Lessons learned from national
CATASTROPHES: on the threshold OF
the 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN THE OTTOMAN
EMPIRE
Presentation
of the Head of the Institute for National Strategic Studies MOD, RA,
Doctor of
Political Science, Major General Hayk Kotanjian.
Parliamentary
hearings at the Standing Committee on Foreign Relations
of the National
Assembly of the Republic of Armenia, December 8, 2014.
Honorable Mr. Chairman!
Dear
Members of the National Assembly
of the Republic of Armenia and
the European Jewish Parliament!
Ladies and Gentlemen!
Let me start my
presentation highlighting the fact that tomorrow is the very day when 66 years
ago - on December 9, 1948 - the United Nations adopted The Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide[i]
developed by Professor of Jewish origin Raphael Lemkin. At the same time, the
proposal to legislatively announce the December 9 the Remembrance Day for
victims of all Genocides in Armenia is on the agenda of the Standing Committee
on Foreign Relations of the Parliament of the Republic of Armenia, under the
auspices of which today’s hearings are conducted, that are very important in
terms of understanding the perspectives of the security cooperation in the
interest of the sustainable development of World Armenians and World
Jewry.
Nevertheless, we
must state, bearing the full responsibility, that on the eve of this
significant event, in close proximity to the Republic of Armenia and the State
of Israel the torturers of the Islamic State perpetrate genocide of Christians,
Jews, Yazidis, and Muslims - not
engaged in terroristic jihad. To efficiently solve the problem of countering
this common threat, it is instrumental to consider and reconsider the lessons
learned by peoples from the genocidal crimes committed against humanity and
mankind during the contemporary history. At the same time, the absolute or
proportionate number of victims from different peoples and religious groups is,
indeed, various; nevertheless, this in no way belittles the role of tragedy in
the fates of each of them.
The Armenian and
Jewish peoples are alike in having responded to the genocides by restoring and
democratically promoting their ancient statehoods. These remarkable events
occurred at the end of the two World Wars of the 20th century: the
Republic of Armenia and the State of Israel were established accordingly on 28
May, 1918 and 14 May, 1948.
The “Never
Again” principle integrates the logical and moral bases of the Jewish and
Armenian peoples’ right to contribute to the international community in
providing Israel and Armenia with the guarantees of non-recurrence of genocide.[ii]
This principle is a cornerstone underlying the National Security Strategies of
the Republic of Armenia and the State of Israel.
The urgency of
the “Never Again” principle for the Armenian people called forth by the
genocidal acts against the Armenians of Azerbaijan during Perestroika in the
USSR, in response to the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians’ peaceful political actions
for self-determination and withdrawal from the Azerbaijani SSR in compliance
with the USSR legislation then in force.[iii] It concerns the pogroms in Sumgait and
Kirovabad in 1988 and in Baku in 1990. These crimes were interspersed and to
this day are being interspersed with the attempts to “counterbalance” them with
the genocidal acts against Azerbaijanis allegedly committed by the Armenians.
Thus, the slaughter of its own citizens in Khojalu, carried out in 1992 by the
Popular Front of Azerbaijan - in order to discredit the then Azerbaijani
President and to seize the power - is imputed to the Armenians who, when
neutralizing enemy’s firing positions, had actually opened a humanitarian
corridor for the evacuation of the people of Khojalu.[iv]
In recent past,
the Baku mass media played up the information that on the territory of the mass
grave in Guba - a town in the north of Azerbaijan - a memorial complex was
erected in commemoration of the victims of the genocide allegedly committed by
the Armenians against the Mountain Jews at the beginning of the last century.[v]
This fact became a matter of political manipulations targeted at cultivating
anti-Armenian sentiments among the Jews.[vi]
However, as the historical facts picked up from the Turkish sources and
published by the Armenian side evidence, in fact this concerns the mass grave
of the Armenians killed as a result of the massacre perpetrated by the Ottoman
Islamic army under the command of Nuri Pasha at the invasion of the South
Caucasus in 1918. Besides, according to the documents of the Central State
Historical Archive of Russia the relations between the Armenians and the Jews
in the South Caucasus region were exceptionally friendly.[vii] The attempts of using falsification of
historical events in Guba - to lead the Jewish and Armenian peoples to a clash
- failed due to the productive cooperation of the scholars and influential
organizations of the Armenian and Jewish Diasporas, as well as the experts of
Armenia and Israel.
