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British Response To Armenian Massacres Of 1914-'23

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  • British Response To Armenian Massacres Of 1914-'23

    BRITISH RESPONSE TO ARMENIAN MASSACRES OF 1914-'23

    Katia M. Peltekian

    Part 2: Part 1: Official Response

    The year 1916 does not start any better for the Armenians when
    headlines in the British Press report even more appalling situation:

    Trail of Death in Asia Minor: Torture of Armenian Women Children as
    Targets: Armenians Drowned by the Hundred Another Armenian Massacre:
    Thousands of Workmen Butchered An Armenian Exodus The Sufferings of
    Armenia: Organized Turkish Outrages

    And at the House of Commons again, in December 1916, the reports of
    the massacres were confirmed by Lord Robert Cecil, the under-secretary
    for Foreign Affairs.

    ... In reply to Mr. A. Williams, Lord Cecil said, "The Government
    has lately received information from a reliable source which gives
    much detailed evidence that systematic cruelty and outrages have
    been inflicted on masses of Armenians deported from their homes. The
    evidence goes to show that the Turkish officials have recourse to
    various methods in order to exterminate the Armenians by famine; by
    deliberate exposure to infectious disease, forced marches of old men,
    women and children, and lastly, by massacres of labourers on charges
    of insubordination.

    The Headlines in the British Press from 1917 did not change much.

    Fewer articles on Armenia & Armenians were published in the newspaper,
    perhaps due to the difficulties that correspondents had reaching
    the war zones, but the headlines remained almost identical to the
    previous years:

    The Murder of a Race: How Armenians Were Exterminated 20,000 Homeless
    Armenian Orphans The Armenian Tragedy: Wholesale Massacres The Armenian
    Refugees: Pitiable Conditions

    And although there was not much reaction in official quarters, the
    British appeals for Armenian orphans and refugees grew. [This will
    be elaborated in the last part]

    In 1918 the British media continued to print articles and editorials
    about the ongoing massacres committed against the Armenians and
    Christians by the Turks. Recurring headlines depicted the following:

    All Males Put to the Sword The Doom of Armenia: Will the World
    Permit it?

    The Armenian Horrors

    In October of 1918, Lord Robert Cecil from the British Foreign Office
    released a statement in which he assured that the Armenians would be
    liberated from the Turks. He declared:

    The services of the Armenians to the common cause have assuredly
    not been forgotten, and I venture to mention four points which the
    Armenians may, I think, regard as the charter of their right to
    liberation at the hand of the Allies.

    1. In the autumn of 1914 the Turks sent emissaries to the National
    Congress of the Ottoman Armenians, then sitting at Erzerum, and
    made them offers of autonomy if they would actively assist Turkey
    in the war. The Armenians replied that they would do their duty,
    individually, as Ottoman subjects, but that as a nation they could
    not work for the cause of Turkey and her allies.

    2. On account, in part, of this courageous refusal, the Ottoman
    Armenians were systematically murdered by the Turkish Government
    in 1915. Two-thirds of the population were exterminated by the most
    cold-blooded and fiendish methods - more than 700,000 people, men,
    women, and children alike.

    3. From the beginning of the war, that half of the Armenian nation
    which was under the sovereignty of Russia organised volunteer forces,
    and under their heroic leader, Andranik, bore the brunt of some of
    the heaviest fighting in the Caucasian campaigns.

    4. After the breakdown of the Russian army at the end of last year
    these Armenian forces took over the Caucasian front, and for five
    months delayed the advance of the Turks, thus rendering an important
    service to the British army in Mesopotamia. These operations in the
    region of Alexandropol and Erivan were, of course, unconnected with
    those at Baku.

    I may add that Armenian soldiers are still fighting in the ranks of
    the Allied forces in Syria. They are to be found serving alike in the
    British, French, and American armies, and they have borne their part
    in General Allenby's great victory in Palestine. He concluded saying:
    "Need I say after this that the policy of the Allies towards Armenia
    remains unaltered? ... I am quite ready to reaffirm our determination
    that wrongs such as Armenia has suffered shall be brought to an end,
    and their recurrence made impossible."

