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  • ISTANBUL: German militarism's connivance with Committee of Union and

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 20 2012

    German militarism's connivance with Committee of Union and Progress

    by Ümit Kardaş*

    20 May 2012 /

    Wolfgang Gust, the foreign news chief of Der Spiegel and the editor of
    Spiegel-Buch, and his wife, Sigrid Gust, have worked on the German
    Foreign Ministry's political archives concerning the disaster and
    massacre Armenians suffered in 1915 and 1916.
    Their book, "Alman Belgeleri: Ermeni Soykırımı 1915-1916" (German
    Documents: Armenian Genocide 1915-1916), published by Belge Yayınları
    in Turkey, is 992 pages long, of which 179 pages are allocated to the
    evaluation and interpretation of the documents and some additional
    resources, while the remaining 813 pages present the archived
    documents. These documents testify to the sheer magnitude of the
    forced relocation of Armenians for eventual destruction, and its
    portrayal of the German administration in this tragedy makes this book
    important.

    German policies concerning Turkey and Armenians were being shaped by
    the German army's top-down management style. Clearly, Germany had an
    authoritarian regime in which Prussian militarism played a dominant
    role. When the bourgeois revolution that sought to implement the
    ideals of the French revolution in Germany in 1848 failed, 2.8 million
    Germans left their country, and most of them went to the US. The
    notion of human rights did not exist in the German language. The
    German academic world argued that German culture would disintegrate
    without German militarism.

    German culture had sprung from militarism thanks to the protection it
    provided. Therefore, this mentality was opposed to Western
    civilization. In response, Western-minded Armenian elites didn't like
    Germans. And Germans didn't like Western-minded Armenians. In a report
    he sent from Damascus to the chancellor of the German Empire, Theobald
    von Bethmann-Hollweg, German propagandist and Intelligence Bureau for
    the East head Max Freiherr von Oppenheim described American and
    British missionary and consulate activities as provocative and
    malicious. For this reason, Germans started to regard Armenians as
    their seventh ally (i.e., after Oppenheim started sowing discord
    between the Germans and the Americans and the British, the Germans
    began to warm to the Armenians).

    Germans sought to extend the Baghdad railway not just to Baghdad but
    also to Basra on the Persian Gulf and perceived the region as an area
    of interest as a German colony and to ensure German economic dominance
    in the region and eventually to annex the region to the German Empire.
    The center of this area of interest was the Çukurova/Adana region
    (Cilicia).

    In a letter he wrote in July 1913 to German Ambassador Hans Freiherr
    von Wangenheim, Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Gottlieb von Jagow
    summed this up as follows, "Turkey will maintain its presence in Asia
    until we reinforce our limits of work and complete the annexation."
    The German plan to reach through the depths of Anatolia to Palestine
    started swiftly in 1912. Their goal was to reach the Suez Canal. This
    policy pitted the Germans against the British, who had investments and
    enterprises in Ottoman territories and pursued similar policies.

    In addition to Britain, Russia and France were uneasy about
    cooperation between Germany and the Committee of Union and Progress
    (CUP). Germans made progress in their projects in the fields of
    economy, commerce, agriculture, navigation and education in the
    Ottoman territories. Parallel to these developments, Enver Paşa made a
    secret agreement with the Germans for the reforming of the army, and
    General Otto Liman von Sanders and 50 German military officers from
    Berlin were invited to the Ottoman Empire. In practice, these military
    officers also meddled with the political affairs of the CUP.
    Non-Muslim groups living in the Ottoman Empire posed an obstacle to
    Germany's economic and ideological aspirations in the East. Thus began
    the connivance of German militarism with the CUP for inhumane
    practices against non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey allies with Germany

    As Turkey allied with Germany in World War I, a savage and ruthless
    practice against Greeks and Armenians commenced. In 1914, an
    oppressive campaign was launched against Greeks, and the destruction
    of Greek settlements started. In early 1915, Deutsche Palastine Bank
    (German-Palestine Bank) distributed flyers in Turkish that provoked
    Muslims in the East and incited hatred against Christians and that
    told Muslims to cut their commercial ties with them. Forced relocation
    of Greeks in Ayvalık was conducted upon official demand from Gen.
    Liman von Sanders (see Mihail Rodas: "Almanya Türkiye'deki Rumları
    Nasıl Mahvetti?" [How did Germany Destroy Greeks in Turkey?]).

    With the start of the war, the military recruitment system had been
    altered so that non-Muslims who wanted to serve in the army would have
    to pay a specified tax or become military deserters. Moreover, labor
    battalions were formed from the Christians sent from Anatolia for road
    construction and other forced labor work. Thousands of Christians who
    were forced to work in these battalions were not paid and were not
    provided with adequate nutrition, and they would lose their lives
    under hard climatic conditions. This compulsory military service model
    destroyed the most efficient groups of ethnic and non-Muslim
    minorities, and this model was further assisted by confiscations and
    compulsory taxes. Thus, the wealth of these minorities was
    confiscated, and their shops were looted.

