© 1918. Henry Morgenthau
American Ambassador to Constantinople
1913-1916
CHAPTER XXVI
ENVER PASHA DISCUSSES THE ARMENIANS
All this time I was bringing pressure upon Enver
also. The Minister of War, as I have already indicated, was a different type of man from
Talaat. He concealed his real feelings much more successfully; he was usually suave,
cold-blooded, and scrupulously polite. And at first he was by no means so callous as
Talaat in discussing the Armenians. He dismissed the early stories as wild exaggerations,
declared that the troubles at Van were merely ordinary warfare, and attempted to quiet my
fears that the wholesale annihilation of the Armenians had been decided on. Yet all the
time that Enver was attempting to deceive me, he was making open admissions to other
people---a fact of which I was aware. In particular he made no attempt to conceal the real
situation from Dr. Lepsius, a representative of German missionary interests. Dr. Lepsius
was a high-minded Christian gentleman. He had been all through the Armenian massacres of
1895, and he had raised considerable sums of money to build orphanages for Armenian
children who had lost their parents at that time. He came again in 1915 to investigate the
Armenian situation in behalf of German missionary interests. He asked for the privilege of
inspecting the reports of American consuls and I granted it. These documents, supplemented
by other information which Dr. Lepsius obtained, largely from German missionaries in the
interior, left no doubt in his mind as to the policy of the Turks. His feelings were
aroused chiefly against his own government. He expressed to me the humiliation which he
felt, as a German, that the Turks should set about to exterminate their Christian
subjects, while Germany, which called itself a Christian country, was making no endeavours
to prevent it. From him Enver scarcely concealed the official purpose. Dr. Lepsius was
simply staggered by his frankness, for Enver told him in so many words that they at last
had an opportunity to rid themselves of the Armenians and that they proposed to use it.
By this time Enver had become more frank with
me---the circumstantial reports which I possessed made it useless for him to attempt to
conceal the true situation further---and we had many long and animated discussions on the
subject. One of these I recall with particular vividness. I notified Enver that I intended
to take up the matter in detail and he laid aside enough time to go over the whole
situation.
"The Armenians had a fair warning," Enver
began, "of what would happen to them in case they joined our enemies. Three months
ago I sent for the Armenian Patriarch and I told him that if the Armenians attempted to
start a revolution or to assist the Russians, I would be unable to prevent mischief from
happening to them. My warning produced no effect and the Armenians started a revolution
and helped the Russians. You know what happened at Van. They obtained control of the city,
used bombs against government buildings, and killed a large number of Moslems. We knew
that they were planning uprisings in other places. You must understand that we are now
fighting for our lives at the Dardanelles and that we are sacrificing thousands of men.
While we are engaged in such a struggle as this, we cannot permit people in our own
country to attack us in the back. We have got to prevent this no matter what means we have
to resort to. It is absolutely true that I am not opposed to the Armenians as a people. I
have the greatest admiration for their intelligence and industry, and I should like
nothing better than to see them become a real part of our nation. But if they ally
themselves with our enemies, as they did in the Van district, they will have to be
destroyed. I have taken pains to see that no injustice is done; only recently I gave
orders to have three Armenians who had been deported returned to their homes, when I found
that they were innocent. Russia, France, Great Britain, and America are doing the
Armenians no kindness by sympathizing with and encouraging them. I know what such
encouragement means to a people who are inclined to revolution. When our Union and
Progress Party attacked Abdul Hamid, we received all our moral encouragement from the
outside world. This encouragement was of great help to us and had much to do with our
success. It might similarly now help the Armenians and their revolutionary programme. I am
sure that if these outside countries did not encourage them, they would give up all their
efforts to oppose the present government and become law-abiding citizens. We now have this
country in our absolute control and we can easily revenge ourselves on any
revolutionists."
"After all," I said, "suppose what
you say is true, why not punish the guilty? Why sacrifice a whole race for the alleged
crimes of individuals?"
"Your point is all right during peace
times," replied Enver. "We can then use Platonic means to quiet Armenians and
Greeks, but in time of war we cannot investigate and negotiate. We must act promptly and
with determination. I also think that the Armenians are making a mistake in depending upon
the Russians. The Russians really would rather see them killed than alive. They are as
great a danger to the Russians as they are to us. If they should form an independent
government in Turkey, the Armenians in Russia would attempt to form an independent
government there. The Armenians have also been guilty of massacres; in the entire district
around Van only 30,000 Turks escaped, all the rest were murdered by the Armenians and
Kurds. I attempted to protect the non-combatants at the Caucasus; I gave orders that they
should not be injured, but I found that the situation was beyond my control. There are
about 70,000 Armenians in Constantinople and they will not be molested, except those who
are Dashnaguists and those who are plotting against the Turks. However, I think you can
ease your mind on the whole subject as there will be no more massacres of Armenians."