In the case of
the Jews, the urgency of guaranteeing non-recurrence of the Holocaust is
conditioned by the unremitting mortal attacks against the Jewish people since
the establishment of the State of Israel, and at present accompanied by the
terrorism of the radical Islam. Direct intersection of security interests of
the Armenians and Jews in terms of the threat of recurrence of genocides in the
Middle East has recently been reflected in the destruction of the 1915 Armenian
Genocide Martyrs' Memorial Church of the Armenian
Catholicosate of Cilicia in the Syrian desert Deir ez-Zor by
the vandals of the Islamic State[viii].
As it is well
known, there is a serious issue regarding the fact that genocide - being an
international crime against humanity and humankind - requires recognition from
the state, the former authorities of which had committed genocide, as well as
the international community. Meanwhile, non-recognition of genocide, as a rule,
is politically motivated. As a precedent we should consider the recognition of
the Holocaust by the authorities of the FRG, who have fundamentally dissociated
themselves from Nazi Germany’s former genocidal leadership. As we know, the
government of Konrad Adenauer on this basis signed an agreement with the
government of Israel and the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against
Germany, under which committed itself to pay compensation to the affected
party. Distancing itself from the
genocidal regimes of Sultan Abdul Hamid and the Young Turks with the assumption
of adequate responsibility for compensating the damage is expected from modern
Turkey’s authorities in terms of the Genocide committed against 1.5 million of
its citizens of Armenian origin.
As some Israeli experts think, in due time, taking into account the
dynamics of the Arab-Israeli conflict, Israel, with a view to build and
maintain partnership with secular Turkey - an alternative to
Arab states - has refused to recognize the Armenian Genocide, so as not to
irritate Ankara. The public arguments of the given political solution were
veiled in the form of protection of the uniqueness of the Holocaust as a
phenomenon incomparable with any other genocide in the history of mankind.
However, along with the changing priorities of the Turkish
authorities, based on the doctrine of "neo-Ottomanism", and the
consequent recent new geostrategy of Turkey in the Middle East and the Islamic
world, there is a tendency for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by
authoritative representatives of the world Jewry. Let me provide you with some
assessments by the leading researchers of the Holocaust.
DR. ISRAEL CHARNY,
Executive Director of the Institute on
the Holocaust and Genocide, Jerusalem.
Editor-in-Chief of the Encyclopedia of
Genocide.
“The Armenian Genocide is remarkable in
many respects, including the fact that in the bloody 20th century it
was an early example of mass genocide, which many recognize as a “dress
rehearsal” of the Holocaust”[ix].
SOL GITTLEMAN
Provost and Head of the Chair of Judaic
Studies, Tufts University (US).
“The campaign of vilification and
dehumanization which preceded the destruction of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians in 1895-1896 and again in 1915 was, in subtlety and in preparation,
just as carefully orchestrated as was the preparation of Dr. Goebbels. The
Armenians were categorized according to the stereotype. Therefore, they were less
than human, and killing men, women, and children was not an act of brutality,
but rather an act of heroism necessary to free the country from an infection.”[x]
LUCY DAWIDOWICZ,
Expert on Holocaust, Harvard (US).
“The Armenian Genocide in its extent and
horror most closely approximated the murder of the European Jews <…> The
once unthinkable “Armenian solution” became, in our time achievable “Final
solution”, the Nazi code name for the annihilation of the European Jews.[xi]”
Meanwhile, Israel urged to recognize the Armenian Genocide not only by
leading experts on the Holocaust. Over the years Knesset members Aryeh Eldad,
Ze’ev Elkin, Zahava Gal-On, Haim Oron, Yossi Sarid, Yuri Stern, Yair Tzaban,
Alexander Tzinker and others bore on the agenda of the plenary sessions of the
Israeli Parliament proposals for official recognition of this tragic fact of
history. Today’s Israeli president Reuven Rivlin - the then Speaker of the
Knesset - also considered the recognition of the Armenian Genocide to be the
duty of the Israeli parliament.[xii]
A crucial support for the recognition of Armenian Genocide
demonstrated Yona Metzger, Chief Rabbi of Israel, who visited the Memorial to
the victims of the Armenian Genocide in Tsitsernakaberd in 2005[xiii].
