecutions. It had the same end in mind—to cleanse Asia Minor

  of Armenians. It seems to have sprung up spontaneously in diff er ent locations

  within weeks of the signing of the armistice and, at least initially, lacked cen-

  tral organ ization. It was especially pronounced in sites to which deportees

  were returning.

  Western missionaries and Armenians referred to the anti- Armenian cam-

  paign of early 1919 as a “white massacre.” The goal was to impoverish and

  dishearten the survivors of the war time genocide by boycotting their busi-

  nesses in the towns and preventing them from farming in the countryside.

  According to the Armenian Patriarchate, the Kemalists were also robbing

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  Armenians and conscripting them for “heavy labor.” But they were not

  massacring: “this is the only favor they grant them.”248 In October 1919, the

  Armenian and Greek patriarchs quoted Kemal as asking, “Why massacre

  when it was so easy to eliminate by steady merciless pressure?”249

  To be sure, Kemal also understood the utility of straightforward, old-

  fashioned massacre, at least to complement the white variety. Massacre

  would trigger immediate mass flight and could bring strategic benefits. Ac-

  cording to an intercepted letter, Kemal ordered Şakır Nimet— a Nationalist

  agent in Aleppo and former staff officer of Enver’s—to “or ga nize massacres

  of Christians in Aleppo, Homs, Damascus and Beirut.” The aim was not just

  to kill Christians but also to persuade the French to shift troops from Cilicia,

  Kemal’s immediate objective, to Syria.250

  The start of the Nationalist guerrilla campaign in Cilicia and northern

  Aleppo vilayet in January– February 1920 was accompanied by large- scale

  massacres. The Turks claimed that their assault on the French- occupied areas

  was in part a reaction to Armenian and French depredations against Muslims.

  The charge was largely a Nationalist invention, though it is probable that many

  Turks believed it. Armenians were enraged by their suffering, and Turks ex-

  pected them to take revenge. As the Armenian archbishop of Bursa told a

  French officer, he “would like to see as many Turks killed by Armenians as

  he had seen Armenians killed by Turks during the war.” (The Frenchman re-

  torted: “I don’t think that sentiment is very Christian.”)251

  This thinking, however prevalent, rarely inspired action. Armenians were

  almost everywhere a minority— demoralized, mostly unarmed, and restrained

  by Allied supervision. Moreover, as the Allies’ promises of Armenian in de-

  pen dence evaporated and their forces came under guerrilla attack, many Ar-

  menians came to understand that the future of those remaining in the country

  was under Turkish rule. It was therefore best to keep a low and subservient

  profile. Perhaps Christian values also acted as a brake.

  But some atrocities did occur. In summer 1920, Armenians raided and

  looted Turkish homes in Adana and several villages, precipitating flight.

  According to French reports, the assailants were bent on torpedoing a

  Franco- Nationalist agreement. The worst of this vio lence occurred in Adana

  itself, on July 10, when police opened fire, killing fifteen Turks. The person

  responsible, allegedly, was an Armenian police officer, Lieutenant Azzadian,

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  Massacred Armenians. The Turks claimed that mass killing was a reaction to Armenian and French murder of Turks.

  “who seeks an opportunity to kill the Turks and pillage their houses.”252 Re-

  porting the same incident, Bristol wrote of “about fifty Mohammedans”

  “murdered.”253 The Armenians denied Bristol’s report.254

  But, en fin, while the Turks complained incessantly, Western observers—

  diplomats, officers, and missionaries— recorded very few Armenian atrocities

  during 1918–1923. Many detailed Turkish complaints referred to minor

  Christian misdeeds when compared to ongoing Turkish atrocities (not to

  mention their crimes during 1914–1918). For example a list of Turkish

  complaints from Cilicia and Adana between December 29, 1918, and Feb-

  ruary 15, 1919, speaks of four Muslim merchants killed in a robbery, one

  woman raped, and the repeated theft of money and jewelry from Muslims.255

  In early 1919 the Turks alleged that Armenians had murdered a handful of

  villa gers at Azairlou, near Dörtyol.256 The Turks widely disseminated such sto-

  ries in newspapers, triggering Muslim anger— and anti- Christian atrocities.257

  The most horrific Turkish allegations came during the war, in the Caucasus

  (where, of course, Armenians regularly alleged Muslim atrocities). Russian-

  Armenian soldiers reportedly committed massacres in the Rowanduz and Neri

  districts in spring– summer 1916.258 In February 1918 the Turks alleged that

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  Armenians had massacred Muslims in the Caucasus and Russian- occupied

  eastern Turkey. Historian Arnold Toynbee, then in the British Foreign Office

  Information Department’s Intelligence Bureau, ruled that the allegations were

  “for the greater part . . . no doubt misrepre sen ta tions.” But he conceded that