I did not take seriously Enver's concluding
statement. At the time that he was speaking, massacres and deportations were taking place
all over the Armenian provinces and they went on almost without interruption for several
months.
As soon as the reports reached the United States the
question of relief became a pressing one. In the latter part of July, I heard that there
were 5,000 Armenians from Zeitoun and Sultanié who were receiving no food whatever. I
spoke about them to Enver, who positively declared that they would receive proper food. He
did not receive favourably any suggestion that American representatives should go to that
part of the country and assist and care for the exiles.
"For any American to do this," he said,
"would encourage all Armenians and make further trouble. There are twenty-eight
million people in Turkey and one million Armenians, and we do not propose to have one
million disturb the peace of the rest of the population. The great trouble with the
Armenians is that they are separatists. They are determined to have a kingdom of their
own, and they have allowed themselves to be fooled by the Russians. Because they have
relied upon the friendship of the Russians, they have helped them in this war. We are
determined that they shall behave just as Turks do. You must remember that when we started
this revolution in Turkey there were only two hundred of us. With these few followers we
were able to deceive the Sultan and the public, who thought that we were immensely more
numerous and powerful than we were. We really prevailed upon him and the public through
our sheer audacity, and in this way we established the Constitution. It is our own
experience with revolutions which makes us fear the Armenians. If two hundred Turks could
overturn the Government, then a few hundred bright, educated Armenians could do the same
thing. We have therefore deliberately adopted the plan of scattering them so that they can
do us no harm. As I told you once before, I warned the Armenian Patriarch that if the
Armenians attacked us while we were engaged in a foreign war, that we Turks would hit back
and that we would hit back indiscriminately."
Enver always resented any suggestion that American
missionaries or other friends of the Armenians should go to help or comfort them.
"They show altogether too much sympathy for them," he said over and over again.
I had suggested that particular Americans should go
to Tarsus and Marsovan.
"If they should go there, I am afraid that the
local people in those cities would become angry and they would be inclined to start some
disturbance which might create an incident. It is better for the Armenians themselves,
therefore, that the American missionaries should keep away from them."
"But you are ruining the country
economically." I said at another time, making the same point that I had made to
Talaat. And he answered it in almost the same words, thus showing that the subject had
been completely canvassed by the ruling powers.
"Economic considerations are of no importance
at this time. The only important thing is to win. That's the only thing we have on our
mind. If we win, everything will be all right; if we lose, everything will be all wrong
anyhow. Our situation is desperate, I admit it, and we are fighting as desperate men
fight. We are not going to let the Armenians attack us in the rear."
The question of relief to the starving Armenians
became every week a more pressing one, but Enver still insisted that Americans should keep
away from the Armenian provinces.
"How can we furnish bread to the
Armenians," Enver declared, "when we can't get enough for our own people? I know
that they are suffering and that it is quite likely that they cannot get bread at all this
coming winter. But we have the utmost difficulty in getting flour and clothing right here
in Constantinople."
I said that I had the money and that American
missionaries were anxious to go and use it for the benefit of the refugees.
"We don't want the Americans to feed the
Armenians," he flatly replied. "That is one of the worst things that could
happen to them. I have already said that it is their belief that they have friends in
other countries which leads them to oppose the Government and so brings down upon them all
their miseries. If you Americans begin to distribute food and clothing among them, they
will. then think that they have powerful friends in the United States. This will encourage
them to rebellion again and then we shall have to punish them still more. If you will give
such money as you have received to the Turks, we shall see that it is used for the benefit
of the Armenians."
Enver made this proposal with a straight face, and
he made it not only on this occasion but on several others. At the very moment that Enver
suggested this mechanism of relief, the Turkish gendarmes and the Turkish officials were
not only robbing the Armenians of all their household possessions, of all their food and
all their money, but they were even stripping women of their last shreds of clothing and
prodding their naked bodies with bayonets as they staggered across the burning desert. And
the Minister of War now proposed that we give our American money to these same guardians
of the law for distribution among their charges! However, I had to be tactful.
"If you or other heads of the Government would
become personally responsible for the distribution," I said, "of course we would
be glad to entrust the money to you. But naturally you would not expect us to give this
money to the men who have been killing the Armenians and outraging their women."
