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Armenian Massacres: New Records Undercut Old
Blame
Reexamining History
by Edward J. Erickson
Middle East Quarterly
Summer 2006
The debate about the World War I deportation and massacre of Armenians in
eastern Anatolia has become more contentious with time. Opponents of Turkey's
European Union accession treat the Armenian question as original sin. Yet much
of the historical debate upon which politicians pass judgment is tinged more by
polemic than by fact. Nine decades after hundreds of thousands of Armenians—and
millions of others—died during World War I, it is important to dig down into the
archives to show what the historical record really says.
There is little argument that many Armenians perished during World War I, but
there remains significant historical dispute about whether Armenian civilians
died in the fog of war or were murdered on the orders of the Ottoman government.
More specifically, the debate about whether or not there was a genocide of
Armenians rests upon three pillars: the record of the Turkish courts-martial of
1919-20 during which the new Turkish government, formed following the defeat of
the Ottoman Empire, tried and hanged some Ottoman officials for war crimes;
documents produced in the Memoirs of Naim Bey, an account allegedly written by
an Ottoman official claiming to have participated in the deportation of
Armenians;[1] and the role of the "Special Organization" (Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa),
somewhat equivalent to the Ottoman special forces.
Recently, two researchers have debated the nature of the World War I Armenian
massacres and, more specifically, the role in the massacres by the Special
Organization and the group's relationship to a Prussian artillery officer known
in the records only by his last name, Stange.[2][3] Dadrian argued that the
Ottoman government diverted the Special Organization units to deportation duty
in rear areas where they became the principal agent in the Armenian massacres.
He bases his claims against Stange on secondhand German reports of massacres in
Stange's area of operations and uses controversial testimony from the 1919
Istanbul courts-martial proceedings to support his claim about Special
Organization redeployments. Since that time, many parties have taken Dadrian's
assertions at face value. [4] The first, Vahakn Dadrian, director of Genocide
Research at the Zoryan Institute for Contemporary Armenian Research and
Documentation, wrote that Stange was the "highest-ranking German guerilla
commander operating in the Turko-Russian border," one of several
"arch-accomplices in the implementation of the massacres," and a Special
Organization commander.
Last year, however, Guenter Lewy, a professor emeritus of political science at
the University of Massachusetts, challenged Dadrian's findings on the grounds
that Stange was neither a Special Organization guerilla leader nor did his unit
operate in the area of the massacres.[5]
In history, details matter. Given the importance that contemporary officials
place on the events of nine decades past, clarifying Stange's operations is
critical to the current debate. In this regard, the official 27-volume Turkish
military history of the World War I campaigns, while seldom utilized in Western
scholarship, is a valuable tool.[6] The volumes are not readily accessible to
university researchers; they are only available at a single military bookstore
on a restricted Turkish army compound in Ankara. Far from the politicized debate
surrounding the massacres, these histories shed light on nitty-gritty details
such as which officers and units were deployed where and when. Within the set,
the Third Army histories help flesh out Stange's wartime record. [7] They were
published simultaneously to Dadrian's 1993 article and so should not be
dismissed as a Turkish response to Dadrian's work. They also provide an
important source of information which Dadrian, genocide scholars, and other
historians of the period have not yet taken into account.
Ottoman Irregular Forces in Eastern Anatolia
Analyzing the events of 1915 requires an understanding of the Ottoman military
for, too often, treatments of the period confuse units and muddle Ottoman
military terms.[8] Between 1914-18, there were five groups of Ottoman military
and paramilitary forces engaged on the Caucasian front. The Ottoman regular army
was a uniformed conscript force led by professional officers who were trained in
conventional military tactics and who responded to military discipline and
orders. It fought on all Ottoman fronts during the war.
Assisting them were the jandarma, a paramilitary gendarmerie or rural police
force trained to military standards and led by professional officers. Every
province had at least one mobile jandarma regiment and also numbers of static
jandarma battalions.[9] The Ministry of the Interior controlled the jandarma in
peacetime but, with the Ottoman mobilization on August 3, 1914, command passed
to the Ministry of Defense.
In addition, there was the tribal cavalry (aşiret, formerly the hamidiye). In
1910, the Ministry of Defense integrated the twenty-nine tribal cavalry
regiments into the regular army. Used as both conventional cavalry and for
internal security duties, members were mostly Kurdish and Circassian, poorly
disciplined, and led by tribal chieftains.[10] However, in the army
reorganization of 1913, these regiments were reclassified as reserve cavalry (ihtiyat
süvari) regiments of the regular Ottoman army.
