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Sunday, 
              April 24th marked the 90th anniversary of 
              the first genocide of the twentieth century: the Turkish government's 
              slaughter of over a million unarmed Armenians.
 The key word is "unarmed."The 
              Turks got away with it under the cover of wartime. They suffered 
              no greater postwar reprisals for this act of genocide than if they 
              had not conducted mass murder of a peaceful people.
Other 
              governments soon took note of this fact. It seemed like such a convenient 
              international precedent. 
Seventy-nine 
              years after that genocide began, Hotel Rwanda opened for business.
The 
              Hutus also got away with it. Ironically, at least a decade before 
              – I wish I could remember the date – Harper's 
              ran 
              an article predicting this genocide for this reason: the Hutus had 
              machine guns. The Tutsis didn't. The article was written as a kind 
              of parable, not a politically specific forecast. I remember reading 
              it at the time and thinking, "If I were a Tutsi, I'd emigrate."
It 
              did not pay to be a civilian in the twentieth century. The odds 
              were against you.
BAD 
              NEWS FOR CIVILIANS
The 
              twentieth century, more than any century in recorded history, was 
              the century of man's inhumanity to man. A memorable phrase, that. 
              But it is misleading. It should be modified: "Governments' 
              inhumanity to unarmed civilians." In the case of genocide, 
              however, this is not easily dismissed as collateral damage on a 
              wartime enemy. It is deliberate extermination.
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The 
              twentieth century began officially on January 1, 1901. At that time, 
              one major war was in full swing, so let us begin with it. That was 
              the United States' war against the Philippines, whose citizens had 
              the naïve notion that liberation from Spain did not imply colonization 
              by the United States. 
McKinley 
              and then Roosevelt sent 126,000 troops to the Philippines to teach 
              them a lesson in modern geopolitics. We had bought the Philippines 
              fair and square from Spain for $20 million in December, 1898. The 
              fact that the Philippines had declared independence six months earlier 
              was irrelevant. A deal's a deal. Those being purchased had nothing 
              to say about it.
Back 
              then, we did body counts of enemy combatants. The official estimate 
              was 16,000 dead. Some unofficial estimates place this closer to 
              20,000. As for civilians, then as now, there were no official U.S.-reported 
              figures. The low-ball estimate is 250,000 dead. The high estimate 
              is one million.
Then 
              World War I opened the floodgates – or, more accurately, the 
              bloodgates.
TURKEY, 
              1915
The 
              diplomatic game is always verbal. The G-word is verboten. Turks 
              accept – though resent – "tragedy." Hence, all 
              official reports from government-funded sources all over the world 
              – except Armenia – refer to the "Armenian tragedy." 
              This game of diplomacy has been going on since the end of World 
              War I. Reagan was the only President to have used the correct term. 
              President Bush diplomatically used "mass killings" in 
              his a 2003 reference to 
              the event. He also referred to "what many Armenian people 
              have come to call the ‘Great Calamity.'" Many Armenians call 
              it this? Really? Name two. He also said:
 I 
                also salute our wise and bold friends from Armenia and Turkey 
                who are coming together in a spirit of reconciliation to consider 
                these events and their significance. I applaud them for rising 
                above bitterness, and taking action to create a better future. 
                I wish them success, building on their recent and significant 
                achievements, as they work together in a spirit of hope and understanding.
Again, 
              name two.
Not 
              being even remotely diplomatic in matters genocidal, I prefer to 
              use the dreaded G-word. The 
              Armenian genocide of 1915 had been preceded by a partial ethnic 
              cleansing, which took two years, 1895 – 97. About 200,000 Armenians 
              were executed.
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This 
              event served as the background for Elia Kazan's great movie, America, 
              America (1963), which was nominated for the Oscar in 1964. 
              Kazan tells a fictionalized version of his Greek uncle's emigration 
              to America. Kazan's family followed in 1913. The movie begins with 
              a Greek and an Armenian, friends, who are warned by their former 
              military officer, a Turk, of trouble coming. It comes. Turkish officials 
              lock the Armenian along with other Armenians inside a church. Then 
              they burn it down. The Greek sees this. He vows to get out of the 
              Ottoman Empire and go to America. The movie traces his journey. 
              America 
              was a sanctuary. If ever there was a movie on America, the sanctuary, 
              it's America, America.
The 
              Armenians were easily identifiable. Centuries earlier, the conquering 
              Ottoman Turks had forced them to add the "ian/yan" sound 
              to their last names. They were dispersed throughout the empire, 
              so they did not possess the same kind of geographical concentrations 
              and strongholds that other Christians did in Greece and the Balkans. 