But Enver returned to his main point. "They
must never know," he said, "that they have a friend in the United States. That
would absolutely ruin them! It is far better that they starve, and in saying this I am
really thinking of the welfare of the Armenians themselves. If they can only be convinced
that they have no friends in other countries, then they will settle down, recognize that
Turkey is their only refuge, and become quiet citizens. Your country is doing them no
kindness by constantly showing your sympathy. You are merely drawing upon them greater
hardships."
In other words, the more money which the Americans
sent to feed the Armenians, the more Armenians Turkey intended to massacre! Enver's logic
was fairly maddening; yet he did relent at the end and permit me to help the sufferers
through certain missionaries. In all our discussions he made this hypocritical plea that
he was really a friend of this distracted nation and that even the severity of the
measures which he had adopted was mercy in disguise. Since Enver always asserted that he
wished to treat the Armenians with justice---in this his attitude to me was quite
different from that of Talaat, who openly acknowledged his determination to deport
them---I went to the pains of preparing an elaborate plan for bettering their condition. I
suggested that, if he wished to be just, he should protect the innocent refugees and
lessen this suffering as much as possible, and that for that purpose he should appoint a
special committee of Armenians to assist him and send a capable Armenian, such as Oskan
Effendi, formerly Minister of Posts and Telegraphs, to study conditions and submit
suggestions for remedying the existing evils. Enver did not approve either of my
proposals; as to the first, he said that his colleagues would misunderstand it, and, as to
Oskan, he said that he admired him for his good work while he had been in the Cabinet and
had backed him in his severity toward the inefficient officials, yet he could not trust
him because he was a member of the Armenian Dashnaguist Society.
In another talk with Enver I began by suggesting
that the Central Government was probably not to blame for the massacres. I thought that
this would not be displeasing to him.
"Of course I know that the Cabinet would never
order such terrible things as have taken place," I said. "You and Talaat and the
rest of the Committee can hardly be held responsible. Undoubtedly your subordinates have
gone much further than you have ever intended. I realize that it is not always easy to
control your underlings."
Enver straightened up at once. I saw that my
remarks, far from smoothing the way to a quiet and friendly discussion, had greatly
offended him. I had intimated that things could happen in Turkey for which he and his
associates were not responsible.
"You are greatly mistaken," he said.
"We have this country absolutely under our control. I have no desire to shift the
blame on to our underlings and I am entirely willing to accept the responsibility myself
for everything that has taken place. The Cabinet itself has ordered the deportations. I am
convinced that we are completely justified in doing this owing to the hostile attitude of
the Armenians toward the Ottoman Government, but we are the real rulers of Turkey, and no
underling would dare proceed in a matter of this kind without our orders."
Enver tried to mitigate the barbarity of his general
attitude by showing mercy in particular instances. I made no progress in my efforts to
stop the programme of wholesale massacre, but I did save a few Armenians from death. One
day I received word from the American Consul at Smyrna that seven Armenians had been
sentenced to be hanged. These men had been accused of committing some rather vague
political offense in 1909; yet neither Rahmi Bey, the Governor General of Smyrna, nor the
Military Commander believed that they were guilty. When the order for execution reached
Smyrna these authorities wired Constantinople that under the Ottoman law the accused had
the right to appeal for clemency to the Sultan. The answer which was returned to this
communication well illustrated the extent to which the rights of the Armenians were
regarded at that time:
"Technically, you are right; hang them first
and send the petition for pardon afterward."
I visited Enver in the interest of these men on
Bairam, which is the greatest Mohammedan religious festival; it is the day that succeeds
Ramadan, their month of fasting. Bairam has one feature in common with Christmas, for on
that day it is customary for Mohammedans to exchange small presents, usually sweets. So
after the usual remarks of felicitation, I said to Enver:
"To-day is Bairam. and you haven't sent me any
present yet."
Enver laughed.
"What do you want? Shall I send you a box of
candies?
"Oh, no," I answered, "I am not so
cheap as that. I want the pardon of the seven Armenians whom the court-martial has
condemned at Smyrna."
The proposition apparently struck Enver as very
amusing.
"That's a funny way of asking for a
pardon," he said. " However, since you put it that way, I can't refuse."
He immediately sent for his aide and telegraphed to
Smyrna, setting the men free.
