Edward J. Erickson, "Armenian Rebellion,"
in his Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World
War, Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn., 2001, pp: 95-104.
There is a huge body of historical literature concerning the "Armenian
genocide" that maintains that the Young Turks, in particular Enver, Talat,
and Cemal, intentionally sought to exterminate the Armenian citizens of
the Ottoman Empire. This case against the Young Turks rests on the premise
that they intended to racially purify the empire by purging or exterminating
its minorities, particularly the troublesome Christian Armenians. Moreover,
the literature maintains that under the pretext of wartime emergencies
and threats to national security, the Young Turks took advantage of circumstances
to conduct genocide against the Armenians. Using a combination of
methods ranging from massacre to starvation, the Young Turks then deliberately
and intentionally caused the deaths of several million Armenians. Much
of this literature is emotionally charged and a large percnetage of it is
directly generated by the descendants of the survivors of the events. The
genocide itself has, over the past eighty years, become a highly political
issue in most western countries, as Armenian descendants seek legistlative
condemnation of the modern Turkish Republic. Because of this transgenerational
campaign to establish that an Ottoman genocide (defined as an intentional
and systematic attempt to exterminate a people or a race) against its Armenian
subjects occurred, balanced and objective discourse on this subject becomes
difficult.
In many quarters of academica, debate has more or less settled on the
acknowledgment that the genocide occurred as a matter of historical fact.
Without question, a large number of innocent Armenians, including women
and children, died during the First World War at the hands of the Turks.
Documentation on this point is incontrovertible and was witnessed
by too many neutral observers, many of whom wrote reliable and immediate
narratives and reports. Because of this, the Young Turks have been
intellectually equated with Adolf Hitler and the Holocaust, and secondarily,
the Turkish Army with the German SS. The Turkish position on the matter
is that the Armenians were actively engaged in terrorism and in outright
insurrection beginning in April 1915. Military necessity therefore
justified the deportation of the Armenians. Both sides conducted unsanctioned
massacres, but to this day the Turks deny that the Ottoman government sought,
with premeditated intent, to exterminate the Armenian people.
It is beyond the scope of this book to assess or to comment on whether
or not there was a deliberate or sytematic genocide of the Armenian people
during the First World War. This section focuses on the role and the
responsibility of the military in identifying and reacting to the Armenian
Rebellion of 1915 and 1916. Only a fraction of the massive Turkish archival
holdings are available to researchers, and these are carefully controlled
by the Turkish authorities. The records available to researchers in
the Turkish General Staff's archives describe a rising pattern of civil unrest,
followed by an armed rebellion. The available records also show an escalating
response by the military culminating in the mass deportation of the Armenians.
As a prelude, there had been considerable recent conflict between the Armenians
and the Ottoman government in the immediate aftermath of the revolutoins
of 1908 and 1909. During this turbulent period, Ottoman restrictions
against minorities first relaxed and then tightened. The hopes of the
minorities, especially the Armenians and the Greeks, who had thought that
the ending of the sultanate and the establishment of a modern constitutional
structure would lead to greater autonomy and political inclusion, were shattered
when General Mehmut Sevket Pasa seized power. Disorder broke out throughout
the empire among minorities disappointed with this development and with
increased taxes and restructions of civil rights. In particular, armenians
in Adana rose in revolt on April 14, 1909, and the army and the Jandarma
in quelling the uprising subsequenlty killed many thousands.
The Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire in 1914 approached several
million and the Armenian population of the northeastern Ottoman vilayets
was probably about 1.3 million people. There had been numerous Armenian
uprisings beginning in the late 1700s and culminating in the 1890s in infamous
and widely reported massacres. While many of the Armenians were loyal
and law abiding citizens of the empire there had existed for many years
subversive Armenian societies dedicated to the establishment of an aunomous
Armenia. After 1909, internal dissent accelerated interest in these
societies. In 1910, the Dasnaks (a revolutionary Armenian national
society) launched a campaign of terror in eastern Anatolia. Both ARmenians
and Turks were killed in the thousands, and the army again was called upon
to help restore order. Similar problems arose in Albania, Kosovo, and
Macedonia as other minorities became disaffected as well. The Balkan
Wars of 1912 and 1913 brought an end to Ottoman control of its European empire,
thus eliminating a substantial part of its minority problem. However,
the Armenians remained within the now truncated empire. By 1914, nationalist/revolutionary
Armenian societies were operating openly in Europe and in Russia and were
receiving support from many sources that sought the dismemberment of the
Ottoman Empire.
