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Israeli PM’s sun announces that Turkey is responsible for Armenian Genocide

May 17, 2018 By administrator

Benjamin Netanyahu’

YEREVAN, MAY 17, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s son Yair Netanyahu has announced that Turkey is responsible for the Armenian Genocide. ARMENPRESS reports, citing the Associated Press agency, Yair Netanyahu made a post about this on his Facebook page.

“Turkey, you are responsible for incredible atrocities and sufferings in Cyprus, actions against Greeks and Kurds, as well as the Armenian Genocide”, Yair Netanyahu wrote, reminding that the Turks have illegally occupied today’s territory of Turkey, which was inhabited with Christians before their invasion.

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Benjamin Netanyahu, Turkey

Armenian Genocide: Turkey Cracks Down

May 6, 2018 By administrator

Armenian civilians, escorted by Ottoman soldiers, marched through Harput to a prison in nearby Mezireh (present-day Elazig), April 1915.

Armenian civilians, escorted by Ottoman soldiers, marched through Harput to a prison in nearby Mezireh (present-day Elazig), April 1915.

by Uzay Bulut,

  • The Christian genocide in Ottoman Turkey lasted for 10 years — from 1913 to 1923 — and targeted Armenian, Greek, Assyrian and other Christians. It resulted in the annihilation of around three million people. Sadly, Turkish aggression against the remaining Armenians continues.
  • According to Turkish myth, it was actually the “treacherous” Armenians who persecuted Turks; and the Turks were acting in self-defense to rid themselves of murderous Armenians. A widespread Turkish claim is, “They deserved it.”
  • The lies and state propaganda, which hold the victims responsible for their own annihilation, are what enable the ongoing Turkish persecution of the country’s remaining Armenians, including the conversion of their churches into mosques and the digging up of Armenian graves and churches by treasure-hunters who search for gold.

The annual Armenian Genocide commemorative event that the Istanbul branch of Turkey’s Human Rights Association (IHD) and the European Grassroots Antiracist Movement (EGAM) planned to hold on April 24 — which they have been holding every year since 2005 — was blocked by police, who seized the placards and banners about the genocide and carried out criminal record checks on participants. Three human rights activists were detained and then released.

In an exclusive interview with Gatestone, Ayşe Günaysu, an activist with the IHD’s Commission Against Racism and Discrimination, said that “on their way to police station, the detainees were made to listen to racist songs containing hostile words concerning Armenians.”

The annual event commemorates the April 24, 1915 round-up, imprisonment and eventual slaughter of more than 200 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Istanbul by Ottoman authorities — and the unfolding of the Armenian Genocide. The victims were brought to a prison, now a building that houses the Museum of Turkish Islamic Art (Türk İslam Eserleri Müzesi). The Armenians were then taken to the Haydarpaşa railway station, where they were transported to Anatolia for their ultimate extermination. According to Günaysu:

“During our commemorations, we showed the crime scenes. We exposed the museum of Turkish Islamic Art and the Haydarpaşa railway station as crime venues. We read out loud and then recorded the names of more than 2,000 Armenian cities, towns and villages destroyed during the genocide. We wrote down their names and exhibited them on show boards. So, we not only commemorated the deaths, but also tried to share the truth about the genocide with the people of Turkey.”

Since 2010, the IHD has gathered at Haydarpaşa railway station for the commemoration. This year, there were plans to hold the event at the Sultanahmet square. Günaysu said:

“We do not ask for the permission of the office of the governor of Istanbul to commemorate the genocide. We only call them on the phone and inform them of the hour and venue of the event. Our banners read ‘Genocide! Recognize! Beg Forgiveness! Compensate!’ in English and Turkish. The police told us we could hold the event on condition that we do not use the word ‘genocide.’ But we said we would not engage in self-censorship and gathered at the square of Sultanahmet to commemorate the genocide victims. We had also prepared a genocide commemoration press release, but we could not read it out or distribute it to the press due to police intervention. The police also seized our banners and the photos of the Armenian intellectuals arrested on April 24, 1915.”

The IHD press release, which the police prevented from being distributed, read, in part:

“At the root of all evils in this country lies the genocide committed against the Christian peoples of Asia Minor and Northern Mesopotamia, against Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks.

