NEW EVIDENCE OF GERMAN GUILT
Jirair Tutunjian, Toronto,
12 June 2014
In a recently published book by the Yale University Press ("Nazis,
Islamists, and the Making of the Modern Middle East) about Germany's
alliance with Ottoman Turkey during the First World War, co-authors
Barry Rubin & Wolfgang G, Schwanitz shed newlight on Berlin's
complicity in the Genocide of Armenians.
Rubin and Schwanitz say that the father of the German policy to recruit
Muslims into the German side was Max von Oppenheim and call for Jihad
against Christian Britain, France, and Russia. According to the two
authors, he was as important to German strategy in the Middle East
as Lawrence of Arabia was to Britain. In November 1914 von Oppenheim
wrote a 136-page plan, "The Revolutionizing of the Islamic Territories
of Our Enemies", to the Kaiser. "The plan was quickly approved and
funded. The plan identified [Germany's] enemy not only the British,
French, and Russians but also non-Muslim minorities, Christians and
Jews who supported the Allies. This meant Germany's endorsement of
a war against civilians and spreading religious hatred.
Thus, German strategy would be intimately involved in the Ottoman's
mass murder of Armenians," say Rubin and Schwanitz.
Here are more excerpts from the book:
"But the Kaiser [Wilhelm II] was not trying to win over the empire's
[Ottoman] non-Muslim or dissident subjects. In 1898, the Ottoman
Empire appeared a stronger horse than scattered Arab nationalist
intellectuals, Jewish ideologues, and Armenian activists with no troops
or money behind them. Thus, the Germans turned down Armenian requests
for help against the Ottomans...Consequently, Armenians would turn
toward Russia and both Zionists and Arab nationalists toward Great
Britain for support."
When the Kaiser visited (1898) Istanbul for the second time, bilingual
(German and Turkish) postcards printed the Kaiser's pledge to be the
"friend of the Ottoman sultan and the three-hundred Muslims who revere
him as their caliph. The postcard was produced two years after the
Ottoman sultan and caliph Abdulhamid II had been condemned throughout
Europe for massacres against his Armenian subjects that shocked all
'minorities of infidels.'"
"...Quickly, Enver (Pasha), who was simultaneously planning the
deportation and massacre of Armenians, realized that the violence
had to be focused against his and Germany's enemies."
"...But the most momentous immediate event arising from the German
jihad strategy was the mass murder of Ottoman Armenians. Von Oppenheim
either urged or supported Ottoman repression of the Armenians and Jews
[although he was a Jew], as well as the execution of Arab nationalists,
groups he saw as favoring the Allies. When German officials warned
about massacres of Armenians, von Oppenheim told them to shut up."
"...Von Oppenheim's aide, Scheubner-Richter, sent three vivid
reports to German Ambassador von Wangenheim on the cruelties against
Armenians in the Lake Van region, Scheubner-Richter reported rumors
that deportations were being conducted according to German advice.
Personally, he explained he didn't believe the story and tried to
help ease the pressure on the Armenians, but von Wangenheim ignored
his request for intervention. If the Germans had wanted to stop, or
at least mitigate, Ottoman policy and behavior toward the Armenians
they could easily have done so. For example, on October 8, 1915,
von Oppenheim received a report that the Ottoman government's goal
was the extermination of the Armenians. Only one week later, however,
he was telling Berlin that the deportations were justified war measures
because the Armenians were betraying the Ottomans by supporting their
Russian enemy."
"Meanwhile, German consuls, bankers, and clerics in the empire were
telling a different story from what von Oppenheim reported to Berlin.
During the second half of 1915, they warned of how jihad rhetoric was
inflaming Muslim hatred of Christians and determination to annihilate
them; how the jihad was just a cover for systematic looting, killing,
and terror toward Armenians; and they provided detailed accounts of
mass deportations, killings, and concentration camps."
"These Germans said they often heard the slogan from Muslims that
jihad should begin by killing local Christians. They also noted that
Ottoman officers and officials frequently said that Germany wanted
the Armenians killed. German bankers told how Armenian employees and
customers were disappearing. The Ottoman government then informed them
that it was seizing the Armenians' assets. The official explanation
for German inaction was that Germany needed Turkey's help as an ally
and so could say nothing."
"By early 1916 German officials in the Ottoman Empire had no doubt
about what was happening. Even the Kaiser heard the news. The head of
his military cabinet, Moriz von Lyncker, wrote in his diary on August
8, 1916: "Most terrible how the Turks rage against Christian Armenians,
their subjects. Thousands--men, woman and children--are slaughtered;
others were driven purposely to death by starvation. Our diplomats
appear at this point powerless. But in fact the German government
never made the slightest attempt to discourage the mass murders."
"Soon, the Armenians disappeared entirely from eastern Armenia. Enver
told a visiting German that there was "No Armenian question anymore."
He said that Armenians had killed between 125,000 and 150,000 Muslim
Turks, and that the Turks had killed--the figures are hotly debated
to this day--up to one and a half million Armenians."
"The mass murder of Ottoman Armenians was the largest organized
massacre against a civilian minority since medieval and probably since
ancient times. While it was carried out by the Ottomans, the German
broadly inspired it, were well aware of it, and didn't interfere
with it."