Within the empire itself, the Armenian community was increasingly alarmed
by a resurgent interest in Pan-Turanism, in particular, by the Turkish nationalist
theories of Ziya Gokal', who advocated the imosition of the Turkish language
and culture on the empire. Certainly a case can be made that these
ideas appealed to some members of the CUP, especially Enver Pasa. This
cult of Turkish nationalism and modernization found many adherents within
the army as well. Gokalp's supporters even made contact with non-Ottoman
Turks outside the empire's boundaries. The Christian, linguistically
and culturally different, Armenians received the ideas of Gokalp with great
foreboding. Perhaps equally worrisome to the hard working and industrious
Armenians was Gokalp's advocacy of greater Turkish participation in the
economy. In any case, it was perhaps more than idle speculation by
1914, that the Turks intended to consolidate their hold on the remaining
empire in the Anatolian heartland, and that they intended to impose some
kind of cultural, linguistic, and economic Pan-Turanic program on the empire's
population. In the spring of 1914 the Turks intercepted letters from
Armenian committees expressing concern over these developments. Other
letters sent by the Tasnak Committee requested weapons from the Russians.
In July 1914, the Ottoman Consulate in Kars intercepted a telegram
outlining the smuggling of four hundred rifles into the Eliskirt valley.
Also during the summer of 1914, the Armenian Committees conducted
the important Erzurum Congress under the leadership of the Tasnaks. Armenian
representatives from every major Eastern Anatolian city were present. Ostensibly
conducted to peacefully advance Armenian concerns through legitimate means,
the Turks regarded the Congress as the seedbed for later insurrection. It
was here, the Turks were convinced, that strong Armenian-Russian links solidified
into detailed plans and agreements aimed at the detachment of Armenia from
the Ottoman Empire.
By September the commander of the Erzurum Fortress received a report that
the Armenian regiments in the Russian Army were mobilized and were conducting
war-training exercises. Indicators of potential violent intent accumulated
as Turkish authorities found bombs and weaopns hidden in Armenian homes.
The 4th Reserve Cavalry Regiment patrolling from its lines in Koprukoy
discovered Russian rifles cached in Armenian homes in Hasankale on October
20. The tempo of army operations against Armenian dissidents accelerated.
In early October 1914 (prior to the commencement of hostilities), the Turkish
Third Army was receiving reports of Armenians who had been ex-Russian soldiers
returning to Turkey with maps and money. There were reports from infantry
battalions concerning Armenian meetings aat which large numbers of aggressively
nationalist people were gathering. In late October 1914, the Third
Army staff informed the Turkish General Staff that large numbers of Armenians
with weapons were moving into Mus, Bitlis, Van, and Erivan. Additionally
disturbing to the military staffs at all levels was an increasing recognition
that thousands of Armenian citizens were deliberately leaving their homes
in Ottoman territory and traveling into Russian held territory with most
of their earthly possessions. Although Turkey was still officially
at peace with Russia, many Turkish officers were by now convinced that Russia
was actively conspiring to foment an Armenian revolt.
The situation went from bad to worse as Russia declared war on Turkey in
November 1914. Throughout November, December, and into January 1915,
many similar reports to the Turkish General Staff outlined the danger osed
by armed Armenians in the Third and in the Fourth Army areas. Incidents
of terrorism increased, particularly bombings and assassinations of civilians
and local Turkish officials. On February 25, 1915, a ciphered cable
went from the Operations Division of the Turkish General Staff to the First,
Second, Third, and Fourth Armeis; the Irak Command; I, II, III, IV, V Army
Corps; and to the Jandarma Command. The cable contained the chief
of the Operatoins Division's newly issued Directive 8682 titled Increased
Security Precautions. This directive noted increased dissident Armenian
activity in Bitlis, Aleppo, Dortyol, and Kayseri, and furthermore identified
Russian and French influence and activities in these areas. The Operations
Division directed that the Third and the Fourth Armies increase durveillance
and security measures. All recipients of the cable were instructed
to increase coordination among themselves. Finally, the cable specifically
directed that any ethnic Armenian soldiers should be removed from Turkish
headquartes staffs and taken out of important Turkish command centers.