“Now, we once more bow with respect before the memory of the Armenian, Assyrian/Syriac and Greek victims of the genocide. And we, the descendants of the genocide perpetrators, repeat our feeling of shame for not being able to prevent the continuation of the genocide through its denial and successive waves of destruction through generations.”

Sadly, Turkish aggression against the remaining Armenians continues. On December 28, 2012, an 85-year-old Armenian woman named Maritsa Küçük was beaten and stabbed to death in her home in the neighborhood of Samatya, one of the largest Armenian communities in Istanbul.

Günaysu said that “during the police intervention and detentions at the genocide commemoration in Sultanahmet,

Küçük’s daughter, Baydzar Midilli, screamed: ‘My mother is a genocide victim, yet you still say there is no genocide?!’ As members of the police department started walking towards her, apparently to detain her for protesting, Eren Keskin, a human rights lawyer, stopped them and told them that Midilli’s mother was murdered for being an Armenian. A police chief then prevented the officers from arresting her.”

On April 24, 2011 — the 96th anniversary of the genocide — Sevag Balıkçı, an Armenian doing his compulsory military service in the Turkish army, was shot to death by a Turkish nationalist. His killer has yet to be brought to justice. During last month’s commemoration, seven years after his murder, Balıkçı’s family and friends stood by his graveside in Istanbul to pay tribute to him. According to Günaysu, police officers told those gathered at the grave that they were not allowed in their speeches to mention the word “genocide”:

“There were a lot of armed police officers at the cemetery. While people were praying, the police were about to intervene. Two activists asked the police to respect those praying and mourning. Fortunately, the police listened, and moved a slight distance away from the congregation.”

The Christian genocide in Ottoman Turkey lasted for 10 years — from 1913 to 1923 — and targeted Armenian, Greek, Assyrian and other Christians. It resulted in the annihilation of around three million people. Although a century has passed since then, it is still a bleeding wound for the victims and their descendants. The online newspaper Artı Gerçek recently reported that the bones of victims are still visible in a lake in in eastern Turkey.

Locals named the lake “Gvalé Arminu” (the “Armenian lake”) after the massacre of more than 1,000 men, women and children that took place there 103 years ago. According to the report, only two children, hidden by villagers, survived. Even the bones that are revealed when the lake dries up in the summer have not led to an investigation by Turkish government, which continues to deny the genocide and attempts aggressively to silence those who try to speak out about it.

On April 24, the government-funded Anadolu Agency (AA) ran a story headlined: “The source of Income of Armenian Lobbies: the Genocide Industry,” alleging that the Armenian diaspora and the republic of Armenia make false claims about “the Armenian genocide lie” for financial gain.

On the same day, the AA ran a separate story: “Turks recall escaping from Armenian oppression.” According to Turkish myth, it was actually the “treacherous” Armenians who persecuted Turks; and the Turks were acting in self-defense to rid themselves of murderous Armenians. A widespread Turkish claim is, “They deserved it”.

The lies and state propaganda, which hold the victims responsible for their own annihilation, are what enable the ongoing Turkish persecution of the country’s remaining Armenians, including the conversion of their churches into mosques and the digging up of Armenian graves and churches by treasure-hunters who search for gold.

The Turkish government must stop.

Uzay Bulut is a journalist from Turkey and a fellow with the news and public policy group Haym Salomon Center. She is presently based in Washington D.C.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkey Cracks Down

Մենք կանգնած ենք հայ ժողովրդի կողքին. Դոնալդ Թրամփի ուղերձը Ցեղասպանության տարելիցին

April 24, 2018 By administrator

ԵՐԵՎԱՆ, 24 ԱՊՐԻԼԻ, ԱՐՄԵՆՊՐԵՍ: ԱՄՆ նախագահ Դոնալդ Թրամփըը հայտարարություն է տարածել Հայոց ցեղասպանության 103-րդ տարելիցի կապակցությամբ՝ կատարվածը կրկին անվանելով Մեծ Եղեռն: Ինչպես հաղորդում է «Արմենպրես»-ը՝ վկայակոչելով Սպիտակ տան պաշտոնական կայքը, ուղերձում ասվում է.