              They never did organize armed resistance forces. That was what led 
              to their destruction. They could not fight back.
They 
              were envied because they were rich and better educated than the 
              ruling society. They were the businessmen of the Ottoman Empire. 
              The same was true in Russia. The same resentment existed in Russia, 
              though not with the intensity of the resentment in Turkey.
Non-Turkish 
              estimates range from 800,000 to 1.5 million Armenians killed. Most 
              of these deaths were low-tech but high efficiency. The army rounded 
              up hundreds or thousands of civilians, drove them into wilderness 
              areas, and waited until they starved to death. 
GENOCIDE? 
              NONSENSE!
It 
              is still the official position of the Turkish government that this 
              was not genocide; it was a relocation for military reasons. You 
              see, there was a revolt being planned by Armenians and Russians 
              in the border region of Van. This was the explanation provided in 
              1915 by the Turkish Consol General in New York, in a 
              statement published in the October 15, 1915 issue of the New 
              York Times. An autonomous republic was set up in Van, which 
              was run by someone named Aram. (We read it here first.)
Then, 
              somehow, things just got out of hand. The government was powerless. 
              You know: just like all other governments during wartime with respect 
              to the activities of officials in defense of the nation. Helpless. 
              What's a government to do? Therefore, in recent days, a 
              minor official for the Turkish government has apologized.
 "We 
                apologize to the Armenians for us and our ancestors not having 
                been able to prevent the Genocide." These are the words of 
                Jashar Arif, representative of the International Exchange Confederation, 
                who is a Turk. He has arrived in Armenia together with several 
                other Turks to take part in the events of the 90th 
                anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
The 
              Turkish government still maintains that the rulers had expected 
              the Armenians to join with Russians to fight Turkey. As recently 
              as April 24, the Philadelphia Enquirer reported that Yasar 
              Yakis, the head of the Turkish Parliament's European Union Affairs 
              Committee, explained the reasons for the relocations. "The 
              Armenians were relocated because they cooperated with the enemy, 
              the Russians, and they . . . killed Ottoman soldiers from behind 
              the lines."
Armenians 
              were systematically killed all over the Empire, not just on the 
              Russian border. Relocation to a camp usually means providing food, 
              shelter, and basic amenities. It doesn't mean letting people starve 
              in the wilderness.
The 
              written text of the government's order is controversial. It 
              was a state secret. One version was smuggled out of Turkey in 1916. 
              It is posted online. As with all such secret orders, it should not 
              be accepted automatically. But it serves as a starting point for 
              full-scale research: open archives openly arrived at.
Our 
                fellow countrymen, the Armenians, who form one of the racial elements 
                of the Ottoman Empire, having taken up, as a result of foreign 
                instigation for many years past, with a lot of false ideas of 
                a nature to disturb the public order; and because of the fact 
                that they brought about bloody happenings and have attempted to 
                destroy the peace and security of the Ottoman state, and the safety 
                and interests of their fellow countrymen, as well as of themselves; 
                and, moreover, as they have now dared to join themselves to the 
                enemy of their existence [i.e., Russia] and to the enemies now 
                at war with our state – our Government is compelled to adopt 
                extraordinary measures and sacrifices, both for the preservation 
                of the order and security of the country and for the welfare and 
                the continuation of the existence of the Armenian community. 
Therefore, 
                as a measure to be applied until the conclusion of the war, the 
                Armenians have to be sent away to places which have been prepared 
                in the interior villages; and a literal obedience to the following 
                orders, in a categorical manner, is accordingly enjoined on all 
                Ottomans: 
First. 
                – All Armenians, with the exception of the sick, are obliged 
                to leave within five days from the date of this proclamation, 
                by villages or quarters, and under the escort of the gendarmerie. 
Second. 
                – Though they are free to carry with them on their journey 
                the articles of their movable property which they desire, they 
                are forbidden to sell their lands and their extra effects, or 
                to leave the latter here and there with other people, because 
                their exile is only temporary and their landed property, and the 
                effects they will be unable to take with them, will be taken care 
                of under the supervision of the Government, and stored in closed 
                and protected buildings. Anyone who sells or attempts to take 
                care of his movable effects or landed property in a manner contrary 
                to this order, shall be sent before the Court Martial. They are 
                free to sell to the Government only the articles which may answer 
                the needs of the Army. 
Third. 
                – Contains a promise of safe conduct. 
Fourth. 
                – A threat against anyone attempting to molest them on the 
                way. 
Fifth. 