    As wealth and commerce were Turkified and Islamified, Germany took its
    share through its banks and companies. Muslims were prohibited from
    developing commercial ties with Greeks, who were banned from exporting
    goods. The government decided to confiscate all properties of those
    who were forced to migrate. Another method was to force Christians to
    become Muslims. Gen. Liman von Sanders collected taxes from Christians
    to establish an orphanage in Bandırma. Here, boys would be
    assimilated, and girls would be forced to marry Turkish boys.
    Christian families would be sent to predominantly Turkish villages,
    and they would not be allowed to leave the village. In addition to
    general massacres, there were also individually committed murders. The
    two-phased policy -- implemented mainly against Greeks in 1914 but
    later expanded to include Armenians -- had a single aim: to destroy
    the Christian components so that the Ottoman Empire could be converted
    into a purely Turkish/Muslim state. Kurds were excluded from this
    policy as they were Muslims and therefore could be Turkified. Kurdish
    and Circassian gangs played a role in this massacre.

    Germany's policies regarding their interests in the East had
    overlapped with the CUP's policy of homogenizing the country. This is
    clearly evidenced by the fact that German Ambassador to the Ottoman
    Empire Count Wolff-Metternich, who criticized the developments, was
    removed from office by the Kaiser on the grounds that he "undermined
    the dignity of Turks and failed to act according to German interests
    by interfering in favor of Christians." Armenians, who were the first
    tribe to accept Christianity, were being crushed between the Russian
    hammer and the Turkish-German anvil.

    There were 800 German military officers in the Ottoman territories
    under the service agreement signed by the Ottoman Empire and the
    German Military Aid Delegation in 1913. They not only trained Turkish
    military officers, but also formed part of the Turkish army. German
    military officers assumed critical positions everywhere in the Turkish
    army. The number of German military officers who openly voiced
    objection to the forced relocation and massacre was very few. Three
    German military officers who opposed forced relocation in Erzurum paid
    dearly for their opposition.

    A brutal report

    In a report attached to a letter he sent to Chancellor of the German
    Empire Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, Rudolf von Valentini from the
    Privy Council of the German emperor said the following based on
    observations that Martin Niepage, a teacher at the German school in
    Aleppo, made in September 1915: "The men are slaughtered on the way;
    the women and girls, with the exception of the old, the ugly and those
    who are still children, have been abused by Turkish soldiers and
    officers and then carried away to Turkish and Kurdish villages, where
    they have to accept Islam. They try to destroy the remnant of the
    convoys by hunger and thirst. Most of them are suffering from typhoid
    and dysentery. If one brings them food, one notices that they have
    forgotten how to eat. They just lie there quietly, waiting for death.
    ... Under such circumstances our educational work flies in the face of
    all true morality and becomes a mockery of human sympathy.
    Mohammedans, too, of more sensitive feelings -- Turks and Arabs alike
    -- shake their heads in disapproval and do not conceal their tears
    when they see a convoy of exiles marching through the city, and
    Turkish soldiers using cudgels upon women in advanced pregnancy and
    upon dying people who can no longer drag themselves along. They cannot
    believe that their government has ordered these atrocities, and they
    hold the Germans responsible for all such outrages, Germany being
    considered during the war as Turkey's schoolmaster in everything.
    Moslem intellectuals believe that even if the German nation condemns
    this massacre, the German government will not be inclined to prevent
    it for the sake of its friendship with the Turkish government."

    Yunus Nadi wrote the following at the end of his article titled
    "Bankruptcy and cleaning" that appeared in Tasvir-i Efkar on Oct. 7,
    1916: "Under pressure from realities, we have to turn toward a new
    target. We have to realize that the policy of ensuring a union among
    the said ethnic groups has gone bankrupt and the era of 'cleaning' for
    the sake of the homeland has started." A German missionary defined
    this strategy of murder as follows: "Exile, execution and bullets
    until the last member." A German military officer narrated his
    observations as follows, "Amid the endless serenity of the desert,
    wheezing sounds of those who are in the throes of death and the cries
    of those who lost their minds were filling the skies."

    In the early 1900s, a similar tragedy occurred in the desert of
    Omaheke in South-West Africa -- currently Namibia. The victims were
    not Armenians, but the Herero, who were massacred by the German
    Imperial Forces led by Gen. Lothar von Trotha (who had violently
    suppressed the Boxer rebellion in China). As he drove the Herero into
    the desert of Omaheke, where they would die, Gen. Trotha justified the
    massacre by saying, "I believe that the nation as such should be
    annihilated." Perhaps, Gen. Trotha had advised the CUP leaders that
    they should implement the recipe of destruction he had applied in
    Africa.

    The conclusion confirmed by the documents published by Gust is that
    German military officers as agents of German militarism endorsed the
    forced relocation, and they found military justifications for it. They
    thought that Germany's interests in the region preached this. And the
    CUP leaders violently implemented its Turkification and Islamification
    policies with support and connivance from Germany. When the scope of
    forced relocation was expanded to the entire country, the Germans did
    not raise objections to it. Reading the details of the documents Gust
    has managed to retrieve from the German Foreign Ministry's Political
    Archives -- although the Germans had destroyed a significant portion
    of these documents -- has left me in utter shame and gripped my soul.

    Germany has a tradition of offering official apologies about such
    periods of shame in their history. If German Chancellor Angela Merkel
    and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan together condemn the
    atrocities and massacres their ancestors performed, the souls of the
    victims, squeezed somewhere, will turn into doves. Does conscience
    tell us to spare our words from the oppressed?

    *Ümit Kardaş is a retired military judge.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-280848-german-militarisms-connivance-with-committee-of-union-and-progress-by-umit-kardas*.html

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