The final measure contained in Directive 8682 was probably taken in response
to a report from the Ministry of the Interior's Intelligence division to
the Turkish General Staff's director of intelligence. In this report
it was noted that the Armenian Patriarchate in Constantinople was transmitting
military secrets and dispositions to the Russians. From February through
July 1915, a great many additional reports from provincial officials and
lower level army units reinforced this pattern of allied intelligence gathering
as well.
In the Third Army area, the disastrous sarikamis offensive had created
a deplorable military situation. The army staff was trying to restore
combat effectiveness to its shattered infantry divisions while at the same
time trying to hold a very long front. Fortunately for the Turks,
the battered Russians were in a similar condition; however, the Russians
were winning the reinforcement battle because of their superior lines of
commuication. A massive Russian offensive was expected following the
spring thaw in 1915. Overlaid on this dismal situation was the increasing
belief by the Turks of an Armenian rebellion in the rear areas of the Turkish
Third Army. For the staff of the Third Army this represented a catastrophe
of unimaginable proportions. The main Armenian centers of population
(and thus of potential armed resistance) lay directly astride the only two
metaled roads leading into the Third Army's area of operations. Sivas,
Erzincan, and Erzurum interdicted the northern route. Each of these
cities included substantial Armenian populations. Some contained Armenian
majorities.
Furthermore, Armenian activity in Konya, Adana, and Aleppo (in the Fourth
Army's area) interdicted the only railroad bringing food, war material,
and reinforcements from the west, through which the Third Army's supplies
flowed as well. Since the Third Army had only limited quantities of
food, medicine, and military stores on hand, interdiction of these key commuications
arteries spelled disaster. There was also the distinct possibility
of organized and armed Armenian groups rising in the Third Army's rear to
actively support and assist the anticipated Russian spring offensive. This
was particularly worrisome given the large numbers of Armenian men who had
joined the Russians, many of whom had left relatives and friends behind in
Ottoman territory. The Armenian threat affected the military situation
not only for the Third Army, but potentially for the Fourth Army in Syria
and the Sixth Army in Mesopotamia. These concerns, therefore, had to
be addressed by the planning staffs of the Turkish Armies as they prepared
for operational contingencies.
It is difficult to pinpoint exactly when and where the rebellions broke
out first. Many western writers and historians have concluded that the
Turks themselves deliberately instigated the revolts by enforcing intolerable
conditions on the Armenians. These acts included murder, rape, and
lesser humiliations, which served to provoke an Armenian reaction. The
Turks dispute this and today claim that it was the Armenians, encouraged
by the Russians and French in the aftermath of Sarikamis, who first rose
in revolt.
IN fact, armed revolts by the Armenians soon broke out. The most
famous incident occurred when the Druzhiny, an Armenian nationalist movement,
seized the lakeside city of Van in fierce fighting on April 14, 1915. The
Turks responded by rushing the Van Jandarma Division to the divy to contain
and to crush the rebellion. There was bitter fighting as the Turks
besieged the city. Simultaneously the Russian Army began its long awaited
offensive into the region. This Russian army contained a large number
of Armenians organized into several army divisions of well-trained and highly
motivated infantry regiments. Although these soldiers were recruited
mainly from the Armenian vilayets lost to Turkey in 1878, their ranks
included numerous expatriate Armenian citizens from the Ottoman Empire who
had fled to fight against the Turks. The Turks believed that the Russians
deliberately recruited these people because of their knowledge of the terrain
and peoples within the Ottoman Empire. The tactical situation around
Van and its approaches appeared to critical that the Turks rerouted the 1st
Expeditionary Force to assist in crushing the rebellion. Two Jandarma
battalions assigned to the 28th Infantry Division were also pulled off the
line and sent to Van. Fighting around Van lasted into late May, when
the Russians finally broke the siege and relieved the Armenian defenders
of the city. Other Armenian centers of population soon followed suit
and over the next several months revolts broke out in the cities of Bayburt,
Erzurum, Beyazit, Tortum, and Diyarbakir. Most of these revolts were
traced to the support and instigation of the Armenian nationalist committees.
Horrible massacres of Armenian males were committed in the Van region which
were widely reported by numerous neutral observers. Most of these
were attributed to Kurds and Circassians, although some were ascribed to
Turkish forces. Rafael De Nogales, a Venezuelan soldier of fortune
fighting with the Turks, claimed in his memoirs to have been told that local
Ottoman officials had received secret orders to exterminate all Armenian
males of twelve years of age and older. Other witnesses, including
Americans and Germans with direct access to the ruling elite, claimed to
have been told about similar orders. Documentaiotn on this point is
contested by the Turks. De Nogales remarked that the Armenians reciprocated
in kind by slaughtering large numbers of Muslims and also noted that the
Armenian rebels were well equipped with arms, ammunitions, and explosives.
