A LETTER FROM "CHANGE ORG" TO THE WORLD.
NO GENOCIDE /// TARGET : GREAT ARMENIAN
Dear Ms. & Mr.
As a bridge between Asia and Europe, with its straits connecting The
Black Sea with the Mediterranean and its geopolitical situation at a
point where the Central Asian, Caucasian and Middle Eastern natural
energy sources intersect, Turkey draws the attention of the entire
world.
The Ottoman Empire in the past and Turkey at present has
always been an arena for which intrigues were incessantly designed. The
colonialist superpowers wishing to eradicate the Ottoman Empire from the
world by dividing it did not fail to use in their schemes also the
Armenians who coexisted in peace with the Turks for so many centuries.
There are today just like in the past, several countries striving to
secure themselves political and economic benefits at the expense of
Armenian community. Monuments accusing Turks and Turkey of having
committed genocide are being erected in some countries; decisions
intending to recognise the so called genocide are brought into the
parliamentary agenda in several countries and even voted for in some
others. Issues that need to be left to historians are turned into means
of self interest by the politicians.
The Armenians who were ousted
from one place to the other, pushed into wars, and treated as third rate
citizens throughout the history by the Romans, Persians and Byzantines.
After the advent of Turks into Anatolia, they benefited from the just,
humane, tolerant and unifying traditions and beliefs of their new
neighbours. The period that lasted until the end of the nineteenth
century when the apogee of these developments and relations was
attained, was the golden age of Armenians. In fact, the Armenians were
by far the greatest beneficiaries of the opportunities offered by the
Ottoman Empire to all industrious, capable, honest and straightforward
citizens of the non-Moslem communities. Being exempted from the military
service and to a large extent from taxation, they had the opportunity
to excel themselves in trade, agriculture, craftsmanship and
administration and therefore were rightly called the “loyal nation”
because of their loyalty and ability to interact with the Ottomans.
There were so many Armenians who spoke Turkish, who even conducted their
rites in this language , who rose to topmost public service posts such
as the Ministries and Under-Secretariats of State for the Public Works,
Navy, Foreign Affairs, Finance, Treasury, Posts and Telegraph and
Minting. There were some who even wrote books in Turkish and foreign
languages on the Problems of the Ottoman Empire .
With the start of
the decline of the Ottoman Empire, the European powers began to
intervene in its affairs and degeneration became evident in the peaceful
Turkish-Armenian relations. Great effort was displayed by the
instigators whom the Western powers planted into the Ottoman Empire
under clerical guise, to create a schism between Turks and Armenians in
the religious, cultural, commercial, political and social fields. Thus,
bloody clashes arose, in which the blunt of pain was borne by the Turks,
and thousands of Armenians and Turks lost their lives in the revolts
that broke out in Eastern Anatolia and spread all the way to Istanbul.
Though there were many Armenians fighting in the Ottoman armies against
the enemy or serving in the rear ranks during the World War I, a
considerable number had sided with the foes on the battlefronts and
launched massacres against the population without distinction of women,
children and the aged. Their toll was hundreds of thousands of Moslems
and ruin in Eastern Anatolia.
The measures adopted by the Ottoman
Empire to stop this violence were presented to the rest of the world
under a completely different light and the Armenians, misguided by the
promises and instigation of the Western Powers started to undermine the
country where they had led a privileged life more than a thousand years.
The Hinchak, Tashnak, Toward Armenia, Young Armenians, Union and
Salvation, Ramgavar, Paramilitaries, Black Cross societies and Hinchak
Revolutionary Committee, which were established out of Anatolia, formed
organisations urging the people for an armed revolt. These activities
were the bloody uprisings that cost thousands of Turkish and Armenian
lives.
During World War I, the Ottoman Empire was fighting against
Russian armies in Eastern Anatolia, where the Armenian revolt was at its
peak; and also against Armenian forces which supported the Russians. On
the other hand, behind the lines it had to continue to fight against
Armenian guerrillas that were burning Turkish villages and towns and
attacking military convoys and reinforcements. In spite of this
violence, the Ottoman Empire tried to solve the Armenian problem for
months by taking local measures. Meanwhile, an operation was made
against the Armenian guerillas and 2345 rebels were arrested for high
treason. When it became evident that the Armenian community was also in
rebellion against the state, the Ottoman Empire proceeded with the last
resort of replacing only those Armenians in the region who actively
participated in the rebellion. With this measure, the Ottoman Empire
also intended to save the lives of the Armenians who were living in a
medium of civil war because Turks started to counter-attack the
Armenians who had performed bloody atrocities against Turkish
communities.
