Originally posted by Gavur
The Armenian Reporter International
April 22, 2006
The Armenian Massacres in the Ottoman Empire: A Disputed Genocide
Review by Marc Aram Mamigonian
Director of Programs and Publications
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
Belmont, MA
Guenter Lewy, the author of The Armenian Massacres in the Ottoman
Empire: A Disputed Genocide (Univ. of Utah Press), was born in Germany
in 1923, from which he emigrated in the late 1930s to Palestine and then
to the United States. He has taught as a political scientist at Columbia
University, Smith College, and the University of Massachusetts at
Amherst, from which he retired in 1985. He is known for his revisionist
writings on the Roma (i.e., Gypsies) and the Native Americans, both of
which concluded that these groups suffered greatly but were not victims
of genocide.
I may as well add that like Lewy, I am not a scholar of the Armenian
Genocide, of Armenian history, or of Ottoman history, and I, like Lewy,
lack the language competency or training as a historian to even pretend
to be. I am, however, well read in the historiography in English, on
"both sides of the issue," as they say, and possess a functioning
critical mind.
Lewy's best-known book is probably America in Vietnam (1978), a
revisionist take on that particular dark chapter in U.S. history that
put the best possible face on America's intentions and actions. The
book is notable for its attempt to discred John Kerry and his
involvement with the "Winter Soldier Investigation" in Detroit in 1971
which publicized alleged American war crimes and atrocities in Vietnam.
According to reporter Tom Bowman of the Baltimore Sun, writing on
February 14, 2004:
In his book, America in Vietnam, author Guenter Lewy noted a subsequent
inquiry by the Naval Investigative Service that found that many of the
veterans who spoke in Detroit refused to be interviewed even when
offered immunity, and some who reported the most grisly atrocities were
fake witnesses who had used the names of real veterans.
In an interview, Lewy termed the Winter Soldier project "completely
unreliable and untrustworthy" and doubts that Vietnam War atrocities
were officially condoned or as widespread as the Detroit testimony
indicated.
Lewy said he does not recall if he saw a copy of the naval investigative
report or was briefed on its contents. "I'm quite confident the
information is authentic," he said.
Naval Criminal Investigative Service public affairs specialist Paul
O'Donnell told the Chicago Tribune on February 22, 2004, that he "could
not confirm the existence" of the report. As those who followed the
Kerry campaign for the U.S. Presidency and those who follow denial of
the Armenian Genocide both know all too well, however, sometimes merely
casting doubt is all that is needed.
In his preface to The Armenian Massacres, while taking shots (mostly
borrowed from an article by Gwynne Dyer, "Turkish 'Falsifiers' and
Armenian 'Deceivers,'" written some thirty years ago [Middle Eastern
Studies, January 1976]) at both Armenian and Turkish historiography on
the Genocide, Lewy - the possessor of "Olympian fair-mindedness," as
fellow denier Norman Stone of Bilkent University in Ankara terms it on
the dust jacket - states: "Unlike most of those who have written on the
subject of the Armenian massacres and who are partisans of one side or
the other, I have no special ax to grind" (x), thus positioning himself
as being above the alleged partisanship that, as Lewy would have it,
leaves an irremovable taint on both Turks and Armenians who work as
scholars on the subject.
A different way of saying this would be that Lewy, a political scientist
who has written books about the Vietnam War, communism in America, the
pacifist movement in America, and the Holocaust, whose work has
demonstrated a total lack of involvement with or training in the issues
surrounding the Armenian Genocide, and who does not possess the language
skills to undertake substantially new work in the area, is in fact the
ideal person to address this history in a definitive fashion.
Lewy states, puzzlingly, that "even a person who knows Turkish and can
read it in the old script most likely would not be able to write a
definitive history of these occurrences" and "Indeed, a requirement that
only persons fluent in the Turkish language be considered competent to
write on this topic would disqualify most Armenians, who also do not
know Turkish" (x, xi). I shall let pass without comment the non
sequitur of the latter statement ("most Armenians" don't write books),
and Lewy is in fact criticizing himself. But I think it safe to say
that the subtext here is even though Lewy does not know Armenian or
Turkish he still feels himself qualified to render judgment on the
historiography because he is looking at things "objectively."
It is noteworthy that Lewy does not acknowledge who assisted him with
Turkish materials -as a scholar might normally do in such an instance-
at the conclusion of his preface. He simply thanks "those who have
translated some important Turkish materials for me" (xiii). Sometimes
silence speaks louder than words.
As for "no ax to grind." Perhaps. We may never know Lewy's motives in
writing the book - except for the yearning for truth that drives all
scholars, surely. To the extent that we are know by the company we
keep, though, it is noteworthy that he spoke at a symposium at Gazi
University in Ankara in November 2005, along with the Who's Who of
Turkish Denial. Among the other speakers was one Gunay Evinch, who
spoke on "The Armenian Pressure on the Freedom of Expression in U.S. and
the Lawsuit Brought by the Turkish Americans in Massachusetts." Evinch
is a Vice President of the Assembly of Turkish American Associations
(ATAA), which is, of course, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. He
is also a principal at Saltzman & Evinch, the Washington law firm (see
www.turklaw.net). Thus, it is hardly surprising that David Saltzman,
Evinch's partner, was the first to post a review (glowing, of course) of
Lewy's book on Amazon.com before the book was available for sale.
Likewise, Lewy's articles that provided a foretaste of the book began
appearing just before the Massachusetts lawsuit was filed. One can
regard these as coincidences, or not.
One notes also that Lewy's article "Revisiting the Armenian Genocide,"
which appeared in the Fall 2005 Middle East Quarterly, also appeared in
the July-September 2005 Insight Turkey magazine. It is somewhat unusual
to publish a "scholarly article" simultaneously in two publications.
What is Insight Turkey? It is published by the Ankara Center for
Turkish Policy Studies (ANKAM), with Suat Kiniklioglu, editor in chief.
(Kiniklioglu is also director of the Ankara office of the German
Marshall Fund of the United States.) Insight Turkey is evidently a
sub-entity of ANKAM, and both appear to have a connection to SDS
International, "Turkey's Leading Private Investigations, Security, and
Risk Consultancy Company." The Insight Turkey, ANKAM, and SDS
International websites each link to each other, and only to each other.
It is not clear if they are sibling organizations or a parent and
subsidiaries.
The Armenian Massacres follows a pattern already familiar to readers of
Lewy's article "Were American Indians the Victims of Genocide?"
(published in Commentary in 2004) and The Nazi Persecution of the
Gypsies (2000), and perhaps other of his works which I have not read.
The template, to which Lewy adheres with the rigidity of a priest
reading the liturgy, is as follows:
* state clearly the argument you are going to proceed to question
* state that you have no desire to minimize the suffering of the group
in question
* establish your objectivity by pointing out the rhetorical excesses of
some of the arguments on both sides
* raise questions about the total population of the victim group (thus
setting up later questions about the number of deaths)
* duly note that, while it can in no way excuse the harsh treatment that
befell them, the group in question did plenty of despicable things
themselves; then describe them in detail, but reiterate that it has no
bearing on the question of genocide
* recite in detail the history of the mass killings, remembering to
stress the magnitude of suffering and establish your empathy with their
loss
* finally, come to the pre-determined conclusion that while what
happened was certainly a terrible human tragedy, it most certainly was
not genocide
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