|
NO GENOCIDE |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
QUESTION 9: IS
THE SEVRES AGREEMENT STILL IN FORCE?
The Armenian propagandists claim that the
Sevres Agreement, which provided
for the establishment of an Armenian
State in eastern Anatolia, is still legally
in force,
and use it to base their claims for the
"return" of "Armenian lands". In fact, this
agreement was never put into force.
It was superseded and replaced by the Treaty
of
Lausanne, and thus no longer has the force
of law. In addition, after the Dashnaks
established an Armenian Republic in
Erivan on 28 May 1918, it signed the Batum
Treaty of 4 June
1918 with the Ottoman Government. This
treaty was described by Foreign
Minister Hadisian of the Armenian
Republic as involving the full disavowal on
the part of the
latter of all claims on the territory or
people of the Ottoman Empire including its
Armenians and the lands claimed by
the Armenian nationalists:
"The Armenians of Turkey no longer think of
separating from the Ottoman Empire. Their
problems no longer are even the
concern of relations between the Armenian
Republic and the Ottomans,
Relations between the Ottoman Empire
and the Armenian Republic are excellent, and
they must remain
that way in the future. All Armenian
political parties feel the same way.
Continuation of this good
neighborly spirit is one of the
principal points of the program recently
announced by the Armenian
Government, of which I am Foreign
Minister. "
Even the Dashnak organ Hairenik stated on 28
June 1918:
"Russia's policy of hostility toward Turkey
emboldened the Armenians of the Caucasus;
that is why the
Caucasus Armenians were involved in clashes
between two friendly races. Thank goodness
that this situation did not last too
long. Following the Russian Revolution, the
Armenians of the
Caucasus understood that their security
could be achieved only by haying good
relations with Turkey,
and they stretched out their hands to
Turkey. Turkey also wanted to forget the
events of the past, and
grasped the out stretched hand in
friendship. We agree that the Armenian
Question has been resolved
and left to history. The mutual feelings of
suspicion and enmity created by foreign
agents have been
eliminated. "
These declarations make it clear that the
Armenian Question was closed by the
agreements concluded, following World
War I; that the events that had taken place
were the
responsibility of the Russians and
Armenians, not of the Turk, and that if
anyone had been
mistreated it was the Turks, no-one else.
It is true that the World War I
settlement was reopened for a time by the
Armenian Republic. Despite the
Dashnak declarations, Armenian bands began
to raid into
eastern Anatolia in the summer of 1918. On
28 May 1919, first anniversary of the
foundation of the Armenian Republic
by the Dashnaks, it declared that "Armenia
has annexed
Eastern Anatolia"
thus laying claim to the territories of
eastern Anatolia which had
been returned to the Ottoman Empire
following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. To
examine the Armenian claims and
recommend a settlement, American President
Wilson sent an American investigation
committee to Anatolia in the fall of 1919
under the
leadership of General James G. Harbord. It
toured through Anatolia during
September and October, and then
reported to Congress that:
"The Turks and Armenians lived in
peace side by side for centuries; that the
Turks suffered as
much as the Armenians at the time of the
deportations; that only 20% of the Turkish
villagers who went
to war would be able to return to their
homes; that at the start of World War I and
before the
Armenians never had anything approaching a
majority of the population in the
territories called
Armenia; they would not have a majority even
if all the deported Armenians were returned;
and the claims
that returning Armenians would be in danger
were not justified.
As a result of this report, in April 1920
the American Congress rejected the
proposal which had been made to
establish an American Mandate over Anatolia
for the
purpose of enabling the Armenians to
establish their own state in the East.
On 10 August 1920 the Armenians
joined in signing the long-hoped-for Treaty
of Sevres, which provided that the
Ottoman government would recognize the
establishment of an independent
Armenian state, with boundaries to be
determined by
President Wilson. This treaty was, however,
signed only by the Ottoman Government in
Istanbul, while most Turks, and most
of the country accepted the leadership of
the
Ankara government, led by Mustafa Kemal, who
actively opposed the treaty and its
provisions.
In the meantime, following the Armistice of
Mondros which concluded the
fighting of World War I in 1918, the
province of Adana was occupied by the
French. The
British occupied Urfa, Marash and Antep but
later left these also to the French.
As French forces occupied these
provinces, in south and southeast Anatolia,
they were
accompanied by Armenians wearing French
uniforms, who immediately began to
ravage Turkish villages and massacred
large numbers of Turks. These atrocities
stirred the Turks
of the area to resist, once again leading to
the spreading of propaganda in
Europe that Turks were massacring
Armenians. This time, however, since the
French themselves
were forced to send the Armenians to the
rear to end the atrocities, the
Armenian claims were evidently false,
and no-one really believed them.
After the American Congress rejected
a Mandate over Anatolia, the Armenian
Republic in the Caucasus, starting in
June 1920, attacked Turkey, sending guerilla
bands as well as organized army units
into eastern Anatolia, and undertaking
widespread massacres of the settled
population. The Ankara government moved to
the defense in
September, and within a short time the
Armenian forces were routed, eastern
Anatolia was regained, and order and
security re-established. By the Treaty of
Gumru
(Alexandropol) signed by the Ankara
Government and the Armenian Republic on 3
December 1920, both sides accepted
the new boundaries and acknowledged that the
provisions of the Treaty of Sevres
were null and void. The Armenians also
renounced all
territorial claims against Turkey.
Shortly after this the Red Army
entered Erivan and established the Soviet
Armenian Government. However through
a revolt in Erivan on 18 February 1921
theDashnaks once again took over control of
Armenia. The new Vratzian Government sent
a committee to Ankara on 18 March asking for
Turkish assistance against the Bolsheviks,
a strange event indeed considering that only
two years previously the
Dashnaks had
organized an Armenian invasion of Turkey.
The Dashnak government did not last very
long, however, and the Soviets soon regained
control of Erivan.
On 16 March 1921 Turkey signed the Moscow
Treaty with the Soviet Union, by
which the boundaries between Turkey and the
Soviet Union were definitively drawn. As
arranged in this agreement, on 13 October
1921 Turkey signed the Kars Agreement with
Soviet Armenia, confirming the new
boundaries between the two as well as their
agreement that the provisions of the Treaty
of Sevres were null and void once and for
all.
The situation on the southern front was
settled by the Treaty of Ankara signed
with France on 20 October 1921. France
evacuated not only its own troops, but also
the Armenian guerillas and volunteers who had
cooperated with them, and most of the
Armenians who had gathered at Adana in the
hope of establishing an Armenian state
there. Most of these Armenians were settled
in Lebanon. This agreement made
possible the subsequent return of Hatay to
Turkey, thus fulfilling the provisions of
the Turkish national pact which had been drawn
up by Mustafa Kemal and the leaders of
the Turkish War for Independence.
All these settlements effectively nullified
Armenian ambitions for a state in
eastern Anatolia. The Treaty of Lausanne,
signed on 24 July 1923 in place of the
Treaty of Sevres, did not even mention the
Armenians,
which is why Armenian nationalists
even today try to resurrect the Sevres
treaty which never really was put into
force.
BACK |
|
|
| | |