"...German policy looked down on Middle Eastern Christians, especially
Armenians. Von Oppenheim said that they deserved their reputation
'as being cowards, and great at plotting and scheming.' This racial
theme would continue under the Nazis..."
http://www.keghart.com/Tutunjian-German-Guilt
Jirair Tutunjian, Toronto,
12 June 2014
In a recently published book by the Yale University Press ("Nazis,
Islamists, and the Making of the Modern Middle East) about Germany's
alliance with Ottoman Turkey during the First World War, co-authors
Barry Rubin & Wolfgang G, Schwanitz shed newlight on Berlin's
complicity in the Genocide of Armenians.
Rubin and Schwanitz say that the father of the German policy to recruit
Muslims into the German side was Max von Oppenheim and call for Jihad
against Christian Britain, France, and Russia. According to the two
authors, he was as important to German strategy in the Middle East
as Lawrence of Arabia was to Britain. In November 1914 von Oppenheim
wrote a 136-page plan, "The Revolutionizing of the Islamic Territories
of Our Enemies", to the Kaiser. "The plan was quickly approved and
funded. The plan identified [Germany's] enemy not only the British,
French, and Russians but also non-Muslim minorities, Christians and
Jews who supported the Allies. This meant Germany's endorsement of
a war against civilians and spreading religious hatred.
Thus, German strategy would be intimately involved in the Ottoman's
mass murder of Armenians," say Rubin and Schwanitz.
Here are more excerpts from the book:
"But the Kaiser [Wilhelm II] was not trying to win over the empire's
[Ottoman] non-Muslim or dissident subjects. In 1898, the Ottoman
Empire appeared a stronger horse than scattered Arab nationalist
intellectuals, Jewish ideologues, and Armenian activists with no troops
or money behind them. Thus, the Germans turned down Armenian requests
for help against the Ottomans...Consequently, Armenians would turn
toward Russia and both Zionists and Arab nationalists toward Great
Britain for support."
When the Kaiser visited (1898) Istanbul for the second time, bilingual
(German and Turkish) postcards printed the Kaiser's pledge to be the
"friend of the Ottoman sultan and the three-hundred Muslims who revere
him as their caliph. The postcard was produced two years after the
Ottoman sultan and caliph Abdulhamid II had been condemned throughout
Europe for massacres against his Armenian subjects that shocked all
'minorities of infidels.'"
"...Quickly, Enver (Pasha), who was simultaneously planning the
deportation and massacre of Armenians, realized that the violence
had to be focused against his and Germany's enemies."
"...But the most momentous immediate event arising from the German
jihad strategy was the mass murder of Ottoman Armenians. Von Oppenheim
either urged or supported Ottoman repression of the Armenians and Jews
[although he was a Jew], as well as the execution of Arab nationalists,
groups he saw as favoring the Allies. When German officials warned
about massacres of Armenians, von Oppenheim told them to shut up."
"...Von Oppenheim's aide, Scheubner-Richter, sent three vivid
reports to German Ambassador von Wangenheim on the cruelties against
Armenians in the Lake Van region, Scheubner-Richter reported rumors
that deportations were being conducted according to German advice.
Personally, he explained he didn't believe the story and tried to
help ease the pressure on the Armenians, but von Wangenheim ignored
his request for intervention. If the Germans had wanted to stop, or
at least mitigate, Ottoman policy and behavior toward the Armenians
they could easily have done so. For example, on October 8, 1915,
von Oppenheim received a report that the Ottoman government's goal
was the extermination of the Armenians. Only one week later, however,
he was telling Berlin that the deportations were justified war measures
because the Armenians were betraying the Ottomans by supporting their
Russian enemy."
"Meanwhile, German consuls, bankers, and clerics in the empire were
telling a different story from what von Oppenheim reported to Berlin.
During the second half of 1915, they warned of how jihad rhetoric was
inflaming Muslim hatred of Christians and determination to annihilate
them; how the jihad was just a cover for systematic looting, killing,
and terror toward Armenians; and they provided detailed accounts of
mass deportations, killings, and concentration camps."
"These Germans said they often heard the slogan from Muslims that
jihad should begin by killing local Christians. They also noted that
Ottoman officers and officials frequently said that Germany wanted
the Armenians killed. German bankers told how Armenian employees and
customers were disappearing. The Ottoman government then informed them
that it was seizing the Armenians' assets. The official explanation
for German inaction was that Germany needed Turkey's help as an ally
and so could say nothing."
"By early 1916 German officials in the Ottoman Empire had no doubt
about what was happening. Even the Kaiser heard the news. The head of
his military cabinet, Moriz von Lyncker, wrote in his diary on August
8, 1916: "Most terrible how the Turks rage against Christian Armenians,
their subjects. Thousands--men, woman and children--are slaughtered;
others were driven purposely to death by starvation. Our diplomats
appear at this point powerless. But in fact the German government
never made the slightest attempt to discourage the mass murders."
"Soon, the Armenians disappeared entirely from eastern Armenia. Enver
told a visiting German that there was "No Armenian question anymore."
He said that Armenians had killed between 125,000 and 150,000 Muslim
Turks, and that the Turks had killed--the figures are hotly debated
to this day--up to one and a half million Armenians."
"The mass murder of Ottoman Armenians was the largest organized
massacre against a civilian minority since medieval and probably since
ancient times. While it was carried out by the Ottomans, the German
broadly inspired it, were well aware of it, and didn't interfere
with it."
"...German policy looked down on Middle Eastern Christians, especially
Armenians. Von Oppenheim said that they deserved their reputation
'as being cowards, and great at plotting and scheming.' This racial
theme would continue under the Nazis..."
http://www.keghart.com/Tutunjian-German-Guilt