    At the end of October 1918, however, the British press published
    concerns regarding some reports emerging in both Paris & London that
    there was an intention to conclude an arrangement with the Turks
    on the basis of leaving them in possession of Armenia, and even of
    acknowledging Turkish authority in the regions from which Turkey
    had been expelled. The British media called this "betrayal", and as
    one The Guardian correspondent wrote, "It may seem incredible that we
    should be guilty of this wicked abandonment of the Eastern Christians,
    of whom the Turks have massacred three-quarters of a million, but the
    War Office Turcophiles are strong, and it is unfortunately impossible
    to treat these reports as being wholly beyond belief."

    Lord Cecil, from the Foreign office, denied these rumors, as did the
    Secretary for Foreign Affairs Lord Balfour, who declared,

    We have always regarded the freeing of the Armenians from Turkish
    misrule as an important part of our Middle Eastern policy, and we
    confidently look forward to its accomplishments. (Cheers.)

    With the end of the Great War came the need to help Armenia (the
    nation), the survivors, the refugees and what the British press called
    "the Armenian Remnant". At a November 1918 meeting in the House of
    Commons dedicated to the Armenians situation,

    Mr. Aneurin Williams called attention to the condition of the races
    that had hitherto been subject to Turkish misrule, and in particular
    of the Armenians. He said that since the beginning of the war 800,000
    Armenian men, women, and children had been massacred. There were
    large numbers of refugees and deportees in concentration camps in
    the north of Syria and the higher parts of the Euphrates. He asked
    what was going to be done to save them from famine and death... He
    urged the Government to organize measures for saving the people from
    starvation and to promise that steps would be taken later to enable
    those who had been compelled to leave their country to return safely
    to the land of their forefathers.

    Another Member of Parliament Mr. J. Bliss, described many of the
    tortures which the Armenians had been subjected to, the confiscations,
    personal outrages, deportations, and murders of which they had been
    victims.

    Moreover, MP Sir G. Greenwood urged that it should be a main principle
    of the British foreign policy that ... Turkish rule in Armenia must
    be forever gone, and the Armenian State placed under the protection
    of the Great Powers, with one Power as mandatory of all the Powers,
    at least for a term of years.

    After a number of members of parliament also made similar statements,
    the Government's reply came from Lord Robert Cecil, the Under-Secretary
    for Foreign Affairs:

    ... I was asked what measures have been completed or were about to
    be taken for the immediate protection of the Armenian people, apart
    from its future government. ... In the first place, provision has
    been made for the repatriation of the Armenians at present imprisoned
    or interned by the Turks, and in that matter the Armenians have been
    singled out from all the other races, and have been put upon the same
    terms as our own prisoners of war.

    Lord Cecil also shared to the full the view that the enemy in this
    matter was the Turkish Government. He believed it to be true that every
    one of the atrocities in Armenia had not been the result of casual
    ferocity of isolated Turkish brigands, or even of the misdeeds of
    local governments; they had been ordered from Constantinople, so far
    as he knew, in every case. That was the central fact to be recognized
    in dealing with the situation. It was not a religious question. The
    Arabs had always protected the Armenians, and when the British Army
    came to Aleppo they found several bodies of Armenians living there
    under the protection of the Arabs.

    And despite several warnings from Britain and the Allies - the victors
    in the War - who constantly reminded the Turks - the losers in the
    War - of the clauses of the armistice to the Turks, the Turks went
    about with their business as usual. Headlines in the British Press
    in 1919 again drew the British public's attention to massacres and
    outrages committed against the Armenians and other Christians.