                – Since the Armenians are obliged to submit to this decision 
                of the Government, if some of them attempt to use arms against 
                the soldiers or gendarmes, arms shall be employed against them 
                and they shall be taken, dead or alive. In like manner those who, 
                in opposition to the Government's decision, refrain from leaving 
                or seek to hide themselves – if they are sheltered or given 
                food and assistance, the persons who thus shelter or aid them 
                shall be sent before the Court Martial for execution.
What 
              happened subsequently was fully consistent with this order.
The 
              Turkish government said in 1989 that the archives regarding the 
              non-existent genocide were now open. But, as it turned out, 
              they were not open to Armenians studying the non-existent genocide. 
              
What 
              the archives prove, according to the Turkish government, is that 
              the Turks were the victims of mass murder by Armenians. Yes, it's 
              hard to believe. But that's what the archives show. We can take 
              the Turkish government's word for this. On April 25, a report appeared 
              on the website of the International Relations and Security Network 
              which is partially funded by the Swiss defense agency. Here, 
              we read:
Armenians 
                say at least 1 million of their ethnic kin died between 1915 – 
                17 as a result of a deliberate policy of extermination. They say 
                the policy was initiated by the Committee of Union and Progress 
                (Ittihad ve Terakki Cemiyeti), or CUP, which then ruled over the 
                empire. Ankara claims the death toll is grossly inflated and that 
                300,000 Armenians died during these years.
 It also says the deaths 
                were the result of negligence, interethnic strife, or wartime 
                operations. It says the CUP leaders – also known as the Young 
                Turks – had no intention of wiping out the empire's largest 
                remaining Christian community. While admitting to the massive 
                deportations of 1915 – which followed the massacre of 200,000 
                Greeks – Turkey's official historiography says the transfers 
                were aimed at preventing Armenians from collaborating with Russia. 
                Tsarist Russia was then at war with the Ottoman Empire and its 
                German ally. Turkey's official historiography also asserts that 
                more than 500,000 Turks died at the hands of Armenians between 
                1910 – 1922.
On 
              April 25, 2005 – hot off 
              the TurkishPress.com site – we learn of that ruthless counter-genocide.
Turkish 
                Republican People's Party (CHP) deputy leader Onur Oymen said 
                on Monday, "if you must express grief about Armenian casualties, 
                you also have to talk about more than half a million Turks who 
                were killed in the same incidents."
In 
                a written statement, Oymen said that the decision of the U.S. 
                president Bush not to use the term "genocide" represents 
                the reality. We 
                must not be too happy about Mr. Bush's statements, told Oymen. 
                "We know for sure that 513,000 Turks were butchered by Armenians. 
                Don't we have a right to ask for sympathy for the murdered Turks?"
"If 
                you are going to mention these incidents and express grief for 
                the Armenians who lost their lives in those incidents, it is our 
                right to expect a word of sympathy for more than half million 
                Turks in the same incidents."
All 
              right, his story is a bit scrambled. It's now up to 513,000 Turks 
              in 1915 – 17, rather than 500,000 Turks 1912-22. But it's all 
              there. In the archives. We 
              are also assured by a spokesman of the Turkish Ministry of Justice 
              that Turkey has had enough of this genocide nonsense. Quite enough. 
              On April 25, 2005, TurkishPress.com posted this story.
Turkish 
                Minister of Justice and Government Spokesman Cemil Cicek has indicated 
                that, after many years of leaving the issue of so-called genocide 
                to historians, it is now high time for Turkey to start disproving 
                all allegations in various countries. 
High 
              time, indeed! Those historians, tied as they are to misleading primary 
              source documents, simply cannot be trusted. They do not pay sufficient 
              attention to primary source documents of official Turkish assurances 
              for 90 years that nothing was happening or had happened, preferring 
              instead to cite unreliable eyewitness accounts of what did happen. 
              Armenian political influence is behind this.
Cicek 
                noted that Armenians influenced the parliaments of the countries 
                in which they are powerful and succeeded in obtaining parliament 
                decisions in their favor in 15 countries. 
As 
                Turks, we wished that, instead of turning incidents of the past 
                into a topic of hatred and anger, they should be brought to daylight 
                by the historians with an approach looking at the future. . . 
                .
Based 
                on our archives and confidence in our history and culture, we 
                can say that no genocide took place.
THE 
              BLUE BOOK
What 
              has stuck in the craw of the Turkish government for almost 90 years 
              is an official report issued by the British government, The 
              Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915–1916. 
              If you don't think governments stick by their official versions 
              of history, consider this April 
              22, 2005 story in London's Financial Times.