The gönüllü, paramilitary volunteer forces, allowed Turks and Islamic ethnic
groups living outside the Ottoman Empire to join the war effort and fight
together.[11] These were often poorly led and armed but organized into units so
that they could assist the regular army in both combat and non-combat
operations. During World War I, most volunteers serving in the Caucasus were
"Greek Turks," "Caucasian Turks," Laz, or Muslim refugees from the European
provinces such as Macedonia or Epirus lost in 1913.[12] By definition, the
volunteers were not released Ottoman convicts.
The Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa or Special Organization, a multi-purpose special
volunteer force led by professional officers, was equivalent to a modern special
operations force. It sought to foment insurrection in enemy territory, fight
guerillas and insurgents in friendly territory, conduct espionage and
counterespionage, and perform other tasks unsuited to conventional military
forces. While many histories suggest the Special Organization received orders
from the Committee of Union and Progress or the Ministry of the Interior, the
archival record suggests that the Ministry of Defense commanded the Special
Organization during World War I.[13]
Finally, there were numbers of non-military groups operating in Anatolia during
the war. These non-military çeteler (which may be translated as bandit, brigand,
insurgent, or guerilla groups depending on context) were local groups not
subject to centralized command and control. Çeteler was a catchall term that was
used by both the Ottomans to describe insurgents and authentic criminal bands
and also by foreign observers to describe groups of killers, whose origins were
often unknown.
The Stange Detachment
Where then did Major Stange fit in? Shortly before the outbreak of World War I,
the German Kaiser charged General Otto Liman von Sanders to lead a military
mission to the Ottoman Empire to assist in rebuilding the Ottoman army after its
defeat in the Balkan wars. Liman von Sanders assigned Captain Stange, a Prussian
artillery specialist, to command the Erzurum fortress artillery.[14] Stange was
a conventional military officer with no special knowledge of guerilla
operations. His assignment to the Ottoman Third Army in Erzurum reflected his
mainstream skills. He occupied his time working on the defenses until the
outbreak of war offered him the chance to lead troops against the Russians.
According to the original Ottoman war plan, the Third Army was ordered to stand
on the defensive in the Caucasus while the bulk of the Ottoman army concentrated
in Thrace.[15][16] There were no regular Ottoman army combat units on the Turco-Russian
frontier from the Black Sea south for about 100 kilometers for this supporting
attack. Nevertheless, Ottoman border forces pushed across the frontier and, on
November 22, closed in on the Russian town of Artvin.[17] Flushed with success,
on December 6, the general staff ordered the Third Army to push onward toward
Ardahan.[18] It was in this capacity that Stange entered the scene. Ottoman
strategists committed every available Third Army division to the Sarakamiş
offensive. The Third Army headquarters ordered Stange to take command of the
Eighth Infantry Regiment, two artillery batteries, and the Çoruh Border Security
Battalion.[19] This newly organized force was designated the Stange Detachment (Ştanke
Bey Müfrezesi) and ordered to take Artvin while the rest of the army moved
toward their main objective. None of the troops were trained in guerilla or
unconventional warfare. Against light opposition, Stange pushed forward and took
the town on December 21. However, in early September 1914, a revised campaign
plan directed the Third Army to conduct offensive operations in the event of
war. When war broke out between Russia and the Ottoman Empire on November 2, the
Ottomans were actively planning a winter offensive in the Caucasus. The plan
called for the three army corps of the Third Army to encircle the Russian army
at Sarakamiş with a supporting operation on the Black Sea flank between Batum
and Ardahan, in modern day Georgia.