    Turkish Massacres of Armenians: Violation of the Armistice Tortured
    Armenians: Turkish Atrocities Continued Turks Harassing Christians:
    Smyrna District Terrorized Slaughter of Armenians Armenian Massacre:
    Hundreds of Women & Children Killed (in Karabakh by Azerbaijani forces)
    Armenians in Peril

    As the massacres continued, the British Government's Press Bureau
    released yet another statement saying:

    Evidence has been received that the Turkish army, in withdrawing from
    the invaded territories in the Caucasus, has continued, in spite of
    the terms of the armistice, to commit the grossest outrages on the
    Armenian population; in fact, individual Turks have openly acknowledged
    that the intention is to deal a final blow at the Armenians and to
    consummate the Turkish policy of exterminating the unfortunate race.

    During the Summer of 1919, alarming reports sent by agents of the
    Allied governments in Armenia alerted the Peace Conference delegates
    that the withdrawal of the British troops from TransCaucasia would
    be the signal for a terrible outbreak of massacres and violence, of
    which the Armenians would again be the victim; however, the British
    government was adamant to start withdrawing on June 15. That withdrawal
    was postponed for two whole months to give other governments interested
    in the welfare of Armenia to step in and take charge. This resulted
    in a few Parliamentary discussions during which friends of Armenia
    MPs Aneurin Williams, T.P. O'Connor and Lord Cecil questioned the
    Government about the measures it would take to ensure the safety of
    Armenians and prevent new massacres from taking place.

    The only answer given was that measures were being discussed at the
    Peace Conference.

    But despite many pleas in and out of the official circles regarding
    the terrible consequences that could occur in Armenia, Britain began
    to gradually withdraw its army as the British press headlines read
    "Armenia Abandoned". Lord Robert Cecil (Undersecretary of Foreign
    Affairs) had this to say during one debate in August 1919 in the
    House of Commons.

    With regard to Armenia, we would much like to avoid the risk of
    possible atrocities, but we had great responsibilities all over the
    world, and our first responsibility was to our own people. There was
    a very definite limit to what the country could do. The Government
    would gladly do everything in their power to avoid misfortune in
    Armenia, and there was reason to hope, from the representations which
    had been made to the Government by a commission sent to Armenia,
    that the atrocities would not take place again. The withdrawal of
    the troops must continue. The process of withdrawal would be slow;
    it would continue well into October. If any sign of help were coming
    from America we should only too gladly welcome it. This was really an
    American problem rather than British. They were in a better position
    to deal with it. They had interests as great as ours. If the President
    of the United States were officially to say to us: "We wish you to
    hold the fort a little until we can make arrangements," we should
    not only do our best, but we could hold out no hope of keeping troops
    longer in that part of the country. We had our own missions both at
    Baku and Batum.

    British Response to Armenian Massacres of 1914-'23

    Part 3: Part 1: Official Response

    With the arrival of 1920 came more massacres of Armenians, this
    time at the hands of Mustapha Kemal Pasha (later known as Ataturk)
    and his Nationalist troops. The British Press's headlines sounded
    like history repeating itself:

    Fresh Armenian Massacres: 1,500 victims of the Turk

    Slaughter of the Armenians: 7,000 Victims of the Turk

    Armenian Call to the Allies: Massacred and Helpless

    These reports did not go unnoticed in the official circles, and as
    the Peace Conference continued to discuss the future of Turkey and
    whether Constantinople would be given back to Turkey, members of
    the Parliament Aneurin Williams and T.P. O'Connor again came to the
    defense of the Armenians with the following discussion.

    Mr. A. Williams asked [the Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs] whether
    he had received news of the massacre of about 1,500 Armenians by
    Nationalist bands near Marash at the end of January, ... and whether
    he was aware that Europeans of Constantinople and Asia Minor... were
    calling out for protection against those continued outrages.

    Sir Hamar Greenwood said: - The answer to [your] question is, I
    regret to say, that similar information has been received from a
    private source by his Majesty's High Commissioner at Constantinople...

    Mr. T. P. O'Connor - May I ask whether these massacres will not confirm
    the Government in their frequently announced policy that none of the
    Christian subjects of Turkey, like the Armenians, shall any longer,
    under the new arrangements with Turkey, be subjected to the possibility
    of massacre, as in the past.

