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QUESTION 7:
DID TALAT PASHA SEND SECRET TELEGRAMS
ORDERING MASSACRES ?
Armenian propaganda claiming that massacres
were an Ottoman government
policy requires proof that such a
decision was in fact made. For this purpose
the
Armenians reduced a number of telegrams
attributed to Talat Pasha supposedly found
by British forces
commanded by General Allenby when they
captured Aleppo in 1918. It
was claimed that they were found in
the office of an Ottoman official named Naim
Bey, and that they
were not destroyed only because the British
occupation came with
unexpected speed. Samples of these
telegrams were published in Paris in 1920 by
an Armenian author
named Aram Andonian,38 and they also were
presented at the Berlin
trial of the Armenian terrorist
Tehlirian, who killed Talat Pasha.
Nevertheless, the court
neither considered these documents as
"evidence" nor was involved in any
decisionclaiming the authenticity of them.
These documents were, however,
entirely fabricated, and the claims deriving
from them
therefore cannot be sustained. They were in
fact published by the Daily Telegraph
of London in 1922,39 which also
attributed them to a discovery made by
Allenby's army.
But when the British Foreign Office enquired
about them at the War Office, and with
Allenby himself, it was discovered
that they had not been discovered by the
British army but,
rather, had been produced by an Armenian
group in Paris. In addition, examination
of the photographs provided in the
Andonian volume shows clearly that neither
in form, script or
phraseology did they resemble normal Ottoman
administrative documents,
and that they were, therefore, rather
crude forgeries.
Following the Entente occupation of
Istanbul, the British and the French
arrested a number of Ottoman
political and military figures and some
intellectuals on
charges of war crimes. In this they were
given substantial assistance by the Ottoman
Liberal Union Party, which had been
placed in power by the Sultan after the war,
and which was
anxious to do anything it could to
definitively destroy the Union and Progress
Party and its leaders, who had long
been political enemies. Most of the
prisoners were
sent off to imprisonment in Malta, but the
four Union and Progress leaders who had fled
the country just before the
occupation were tried and sentenced to death
in absentia in
Istanbul. Three other Government officials
were sentenced to death and executed, but it
was discovered later that the
evidence on which the convictions had been
based was false.
In the meantime, the British looked
everywhere to find evidence against those
who had been sent to Malta. Despite
the complete cooperation of the Ottoman
Liberal Union government, nothing
incriminating could be found among the
Ottoman government documents. Similar
searches in the British archives were
fruitless.
Finally, in desperation, the British Foreign
Office turned to the American archives in
Washington, but in reply, one of
their representatives, R. C. Craigie, wrote
to Lord Curzon:
"I regret to inform your Lordship that there
was nothing therein which could be used as
evidence against
the Turks who are at present being detained
at Malta ...no concrete facts being given
which could
constitute satisfactory incriminating
evidence.... The reports in question do not
appear in any case
to contain evidence against these Turks
which would be useful even for the purpose
of corroborating
information already in the possession of His
Majesty's Government."
Uncertain as to what should be done
with prisoners, who already had been held
for two years, without trial, and
without even any charges being filed or
evidence produced,
the Foreign Office applied for advice to the
Law Officers of the Crown in
London, who concluded on 29 July,
1921: "Up to the
present no statements have been taken from
witnesses who can depose to the truth of
the charges made against the
prisoners. It is indeed uncertain whether
any witnesses can be found.''
At this time the "documents" produced by
Andonian were available, but despite
their desperate search for evidence
which could be presented in a court of law,
the British never
used them because it was evident that they
were forgeries. As a result, the
prisoners were quietly released in
1921, without charges ever having been filed
or evidence
produced. It is
useful to reiterate the main elements in the
chain of evidence constructed in
proving that Andonian's "documents"
were all patent forgeries:
1. To show that his forgeries were in fact
"authentic Ottoman documents" Andonian
relied on the signature of the
Governor of Aleppo, Mustafa Abdülhalik Bey,
which
he claimed was appended to several of the
"documents" in question. By examining
several actual
specimens of Mustafa Abdülhalik Bey's
signature as preserved on contemporary
official documents, it is established
that the alleged signatures appended to
Andonian's
"documents" were forgeries.
2. In one of his forged documents, Andonian
dated the note and signature
attributed to Mustafa Abdülhalik Bey.
Again, by a comparison with authentic
correspondence between the Governor
of Aleppo and the Ministry of the Interior
in Istanbul, on
the date in question, it is proven that the
Governor of Aleppo on that date
was Bekir Sami Bey, not Mustafa
Abdülhalik Bey.
3. Consistently, Andonian's forgeries attest
to the fact that he was either totally
unaware of, or carelessly neglected
to account for, the differences between the
Muslim
Rumi and Christian calendars. The numerous
errors he made as a result of this oversight
are, in and of themselves, sufficient
to prove the fabricated nature of his
"documents". Among
other things, the errors Andonian made in
this respect served to destroy the
system of reference numbers and dates that
he concocted for his "documents".
4. By way of a detailed comparison of the
entries made in the Ministry of
the Interior's Registers of outgoing
Ciphers, wherein are recorded the date and
reference number of every ciphered
communication sent out by the Ministry, with
the dates and
reference numbers placed by Andonian on his
forgeries, it is proven that his
so-called "ciphered telegrams" bear no
relationship whatsoever to the actual
ciphers sent by
the Ministry to Aleppo in the period in
question.