«Այսօր մենք հիշատակում ենք Մեծ Եղեռնը՝ 20-րդ դարի վատթարագույն զանգվածային վայրագություններից մեկը, երբ 1,5 միլիոն հայեր տեղահանվեցին, կոտորվեցին կամ դատապարտվեցին մահվան երթի Օսմանյան Կայսրության վերջին տարիներին: Մենք հիշատակում ենք 1915թ. իրադարձությունները և սգում զոհերի և տառապյալների համար:

Մենք նաև օգտագործում ենք պահը՝ ճանաչելու քաջությունն այն անհատների, ովքեր ձգտեցին վերջ տալ բռնությանը, ինչպես նաև նրանց, ովքեր իրենց ներդրումն ունեցան վերապրածներին օգնություն ցուցաբերելու և համայնքները վերակառուցելու համար, այդ թվում և Օսմանյան կայսրությունում ԱՄՆ դեսպան Հենրի Մորգենթաուին, ով ձգտում էր վերջ տալ բռնությանը, իսկ հետագայում Մերձավոր Արևելյան նպաստամատույցի միջոցով հավաքեց գումարներ՝ օգնելու հայ ժողովրդին: Խորը հարգանքով ենք արձանագրում հայ ժողովրդի դիմացկունությունը, որի շատ ներկայացուցիչներ նոր կյանք կառուցեցին Միացյալ Նահանգներում և շատ անհաշվելի ներդրումներ ունեցան մեր երկրում:

Քանի որ մենք հարգում ենք նրանց հիշատակը, ովքեր տառապել են, մենք նաև վերադառնում ենք մեր հանձնառությանը՝ երաշխավորելու, որ նման կոտորածները չկրկնվեն: Մենք ընդգծում ենք ցավոտ տարրերով անցյալի ճանաչման ու դրա հետ հաշվի նստելու կարևորությունը՝ որպես անհրաժեշտ քայլ ավելի հանդուրժող ապագա կառուցելու ճանապարհին:

Այս հանդիսավոր օրը մենք կանգնած ենք ողջ աշխարհի հայ ժողովրդի կողքին՝ ի նշան հարգանքի նրանց հիշատակին, ովքեր զոհվել են՝ պարտավորվելով աշխատել միասին և կառուցել ավելի լավ ապագա»:

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Trump

Armenians worldwide commemorate 103rd anniversary of Genocide

April 24, 2018 By administrator

Armenians worldwide commemorate 103rd

103 years have passed since the beginning of the Armenian Genocide.

In April 1915, the Ottoman government embarked upon the systematic decimation of its civilian Armenian population. The persecutions continued with varying intensity until 1923 when the Ottoman Empire ceased to exist and was replaced by the Republic of Turkey. The Armenian population of the Ottoman state was reported at about two million in 1915. By 1923 virtually the entire Armenian population of the Ottoman Turkey had disappeared.

The massacres of Armenians began in late 19th century, when despotic Turkish Sultan Abdul Hamid II – obsessed with loyalty above all, and infuriated by the nascent Armenian campaign to win basic civil rights – declared that he would solve the “Armenian question” once and for all.

On April 24, 1915, the Armenian Genocide began. That day, the Turkish government arrested and executed several hundred Armenian intellectuals. Afterwards, ordinary Armenians were turned out of their homes and sent on death marches through the Mesopotamian desert without food or water. Frequently, the marchers were stripped naked and forced to walk under the scorching sun until they dropped dead. People who stopped to rest were shot.

While modern Turkey denies the Armenian Genocide, many Turkish intellectuals have recognized this crime against humanity, committed at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

On April 15, 2015, the European Parliament during its plenary session adopted a resolution on the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, which recalled the Parliament’s resolution of June 18, 1987, in which the EP recognized that the tragic events that took place in Ottoman Armenia from 1915 to 1918 against the Armenians constitute genocide as defined by international law.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 103, armenian genocide

U.S. people, government do not forget 1.5 million Armenians – ambassador

April 24, 2018 By administrator

U.S. ambassador

U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Richard Mills visited today Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex in capital Yerevan to pay homage to the memory of 1.5 million innocent victims “who lost their lives in the Ottoman Empire”.

