James J. Reid. "Total War, the Annihilation Ethic, and the Armenian Genocide, 1870-1918"
from R. Hovannisian (ed). The Armenian Genocide: History, Politics, Ethics, New York, 1992, pp. 21-47.
Current discussions about the Armenian Genocide assume an entirely unrealistic assessment of the genocide's generation. Numerous writings claim that Armenians died simply because they were the victims of a war, not of a purposeful Ottoman policy to exterminate them.
Turks reject the characterization of their forebears as the perpetrators of genocide. While acknowledging the deaths of Anatolian Armenians during the First World War, they view those deaths as part of the carnage which likewise took the lives of civilian Moslems in the same region.
Such assessments betray a naive lack of awareness about the methods and aims of warfare in the period of the 'Great War.' Armenians (and others) were exterminated primarily because military ethics of the time permitted generals to view civilians as valid targets of war. The above statement is naive primarily because it actually proves the case that Armenians were victims of a war machine intending to deal death to civilians. A study of militarism as it developed over the nineteenth century will prove that such large numbers of civilian victims could not be the accidental victims of war.
The Armenian Genocide of 1915-18 was the culmination of a militaristic doctrine which aimed at destroying autonomous components of the Ottoman Empire, especially those deemed agents of the Russian Empire, or other colonial powers. Whatever other ideology influenced the destroyers of Armenia, modern militarism was the chief ideology permitting an unfettered ethic of destruction and annihilation. The other ideologies may have aided in promoting the genocide, but none of them contained a doctrine and living practice of militarism. Traditional forms of warfare survived, but increasingly became subverted to the ethic and philosophy of reform militarism. Racism alone cannot destroy an entire people, only a military/ bureaucratic apparatus capable of wielding a totally destructive force can do so.
IDEOLOGICAL FACTORS INFLUENCING REFORM MILITARISM
Reform militarism was that ideal of military development which established a broad currency from the wars of the French Revolution onward. All states hoping to survive the competition for empire which gathered momentum in the nineteenth century, and which was a major cause of the First World War of 1914-18, needed to reform their armies. The Ottoman Empire was no different. Before examining this phenomenon, some political aspects of Ottoman developments must be summarized. If the Ottoman army used the Prussian reform model to develop its military organization and military ethic, the political orientations adopting the reforms were derived from Ottoman conditions.
Autocracy (Istibdad)
The chief reason for the formulation of an Ottoman militarist ideology and a reform military was the rule of the Ottoman sultans, and efforts by the sultans to protect their regime from overthrow by a wide variety of forces. The crisis of 1826 originated in the Greek Revolution in which the Ottoman army failed to perform satisfactorily. The result was the destruction of the Janissary Corps, and the formation of a two-tiered army system: the nizam/redif army, and the irregular cavalry (popularly called bashixxxuks, and seen by many as the remnants of the old timar order). As in everything else, the Ottoman sultan ensured the loyalty of his standing army by permitting the organizations supporting irregular cavalry to survive. Nonetheless, the nizam became the tool of Ottoman autocracy, and the irregular cavalry served the standing army or pr y New or Young Ottoman ideals, perceived the environment of his times as oppressive. Under the restrictions of censorship, his novel Bir Olunun Defteri (Journal of a Dead Man), used an ordinary plot line to portray a pessimistic social condition, which was the product of 'tyranny.' A history of Abdul-Hamid's reign published in 1909-10 (when censorship was briefly removed) suggested that Abdul-Hamid's martial rule originated in the empire's emergency (especially the Balkan revolutions which plagued Abdulaziz's last year as sultan). This autocracy was totalitarian in only a very rudimentary sense. If censorship attempted to control criticism and even supportive analysis of the government, there was no effort to employ a totalitarian revolutionary doctrine as a disguise for oppressive military rule. The autocrat's aggressive domination of the society he ruled became the basis for the foundation of a reform military establishment, and the subjection of semi-autonomous politico-military organizations (derebeys, tribal chiefs, and other local authorities) as irregular military formations. In Ottoman autocracy, the reform military developed a special ideological presence of its own, supporting the sultanate for most of the nineteenth century, but becoming an independent actor on its own terms after 1908, and especially after 1913. The Young Turk military leadership assumed the position of the autocratic dictator using the same excuse that the military emergency of the empire did not permit a republic to exist.