5. Again, by comparing the Turkish
"originals" of Andonian's "ciphered
telegrams" with
actual examples of contemporary Ottoman
ciphered messages, it is shown that the
number groupings he employed bear no
relationship to the actual ciphers the
Ottomans were
using in that period. Thus, in his attempt
to make his forgeries appear credible,
he created a whole series of
unusable, non-existent ciphers. Further,
from the dates he
affixed to his forgeries in this category,
the Ottomans would have had to have used
the same ciphers over a six-month
period which was impossible. By publishing a
series of
documents instructing officials to change
the ciphers they were using, it is shown
that, in fact, the
Ottomans were changing their cipher codes on
average once every two
months during the war years.
6. By comparing the manner in which the
common Islamic injunction, Besmele,
was written on Andonian's two forged
letters with numerous examples of the way in
which it appears on authentic contemporary
Ottoman documents, it is suggested that
Andonian's clumsy forgery of this
term may well have stemmed from the fact
that
non-Muslims, even those who knew Ottoman
Turkish, did not employ this
in
junction.
7. A number of examples from Andonian's
forgeries show that it is simply
inconceivable that any Ottoman
official could have used such sentence
structures and
made grammatical errors. In the same vein, a
host of expressions; allegedly uttered by
prominent Ottoman officials are used,
which no Ottoman Turk would ever have used.
Andonian's intention in these
instances was clear: he wanted nothing less
than the Turks
themselves to be seeming to confess to
crimes which he had manufactured for them.
8. The forged documents, with two
exceptions, were written on plain paper with
none of the usual signs found on the
official paper used by the Ottoman
bureaucracy in
this period. The fact that one of the forged
Turkish originals was written on a
double-lined paper, which the
Ottomans did not even use for private
correspondence,
constitutes an even more serious error on
Andonian's part. Even the two forgeries
which appear at first glance to have been
written on some kind of official Ottoman
stationery are
actually written on blank telegraph forms,
which anyone wishing to send a telegram
could pick up in any Ottoman post
office.
9. At a time when the British were
frantically searching the world's archives
for anything to be
used as "evidence" against the group of
Ottoman officials whom they were
holding for trial as being
"responsible for the Armenian incidents",
their failure to utilize
Andonian's "documents" which were
readily available in their English edition,
strongly suggests that the British
Government was fully aware of the nature of
these forgeries.
10. Had documents of the nature of those
concocted by Andonian ever actually
existed, their confidential nature
would have dictated that they be sent by
courier for
security reasons; rather than through the
easily reachable public telegraph system.
Likewise, had such documents really
ever been written; it is inconceivable that
they
could have lain around in a file for three
years, instead of being destroyed as soon as
they had been read.
11. There are also numerous differences
between the French and English
editions of Andonian's book. Indeed,
these variations are of such significance
that it is
absolutely impossible to ascribe them to
printing errors, or errors in translation.
12. Finally, the fact that even some authors
with close links to Armenian circles,
who serve as spokesmen for Armenian
causes, have indicated their own doubt as
to the veracity of Andonian's "documents"
should not be overlooked.
In short, from start to finish the
so-called "Talat Pasha Telegrams" are
nothing more than
crude forgeries, concocted by Andonian and
his associates.
Moreover the Ottoman archives contain a
number of orders; whose authenticity
can definitely be substantiated,
issued on the same dates, in which Talat
Pasha ordered
investigations to be made to find and punish
those responsible for the attacks
which were being made on the
deportation caravans. It is hardly likely
that he would have
been ordering massacres on one hand and
investigations and punishments for
such crimes on the other.
A letter forged by Aram Andonian with
the date, February 18, 1331 (March 2, 1916).
The letter opens with a "bismillah"
(blessing), which would never have been
written by a
Moslem. The forger, Andonian, made his most
fatal mistake with the date, however. He was
obviously not well enough versed in
the tricks of converting to the Rumi year of
the Ottomans,
where a difference of thirteen days between
the Rumi and Gregorian calendars
must be taken into account. The date
he put on the letter was off by a full year.
Instead of 1330
(1915), he wrote 1331 (1916). The contents
of the letter are supposed to be evidence
of the long advance planning of the
resettlement operation of 1915.
An American aid organization called
"the Near East Relief Society" was allowed
by the Ottoman
Government to stay and fulfill its functions
in Anatolia during the
deportations. Even following the
entry of U.S.A. into war on the side of
Entente powers
against Ottoman
Empire, the same organization was permitted
to remain in Anatolia.
This was dealt in the reports of the
American Ambassador Elkus in Istanbul. In
this case,
if an order for "massacring Armenians" had
been given, would the Ottoman Government
have allowed to an American
organization to be witness to the
"massacres". In other
words, it is ridiculous to suppose
that the Ottomans said to America: "We are
massacring
Armenians. Why don't you have a look at it."
Such an allegation could never be a logical
explanation of historic facts.
Finally, and in the end most
important, when the war came to an end, the
Armenian population still was
substantially in place in Western Anatolia,
Thrace and
Istanbul. Had the Ottoman government ordered
massacres, evidently they too would
have been killed. And for that
matter, had the Ottoman government wanted to
eliminate all the
Armenians in the Empire, it could have done
so far more easily by killing and
disposing of them where they lived,
rather than undertaking a large-scale
deportation of
those in the Eastern war zones under the
eyes of foreign observers.
The claim, thus, that the Ottoman
government ordered and carried out a
general massacre of Armenians in the
Empire cannot be sustained and is disproved
by the facts.
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