“I am here today on behalf of the U.S. people to remember and commemorate all those who lost their lives in one of the great atrocities of the 20th century,” he told reporters at the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex.

“The U.S. people, the U.S. government remain committed to not forgetting what happened 103 years ago, the 1,5 million Armenians who marched to their deaths at the end of the Ottoman Empire,” the top US official said.

“We also want to remember all those who helped victims, all those who helped rebuild Armenian civilization and culture. And we want to remember all those who came to America as a result of this atrocity, and have contributed so much to the American life and society.”

According to Mr. Mills, the goal of the U.S. remains that there be an “honest and true” reckoning of the facts and acknowledgment of the past.

“And that is what the U.S. government is working for – to try to achieve the acknowledgment of the past. An honest acknowledgment will lead to reconciliation for all,” he concluded.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, U.S-Ambassador

Dutch minister attends Armenian Genocide commemoration in Yerevan

April 24, 2018 By administrator

Dutch minister attends Armenian Genocide

YEREVAN. – Dutch State Secretary of Finance Menno Snel attended the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide in Yerevan.

This is the first time a member of the Dutch government was present at Tsitsernakaberd after the Dutch parliament approved the motion recognizing the Armenian Genocide earlier this year.

The Dutch official was accompanied by Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

From now on, a Dutch Minister or State Secretary will attend the commemoration every five years.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, attends, Dutch minister

Garo Paylan has submitted a law draft for the recognition of Armenian Genocide, to National Assembly of Turkey

April 20, 2018 By administrator

Law Draft Submitted for Recognition of Armenian Genocide

Law Draft Submitted for Recognition of Armenian Genocide

HDP MP Garo Paylan has submitted a law draft for the recognition of Armenian Genocide, the removal of genocide perpetrators’ names from public places and an amendment to the Turkish Citizenship Law.

Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) İstanbul MP Garo Paylan has submitted a law draft to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey for the “Recognition of Armenian Genocide”, “Removal of the Names of Genocide Perpetrators from Public Places” and “Amendment to Turkish Citizenship Law.”

In the general preamble of the law draft, it has been stated, “According to a census conducted in 1914, approximately two million Armenians lived in the Ottoman Empire. At the night of April 24, 1915, around 250 Armenian intellectuals, including MPs and writers were arrested in İstanbul.”

In the preamble, it has also been indicated, “After these people were sent into exile in Ayaş and Çankırı, the vast majority of them were killed. Among the ones sent into exile and killed were Dr. Nazaret Dağavaryan (MP of Ottoman Empire), Armen Doryan (poet and journalist), Şavarş Krisyan (editor of the sports magazine Marmnamarz), Levon Larents (poet), Rupen Sevag (poet), Yenovk Şahen (theater artist), Siamanto [Atom Yarcanyan] (poet), Hagop Terziyan (pharmacist and writer), Taniel Varujan (poet), Krikor Yesayan (teacher and translator), Rupen Zartaryan (writer and poet), Diran Kelekyan (writer and Professor of Turkish language) and Krikor Zohrab (MP of Ottoman Empire and writer). (PT/SD)

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, draft, Garo Paylan

Cyprus House hears speech on Armenian Genocide

April 20, 2018 By administrator

It was inconceivable that 103 years after the Armenian Genocide there were civilized states that succumbed to Turkey’s pressure not to recognize the ‘extinction plan’ applied by Ankara in 1915, the Armenian Representative at the House Vartkes Mahdessian said on Friday.

Mahdessian was addressing the House plenary, which itself called on the international community to recognize the crime, which is marked on April 24 every year.

The Armenian representative in his address to MPs expressed his gratitude that Cyprus was the first European country to pass a parliamentary resolution recognizing the genocide in 1975. In 2015, Cyprus was the first county in the world to then make it a crime to deny the Armenian Genocide, he said.

“It is truly unthinkable that civilized states, who appear to be protectors of human rights and democracy, continue to yield to the pressure exerted by Turkey, taking advantage of its geostrategic position and purchasing power, which stops them from recognizing the Armenian Genocide,” said Mahdessian.