    SIR H. Greenwood - I wish it were possible for me to give an answer
    to the question satisfactorily both to the hon. member and to myself.

    Mr. A. Williams - Is it not a fact that the Armenians went back to
    these districts under the encouragement of the British authorities?

    SIR H. Greenwood - I must have notice of that question.

    Debates in the House of Commons took place frequently during the first
    months of 1920, but the interest of the British Government seemed to
    diminish. Whenever similar questions were raised by members of the
    Parliament, the government either chose not to answer or completely
    avoided the issue saying that those territories were not under British
    responsibility but rather under the French jurisdiction. However,
    the British newspapers did not remain silent. In several editorials,
    the Government was called upon to do the honorable duty towards the
    Armenians. The Editor of The Times (February 18, 1920) described the
    situation well.

    While the Supreme Council in London is preparing to deal indulgently
    with the Turkish Government, large forces of Turks and Kurds have begun
    a wholesale massacre of the remnants of the Armenian people in the
    province of Cilicia, in Asia Minor. These forces are under the control
    of the recalcitrant general, Mustapha Kemal Pasha, who is the head
    of the "Nationalist" movement in Anatolia... Mustapha Kemal appears
    to have adopted the policy of Enver and Talaat, who sought to "kill
    the Armenian question by "killing the Armenian nation."... Over fifty
    per cent. of the two million Armenians in Asia Minor are believed to
    have been exterminated as a consequence of the terrible "deportations"
    of 1915. The victims who have already been butchered in the last week
    or two by Mustapha Kemal 's men are said to number seven thousand. At
    Zeitun (the Armenian town which always maintained semi-independence
    until five years ago), at Furnus, and at other places the Armenians
    were not able to offer any effective resistance. At Hajin, a lonely
    town set in the midst of high mountains, the Armenian inhabitants and
    a party of Frenchmen were, by last report, holding out... The Editorial
    continued describing the dire situation of the Armenians in Cilicia.

    Another editorial in The Times warned that

    The one thing the public will not tolerate is the abandonment of the
    Armenians to destruction. Mr.Lloyd George told the Armenian citizens
    of Manchester in 1918 that "those responsible for the government
    of this country are not unmindful of their responsibilities to your
    martyred race." The time has come to recall these responsibilities...

    During subsequent meetings at the House of Lords and the House of
    Commons, news of fresh new massacres were confirmed by members of
    the Government, while the Prime Minister Lord Andrew Bonar Law and
    his cabinet confirmed that they were doing all that could be done.

    ... In regard to the carrying out of the pledges given to the Armenian
    and Christian peoples of the Turkish Empire, Sir Bonar Law said: -
    I do not think that it is necessary to assure my hon. friends and the
    House that the protection of the races referred to in the questions
    is one of the most vital subjects to be decided in the Turkish Treaty,
    and the steps necessary to secure that protection are being considered
    at the Conference.

    It is during this time that two opposing groups emerged in the British
    Parliament: One side included Lord Robert Cecil, T.P. O'Connor,
    Aneurin Williams, and others who signed a declaration to the Prime
    Minister that it was essential in the interests of the permanent peace
    that Constantinople not be left to the Turks. Whereas a counter-move
    was made by 23 members of the House who circulated a letter to their
    colleagues at Westminster saying that they disagreed that the Turk
    should be thrown out of Constantinople because the British Empire
    had pledged its Indian citizens in 1918 that the British Empire was

    "... not fighting to deprive Turkey of its capital or of the rich and
    renowned lands of Asia Minor ... which are predominantly Turkish in
    race. We believe that any departure from this undertaking would have
    disastrous effects on Moslem opinion in India.