  “the turn of the wheel” of fortune, with the Armenians on top, “may be ac-

  companied by certain acts of vio lence or injustice.”259 In July 1918 British dip-

  lomats in Moscow reported a massacre of 800 Muslims, including women

  and children, in Erzincan before the Rus sian evacuation of the town.260 A

  British officer reported that in the area near Lake Balık, where Rus sian Ar-

  menian and Muslim Kurdish units were at loggerheads, the “entire Moslem

  population is seeking refuge from Armenian robbery and vio lence.”261 Arme-

  nian troops also appear to have massacred Tatar villa gers.262 Armenian

  spokesmen routinely denied such allegations.263

  In January 1919 Muslims from Yerevan and surrounding villages com-

  plained of Armenian depredations after the Turkish withdrawal. At Kerni

  Yassar, they charged, Armenians arrested and killed “the rich and educated,”

  then killed other inhabitants and looted homes. Elsewhere in the area, Arme-

  nians allegedly separated men from women and massacred the men. Then

  “the Armenians carried away with them all the girls and women.”264 A Turkish

  official claimed that Armenian regulars massacred the inhabitants of Vedi

  and Sadank, southeast of Yerevan, and that in other areas they killed some

  20,000 people, burning women and children.265 Turks alleged that in six vil-

  lages near Sarıkamış, the whole population was “burnt alive.”266 A report

  from the Ankara government even spoke of an “extermination policy” in

  Kars, with 800 murdered and 900 deported. Altogether the Nationalist re-

  port charged that 135,000 Turks were massacred or driven out of 199 vil-

  lages by the end of 1919.267 Almost none of these allegations were con-

  firmed by Western observers, and the stories clearly aped Armenian charges

  against Turks— which, by contrast, were routinely confirmed by outsiders.

  There were more reports of massacres in summer 1921, committed by Ar-

  menian brigands in western Anatolia as Greek forces retr
eated from the Izmit

  area. Bristol wrote of “several hundred Turks” killed, apparently basing him-

  self on a report by an American missionary who had heard from British offi-

  cials that Armenians had “murdered 200” Turks in Izmit town on June 25.268

  Rosalind Toynbee, a prolific author and Arnold Toynbee’s wife, wrote of

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  meeting a little Turkish girl whose lower jaw had been blown off. The girl

  somehow related that an Armenian band had pillaged her village, driven

  the inhabitants into a house, and thrown bombs inside. Her mother died

  in the house, along with nineteen others. Another ten villa gers were killed in the street, she said.269

  Without doubt, there were Armenian depredations in the eastern vilayets

  and in the Caucasus, where mutual massacre was a norm in the war time and

  postwar ethnic clashes. But in central, western, and southern Anatolia, in-

  cluding Cilicia, Armenian criminality was normally limited to theft, including

  robbery. Murders were rare, and multiple murder was almost unheard of. The

  July 1920 massacre in Adana and the summer 1921 Izmit- area massacres

  seem to have been the only ones of their kind. The only Western diplomat

  who accepted Turkish allegations at face value, and always highlighted

  them, was Bristol.270 In general Western observers— diplomats, officers, and

  missionaries—recorded very few atrocities committed by Armenians during

  1918–1923. Even the Turks, though they provided many detailed com-

  plaints, produced a cata log of only minor misdeeds when compared to their

  ongoing crimes.

  Maraş

  The French takeover in Cilicia and northern Aleppo vilayet “stirred up al-

  most as much feeling as the Greek entrance into the Smyrna district,” Bristol

  wrote.271 Within weeks, the French garrisons were effectively under siege.

  Turks severed roads and rail lines and assailed relief columns and the garri-

  sons themselves. Maraş was the first major flashpoint.

  Maraş was in difficult straits before the French arrived, at least from the

  perspective of the Armenians. In late December 1918 Sykes visited and dis-

  covered “one of Turkey’s most charming spots, a city of trees and running

  water” surrounded on all sides by the foothills of the Taurus Mountains.272

  But the roughly 6,000 Armenians who had returned— from a prewar popula-

  tion of 20,000— found their homes “demolished, their shops ruined and

  their churches used as latrines.” He noted, “The children are naked in the

  streets and the Turks still threaten [them].” Thousands more Armenians re-

  settled there during the following months.273

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  The British oversaw law and order with a small garrison but left day- to- day

  governance to the Turkish administration. Incidents between Turks and

  Britons and Turks and Armenians were rare, the Turks cowed by the British

  military presence. The British withdrawal and the arrival of the French in No-

  vember 1919 appear to have passed smoothly. On the face of it, Turkish-

  Armenian relations appeared tranquil.