At the same time, other Ottoman forces were operating in the area. Bahattin
Şakir, a high-ranking member of the governing Committee of Union and Progress,
commanded the Special Organization force, which had infiltrated its forward
units near Batum to foment an uprising among Laz and Turkic peoples inside the
Russian Empire. In addition to this mission, Şakir ordered Ziya Bey, an
artillery major commanding the Special Organization men on the ground in Russia,
to encircle and destroy çeteler that included a number of Armenians.[20] The
Special Organization also attacked regular Russian army units, capturing four
officers and sixty-three Russian soldiers in late November.[21] One Turkish
source also mentions a large force of volunteers operating in the Çoruh River
valley under Yakup Cemil Bey.[22] Another Turkish source asserts that Yakup
Cemil's detachment was a Special Organization force composed of çeteler.[23] In
this bitter internecine fighting, many civilian Turks, Armenians, and other
local ethnic groups were massacred indiscriminately.[24]
With so many different units and organizations operating in the area, there was
bureaucratic wrangling over how to unify the command as the Sarakamiş campaign
approached. In the end, Stange took command of the entire force—regulars, border
security battalions, volunteers, and the Special Organization. However, the
Special Organization and volunteers continued to receive their orders from Şakir,
who wanted to retain control of the operation while Stange answered to the X
Corps commander, in whose sector he operated.[25]
On December 22, the X Corps and Third Army ordered Stange, the Special
Organization, and the volunteers to converge separately on Ardahan. The Special
Organization, now locally commanded by Captain Halit Bey, cooperated and joined
the advance.[26] Despite bad winter weather, these forces began to encircle the
city on December 29. Because Stange controlled neither the Special Organization
nor the volunteers, he sent coordination copies of his own detachment orders to
Halit, who passed these on to the adjacent volunteers.[27] This was a clumsy
arrangement, and there is no indication that the Special Organization and
volunteers reciprocated. The result was an uncoordinated attack on Ardahan.
Stange's detachment suffered heavy casualties[28] while Special Organization and
volunteer losses were light.[29] The Ottomans failed to hold the city for long.
In early January 1915, the Russians retook the city with bayonet assaults. Over
the next month, the Ottomans conducted a fighting retreat back toward Artvin.
At the end of January 1915, Şakir consolidated some of the Special Organization
units into a Special Organization Regiment (Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa Alay) commanded
by Halit.[30] This regiment was assigned nine officers and 671 men.[31] Halit
also gained control over a group of volunteers known as the Baha Bey Şakir
Force. Subsequently and because of the deteriorating tactical situation, Şakir
ordered the Special Organization Regiment to cooperate with Stange in defensive
operations along the border. Additionally, a smaller Special Organization
detachment commanded by Riza Bey conducted operations around Murgal, northwest
of Artvin. Istanbul also sent Stange about 1,600 replacements. Fighting was
hard, and the Ottomans were pushed back. On February 16, three Russian infantry
and two cavalry regiments, Cossacks, and an Armenian battalion attacked a rear
guard of Halit Bey's Special Organization soldiers.[32] The Special Organization
fought well and covered Stange's regulars as they retreated.
On March 1, 1915, the Russian army launched a major attack to restore the
frontier, pushing back Stange, the Special Organization, and the volunteers. In
reaction to what appeared to be a disastrous retreat, on March 20, the X Corps
reorganized the Ottoman forces on the northeast frontier, forming the Lazistan
Area Command (Lazistan ve Havalisi Komutanlıgı) [See Table 1].[33] By this time,
Şakir had left Erzurum, and Stange finally received unitary command over the
regular army unit as well as the Special Organization and volunteers. Stange
immediately set about coordinating a defense with a combined force of 4,286 men,
six machine guns, and four cannon.[34]
Table 1
Lazistan Area Command - March 28, 1915
Lazistan Detachment No. of Men
1st Btln, 8th Infantry Regt 306
3rd Btln, 8th Infantry Regt 581
Mountain Btry, 8th Field Artillery 192
Machinegun Company 97
Engineer Company 140
Cavalry Platoon 30
Trabzon Jandarma Regt No. of Men
Trabzon Jandarma Btln 400
Rize Jandarma Btln 450
Giresun Jandarma Btln 330
Hopa Hudut (Border) Btln 330
Special Organization Regiment (Teşkilat-ı Mahsusa Alay)
Zia Bey Btln
Adil Bey Btln
Muhsin Btln
Salih Aga Btln
Ibrahim Bey Btln
Veysel Efendi Detachment 1,430 men (in total)
Source: TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, Kuruluş 12 (Organizational
Chart 12)
The Third Army sent Staff Lieutenant Colonel Vasıf to be Stange's chief-of-staff
in the expanded command[35] while Stange collected supplies, engineers, and
cavalry from the Third Army Lines of Communications Command. In addition, the
military mobilized all men in the Trabzon vilayet (province) between the ages of
17-18 and 45-50 while a Special Organization unit from Istanbul joined the
Lazistan area command's Special Organization regiment.
Stange reorganized his augmented command into field forces and static forces.
