Professor Henry Srebrnik

Professor Henry Srebrnik

Monday, August 12, 2013

The Turks Have a Proud History

Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer

No one doubts that Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister of Turkey since 2003, is a very tough man. He has demonstrated that in recent years, in run-ins with Israel, Libya, Syria, the United States, and his own citizens. In that sense, he epitomizes the Turkish character.
Historically a warrior people, the Turks are a proud nation. And why shouldn’t they be? Since the “entered” medieval history, they are virtually the only people in the entire world who have never been conquered and subjugated for any length of time by others.

Think about it: in the Western Hemisphere, all aboriginal peoples were overpowered by Europeans. The same holds true for all of Africa, with Ethiopia the last to come under foreign rule when defeated by fascist Italy in the 1930s.
With the exceptions of Great Britain, Sweden and Switzerland, every country in Europe has at some time been vanquished and occupied by another – particularly in the Second World War. The Russians may only have been partially conquered by Napoleon and Hitler, but they fell under Mongol rule for some 250 years during the 13-15th centuries.

In the Middle East, all the Arab peoples, from Morocco to Iran, came under first Ottoman Turkish, and later western, rule, except for Saudi Arabia. Central Asia fell to the Russians. The Jews of Israel are the descendants of people who lived without sovereignty, at the mercy of others. Iran remained nominally sovereign but effectively under British and Russian control; this was also true of Afghanistan.
In Asia, only Japan held out, until occupied after 1945 by the United States. China lost immense amounts of territory to Japanese, Russian and western imperialists in the 19th and 20th centuries. Of course the entire Indian subcontinent was gobbled up piecemeal by the British.

The Ottoman Turks, themselves an imperial power in large parts of Europe and virtually the entire Middle East for many centuries, were defeated in the First World War. They lost their Mideast Arab holdings.
But plans were afoot to partition the ethnic Turkish heartland itself. The terms of the Treaty of Sèvres, signed by the defeated Ottomans in 1920, were severe, and involved dismembering Anatolian Turkey itself.

The Greeks were to obtain almost all that was left of European Turkey, while the lands on either side of the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, which link the Mediterranean to the Black Sea, would come under international control. The great Ottoman capital city of Istanbul was included in this zone.
Greece was also awarded a substantial area of western Anatolia facing the Aegean Sea, including the city of Smyrna (now Izmir). The rest of western and southern Turkey, including the port of Antalya on the Mediterranean, would become an Italian zone of influence.

France would take under its direct control a section of the country north of Syria (which was becoming a French Mandate, or colony), plus a very large zone of influence in the centre of Turkey. Britain would have a smaller zone, north of what was becoming the British mandate of Iraq.
Finally, the Armenians were to acquire an independent state that would consist of most of eastern Turkey, from the city of Trabzon on the Black Sea in the north down to Lake Van. Only a rump Turkish state centred around Ankara would retain its sovereignty. Some Kurds were also advocating an independent state of their own in eastern Anatolia.

None of this came to pass. A nationalist movement led by Mustapha Kemal, who became Kemal Ataturk (“Father of the Turks”), defied the Allied powers and refused to accept the loss of ethnic Turkish lands.
His armies defeated Armenian, French and Greek forces, reoccupying the entire Anatolian peninsula within a few years, and forcing the Allied powers into signing the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923. It led to the international recognition of the sovereignty of the new Republic of Turkey as the successor state to the defunct Ottoman Empire.

The Greeks were forced out of all Turkish territories, and the Armenians, too, saw their dream of a greater Armenia evaporate. A small Armenian region that was already under Russian control before 1914 eventually became part of the Soviet Union. The Kurds in Anatolia remained under Turkish rule.
Since that difficult time 90 years ago, no one has tried to acquire any territory at the expense of Turkey.

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