He said the genocide was a tragedy that shocked the then civilized world and which created deep wounds like no other event in the long course of the Armenian nation.

Between 1915 and 1923 more than 1,500,000 Armenians were killed, tortured, or forced to die in the inhospitable desert of Deer Zor, while more than 800,000 became refugees and became scattered around the world, shaping the Armenian diaspora as it is today.

Mahdessian noted that a century and a bit later, “Turkey continues to stubbornly refuse to acknowledge its blood-stained past and the commission of these crimes”.

“Using a well-organised policy plan, diplomacy, extortion and intimidation, reinforced by false academic evidence, falsified data and a number of threats, Turkey attempts to silence any attempt to reveal the truth,” he added.

As to why Turkey has so stubbornly refused to recognize the Armenian Genocide, while Germany has recognized the Holocaust of the Jews, Mahdessian said that the main reasons were the legal consequences of such a move and its impact on Turkish society.

“Turkey is not willing to pay even one cent to the survivors of the Genocide and their offspring, since it would not be only for the Armenians, but also the Greeks, the Assyrians, and perhaps the Kurds, and the Cypriots,” he concluded.

As part of the anniversary events this weekend, on Saturday, from 3pm to 6pm, a blood drive will be organised at the Armenian Primary School NAREK.

On Tuesday, April 24, the anniversary date, at 5pm, a youth march will take place, which will start from Makarios Avenue parking lot across from the Zena Kanther Building, which will head to Armenias Street by 7pm to meet up with other members of the community.

The marchers will then head for the Monument of the Armenian Genocide at the Armenian Church, where at 7:30pm there will be a memorial event with the main speaker being House President Demetris Syllouris. Also attending the event will be the Armenian Archbishop of Cyprus.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Cyprus House

New signs lead to Pasadena’s Armenian Genocide Memorial

April 12, 2018 By administrator

State Senator Anthony J. Portantino will be joining the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee for the official unveiling of the I-210 Freeway signs for the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial on Saturday, April 21, Armenian news agency PanArmenian said in a report Wednesday, Pasadena Now reports.

The event at Memorial Park in Pasadena is open to the community.

The Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial is a solemn reminder of 1.5 million Armenians who were killed during the Armenian Genocide. It also serves as a religious and cultural celebration for the thousands of Armenian American descendants of survivors within the 25th Senate District and Los Angeles County.

Prior to his election to the State Senate, Senator Portantino served on the Board of the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee which constructed the memorial. After his election, Senator Portantino requested for informational signs to be installed to direct the public to the memorial.

Two freeway and two off-ramp signs have already been installed.

Senator Portantino currently represents Senate District 25, which is home to the largest Armenian-American community in the country.

Saturday’s unveiling ceremony will start with a march at 5 p.m. arriving at the Armenian Genocide Memorial, and will also include distinguished clergy and dignitaries, a Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee announcement said.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Memorial, Pasadena’s, sign

New report details Germany’s role in Armenian genocide – Deutsche Welle

April 6, 2018 By administrator

Germany's role in Armenian genocide

Germany’s role in Armenian genocide

The German Reich provided the Ottoman Empire with the weapons to carry out the Armenian genocide, a new report claims. Prussian officers also laid the “ideological foundations” for the massacre, according to the author.Turkish forces mainly used German rifles and other weapons to carry out the 1915-16 genocide of the Armenian people, a new report has found.

Mauser, Germany’s main manufacturer of small arms in both world wars, supplied the Ottoman Empire with millions of rifles and handguns, which were used in the genocide with the active support of German officers. Historians have estimated that between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians were killed in the two-year genocide.”German officers who served in Turkish-Ottoman military staff actively helped carry out individual murders,” according to the report by Global Net — Stop the Arms Trade (GN-STAT).

“The majority of the aggressors were armed with Mauser rifles or carbines, the officers with Mauser pistols.” Many German officers witnessed and wrote about the massacres in letters to their families.