  But tensions rose during December 1919– January 1920. It is unclear

  whether the Nationalists deliberately selected Maraş— the isolated, north-

  ernmost French garrison—as the first site of their campaign against the

  occupation, or whether Nationalist vio lence there was precipitated by local

  incidents. A leading American missionary seemed to think Maraş was hand-

  picked, later writing that the Turks “appear to have been moving in this

  direction for some time prior to the beginning of hostilities. It looks as

  [though] there was a deliberate intention to make an attack [on Maraş] and

  as if preparations had been made for it.”274 Indeed, there were standing

  orders to this effect, albeit not only regarding Maraş. On October 26, 1919,

  Kemal instructed his army corps commanders “to fight against the French

  occupation of Marash, Aintab and Urfa.”275

  A chain of incidents began just after this order was received. On October 31

  a Turk killed an Armenian legionnaire after he allegedly tore off a Muslim

  woman’s veil.276 A few days later, Kemal sent four lieutenants to the area to

  or ga nize irregulars for an attack on the French. Then, on November 16–18,

  Kemal convened his army’s corps commanders in Sivas to discuss ways to

  limit French “encroachments on Turkish authority.”277 This was followed on

  the 24th by the arrival in Maraş of the military governor of Osmaniye, Cap-

  tain Pierre André, at the head of a small troop of gendarmes— Turks, Arme-

  nians, and Kurds— and French soldiers. André apparently ordered the removal

  of the Ottoman flag over the citadel and its replacement with the tricolor. A

  mob of Muslims, including gendarmes, removed the tricolor and restored the

  Ottoman flag. Preferring to avoid a fight, André withdrew, leaving the citadel

  and local government in Turkish hands.278

  To reassert their rule, the French beefed up their military in and around

  Maraş and replaced André with a governor they thought would be more stead-

  fast, General Querette. The general was taking over a city on the brink. In

  January 1920 a missionary reported that, in Maraş, “the Turks are bolder and

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  more threatening than I have ever seen.” Anti- Armenian vio lence surged on

  the town’s outskirts; Armenians were murdered almost daily. Two were shot

  dead by the son of a wealthy Muslim, and the bodies of four more were found

  outside a gendarmerie post after disappearing on the road to Zeytun. Arme-

  nian villa gers abandoned their fields. The Turks, the missionary reported,

  were blaming “bandits,” but the Armenians believed their “neighbors” were

  responsible.279 Inside the town, too, the situation grew darker. “ Sister E.,” ap-

  parently a nun, wrote that the local Armenian Catholic school closed fre-

  quently “owing to the terror which the Turks spread around.”280 Armenian

  villa gers fled into town. By late January, the Armenian population of Maraş

  had swelled to 22,000.281

  On January 18 the Turks charged that the French were interfering with their

  administration and demanded that they send away the Armenian legionnaires.

  Anticipating vio lence, Armenians and Turks closed their shops, and Armenians

  moved into churches for safety. “Armed Turks . . . in considerable numbers”

  poured into the city.282 The French agreed to send away 500 legionnaires, but

  the legionnaires were ambushed on the Maraş- Antep road on January 20–21.283

  The survivors left the dead behind and returned to Maraş.284 The Turks

  had their own complaints, alleging that a 3,000- man French relief column

  with cannon and machine guns was advancing toward the town from Islahiye

  and had destroyed Muslim villages en route.285

  On January 21 the French made their move. “They had determined to

  strike and strike hard,” an American missionary was told.286 It began when

  Querette summoned the Turkish notables and issued an “ultimatum” de-

  manding that they turn over the governance of the town.287 The Turks re-

  fused. Apparently th
ey told him that he was “obliged to wait until the [Paris]

  peace conference is finished” because it was not yet clear “to whom Marash

  will belong.”288 The French then arrested six of the notables, including the

  deputy mutesarrif, and threatened to hang them and “burn” down the town.

  The Turks responded by deploying armed men and fortifying key buildings.

  At one o’clock in the after noon, following one or two isolated shots, they

  opened fire from the citadel and cut down French sentries and patrols around

  town.289

  It is not clear whether the local Turkish militiamen were following Kemal’s

  instructions or were acting on their own, though undoubtedly Kemal was

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  supportive. A few days later, on the 24th, he instructed commanders in the

  areas bordering Cilicia to back the guerrilla war against the French and to inter-

  dict French reinforcements moving northward from Homs.290 The following

  day he underlined his approval, cabling his commanders, “ There is both harm

  and disadvantage in delaying operations by the Kuvâ-yi Milliye [National

  Forces] against the French any longer. . . . We must respond to French actions

  at Marash everywhere throughout the nation.”291 Kemal’s only relevant public

  statement also hints at his probable approval of the January 21 action: “At first

  there were British units at Maraş, Urfa and Antep. French troops replaced them.

  We tried to prevent this occupation. After it became fact, we resorted to po liti cal efforts, then to more active ones.”292 But without access to Turkish documents,

  the only direct evidence of orders concerning the opening of hostilities comes

  from a Turkish source who claimed the Maraş police commissioner Arslan Bey,

  “encouraged by orders of Mustafa Kemal Pasha” proclaimed on the after noon

  of the 21st, “Comrades, war has begun. With the grace of God, in the spirit of

  the Prophet, and with the self- sacrifice of believers, be resigned to every-

  thing! . . . From us, perseverance; from God, help.”293

  The French answered the Turkish salvos of January 21 with a cannonade

  from positions on the hills above. A missionary in the American compound

 

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