HE claimed that the semi-automatic Mauser pistol seemed particularly
abundant, and was an Armenian weapon of choice in the close hand-to-hand
fighting within the city of Van itself.
Turkish reaction to these armed rebellions escalated in the late spring
and the early summer of 1915. On April 20, Enver Pasa sent a ciphered
message to the Third Army headquarters confirming that Armenian and Greek
soldiers were deserting to form dangerous rebel bands. Enver noted that
it was undesirable to use either regular Turkish troops or the mobile Jandarma
regiments against these rebels (these troops were then badly needed at the
front). He therefore directed that the local and permanently based
(static) Jandarma battalions be used to help capture the rebels. He
also recommended that a reward system of one Turkish lira per every captured
rebel be established to encourage local inhabitants to turn in the rebels.
A messagefrom Muammer Bey, the Governor of Sivas, exposed a serious problem
with this plan. The governor noted that in his vilayet, although
about fifteen thousand Armenian men of military age had departed to join the
Russians, another fifteen thousand Armenian men remained in the vilayet
. Unfortunately, conscription of all Turkish men up to the age of
50 years old had left the local villages practically unprotected and vulnerable
to Armenian depredations. This condition made hunting down the rebels
problematic. The greater need by far, at least in Sivas, was simply
to provide for the protectoin of the Muslim villagers themselves, and the
local Jandarma were hard pressed to accomplish this.
On April 24, 1915, Enver Pasa in his capacity as the chief of the Turkish
General Staff issued an important directive that noted that the Armenians
posed a great danger to the war effort, particularly in eastern Anatolia and
outlined a plan to evacuate the Armenian population from the region. This
directive also confirmed the Armenians' worst fears about the direction of
Ottoman policy regarding their status as a discrete cultural entity within
the Empire. It specified that Armenian males between sixteen and fifty-five
years of age would be deported. Furthermore, all Armenians would be
directed to speak Turkish and Armenian schools would be forced to accommodate
this. All Armenian newspapers throughout the empire would be closed
immediately, although this may have been a moot point since Enver had rounded
up most of the Armenian intelligentisa (over three hundred in Constantinople
alone) previously on april 20. The April 24 directive specifically
identified the six eastern Anatolian vilayets , Zeytun, and the area
south of Diyarbakir as the operational area affected by the evacuation plan.
It was intended to move the Armenians to the Euphrates Valley, Urfa,
and Suleymaniye. The order specified that the goal was to create an
eastern Anatolian demographic situation in which the ratio of Armenians owuld
drop to 10 percent of the local total of Turks and local tribesmen. Almost
mocking the inhumanity of the directive, it was specified that the Armenian
families would draw lots to see who would have to leave. Finally, the
directive concluded by reminding all concerned that the Armenians would be
treated in a proper manner.
It would appear from this directive that the Turkish General Staff intended
that this evacuation would be orderly. Further guidance from Enver soon
followed on April 29. In a ciphered instruction to the Ministry of
War, all army commanders, all fortress commanders, and to the Irak Command,
Enver directed that all Armenian leadesr and
"malicious" Armenians be arrested immediately. The Dasnak, Huncak,
and similar Armenian Committees in Constantinople and in the vilayets
would immediately be closed down and those who were regarded as harmful
would be made to stay in a more "suitable location."
Outside forces now conspired to exaggerate the growing problem of an actively
hostile Armenian population in eastern Anatolia. In Mesopotamia, on
april 14, the British began an offensive that would take them to the very
gates of Baghdad itself. On April 25, 1915, the British and French came
crashing ashore at Gallipoli creating a critically important fourth front
that immediately threatened the power center of the empire. The long
anticipated Russian offensive in Caucasia began on May 6 with a major attack
down the Tortum Valley toward Erzurum. A second major Russian attack
also started toward the city of Van. These twin Russian attacks seemed
aimed at Turkish cities containing large Armenian populations. Indeed,
the Armenians in Van had already risen in rebellion. Furthermore, the
timing of the allied attacks, nearly simultaneously on three sidely separated
fronts, indicated allied coordination and mutual support hitherto unseen by
the Turks. There was a sustained period of crisis for the Turkish General
Staff in 1915 - it began on April 25 and it lasted until the fronts were
stabilized in the fall of 1915. During this period almost every Turkish
Infantry Division would be committed to combat in a strategic situation akin
to the Dutch boy plugging the dyke with his finger. Quite literally
in the very middle of this sea of competing priorities and in a position to
interdict the military lifelines of the empire, lay the Armenians, a subject
people heavily armed, belligerent, and now actively engaged in open rebellion.