The field forces, which held the defensive lines against the Russians, were
composed of the 8th Infantry Regiment, the Trabzon Jandarma Regiment, and the
Special Organization Regiment.[36] The static forces, which were responsible for
rear area security, were composed of the Riza, the Trabzon, and the Samsun
Jandarma regiments. On April 14, 1915, Stange had over 6,000 men assigned to his
command.[37] Table 2 shows Stange's revised command arrangements.
Table 2
Lazistan Area Command - 15 April 1915
FIELD FORCE
Lazistan Detachment 1st Btln, 8th Infantry Regt
3rd Btln, 8th Infantry Regt
Machinegun Company
Trabzon Jandarma Regt Giresun Jandarma Btln Amasya Jandarma Btln
Hopa Border Btln
Machinegun Company
Special Organization Regt Ziya Bey Btln Adil Bey Btln
Mehmet Ali Btln
Ibrahim Bey Btln
Veysel Bey Btln
Machinegun Company
Field Force Troops Two artillery batteries (8th Artillery), Engineer Company,
Cavalry Platoon
STATIC FORCE
Rize Jandarma Regt 2 jandarma btlns
Trabzon Jandarma Regt 3 jandarma btlns
(probably reconstituted from recalled men)
Samsun Jandarma Reg 4 jandarma btlns
Source: TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, Kuruluş 13 (Organizational
Chart 13)
These arrangements solidified the Ottoman defense, which by mid-April was
successfully holding a line about ten kilometers west of the prewar
Ottoman-Russian frontier. They also show a return to a conventional military
organizational architecture, mirroring the organization of regular Ottoman
infantry divisions in 1915, which contained three regiments each with a machine
gun company. A general support element of artillery, engineers, and cavalry
augmented the regiments.[38] The field force was, practically speaking, staffed
and organized as a regular infantry division. This reflects Stange's
conventional background and the tactical necessity to put an effective and
standard defense on the empire's northeast frontier. The tempo of fighting
dropped, and the front remained stationary until early 1916. Throughout this
period the Special Organization Regiment remained on the line and engaged in
conventional defensive operations.[39] In late January 1916, the recently
promoted Major Halit relieved Stange; he returned to Erzurum.
Early 1916 was a period of disaster for the Ottoman strategic position in
northeastern Anatolia and the Caucasus. The Russians seized Erzurum, Rize, and
Trabzon. Regular army infantry divisions reinforced the Lazistan Area Command.
Several Special Organization battalions in the sector were transferred to the
adjacent Çoruh Detachment in May 1916 where they continued to participate in
frontline duties.[40] The remaining Special Organization troops were distributed
into two elements, which were designated as the First and Second Special
Organization regiments and assigned to a newly-formed coastal detachment.[41]
Other Special Organization units were redeployed to the IX Corps sector on the
Erzincan front near the village of Tuzla.[42] These units served directly under
a provisional corps commanded by Staff Lieutenant Colonel Şevket and conducted
offensive operations in conjunction with the Ottoman Thirteenth Infantry
Division.[43] On June 6, 1916, three Special Organization companies were
assigned to the newly formed Haçköy Detachment on the line south of Tuzla. The
detachment also had an infantry battalion, two cavalry squadrons, and
artillery.[44] The Special Organization continued to participate in conventional
operations on the Caucasian front for the remainder of the summer. On July 29,
1916, the First and Second Special Organization regiments were inactivated and a
single regiment reestablished.[45] Major combat operations in the Ottoman Third
Army area began to diminish in the late summer and, by mid-fall 1916, had almost
completely stopped. This was a result of both combat exhaustion and severe
weather.
The published paper trail of the Special Organization formations on the
Caucasian front ends in 1917, and the Special Organization does not appear in
the 1918 Ottoman Caucasian orders of battle. It is unclear what happened to the
Special Organization officers and men assigned to the units at that time.
However, the deportation of Armenians was completed in 1916, and it appears
certain that the Special Organization formations in this study remained on the
front during that period.
Conclusions
Many historians find military chronicles dry and difficult to comprehend.
Nevertheless, when it comes to the controversy over the fate of Armenians in
1915, they are crucial. Many contemporary historians accuse the Special
Organization and Major Stange of complicity in genocide. The records, though, do
not lend such accusations credence.
The official military histories of the modern Turkish Republic portray the
operations of organized Ottoman Special Organization units on the Caucasian
front from December 1914 through the end of 1916 as largely conventional. There
is little evidence of a cover-up, especially as these histories are technical,
not intended for the public, and predate the scholarly controversy over
allegations of Special Organization complicity in Armenian genocide.