The report represents the first “case” being researched and developed by GN-STAT, a new multilingual worldwide network of more than 100 organizations, and a database for activists, whistleblowers, journalists, artists, and others interested in arms exports. It is already preparing new case studies about the illegal G36 deal that Heckler & Koch made in Mexico, and which is about to go to trial in Stuttgart, and the $110 billion (€90 billion) arms deal that the United States struck with Saudi Arabia last year.

Accessory to murder

The Turkish army was also equipped with hundreds of cannons produced by the Essen-based company Krupp, which were used in Turkey’s assault on Armenian resistance fighters holding out on the Musa Dagh mountain in 1915.

In 2015, German President Joachim Gauck acknowledged Germany’s “co-responsibility” for the Armenian genocide, while a book published in the same year by the journalist Jürgen Gottschlich detailed the political collusion of Turkey’s most important European ally in the First World War, which provided military advice and training for the Ottoman Empire throughout the Wilhelmine period. But the new GN-STAT report is the first to detail the sheer extent of the material support provided by Mauser and Krupp.

“Mauser really had a rifle monopoly for the Ottoman Empire,” said the report’s author, Wolfgang Landgraeber, a filmmaker who has made several films about German weapons exports. Mauser is now defunct as a company, but Krupp’s successor, the German steel giant ThyssenKrupp, has never publicly acknowledged the part that it played in the genocide.

“The question of who actually supplied the weapons, not only for the genocide but also for the First World War in Turkey, no one has really addressed that question before,” said Landgraeber. “And to what extent German officers took part in murders by actually picking up the rifles and firing them themselves — that wasn’t known before.”

Many of the firsthand German accounts in the report come from letters by Major Graf Eberhard Wolffskehl who was stationed in the southeastern Turkish city of Urfa in October 1915. Urfa was home to a substantial population of Armenians, who barricaded themselves inside houses against Turkish infantry. Wolffskehl was serving as chief of staff to Fahri Pasha, deputy commander of the Ottoman 4th Army, which had been called in as reinforcement.

“They (the Armenians) had occupied the houses south of the church in numbers,” the German officer wrote to his wife. “When our artillery fire struck the houses and killed many people inside, the others tried to retreat into the church itself. But … they had to go around the church across the open church courtyard. Our infantry had already reached the houses to the left of the courtyard and shot down the people fleeing across the church courtyard in piles. All in all the infantry, which I used in the main attack … acquitted itself very well and advanced very dashingly.”


Ideological support

While German companies provided the guns, and German soldiers the expert advice on how to use them, German officers also laid what Landgraeber calls the “ideological foundations” for the genocide.

That the German Reich shared the Ottomans’ mistrust of the Armenians was no secret — both feared they were colluding with mutual enemy Russia, while Gottschlich’s book quotes navy attache Hans Humann, a member of the German-Turkish officer corps and close friend of the Ottoman Empire’s war minister, Enver Pasha, as saying: “The Armenians — because of their conspiracy with the Russians — will be more or less exterminated. That is hard, but useful.”

Another figure the report focuses on is the Prussian major general Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz, a key figure who became a vital military adviser to the Ottoman court in 1883 and saw himself as a lobbyist for the German arms industry and supported both Mauser and Krupp in their efforts to secure Turkish commissions. (He once boasted in his diary, “I can claim that without me the rearmament of the army with German models would not have happened.”) “Not publicly, but among his friends and relatives, von der Goltz would show himself an Armenia-phobe,” said Landgraeber. “Several witnesses heard him describing them as ‘a greasy trader people.’ He helped persuade the Sultan to try and end the Armenian question once and for all.”

Landgraeber also considers von der Goltz a source for later Nazi ideology. The Prussian officer published a military book in 1883 titled “Das Volk in Waffen” (“The People Armed”), in which, as Landgraeber puts it: “He adopts positions that Hitler would take up later — for example, the aim of a military campaign should be to destroy the enemy totally, not just to fight and force a capitulation. He believed in total war. That was also the ideological foundation that he gave the Ottomans, and which they used in the Armenian issue.”

Landgraeber is keen to underline that the new research does not absolve the Ottoman Empire of its guilt — but simply fills in the gaps in the historical record. “It happened as we have researched it, and nothing should be sugarcoated — but the entire picture should be more complete.”

 

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Germany’s, Role

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