Thus fortuitously is justice administered and
decision involving human lives made in Turkey. Nothing could make clearer the slight
estimation in which the Turks hold life, and the slight extent to which principle controls
their conduct. Enver spared these men not because he had the slightest interest in their
cases, but simply as a personal favour to me and largely because of the whimsical manner
in which I had asked it. In all my talks on the Armenians the Minister of War treated the
whole matter more or less casually; he could discuss the fate of a race in a parenthesis,
and refer to the massacre of children as nonchalantly as we would speak of the weather.
One day Enver asked me to ride with him in the
Belgrade forest. As I was losing no opportunities to influence him, I accepted this
invitation. We autoed to Buyukdere, where four attendants with horses met us. In our ride
through the beautiful forest, Enver became rather more communicative in his conversation
than ever before. He spoke affectionately of his father and mother; when they were
married, he said, his father had been sixteen and his mother only eleven, and he himself
had been born when his mother was fifteen. In talking of his wife, the Imperial Princess,
he disclosed a much softer side to his nature than I had hitherto seen. He spoke of the
dignity with which she graced his home, regretted that Mohammedan ideas of propriety
prohibited her from entering social life, but expressed a wish that she and Mrs.
Morgenthau could meet. He was then furnishing a beautiful new palace on the Bosphorus;
when this was finished, he said, the Princess would invite my wife to breakfast. Just then
we were passing the house and grounds of Senator Abraham Pasha, a very rich Armenian. This
man had been an intimate friend of the Sultan Abdul Aziz, and, since in Turkey a man
inherits his father's friends as well as his property, the Crown Prince of Turkey, a son
of Abdul Aziz, made weekly visits to this distinguished Senator. As we passed through the
park, Enver noticed with disgust that woodmen were cutting down trees and stopped them.
When I heard afterward that the Minister of War had bought this park, I understood one of
the reasons for his anger. Since Abraham Pasha was an Armenian, this gave me an
opportunity to open the subject again.
I spoke to him of the terrible treatment from which
the Armenian women were suffering.
"You said that you wanted to protect women and
children," I remarked, "but I know that your orders are not being carried
out."
"Those stories can't be true," he said.
"I cannot conceive that a Turkish soldier would ill-treat a woman who is with
child."
Perhaps, if Enver could have read the circumstantial
reports which were then lying in the archives of the American Embassy, he might have
changed his mind.
Shifting the conversation once more, he asked me
about my saddle, which was the well-known "General McClellan" type. Enver tried
it and liked it so much that he afterward borrowed it, had one made exactly like it for
himself---even including the number in one corner and adopted it for one of his regiments.
He told me of the railroads which he was then building in Palestine, said how well the
Cabinet was working, and pointed out that there were great opportunities in Turkey now for
real-estate speculation. He even suggested that he and I join hands in buying land that
was sure to rise in value! But I insisted in talking about the Armenians. However, I made
no more progress than before.
"We shall not permit them to cluster in places
where they can plot mischief and help our enemies. So we are going to give them new
quarters."
This ride was so successful, from Enver's point of
view, that we took another a few days afterward, and this time Talaat and Dr. Gates, the
President of Robert College, accompanied us. Enver and I rode ahead, while our companions
brought up the rear. These Turkish officials are exceedingly jealous of their
prerogatives, and, since the Minister of War is the ranking member of the Cabinet, Enver
insisted on keeping a decorous interval between ourselves and the other pair of horsemen.
I was somewhat amused by this, for I knew that Talaat was the more powerful politician;
yet he accepted the discrimination and only once did he permit his horse to pass Enver and
myself. At this violation of the proprieties, Enver showed his displeasure, whereas Talaat
paused, reined up his horse, and passed submissively to the rear.
"I was merely showing Dr. Gates the gait of my
horse," he said, with an apologetic air.
But I was interested in more important matters than
such fine distinctions in official etiquette; I was determined to talk about the
Armenians. But again I failed to make any progress. Enver found more interesting subjects
of discussion.
He began to talk of his horses, and now another
incident illustrated the mercurial quality of the Turkish mind---the readiness with which
a Turk passes from acts of monstrous criminality to acts of individual kindness. Enver
said that the horse races would take place soon and regretted that he had no jockey.
"I'll give you an English jockey," I said.
"Will you make a bargain? He is a prisoner of war; if he wins will you give him his
freedom?"
"I'll do it," said Enver.
This man, whose name was Fields., actually entered
the races as Enver's jockey, and came in third. He rode for his freedom, as Mr. Philip
said! Since he did not come in first, the Minister was not obliged, by the terms of his
agreement, to let him return to England, but Enver stretched a point and gave him his
liberty.