Today, Armenia and some states using Armenians for
their economic and political benefits have launched a massive propaganda
campaign to present the replacement decision and the 24 April arrests
as genocide to the world public opinion.
At the end of the World War
I, when the armies of Allied States occupied The Ottoman Empire and the
British officials among them arrested 143 Ottoman political and
military leaders and intellectuals for “having committed war crimes
toward Armenians” and exiled them to Malta where a trial was launched.
However, the massive scrutiny made on the Ottoman, British, American
archives in order to find evidence to incriminate these 143 persons
failed to produce even the least iota of proof against them. In the end,
the detainees in Malta were released without trial and even any
indictment in 1922.
The United States archives contain an
interesting document sent to Lord Curzon on 13 July 1921 by Mr. R.C.
Craigie, the British Ambassador in Washington. The message was as
follows: “I regret to state that there is nothing that may be used as
evidence against the Turkish detainees in Malta. There are no events
that may constitute adequate proofs. The said reports do not appear to
contain even circumstantial evidence that could be useful to reinforce
the information held by His Majesty’s Government against the Turks.”
On 29 July 1921, the legal advisers in London decided that the intended
indictments drawn up against the persons on the British Foreign
Ministry’s list were semi-political in nature and therefore these
individuals should be treated separately from the Turks detained as
criminals of war.
They also stated the following: “No statements
were hitherto received from the witnesses to the effect that the
indictments intended against the detainees are correct. Likewise it does
not need to be restated that finding witnesses after so long a time is
highly doubtful in a remote country like Armenia which is accessible
only with great difficulties.” This statement was made also by none
other than the legal advisers in London of His Majesty’s Government.
Yet, the efforts to smear the image of Turks with genocide claims did
not come to an end as the British press published certain documents
attempting to prove the existence of a massacre claimed to have been
perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire while efforts were being made to start
a lawsuit in Malta. It was stated that the documents were found by the
British occupation forces in Syria, led by General Allenby. The
inquiries subsequently made by the British Foreign Office revealed,
however, that these documents were fakes prepared by the Armenian
Nationalist Delegation in Paris and distributed to the Allied
representatives.
The Armenian Diaspora, who left no stone unturned
to keep the genocide claims on the agenda despite all these facts,
resorted to terrorism in the end. The so-called Armenian issue, which
started to attract the attention of the world and Turkish public opinion
through the smearing campaign launched by the Armenians against Turkey
after 1965, in the ‘70s turned into terrorist attacks directed against
the Turkish representations abroad. In Santa Barbara on January 27,
1973, the first individual terrorist attack was launched by an aged
Armenian named Gurgen (Karekin) Yanikian. He murdered Mehmet Baydur and
Bahadir Demir, the Turkish Consul General and Vice Consul in Los
Angeles, and these murders turned into an organised campaign after 1975.
The attacks against Turkish embassies, officials and institutions
abroad gradually intensified.
A major increase in the attacks was
noted after 1979 when an internal unease started in Turkey. The Armenian
terrorists staged a total of 110 attacks at 38 cities of 21 countries.
39 of these acts were committed by small arms, 70 of them were realised
by bombs and one was an outright occupation. 42 Turkish diplomats and 4
foreigners were killed and 15 Turks and 66 foreigners were wounded in
these incidents.
As these actions received a strong reaction from
the world public opinion, the Armenian terrorist organisations changed
their tactics in 1980 and began to co-operate with the PKK terrorist
group which was pushed into the scene by the Eruh and ªemdinli attacks
as the ASALA and Armenian operations were stopped. The documents and
evidence from Beqaa and Zeli camps show that the PKK and ASALA militants
were trained there together.
The success achieved by the Turkish
security forces made the Armenian terrorism pursue the so called
genocide claims through the Armenian Diaspora and attempt to make the
world believe in the existence of such an event by inducing several
parliaments to adopt resolutions and laws which recognise it.
The
goal of these terrorists is to plant into minds of people the existence
of a genocide, to force Turkey to recognise it, to receive indemnity
from Turkey and, finally, to snatch from Turkey the land needed for
realising the dream of Great Armenia
21 Haziran 2016 Salı
Kaydol:
Kayıtlar (Atom)