    At this point, matters took a different turn. The Indian Moslems
    of the British Empire showed their displeasure with the British
    officials at the Peace Conference who were negotiating the peace
    terms with Turkey as the topic of Constantinople hit the headlines:
    should Turkey stay out of Europe? In fact, in the Parliament, the
    debate on Constantinople took precedence over the rights of the
    minorities in Turkey. Indian Moslems were also disgruntled at the
    direction the debates were going: after all, the Moslem Caliphate was
    in Constantinople. Frequently, letters to the editor from the Indian
    Moslem community leaders, such as Ameer Ali, began to appear on the
    pages of The Times. These letters openly attacked Lords and MPs,
    such as Bryce and Williams, who wanted Turkey out of Europe and out
    of the Armenian provinces. Indian Moslem leaders claimed that the "
    the hundreds of millions of Moslems in the British Empire helped the
    Allies in the war because of the Prime Minister's declaration in 1918
    that the aim was not to deprive Turkey of its capital or of the rich
    and renowned lands of Asia Minor and Thrace, which are predominantly
    Turkish in race." They even blamed Europe and Tsarist Russia for the
    misrule of Constantinople. Their discord and underlying threat to
    World Peace was even more evident with such claims in a Letter to
    the Editor of The Times in February 1920:

    To drive the Turks out of Europe, and pen them in, within the
    plateau of Anatolia would mean that they would be excluded from free
    inter-association with other nations; would be deprived of all touch
    with the modern world, and thus have no chance of development. They
    would brood in sullen anger over their wrongs and wait for the hour
    of revenge... The Indian Moslem leaders in Britain even avowed that
    Turkey [was] a victim of injustice. They hoped that Britain would
    not allow the cherished feelings of their Moslem fellow-subjects to
    be trampled upon and a gulf of bitterness and hatred created between
    the two great faiths within the British Empire.

    After this sort of language emerged from the Moslem Indians of the
    British Empire, both Houses of the Parliament had long discussions
    and debates on Constantinople and Indian Moslem sentiments, but some
    officials remained firm in honoring other pledges such as those given
    to the Armenians.

    Towards the end of February 1920, the British Labor Party protested
    against the treatment of Armenia by the Allied Powers: They issued a
    lengthy resolution regarding the minimum programme which the Allied
    Governments are bound in honour to carry out, and which included: -

    The entire region known as Turkish Armenia must be released absolutely
    from Turkish sovereignty.

    The best settlement would have been to place the whole of this
    region for a term of years and under strict conditions under the
    control of a single mandatory Power, charged to maintain religious
    and racial equality between the different elements of the population,
    to promote goodwill between them, and to train them to govern their
    country in common. But the party recognise that if America stands
    aside the country may have at least temporarily to be divided. But
    if a mandate for the south-western districts (Cilicia, Diarbekr,
    Kharput) is given to France, they demand that it shall be conferred
    under the strict conditions referred to above, and that at a date
    to be specified in the mandate the population shall be given an
    opportunity of deciding whether they wish to govern themselves as a
    separate State or to reunite with the rest of Armenia.

    The remainder of Turkish Armenia ought to be attached at once to the
    independent Armenian Republic, already in being in Trans-Caucasia.

    The party protests against any idea of subordinating the Armenian
    settlement to considerations of Indian policy.

    The British Press did not back down either: Headlines in 1920 now
    referred to

    The Scandal of Armenian Martyrdom

    The Massacre of Armenians: Deportation Horrors Repeated

    The Marash Massacres: 16,000 Armenians Killed out of 22,000

    Cilician Massacres: Nationalist Orgies

    The Press also showed discontent at the Supreme Council's (at the
    Peace Negotiations) silence over the measures it would take to stop
    the massacres; in fact, Editorials demanded answers when they printed:

    Armenia happens to be the subject upon which millions who care
    little for foreign affairs of the usual sort are now particularly
    interested...

    The question to these millions is not one of territorial or financial
    gains to this country or to that. It is a question of human life. It
    is a question of saving the remnant after massacres of the Armenian
    people, from the wholesale slaughter which is now being prepared
    for them.

