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turkey AFTER WORLD WAR I: LOSSES AND GAINS
AND THE ARMENIAN HOLOCAUST

On
August 10 1920, competent representatives of 14 nations
including Armenia, signed “the Treaty of Peace between Allied
and Associated Powers and turkey” in Sevres (France). The treaty
officially put an end to the Ottoman Empire and in fact,
abolished turkish sovereignty.
Basing
on its provisions, turkey agreed to British and French
protectorate over Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Syria (Syria, Lebanon,
Transjordan and Palestine), recognized independence of Hejaz,
Asir and Yemen, granted autonomy to kurdistan (the province of
Diyarbekir and southern part of Van province), ceded Smyrna (now
Izmir) and Eastern Trace to Greece and Western Armenia (the
provinces of Bitlis, Erzerum and nouthern part of Van province)
to the Armenian Republic. Additionally, eastern half of
Trebizond province was to be partitioned between Armenia and
Georgia thus providing Armenian Republic full access to the sea.
The Zone of the Straits formally remained turkish but was to be
neutralized and internationalized.
“Old Constantinople” by Luigi Premazzi

While accepted by the
government of sultan muhammad V in Constantinople, the treaty of
Sevres was rejected by the new nationalist government formed in
Ankara by kemal ataturk. turkish nationalists refused to
transfer the assigned
territories to Greece and especially to Armenia and Georgia.
ataturk even claimed that turkey had enough forces to take over
all the South Caucasus if needed.
sultan muhammad v
kamal ataturk
Unlike
Greece controlling not only the assigned territories but
occupying area of western Anatolia, Armenian Republic seemed
unable to take over the territories assigned
to her by the treaty. Facing
50, 000 strong turkish army of nizam karabeqir pasha at her
pre-treaty borders, Armenia could boast less than 30,000
soldiers. In spite of the fact that according to their British
allies, Armenian army was the best trained and the most
disciplined among other armies of the South Caucasus, it was
exhausted both morally, physically and financially as a result
of the series of almost non-stop warfare starting with 1917.

The Armenian-turkish
relations in the aftermath of the Treaty of Sevres, were marked
by the following misbalance: Armenia was willing to take over
the territory legally assigned to her by the Allies but was
unable to do so while the turks unwilling to submit to the
treaty, had both the possibilities and aspirations to take over
all the remaining Armenia. The further development of the
situation in the South Caucasus demonstrated that Armenia could
not count on any serous external help while turkey enjoyed both
diplomatic and military support on behalf of the Soviet Russia
and its puppet-state of Soviet azerbaijan.
As
a result of the Greek-turkish War (1919-1922) and
Armenian-turkish War (Sept.-Dec., 1920), both won by
the turks, the Allied powers had to revise some of the
provisions of the Treaty of Sevres. According to the Treaty of
Lausannes (24.07.1923), Greece had to return to turkey the city
of Smyrna (Izmir) with the surrounding
area, Eastern Trace and the island of Imbroz. turkey was given
back all the territories previously assigned to Armenia and
Georgia (the two countries that by that time already been
absorbed by the USSR). The Treaty of Lausannes also confirmed
turkish rights to the additional territories conquered by the
turks from Armenia and Georgia in 1920-21 and ceded to them by
the
Treaty of Kars (13.10.1921).
During wars of 1919-22 and after the end of all military
operations, turkish government and armed forces performed large
ethnic cleansing as a result of which turkey was
left without its
Armenian,
Assyrian and
Greek population.
Click
here for the Armenian Holocaust Sites.
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