Turkey 
              challenges genocide ‘fraud'
By 
              Vincent Boland in Ankara 
Published: 
              April 22 2005 
The 
                Turkish parliament was yesterday preparing to ask the UK to repudiate 
                a historical document that is considered to form the basis of 
                the claim that Armenians were victims of genocide by Ottoman Turks 
                during the first world war.
The 
                initiative comes on the eve of Sunday's 90th anniversary 
                commemorations among Armenians of what they regard as the start 
                of the massacre of up to 1.5m people.
The 
                move is likely to exacerbate the bitter dispute between Turks 
                and Armenians. Supporters of the Armenian cause, particularly 
                in France, are lobbying for the European Union to delay the start 
                of Turkey's accession talks for EU membership until Turkey acknowledges 
                a "systematic extermination" in 1915.
Turkish 
                MPs completed and signed a letter to both houses of the UK parliament 
                arguing that the document was "a fraud based on fabrications, 
                half truths and biased reports and perceptions" of what happened 
                and "a masterpiece of propaganda and tool of deception".
The 
                document, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915-1916, 
                was written by the British historian Arnold Toynbee and included 
                in a publication known as the Blue Book, by Viscount Bryce, a 
                British diplomat. It was an official Westminster document, which 
                is why the Turkish parliament wants the House of Commons and House 
                of Lords to act.
Turkey 
                rejects the charge of genocide. It insists that the true death 
                toll among Armenians was about 600,000 and that many died from 
                the effects of civil war, starvation and deportation. It says 
                the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Turks at the time are overlooked.
The 
                letter, which was made available yesterday by the Turkish parliament 
                in the original Turkish and in English translation, will be sent 
                to London imminently.
The 
                letter says British propaganda in the first world war aimed to 
                portray the destruction of the Ottoman Empire as a key aim of 
                the war, to "render British colonialism in Anatolia and Mesopotamia 
                palatable", and to encourage the US to join the Allied side. 
                The Ottoman Empire collapsed into many nations after the war. 
                Its Anatolian heartland is now Turkey.
The 
                British embassy in Ankara declined to comment on the letter. Some 
                Turkish historians say the document has stood the test of time; 
                others say Mr Toynbee later distanced himself from its findings, 
                which were based on eyewitness accounts.
The 
                official UK position is that the massacres were "an appalling 
                tragedy" but that the evidence is not "sufficiently 
                unequivocal" to categorise them as genocide under the 1948 
                United Nations Convention on Genocide.
The 
                letter says British propaganda in the first world war aimed to 
                portray the destruction of the Ottoman Empire as a key aim of 
                the war, to "render British colonialism in Anatolia and Mesopotamia 
                palatable", and to encourage the US to join the Allied side. 
                The Ottoman Empire collapsed into many nations after the war. 
                Its Anatolian heartland is now Turkey.
The 
                British embassy in Ankara declined to comment on the letter. Some 
                Turkish historians say the document has stood the test of time; 
                others say Mr Toynbee later distanced himself from its findings, 
                which were based on eyewitness accounts.
The 
                official UK position is that the massacres were "an appalling 
                tragedy" but that the evidence is not "sufficiently 
                unequivocal" to categorise them as genocide under the 1948 
                United Nations Convention on Genocide.
Viscount 
              James Bryce was a master historian. His book, The 
              American Commonwealth (1888), is still read by American 
              historians as a primary source document regarding educated English 
              opinion about America. He served as Ambassador to the United States 
              from 1907–13.
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The 
              name Arnold Toynbee may ring a bell. By the 1950s, he was one of 
              the most prominent historians on earth. His 12-volume study (1934–61) 
              of 26 civilizations is unprecedented in its breadth. The 
              Treatment of Armenians was his first major publication.
Why 
              some Armenian organization has not bought a copy of Adobe Acrobat 
              Pro 7 and scanned in the full volume, with the documents, remains 
              a mystery to me. The book is in the public domain: pre-1923. But 
              Toynbee's summary is online. 
              This section, which appears in Part VI, "The Deportations of 
              1915: Procedure," is enlightening. Read it carefully. It is 
              the crucial aspect of the entire genocide. The government confiscated 
              their guns.
 A 
                decree went forth that all Armenians should be disarmed The Armenians 
                in the Army were drafted out of the fighting ranks, re-formed 
                into special labour battalions, and set to work at throwing up 
                fortifications and constructing roads. The disarming of the civil 
                population was left to the local authorities, and in every administrative 
                centre a reign of terror began. The authorities demanded the production 
                of a definite number of arms.