    However, whenever some MPs brought up the issue of these renewed
    slaughters, the Government chose to remain silent: At one House of
    Commons meeting in March of 1920:

    SIR D. MacLean and Major D. Davies asked for information with regard
    to the massacres of Armenians by the Turks, and the action it was
    proposed to take.

    Mr. Lloyd George (PM) - These matters are under discussion by the
    Allied Governments and between the Government and their representatives
    in Constantinople, and I hope my hon. friend will recognize the
    inadvisability of making an announcement on the subject at present...

    The deterioration of morals of the British Government came at another
    House of Commons meeting during which the protection of Armenia was the
    topic of discussion on the number of Armenians massacred: (March 1920)

    Mr. T. P. O'Connor asked the Prime Minister whether he had seen the
    most recent telegram from Cilicia giving full details of the massacre
    of Armenians there. He had seen a telegram stating that 18,000 had
    been massacred in the district of Marash, that 1,300 women and children
    had perished in a snowstorm, and that there were still 8,000 Armenians
    in daily peril.

    Mr. Lloyd George replied: Such information as we have received does
    not, I am glad to say, indicate that the massacres have quite reached
    that formidable figure; but they are formidable enough. The latest
    figure we have comes to something like 15,000. Beyond that I do not
    think we have heard anything.

    Mr. T. P. O'Connor asked whether details had been received as to the
    death of refugee women and children from snow and starvation.

    Mr. Lloyd George - I think they would be included in the 15,000. No
    doubt many of them attempted to escape and perished in a snowstorm.

    For one reason or another, the British government began putting all
    sorts of obstacles not to grant Armenia what it had promised. One such
    reason was whether the Armenians constituted a majority or a minority
    in the regions that were to be given to Armenia & Cilicia. During a
    long debate on Foreign Policy in the House of Commons, the following
    statement was made by the Prime Minister Mr. Lloyd George:

    The difficulty about Armenia is that the Armenian population is
    scattered over several provinces. There is only one part of Turkey
    where you can say that the Armenians are in the majority. By no sort of
    self-determination can you add to the Republic of Armenia territories
    like Cilicia. In Cilicia they are in a very considerable minority. I
    rather think that the [Moslems] there are in the proportion of three or
    four to one, ... Here are the figures: - Moslems, 546,000; Armenians,
    130,000; Greeks, 36,000; other elements 18,000...

    Of course, this issue of numbers was not dismissed that easily by
    Aneurin Williams when he asked whether the Prime Minister was speaking
    of the population of Cilicia as it was now or as it was before the
    massacres. Was he recognizing the majority created by the massacres?

    To which Lloyd George answered: We must take the facts as they are.

    I have no doubt that the horrible massacres have upset the balance
    of the population.

    When T.P. O'Connor demanded that it was Britain's greatest
    responsibility to prevent further massacres, the Prime Minister had
    only this to say:

    I agree that we have a certain responsibility in the matter, but we
    really cannot police the whole world. With every desire to assist,
    we have used the British Fleet very freely. We practically policed
    that country for a year or two, and policed it successfully, but it
    cost a very considerable sum of money, and we cannot undertake that
    liability indefinitely. (Hear, hear.)... With regard to the Republic
    of Erivan... it depends entirely on the Armenians themselves whether
    they protect their independence. They must do so; they must begin
    to depend upon themselves. They are an exceptionally intelligent
    people. In fact it is their intelligence which gets them into
    trouble sometimes, from all I hear... The Prime Minister even had
    the audacity to declare that Instead of always casting themselves
    upon other countries and sending supplications and appeals, let the
    [Armenians] defend themselves. When they do so the Turk will have too
    much respect for them to attempt any more massacres in that quarter.

    Note: All citations are taken from "The Times of the Armenian Genocide:
    Reports in the British Press," edited by Katia Minas Peltekian. The
    book in two volumes compiles over one thousand articles from the
    British Press during 1914-1923.

    http://www.keghart.com/Peltekian-British-Response2-3

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