On this same ride Enver gave me an exhibition Of his
skill as a marksman.
At one point in the road I suddenly heard a pistol
shot ring out in the air. It was Enver's aide practising on a near-by object. Immediately
Enver dismounted, whipped out his revolver, and, thrusting his arm out rigidly and
horizontally, he took aim.
"Do you see that twig on that tree?" he
asked me. It was about thirty feet away.
When I nodded, Enver fired-and the twig dropped to
the ground.
The rapidity with which Enver could whip his weapon
out of his pocket, aim, and shoot, gave me one convincing explanation for the influence
which he exercised with the piratical crew that was then ruling Turkey. There were plenty
of stories floating around that Enver did not hesitate to use this method of suasion at
certain critical moments of his career; how true these anecdotes were I do not know, but I
can certainly testify to the high character of his marksmanship.
Talaat also began to amuse himself in the same way,
and finally the two statesmen started shooting in competition and behaving as gaily and as
carefree as boys let out of school.
"Have you one of your cards with you?"
asked Enver. He requested that I pin it to a tree, which stood about fifty feet away.
Enver then fired first. His hand was steady; his eye
went straight to the mark, and the bullet hit the card directly in the centre. This
success rather nettled Talaat. He took aim, but his rough hand and wrist shook
slightly---he was not an athlete like his younger, wiry, and straight-backed associate.
Several times Talaat hit around the edges of the card, but he could not duplicate Enver's
skill.
"If it had been a man I was firing at,"
said the bulky Turk, jumping on his horse again, "I would have hit him several
times."
So ended my attempts to interest the two most
powerful Turks of their day in the fate of one of the most valuable elements in their
empire!
I have already said that Saïd Halim, the Grand
Vizier, was not an influential personage. Nominally, his office was the most important in
the empire; actually, the Grand Vizier was a mere place-warmer, and Talaat and Enver
controlled the present incumbent, precisely as they controlled the Sultan himself.
Technically the ambassadors should have conducted their negotiations with Saïd Halim, for
he was Minister for Foreign Affairs; I early discovered, however, that nothing could be
accomplished this way, and, though I still made my Monday calls as a matter of courtesy, I
preferred to deal directly with the men who had the real power to decide all matters. In
order that I might not be accused of neglecting any means of influencing the Ottoman
Government, I brought the Armenian question several times to the Grand Vizier's attention.
As he was not a Turk, but an Egyptian, and a man of education and breeding, it seemed not
unlikely that he might have a somewhat different attitude toward the subject peoples. But
I was wrong, The Grand Vizier was just as hostile to the Armenians as Talaat and Enver. I
soon found that merely mentioning the subject irritated him greatly. Evidently he did not
care to have his elegant case interfered with by such disagreeable and unimportant
subjects. The Grand Vizier showed his attitude when the Greek Chargé d'Affaires spoke to
him about the persecutions of the Greeks. Saïd Halim. said that such manifestations did
the Greeks more harm than good.
"We shall do with them just the opposite from
what we are asked to do," said the Grand Vizier.
To my appeals the nominal chief minister was hardly
more statesmanlike. I had the disagreeable task of sending him, in behalf of the British,
French, and Russian governments, a notification that these Powers would hold personally
responsible for the Armenian atrocities the men who were then directing Ottoman affairs.
This meant, of course, that in the event of Allied success, they would treat the Grand
Vizier, Talaat, Enver, Djemal and their companions as ordinary murderers. As I came into
the room to discuss. this somewhat embarrassing message with this member of the royal
house of Egypt, he sat there, as usual, nervously fingering his beads, and not in a
particularly genial frame of mind. He at once spoke of this telegram; his face flushed
with anger, and he began a long diatribe against the whole Armenian race. He declared that
the Armenian "rebels" had killed 120,000 Turks at Van. This and other of his
statements were so absurd that I found myself spiritedly defending the persecuted race,
and this aroused the Grand Vizier's wrath still further, and, switching from the
Armenians, he began to abuse my own country, making the usual charge that our sympathy
with the Armenians was largely responsible for all their troubles.