Importantly, the official histories fully cite archival sources and often
reproduce reports and orders.
Early Special Organization operations near Batum were unconventional and
involved guerilla warfare operations. However, the Sarikamiş offensive provided
the engine that drove the Special Organization into the arms of regular army
commanders like Stange. Subsequent and perennial manpower shortages kept the
Special Organization engaged in conventional military operations. From the
record of unit assignments and locations on the front, it appears that the
Special Organization units associated with Stange were not redeployed from the
Caucasian front to deport and massacre Armenians.
Nor does it seem possible that Stange was involved in the deaths of Armenians.
The modern Turkish histories show that he commanded regular army forces engaged
in conventional offensive and defensive operations until late March 1915.
Although he technically commanded all Ottoman forces near Ardahan in 1914, he
exercised no real control over the Special Organization or volunteers. After
Stange gained command of the Lazistan Area Command, he held direct command over
Special Organization forces, which he employed on the defensive line in a
conventional manner. In effect, from December 11, 1914 through March 20, 1915,
Stange can be characterized as a detachment commander who cooperated with the
Special Organization in conventional operations. After March 20, 1915, Stange
was an area commander who commanded Special Organization forces for conventional
defensive operations. The record demonstrates that Stange was neither a Special
Organization commander, nor was he a guerilla leader. Indeed, Stange was unhappy
with the discipline and training of both the Special Organization and irregular
forces, reflecting his lack of authority over them.[46]
The Turkish histories do reveal an intriguing alternative possibility concerning
who might have been redeployed to deport Armenians. The reserve cavalry
regiments (the former aşiret or tribal cavalry) were grouped into four reserve
cavalry divisions that were mobilized into the Reserve Cavalry Corps in August
1914. The tactical performance of this corps was abysmal, and its levels of
discipline and combat effectiveness low.[47] Consequently, the Ottoman General
Staff inactivated the Reserve Cavalry Corps on November 21, 1914,[48] and only
seven of the twenty-nine reserve cavalry regiments remained with the colors in
the Third Army.[49] The remaining regiments were dissolved, and "10,000 reserve
cavalrymen dispersed throughout the region and returned to their villages."[50]
Most of these men were tribal Kurds or Circassians and, unemployed following
demobilization, many may have been attracted to the work of deporting the
Armenians in the spring of 1915. Clearly, many Armenians died during World War
I. But accusations of genocide demand authentic proof of an official policy of
ethnic extermination. Vahakn Dadrian has made high-profile claims that Major
Stange and the Special Organization were the instruments of ethnic cleansing and
genocide. Documents not utilized by Dadrian, though, discount such an
allegation.
Edward J. Erickson, Ph.D. is a retired U.S. Army officer at International
Research Associates.
[1] Aram Andonian, comp., The Memoirs of Naim Bey: Turkish Official Documents
Relating to the Deportations and Massacres of Armenians (Newtown Square, Pa.:
Armenian Historical Society, 1965, reprint of London, 1920 ed).
[2] See Guenter Lewy, "Revisiting the Armenian Genocide," Middle East Quarterly,
Fall 2005, pp. 3-12; Vahakn Dadrian, "Correspondence," Middle East Quarterly,
Winter 2006, pp. 77-8.
[3] Vahakn Dadrian, "The Role of the Special Organization in the Armenian
Genocide during the First World War," Minorities in Wartime: National and Racial
Groupings in Europe, North America and Australia in Two World Wars, Panikos
Panayi, ed. (Oxford: Berg, 1993), p. 58-63.
[4] For example, see: Taner Akçam, Armenien und der Völkermord: Die Istanbuler
Prozesse und die türkische Nationalbewegung (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1996),
p. 65.
[5] Lewy, "Revisiting the Armenian Genocide"; Guenter Lewy, The Armenian
Massacres in Ottoman Turkey, A Disputed Genocide (Salt Lake City: The University
of Utah Press, 2005), pp. 82-8.
[6] See Edward J. Erickson, "The Turkish Official Military Histories of the
First World War: A Bibliographic Essay," Middle Eastern Studies, 39 (2003):
183-91. No library outside Turkey holds the complete series. In addition to the
27-volume coverage of World War I, there are also fourteen volumes on the Balkan
wars (1911-13) and eighteen volumes on the war of independence (1919-23).