The strategic dilemma of early May 1915 caused a major shift in the philosophical
and practical basis of the government's policy toward Armenians, as Enver
Pasa reevaluated the mounting problems and decided to take a radically different
approach. This shift in poicy would have severe and heartbreaking consequences
for the entire eastern Anatolian demographic landscape, and it produced unintended
effects that linger into the contemporary world. On May 2 Enver wrote
to the Ministry of the Interior outlining his thoughts on the best way to
tackle the Armenian situation. He thought it necessary either to drive
the Armenians, then living around Lake Van, into Russian territory or to disperse
them throughout the Ottoman Empire. Enver's preference was to drive
the rebels, their families and their headquarters away from the Russian border
and then to resettle the area with Muslim refugees from abroad (Turkey had
still not fully assimiated the millions of Turkish and Balkan Muslim refugees
who had fled into the empire after the Balkan Wars). Finally, Enver
asked the Ministry of the Interior to select an appropriate plan, practices,
and methods to accomplish these ends.
Clearly what had begun as a temporary and partial evacuation of rebellious
Armenians had now changed, philsophically and practically, into a mass deportation
of a more permanent nature. Moreover, it was now apparent that the military
was attempting to involve or to include the Ministry of the Interior in the
promulgation of the deportation. As the full scope of the Van rebellion
and associated Armenian rebellions in the Third Army area became apparent
the military tried to enforce and adhere to the existing policies. However,
the existing security measures were inadequate to deal with the problems
at hand, in particular, the pressing enemy offensives drained almost all
regular Turkish military power into the front lines. As Enver's new
policy ideas began to take hold in the capital, the military grappled with
ways to come to terms with the dilemma. Turkish reactions grew harsher.
A new provisional law was passed on May 27, which established military
responsibility for crushing Armenian resistance. The military was also
fully empowerred to round up the Armenians, either collectively or individually
in response to military needs or in response to any sign of treachery or
betrayal, and to transfer populatons. It is important to note here
that this law still maintained the operative notion that direct action against
Armenians would only be in response to military necessity or in reply to
hostile behavior.
On May 30, 1915, the now infamous Regulation for the Settlement of Armenians
Relocated to Other Places because of War Conditions & Emergency Political
Requirements was established under the oversight of the Department of Settlement
of Tribes and Immigrants in the Ministry of the INterior. This regulation
fixed responsibility for transportation with local officials and additionally
charged them with the protection and lives of the Armenians enroute to their
new homes. Importantly, the regulation established that the new areas
and the new villages for the Armenians would be established at leasat twenty-five
kilometers from the route of the Baghdad Railroad. It was clearly specified
that the health, boarding, and welfare of the deportees would remain a high
priority.
Thus cumulatively, the mechanism for the deaths of many deportees enroute
was now established. There was no central headquarters in overall charge
of the deportation. To the military fell the responsibility to round
up the rebellious Armenian population. To local officials fell the incredibly
difficult responsibility of arranging transportation, lodging, feeding, and
health care for an unwilling Armenian population of mostly women, children,
and the elderly To the Ministry of the Interior fell the responsibility
of finding suitable locations at the end of the journey for the deportees
to reestablish their lives. Compounding this critically flawed organizational
command structure was the military mandate to relocate the Armenians to a
place somewhere other than near the route of the Baghdad Railroad. There
is nothing in the record to indicate that the military, the Ministry of the
Interior, and local officials coordinated their efforts to alleviate the
horrible conditions suffered by many of the deportees.