Ottoman autocratic militarism separated itself from all forms of Middle Eastern military traditions, except to dominate and control surviving elements of those traditions (Islamic concepts of jihad, various irregular armies). This reform militarism consciously connected itself with European military theories and practices. From 1836 to 1839, the Sultan Mahmud II instituted the advice of the Prussian officer Helmuth von Moltke. Moltke was later responsible for perfecting the doctrine of total offensive warfare which led Prussia to victory against Denmark, Austria, and France. Variations of his doctrine influenced Prussian warfare, and the doctrines of Prussia's allies (including the Ottoman Empire). Moltke's program, accepted by Mahmud II, was to build a total war army based upon the three-level organization of nizam (standing army), redif (reserve), and mustahfiz (home guard, second-level reserve with old men). The army was also divided by branch - infantry, artillery, and cavalry. Unit organization followed the European model (battalion, battery, and squadron). Each unit was to have a chain of command from battalion head (major) to sergeants and corporals. The weakest link in the entire reform was the officer corps. Severe shortages existed as late as the wars of 1875-78, and European soldiers of fortune were imported to take even high commands to alleviate the problem. The purpose of the army was, of course, to wage total warfare in the style of Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic armies. As such, the army was intended as a tool of aggression, and a conscious player in the arena of warfare (not simply the recipient of other armies' aggressions).
This army became the extension of the autocrat's ideological existence, and enabled him to dominate his subjects by force, thus denying them even the traditional means of local autonomy. The nizam formulated upon Moltke's advice became active almost immediately, fighting wars in Kurdistan which von Moltke observed himself. The nizam suppressed similar revolts in the following decades, often using brutal and annihilating tactics. The Ottoman general 'Omer Pasha, an Austrian Croat emigre, commanded the nizam in the brutal suppressions of numerous revolts in Bosnia (1851), Montenegro (1852), Thessaly (1854), and Crete (1867), among other places. The redif and irregular cavalry supplemented the nizam in suppressing revolts everywhere in the empire. As the empire's collapse continued, the nizam became the chief means of imposing order from Yemen to Macedonia in an increasingly anarchic situation.
from R. Hovannisian (ed). The Armenian Genocide: History, Politics, Ethics, New York, 1992, pp. 21-47.
Current discussions about the Armenian Genocide assume an entirely unrealistic assessment of the genocide's generation. Numerous writings claim that Armenians died simply because they were the victims of a war, not of a purposeful Ottoman policy to exterminate them.
Turks reject the characterization of their forebears as the perpetrators of genocide. While acknowledging the deaths of Anatolian Armenians during the First World War, they view those deaths as part of the carnage which likewise took the lives of civilian Moslems in the same region.
Such assessments betray a naive lack of awareness about the methods and aims of warfare in the period of the 'Great War.' Armenians (and others) were exterminated primarily because military ethics of the time permitted generals to view civilians as valid targets of war. The above statement is naive primarily because it actually proves the case that Armenians were victims of a war machine intending to deal death to civilians. A study of militarism as it developed over the nineteenth century will prove that such large numbers of civilian victims could not be the accidental victims of war.
The Armenian Genocide of 1915-18 was the culmination of a militaristic doctrine which aimed at destroying autonomous components of the Ottoman Empire, especially those deemed agents of the Russian Empire, or other colonial powers. Whatever other ideology influenced the destroyers of Armenia, modern militarism was the chief ideology permitting an unfettered ethic of destruction and annihilation. The other ideologies may have aided in promoting the genocide, but none of them contained a doctrine and living practice of militarism. Traditional forms of warfare survived, but increasingly became subverted to the ethic and philosophy of reform militarism. Racism alone cannot destroy an entire people, only a military/ bureaucratic apparatus capable of wielding a totally destructive force can do so.
IDEOLOGICAL FACTORS INFLUENCING REFORM MILITARISM
Reform militarism was that ideal of military development which established a broad currency from the wars of the French Revolution onward. All states hoping to survive the competition for empire which gathered momentum in the nineteenth century, and which was a major cause of the First World War of 1914-18, needed to reform their armies. The Ottoman Empire was no different. Before examining this phenomenon, some political aspects of Ottoman developments must be summarized. If the Ottoman army used the Prussian reform model to develop its military organization and military ethic, the political orientations adopting the reforms were derived from Ottoman conditions.
