Genocide
The second most studied instance of genocide is the methodical killing of the Armenian population that lived in the Ottoman Empire during and following the First World War. However, there were also other ethnic groups that were targeted by the Ottoman Empire during the same period such as Greeks and Assyrians murdered in a broader context of killing non-Muslims (Dixon, 2010). There are some historians who consider those groups to be a part of the same procedure of elimination by the Turks. In any event the genocide was executed by way of indiscriminate massacres and deportations. The deportations were forced long-term marches into the dessert under extreme conditions that were designed to bring about the death of those that were deported. The beginning of the genocide is generally reported as April 24, 1915 (Red Sunday) when the Ottoman authorities arrested 250 Armenian community leaders and intellectuals in Constantinople. Following these arrests military deportations that had Armenians taken from their homes and led on a forced march of hundreds of miles without food or water into the desert of what is now Syria took place. Once the deportees reached their destination indiscriminate slaughters occurred that were preceded by multiple instances of rape and other abuses. The majority of property belonging to Armenians was appropriated and then redistributed to Turks by agents of the State. The result was that the Armenian community that had dwelled for centuries in Anatolia was totally destroyed. The deportations and associated massacres were organized and ordered the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the governing body of the Ottoman Empire during that time period. The Armenian genocide took place under the motivation for an extensive ethnic cleansing of the Christian minorities that lived within the Ottoman Empire by the Turks (Mazian, 1990). The Armenian genocide lasted from 1915 to 1917 and the total death count is generally reported as between one million and one and a half million people (Mazian, 1990).
Following the end of WWI the Ottoman government was placed under some heavy pressure, especially from Great Britain, to convict and punish the people responsible for the Armenian massacres. Turkey actually initially established a military tribunal in order to try those responsible (Mazian, 1990). However, there were internal debates over who should take the responsibility for the events occurring in Ottoman government and by 1920 political pressures as well as the positive attitude towards the military as the saviors of the Turks led the Turkish nationalist leaders to move away any prosecutions at all and to renounce any responsibility for the events. The Republic of Turkey has repeatedly denied that "genocide" represents a truthful description of the events and has endured repeated requests to publically represent the events as genocide, but has not done so despite over most other countries officially recognizing the events as an attempt at genocide. Moreover, the majority of historians and genocide scholars accept this view (Dixon, 2010; Mazian, 1990).
Dixon (2010) suggests that the Turkish military, which defeated the occupying Greek army following WWI, and has exerted considerable political influence in Turkey ever since, is at the center of (or at least is a good part of) both the atrocities and ongoing denial. Following WWI when the Ottoman government was pressured to punish those responsible for the genocide and as Turkey began to secure its independence, the CUP and other officials would have been held responsible for the events which would have threatened the nationalists' aim of procuring Anatolia (the Armenian heartland) for Turkey. Moreover many of the nationalists themselves were involved in organizing the genocide. Thus, the Treaty of Lausanne, the post war settlement between Turkey and the WWI allies, officially silenced any reference to the genocide. The silence continued for decades perpetrated by Turkey's strategic position in world affairs such as WWII and the cold war. This major atrocity was essentially officially forgotten. The Turks officially asserted that there was no genocide, the number of Armenians killed has been inflated by outsiders, and that many Turks as well as other groups including Armenians were killed as a result of the struggle in WWI and inter-ethnic violence. This policy is often termed as the "official narrative" and Turkey officially has referred to the genocide as "the Armenian question" (Dixon, 2010).
Mazian (1990) has also discussed the state of Turkish nationalistic views and how they affect the acceptance by the people of official narrative concerning the Armenian question. As stated above, following the 1923 establishment...
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