A human disaster of huge proortions loomed on the horizon. Administratively
such a scheme wildly exceeded Turkish capabilities. Even had the Turks
been inclined to treat the Armenians kindly, they simply did not have the
transportation and logistical means necessary with which to conduct population
transfers on such a grand scale. Military transportation, which received
top priority, illustrates this point, when first-class infantry units typically
would lose a quarter of their strength to disease, inadequate rations, and
poor hygiene while traveling through the empire. This routinely happened
to regiments and divisions that were well equipped and composed of healthy
young men, commanded by officers concerned with their wellbing. Once
again, in a pattern which would be repeated through 1918, Enver Pasa's plans
hinged on nonexistent capabilities that guaranteed inevitable failure.
Compounding the implementation of these policies was the continuing Armenian
Rebellion, which included bombings, assassinations, and the wholesale slaughter
of Muslim Turkish villages. In some places the rebels even gained the
upper hand. The rebels in the city of Van were ultimately relieved
by advancing Russian forces. At Musa Dag in Cilicia, highly organized
Armenians fought the Turks for forty days. These events were bound
to inflame an already angry Turkish population and bureaucracy. In
spite of this, the Ministry of the Interior continued to muddy the organizational
waters by establishing further regulations that safeguarded the homes of
the deportees. According to the ministry, the homes of the deportees
were to be sealed and possessions left behind were to be cared for. If
the Armenians' homes were used as temporary lodging for Balkan immigrants
the new occupants would be liable for any accrued taxes and for damages.
Certainly there were many mixed messages with all of their associated
and unsaid complexities to be found in the rapidly evolving legal mechanisms
which governed the deportation and relocation of the eastern Anatolian Armenians.
The ponderous and complex wheels of the relocation process now began
to grind the Armenians into dust.
At the highest levels, Enver Pasa and the military staffs appear to have
generated the basic idea of the forced evacuation of the Armenians in response
to a military problem which threatened the security of the Turkish Third
Army and therefore of the empire itself. It is beyond question that
the actuality of the Armenian revolts in the key cities astride the major
eastern roads and railroads posed a significant military problem in the real
sinse. In point of fact, there were heavily armed and organized bands
of Armenians operating in concert with their Russian allies. This problem
in combination with the allied offensives in Caucasia, Mesopotamia, and at
Gallipoli caused an acceleration of the Turkish will to deal with an issue
of growing military concern. The main body of the army itself appears
removed from the Armenian deportations because of the strategic crisis of
1915 which kept regular army units at the front and away from the implementation
of the Armenian directives. Most of the mobile Jandarma regiments and
battalions would likewise have fallen into this category. As to the
question of which military units actually participated in the initial consolidations
and delivery of Armenians into pipeline, the answer is not clearly established
in Turkish official histories. It is likely that the work was done
by local Jandarma units and Ministry of the Interior forces which remained
in the vilayets for village and area protection. Kurdish and
Circassian volunteers who probably had axes to grind with their Armenian
neighbors usually augmented these units. De Nogales says as much in
his memoirs. The highly visible deportation began in earnest in the
early summer of 1915 and, as detailed by numerous German and American observers,
violence against Armenian noncombatants began almost immediately. By
the early fall, formal reports of abuses against Armenians were beginning
to filter up the military chain of command to the Turkish General Staff and
to the Ministry of War.
By mid-1916, most of the Armenian population had been forcibly removed from
the eastern Anatolian vilayets and from the key cities along the east-west
railroad. At this point, the Armenians ceased to be a military concern
for the Turkish military staffs. Numbers of Armenian males remained
alive as the Turkish Army continued to use Armenian manpower in its labor
battalions until the end of the war. This is particularly true of the
western, and predominately Catholic, Armenian population of the empire. Additionally,
large numbers of eastern Anatolian, primarily Orthodox, Armenians survived
by fleeing to join the Russians.
In the end, hundreds of thousands of Armenians died during the Armenian Rebellion
and deportation of 1915-1916. A similar number of Muslim Turks also
died during the Armenian revolts and during the Russian occupation of Erzurum,
Van, Erzincan, Trabzon, and Malazgirt. To be sure, many Armenians,
particularly leaders and men of military age were immediately killed or massacred
early on before entering the deportation flow. Many more, especially
the elderly and the infirm, died en route from apathy and neglect, or were
murdered outright, as the deportees were passed from local official to local
official in an ambulatory pipeline that resembled a decaying daisy chain.
Finally, the geographic constraints imposed on where the Armenians
could ultimately be allowed to settle imposed long term starvation as they
were sent to arid locations outside the fertile and well-watered route of
the Baghdad Railroad. It was a recipe for disaster with profound historical,
moral, and practical consequences which persist into the present day.