Autocracy (Istibdad)
The chief reason for the formulation of an Ottoman militarist ideology and a reform military was the rule of the Ottoman sultans, and efforts by the sultans to protect their regime from overthrow by a wide variety of forces. The crisis of 1826 originated in the Greek Revolution in which the Ottoman army failed to perform satisfactorily. The result was the destruction of the Janissary Corps, and the formation of a two-tiered army system: the nizam/redif army, and the irregular cavalry (popularly called bashixxxuks, and seen by many as the remnants of the old timar order). As in everything else, the Ottoman sultan ensured the loyalty of his standing army by permitting the organizations supporting irregular cavalry to survive. Nonetheless, the nizam became the tool of Ottoman autocracy, and the irregular cavalry served the standing army or pr y New or Young Ottoman ideals, perceived the environment of his times as oppressive. Under the restrictions of censorship, his novel Bir Olunun Defteri (Journal of a Dead Man), used an ordinary plot line to portray a pessimistic social condition, which was the product of 'tyranny.' A history of Abdul-Hamid's reign published in 1909-10 (when censorship was briefly removed) suggested that Abdul-Hamid's martial rule originated in the empire's emergency (especially the Balkan revolutions which plagued Abdulaziz's last year as sultan). This autocracy was totalitarian in only a very rudimentary sense. If censorship attempted to control criticism and even supportive analysis of the government, there was no effort to employ a totalitarian revolutionary doctrine as a disguise for oppressive military rule. The autocrat's aggressive domination of the society he ruled became the basis for the foundation of a reform military establishment, and the subjection of semi-autonomous politico-military organizations (derebeys, tribal chiefs, and other local authorities) as irregular military formations. In Ottoman autocracy, the reform military developed a special ideological presence of its own, supporting the sultanate for most of the nineteenth century, but becoming an independent actor on its own terms after 1908, and especially after 1913. The Young Turk military leadership assumed the position of the autocratic dictator using the same excuse that the military emergency of the empire did not permit a republic to exist.
Ottoman autocratic militarism separated itself from all forms of Middle Eastern military traditions, except to dominate and control surviving elements of those traditions (Islamic concepts of jihad, various irregular armies). This reform militarism consciously connected itself with European military theories and practices. From 1836 to 1839, the Sultan Mahmud II instituted the advice of the Prussian officer Helmuth von Moltke. Moltke was later responsible for perfecting the doctrine of total offensive warfare which led Prussia to victory against Denmark, Austria, and France. Variations of his doctrine influenced Prussian warfare, and the doctrines of Prussia's allies (including the Ottoman Empire). Moltke's program, accepted by Mahmud II, was to build a total war army based upon the three-level organization of nizam (standing army), redif (reserve), and mustahfiz (home guard, second-level reserve with old men). The army was also divided by branch - infantry, artillery, and cavalry. Unit organization followed the European model (battalion, battery, and squadron). Each unit was to have a chain of command from battalion head (major) to sergeants and corporals. The weakest link in the entire reform was the officer corps. Severe shortages existed as late as the wars of 1875-78, and European soldiers of fortune were imported to take even high commands to alleviate the problem. The purpose of the army was, of course, to wage total warfare in the style of Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic armies. As such, the army was intended as a tool of aggression, and a conscious player in the arena of warfare (not simply the recipient of other armies' aggressions).
This army became the extension of the autocrat's ideological existence, and enabled him to dominate his subjects by force, thus denying them even the traditional means of local autonomy. The nizam formulated upon Moltke's advice became active almost immediately, fighting wars in Kurdistan which von Moltke observed himself. The nizam suppressed similar revolts in the following decades, often using brutal and annihilating tactics. The Ottoman general 'Omer Pasha, an Austrian Croat emigre, commanded the nizam in the brutal suppressions of numerous revolts in Bosnia (1851), Montenegro (1852), Thessaly (1854), and Crete (1867), among other places. The redif and irregular cavalry supplemented the nizam in suppressing revolts everywhere in the empire. As the empire's collapse continued, the nizam became the chief means of imposing order from Yemen to Macedonia in an increasingly anarchic situation.
Comment