 Those who could not produce them 
                were tortured, often in fiendish ways; those who procured them 
                for surrender, by purchase from their Moslem neighbours or by 
                other means, were imprisoned for conspiracy against the Government. 
                Few of these were young men, for most of the young had been called 
                up to serve; they were elderly men, men of substance and leaders 
                of the Armenian community, and it became apparent that the inquisition 
                for arms was being used as a cloak to deprive the community of 
                its natural heads. Similar measures had preceded the massacres 
                of 1895 – 6, and a sense of foreboding spread through the 
                Armenian people. "One night in winter" writes a foreign 
                witness of these events," the Government sent officers round 
                the city to all Armenian houses, knocking up the families and 
                demanding that all weapons should be given up. This action was 
                the death-knell to many hearts."
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I 
              own a copy of The Treatment of Armenians. Or, rather, my 
              wife does. In it, there are two accounts of events in Van, which 
              is where the Turks say a revolt broke out, thereby justifying the 
              forced relocation. These reports were written by Y. K. Rushdooni 
              (as it is spelled in The Treatment of Armenians), my wife's 
              grandfather. They are extremely detailed: street 
              by street activities. Some might think they are just too detailed.
 Not so. Y. 
              K. Rushdoony had a photographic memory. Once, his son Haig caught 
              him in his easy chair in front of the fire, head down, eyes closed. 
              "You were sleeping," Haig kidded him. "I was meditating on what 
              I have just read," he replied. "Come on," Haig said. "You were asleep." 
              He handed Haig the book. "Ask me anything about the pages where 
              the book is open to." Haig did. He said that his father began answering 
              each question, word for word, by what was on the page. He went on 
              for two pages. Haig told me this story 50 years later and confirmed 
              it yesterday. "It was the only time I ever challenged him."
 When, 
              in his old age, Y. K. began to lose his eyesight, he memorized dozens 
              of psalms, so that he could read them at family gatherings. If his 
              sons knew, they did not tell him. Haig, a Ph.D. in geography, has 
              a good memory. Rousas John, his older brother, was also generally 
              regarded as no slouch in the memory department – a master of 
              the footnote.
 Ask him a question after one of his lectures, and 
              you might get another lecture. (His dying words, after he had briefly 
              exposited a passage that his son had read to him on his deathbed, 
              were these: "Are 
              there any questions?") But, compared to their father, they both 
              said, they were outclassed.
On 
              her way home in 1915, his pregnant wife came across her father's 
              remains in the street. He had been hacked to death. Y. K. took her, 
              his young child, and a £100 sterling note that had been given to 
              him when he graduated from Edinburgh, and fled across the border 
              into Russia. The boy drowned in the escape. The money – hard 
              currency – got the two of them across Russia to Archangel, 
              and from there they bought passage to the United States. Rousas 
              was born in 1916 in New York City. 
GUN 
              CONTROL
Lenin 
              disarmed the Russians. Stalin committed genocide against the Kulaks 
              in the 1930s. At least six million died.
 The 
                model for 1968 Gun Control Act – even the wording was 
                taken from Hitler's legislation of 1938, which was a revision 
                of the 1928 law passed by the Weimar government. A good introduction 
                to this politically incorrect history of American gun control 
                is on jpfo.org: Jews for the 
                Preservation of Firearms Ownership.
When 
              Mao's troops took a village, they would kidnap rich people. They 
              would then offer to return the victims in exchange for money. The 
              victims would be released upon payment. Then they would be kidnapped 
              again. This time, the demand was for guns. Then they would be released 
              again. This made the deal look reasonable to the families of the 
              next victims. But once they had the community's guns, the mass arrests 
              and executions began.
The 
              idea that the individual has a right of self-defense is written 
              into the U.S. Constitution: the second amendment. Carroll Quigley, 
              who taught Bill Clinton history at Georgetown, was an expert in 
              the history of weaponry. He wrote a 1,000-page book on medieval 
              weaponry. He argued in Tragedy 
              and Hope (1966) that the American Revolution was successful 
              because the Americans possessed weapons that were comparable to 
              those possessed by British troops. 
This, he said, was why there 
              were a series of revolts against despotic governments in the eighteenth 
              century. When government weapons became superior, the move toward 
              smaller government ceased to be equally successful.
There 
              is a reason why governments are committed to disarming their citizens. 
              They want to maintain the monopoly of violence, no matter what. 
              The idea of an armed citizenry is anathema to most politicians. 
              After all, what's a monopoly for, if not to be used?
CONCLUSION
Genocide 
              happens.
It 
              doesn't happen whenever the would-be targets own guns.
 
 
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