Soon after this interview Saïd Halim ceased to be
Minister for Foreign Affairs; his successor was Halil Bey, who for several years had been
Speaker of the Turkish Parliament. Halil was a very different type of man. He was much
more tactful, much more intelligent, and much more influential in Turkish affairs. He was
also a smooth and oily conversationalist, good natured and fat, and by no means so lost to
all decent sentiments as most Turkish politicians of the time. It was generally reported
that Halil did not approve the Armenian proceedings, yet his official position compelled
him to accept them and even, as I now discovered, to defend them. Soon after obtaining his
Cabinet post, Halil called upon me and made a somewhat rambling explanation of the
Armenian atrocities. I had already had experiences with several official attitudes toward
the persecutions; Talaat had been bloodthirsty and ferocious, Enver subtly calculating,
while the Grand Vizier had been testy. Halil now regarded the elimination of this race
with the utmost good humour. Not a single aspect of the proceeding, not even the unkindest
things I could say concerning it, disturbed his equanimity in the least. He began by
admitting that nothing could palliate these massacres, but, he added that, in order to
understand them, there were certain facts that I should keep in mind.
"I agree that the Government has made serious
mistakes in the treatment of the Armenians," said Halil, "but the harm has
already been done. What can we do about it now? Still, if there are any errors we can
correct, we should correct them. I deplore as much as you the excesses and violations
which- have been committed. I wish to present to you the view of the Sublime Porte; I
admit that this is no justification, but I think there are extenuating circumstances that
you should take into consideration before judgment is passed upon the Ottoman
Government."
And then, like all the others, he went back to the
happenings at Van, the desire of the Armenians for independence, and the help which they
had given the Russians. I had heard it all many times before.
"I told Vartkes" (an Armenian deputy who,
like many other Armenian leaders, was afterward murdered), "that, if his people
really aspired to an independent existence, they should wait for a propitious moment.
Perhaps the Russians might defeat the Turkish troops and occupy all the Armenian
provinces. Then I could understand that the Armenians might want to set up for themselves.
Why not wait, I told Vartkes, until such a fortunate time had arrived? I warned him that
we would not let the Armenians jump on our backs, and that, if they did engage in hostile
acts against our troops, we would dispose of all Armenians who were in the rear of our
army, and that our method would be to send them to a safe distance in the south. Enver, as
you know, gave a similar warning to the Armenian Patriarch. But in spite of these friendly
warnings, they started a revolution."
I asked about methods of relief, and told him that
already twenty thousand pounds ($100,000) had reached me from America.
"It is the business of the Ottoman
Government,"' he blandly answered, "to see that these people are settled,
housed, and fed until they can support themselves. The Government will naturally do its
duty! Besides, the twenty thousand pounds that you have is in reality nothing at
all."
"That is true," I answered, "it is
only a beginning, but I am sure that I can get all the money we need."
"It is the opinion of Enver Pasha," he
replied, "that no foreigners should help the Armenians. I do not say that his reasons
are right or wrong. I merely give them to you as they are. Enver says that the Armenians
are idealists, and that the moment foreigners approach and help them, they will be
encouraged in their national aspirations. He is utterly determined to cut forever all
relations between the Armenians and foreigners."
"Is this Enver's way of stopping any further
action on their part? " I asked.
Halil smiled most good-naturedly at this somewhat
pointed question and answered: "The Armenians have no further means of action
whatever!
Since not far from 500,000 Armenians had been killed
by this time, Halil's genial retort certainly had one virtue which most of his other
statements in this interview had lacked---it was the truth.
"How many Armenians in the southern provinces
are in need of help?" I asked.
"I do not know; I would not give you even an
approximate figure."
"Are there several hundred thousand?"
"I should think so," Halil admitted,
"but I cannot say how many hundred thousand."
"A great many suffered," he added,
"simply because Enver could not spare troops to defend them. Some regular troops did
accompany them and these behaved very well; forty even lost their lives defending the
Armenians. But we had to withdraw most of the gendarmes for service in the army and put in
a new lot to accompany the Armenians. It is true that these gendarmes committed many
deplorable excesses.
"A great many Turks do not approve these
measures," I said.
"I do not deny it," replied the
ever-accommodating Halil, as he bowed himself out.
Enver, Halil, and the rest were ever insistent on
the point which they constantly raised, that no foreigners should furnish relief to the
Armenians. A few days after this visit the Under-Secretary of State called at the American
Embassy. He came to deliver to me a message from Djemal to Enver. Djemal, who then had
jurisdiction over the Christians in Syria, was much annoyed at the interest which the
American consuls were displaying in the Armenians. He now asked me to order these
officials "to stop busying themselves in Armenian affairs." Djemal could not
distinguish between the innocent and the guilty, this messenger said, and so he had to
punish them all! Some time afterward Halil complained to me that the American consuls were
sending facts about the Armenians to America and that the Government insisted that they
should be stopped.
As a matter of fact, I was myself sending most of
this information, ---and I did not stop. |