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  • US Former Ambassador To Armenia John Evans Wrote Review About Books

    US FORMER AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA JOHN EVANS WROTE REVIEW ABOUT BOOKS ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    http://times.am/?l=0&p=8894

    US Former Ambassador to Armenia John Evans wrote review about two
    books on Armenian Genocide. The books are "The Young Turks' Crime
    Against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the
    Ottoman Empire" by Taner Akcam and "Judgment at Istanbul: The Armenian
    Genocide Trials" ny Vahakn N. Dadrian and Taner Akcam.

    Here is the review:

    "These two books are the latest, and perhaps most conclusive, of the
    many I have read about the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Dr. Taner Akcam's
    The Young Turks' Crime Against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and
    Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire (Princeton University Press,
    2012) constitutes a major breakthrough in our understanding of the
    social engineering that led to the near destruction of the Armenians
    of Anatolia, and of the dual-track mechanism for organizing it that
    the Young Turks employed. Judgment at Istanbul: The Armenian Genocide
    Trials (Zoryan Institute; 2011) co-authored by Akcam and veteran
    Armenian historian Vahakn Dadrian, gives the English-speaking world,
    for the first time, the full story of the courts-martial constituted
    by the Ottoman Government in 1919 to hold to account the perpetrators
    of the deportations and massacres (seven of the most important of
    whom had already escaped to safety on a German warship).

    Both volumes are a must for serious scholars of the Armenian Genocide,
    but The Young Turks' Crime Against Humanity is the better value
    for most readers (Judgment at Istanbul, published first in Turkish
    in 2008, and now in English from Berghahn Books, lists at $110),
    although university libraries will want to have both.

    Dr. Akcam, a Turkish historian now at Clark, was the first scholar of
    Turkish origin to recognize the Armenian Genocide; he has made huge
    contributions to understanding it in his 2004 From Empire to Republic:
    Turkish Nationalism & the Armenian Genocide and A Shameful Act: The
    Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility (2006)
    and in innumerable articles and lectures.

    A close friend of the Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was
    assassinated on an Istanbul street in January, 2007, Akcam has himself
    been the target of death threats, yet he has continued to mine the
    Ottoman archives, which he is able to read in the pre-reform script,
    with jaw-dropping results.

    One of his recurring themes is that the Ottoman archives, far from
    painting a picture at odds with that which is already familiar to
    scholars of American, German and Austrian documentation, actually
    confirm the basic facts of the 1915 atrocities. But what Akcam has
    managed to do, this time by scouring the archives of the Ministry
    of the Interior (presided over at the time by Talat Pasha), is to
    bring to light the steady, mechanical and precise nature of the Young
    Turks' obsession with reducing the Armenian population of Anatolia
    to 5 to 10 per cent of the population in all localities - a goal
    that required both forced deportations, carried out with an outward
    show of legality, and massacres, secretly ordered through special
    channels and carried out in large part by the Special Organization
    () and bands of Kurdish marauders.

    In a way, Akcam's account is oddly reassuring, as it gets to a basic
    and banal, if also horrifying, truth: the Turks did not so much loathe
    the Armenians as view them as competitors in the impending challenge
    of building a new state, inspired by extreme Turkish nationalism,
    on the ruins of the defunct Ottoman Empire.

    This is not to understate the crimes committed, which included rape,
    forced assimilation and murder, as well as wholesale expropriations of
    land and property: genocide, in short. But as atrocious as the Young
    Turks' behavior was, it is somehow more comprehensible in terms of the
    dark logic of Turkish ultra-nationalism, and not just as a result of
    free-floating ethnic or religious hatred. Still, as Akcam shows, the
    other Christian and non-Turkish populations - Greeks, Assyrians and
    Kurds - similarly did not fit into this state-building project, but
    it was the Armenians who were most savagely targeted for annihilation.

    They clearly were not removed for "wartime necessity," as Akcam
    demonstrates. In particular, it emerges that the Armenian Reform
    Agreement (Yenikoy Accord) of 1914, forced on the Sultan by the Allies,
    notably Russia, was viewed by the Young Turks as a major threat -
    and ultimately did a terrible disservice to the Armenians.

    Akcam is very careful not to let his elucidation of the causes
    of the atrocities be taken as a justification for the Genocide -
    he does not "blame the victim," - but I expect his work will draw
    critics to the extent it fails to confirm long-held assumptions,
    assertions and denials.

    Meanwhile, the earlier (and less accessible) book, Judgment at
    Istanbul, painstakingly mines the pages of the Takvim-i-Vekâyi (the
    official organ of the Ottoman Parliament), court records and the
    Turkish press to demonstrate the sheer scale and broad involvement
    of Turkish officialdom and society in carrying out the deportations
    and worse.

    Both volumes, to be fair, record also a few exculpatory episodes of
    Turkish officials who would not go along with the Committee of Union
    and Progress's murderous plans and paid dearly for their refusal to
    obey orders. When the Ottoman courts-martial targeted Mustafa Kemal
    (the future Ataturk), not for genocide, but for mutiny, he ultimately
    responded by tearing down the 800-year-old dynasty at the head of the
    nationalist movement that launched the War of Independence and created
    the Republic of Turkey. While Ataturk was not directly involved in
    the 1915 genocide (the term "a shameful act" is his), many of his
    confrères in building the new Turkish state were, and the pattern
    of official denial was set early on. With less than two years to go
    until the centenary, much will yet be written, but I doubt as much
    light will be shed as by these two valuable volumes.

    All students of the Armenian Genocide owe Taner Akcam and Vahakn
    Dadrian a great debt for their persistent and systematic scholarship
    over the years against very heavy headwinds, including the outright
    hostility of certain states".



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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