We welcome the members of the European Jewish Parliament at the
National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia on the threshold of the 100th
Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. Let me express my
confidence that today’s joint discussion of ours will advance the understanding
and implementation of constructive cooperation between the Armenians of the
World and World Jewry in the interests of security and sustainable development
of the Republic of Armenia and the State of Israel, as well as the Armenian and
the Jewish Diasporas.
In conclusion, I feel genuinely obliged to speak about the
appropriateness of the invitation of His Excellency the President of Israel
Dear Mr. Reuven Rivlin to Yerevan in April, 2015, to take part in events
marking the 100th
Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. This visit,
reflecting the national security interests of the State of Israel and the
Republic of Armenia, and I am sure of it, may become a high performance act of
moral duty for all the states and peoples of the world - in relation to the
memory of the victims of crimes against humanity and mankind.
[i] See Конвенция о
предупреждении преступления геноцида и наказании за него. Принята резолюцией
260 (III) Генеральной
Ассамблеи ООН от 9 декабря 1948 года (http://www.un.org/ru/documents/decl_conv/conventions/genocide.shtml),
H.V.
hakobian: The Genocide of the Armenians in Azerbaijan from 1988-1990, from the
standpoint of international law. “Haykakan Banak” Quarterly Journal of Military
Sciences, MOD, RA, Yerevan 1997.
[ii] See: Гайк
Котанджян. "Никогда опять"
- императив гарантирования безопасности еврейского и армянского народов. International
expert Center for Electoral Systems. 31 мая 2011
(http://www.elections-ices.org/russian/publications/textid:10805/).
[iii] See: Hayk Kotanjian: Minister
of Foreign Affairs of the Nagorno-Karabakh Government In-Exile Speaks of the
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the Karabakh National-Liberation Movement,
International Center for Electoral Systems, Israel,
http://www.elections-ices.org/files/publications/298.pdf.
[iv] See: in detail В. А. Пономарев. Трагические события, которые
можно было предотвратить. Военно-научный журнал ИНСИ МО РА “Армянская армия”,
2012, N 3.
[v] See: "Французские евреи испытали ужас от массового захоронения в
Губе". 27 октября 2012 АзерТАдж: - (http://news.day.az/politics/363021.html).
[vi] See: Гайк Котанджян.
Политологи против политики ксенофобии главы Азербайджанского государства.
01.11.2012 (http://www.elections-ices.org/files/publications/16038.pdf)
[vii] See: "Почему и как Российские евреи принимали
христианство по армянскому обряду (1910-1915 гг.)". Документы и материалы
Центрального Государственного Исторического Архива России. Подборка.
Составитель и автор введения академик НАН РА Вардгес Микаелян, Ереван,
"Наири" 1999.
[viii] See “IS said to destroy Armenian Genocide memorial: Complex in
Deir ez-Zor was often compared to the Auschwitz death camp in Poland”.
September 22, 2014, The Times of Israel (http://www.timesofisrael.com/is-reportedly-destroys-armenian-genocide-memorial/#ixzz3L1iCdUis)
[ix] Charny Israel. Ed.,
Introduction to «The Widening Circle of Genocide» - «Genocide: A Critical
Bibliographic review». Vol. New Branswick, N.J.: Transaction, 1994. P. XIX;
«The Ottoman Empire: A Troubled Legacy». Views, Comments and Judgements by
Noted Experts Worldwide. Compiled by Vahakn N. Dadrian for the Association of
Genocide Scholars. Williamsburg (USA), 1997. P. 69.
[x] Sol Gittleman, The Stereotype
as a Prelude to Genocide in «Genocide and
Human Rights» (A special issue of the «Journal of American Studies», IV,
1 & 2, 1992. P. 5); «The Ottoman Empire: A Troubled Legacy». Views,
Comments and Judgements by Noted Experts Worldwide. Compiled by Vahakn N.
Dadrian for the Association of Genocide Scholars. Williamsburg (USA), 1997. P.
75.
[xi] Dawidowicz Lucy. The
Holocaust and the Historians. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1981. P.
20.
[xii] “Knesset Speaker working to
boost recognition of Armenian genocide”. May 31, 2011, Haaretz (http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/knesset-speaker-working-to-boost-recognition-of-armenian-genocide-1.365034)
[xiii] “Israeli chief rabbi says killing of Armenians in 1915 was
genocide”. November 23, 2005, World Jewish Congress (http://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/news/5737/israeli_chief_rabbi_says_killing_of_armenians_in_1915_was_genocide)