[7] These two books are T.C. Genelkurmay Başkanlıgı, Birinci Dünya Harbinde,
Türk Harbi, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, Cilt I ve Cilt II (Ankara:
Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1993). Hereafter referred to as TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü
Ordu Harekatı and TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı II.
[8] For example, "scum" cited in Dadrian, "The Role of the Special Organization
in the Armenian Genocide during the First World War," p. 58, or "ex-convict
killer bands" in Peter Balakian, The Burning Tigris, The Armenian Genocide and
America's Response (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003) p. 182-3.
[9] TCGB, Türk Silahlı Kuvvetleri Tarihi, IIIncü Cilt, 6ncı Kısım, 1908-1920
(Ankara: Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1971) pp. 133-5.
[10] Ibid., pp 129-32.
[11] Ibid., pp. 239-40.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Askeri Tarih ve Stratejik Etüt (ATASE), BDH Koleksıyonu Kataloğu-4 (Ankara:
undated). First World War Catalogue, no. 4, of the military archives lists files
of the Special Organization detachments, proving that these detachments were
under Ministry of Defense command.
[14] Ismet Görgülü, On Yıllık Harbin Kadrosu 1912-1922, Balkan-Birinci Dünya ve
Istiklal Harbi (Ankara: Türk Tarıh Kurum Basımevi, 1993), p. 105; Deutsche
Offiziere in der Türkei
[15] TCGB, Birinci Dünya Harbinde, Türk Harbi, Inci Cilt, Osmanlı
Imparatorluğunun Siyasi ve Askeri Hazırlıkları ve Harbe Girişi (Ankara:
Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1970), pp. 212-38.
[16] Fahri Belen, Birinci Cihan Harbinde Türk Harbi, 1914 Yılı Hareketleri
(Ankara: Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1964), p. 96.
[17] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, Kroki 36 (Map 36).
[18] "Ottoman General Staff Orders, ATASE Archive 2950, Record H-6, File 1-267,"
reproduced in ibid., pp. 339-40.
[19] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 349.
[20] Ibid., p. 344.
[21] Ibid., p. 293.
[22] Ibid., Kroki 37 (Map 37).
[23] Görgülü, On Yıllık Harbin Kadrosu 1912-1922, pp. 109, 111.
[24] Muammer Demirel, Birinci Cihan Harbinde Türk Harbinde Erzurum ve Çevresinde
Ermeni Hareketleri (Ankara: Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1996), pp. 41-5; Dadrian, "The
Role of the Special Organization in the Armenian Genocide during the First World
War," p. 62.
[25] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 602.
[26] Ibid., p. 605.
[27] "Detachment Orders, ATASE Archive 5257, Record H-1, File 1-10," cited in
ibid., p. 603.
[28] "Detachment Orders, ATASE Archive 5257, Record H-1, File 1-12," reproduced
in TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 603.
[29] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 603.
[30] Ibid., p. 608.
[31] "Strength Report, ATASE Archive 5257, Record H-3, File 1-4," reproduced in
ibid., p. 603.
[32] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 607.
[33] Ibid., p. 614.
[34] "Reports, ATASE Archive 2950, Record H-3, File 1-49," cited in ibid., p.
614.
[35] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 615.
[36] "Detachment Orders, ATASE Archive 2950, Record H-4, File 1-8," cited in
ibid., p. 615.
[37] "Strength Report, ATASE Archive 5257, Record H-4, File 194," reproduced in
TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 616.
[38] TCGB, Türk Silahlı Kuvvetleri Tarihi, pp. 199-203, 266-72, for information
on the architecture of Ottoman army infantry divisions. The Lazistan Detachment
was a regimental equivalent.
[39] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı II, p. 86.
[40] "Orders, ATASE Archive 3974, Record H-2, File 1-59 and 73," cited in ibid.,
p. 181.
[41] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı II, p. 251.
[42] Ibid., p. 233.
[43] Ibid., p. 240, Kuruluş 11 (Organizational Chart 11).
[44] Ibid., p. 247.
[45] "Strength Report, ATASE Archive 2950, Record H-58, File 1-329 & 333," cited
in ibid., pp. 369-70.
[46] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 618.
[47] Belen, 1914 Yılı Hareketleri, p. 116-24.
[48] TCGB, Kafkas Cephesi 3ncü Ordu Harekatı, p. 311.
[49] Ibid., Kuruluş 1 (Chart 1).
[50] Ibid., p. 322. (Bonn: Militar, 1957), p. 10.
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