Ahmed Cemâl | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Minister of the Navy | |
In office 10 March 1914 – 14 October 1918 | |
Monarchs | Mehmed V, Mehmed VI |
Preceded by | Çürüksulu Mahmud Pasha |
Succeeded by | Hüseyin Rauf Pasha |
Personal details | |
Born | (1872-05-06)6 May 1872 Midilli,Vilayet of the Archipelago,Ottoman Empire |
Died | 21 July 1922(1922-07-21) (aged 50) Tbilisi,Georgian SSR,Soviet Union |
Relations | Hasan Cemal (grandson) |
Children | 5 |
Military service | |
Allegiance | ![]() ![]() |
Years of service | 1893–1918 |
Rank | ![]() |
Commands | Fourth Army |
Battles/wars | |
Ahmed Djemal (Ottoman Turkish:احمد جمال پاشا,romanized: Ahmed Cemâl Paşa;Turkish:Ahmet Cemal Paşa; 6 May 1872 – 21 July 1922), also known asDjemal Pasha orCemâl Pasha, was anOttoman military leader and one of theThree Pashas that ruled theOttoman Empire duringWorld War I.
As an officer of theII Corps, he was stationed inSalonica where he developed political sympathies for theCommittee of Union and Progress (CUP) reformers. He was initially praised by Christian missionaries and provided support to the Armenian victims of theAdana massacres.
In the course of his army career Cemal developed a rivalry withMustafa Kemal Atatürk, served in Salonica on the frontlines of theBalkan Wars and was given the martial law command ofConstantinople after theRaid on the Sublime Porte. Cemal's authoritarian three year rule inSyria alienated the local population who opposedTurkish nationalism. His role in theArmenian genocide has been controversial as his policies were not as deadly as other CUP leaders; Cemal favored the forced assimilation of Armenians.
Ahmed Djemal was born in aTurkish family inMytilene,Lesbos, to Mehmed Nesib Bey, a military pharmacist.[citation needed] Djemal graduated fromKuleli Military High School in 1890 and completed his studies at the Military Academy (Mektebi Harbiyeyi Şahane), the staff college inIstanbul, in 1893.[1] He was posted to serve with the 1st Department of the Imperial General Staff (Seraskerlik Erkânı Harbiye),[citation needed] and then he worked at theKirkkilise Fortification Construction Department bound toSecond Army. Djemal was assigned to theII Army Corps in 1896.[1] Two years later, he was appointed staff commander of the Novice Division, stationed on theSalonica frontier.[citation needed]
Meanwhile, he began to sympathize with theCommittee of Union and Progress (CUP), and joined the organization in 1898. It was in 1905 that Djemal was promoted to major and designated Inspector ofRumelia Railways.[1] The following year he signaled his democratic credentials and joined the Ottoman Liberty Society. He became influential in the department of military issues of the Committee of Union and Progress. He was elected to the board of theIII Army Corps in 1907.[1] Following theYoung Turk Revolution in 1908 he became a member of thecentral committee (Merkezi Umum-i) of the CUP and later was deployed as aKaymakam toÜsküdar,Constantinople.[2]
Djemal served as thegovernor of theAdana Vilayet between August 1909[3] and April 1911.[4] In Adana, he was involved in providing support for the Armenian victims of theAdana massacres, and was praised by Christian missionaries in the region as a competent administrator.[5] He was also military governor of Istanbul in 1909, 1910, 1912, and 1913. In the III Army Corps, he worked with future Turkish statesmenMajor Fethi (Okyar) andMustafa Kemal (Atatürk), although Atatürk soon developed a rivalry with Djemal Pasha and his colleagues over their policies after theyseized power in 1913.[6][7]
In 1911, Djemal was appointed Governor ofBaghdad. He then resigned to rejoin the army in theBalkan Wars on the Salonica front line, attempting to protect Turkey's European possessions.[8] In October 1912, he was promoted to colonel. At the end of theFirst Balkan War, he played an important role in the propaganda drawn up by the CUP against negotiations with the victorious European countries. He tried to resolve the problems that occurred in Constantinople after theCoup of 1913. Djemal played a significant role in theSecond Balkan War, and with the revolution of the CUP on 23 January 1913, he became the commander of Constantinople and was appointed Minister of Public Works. He was assigned the military command in the Constantinople Vilayet byGrand VizierMahmud Sevket Pasha and by December 1913 he was given the titlePasha. In February 1914, he was promoted toMinister of the Ottoman Navy.[9]
When Europe was divided into two blocs before the First World War, he supported an alliance with France. He went to France to negotiate an alliance with the French, but failed and then sided withEnver andTalaat, who favoured the German side. Djemal, along with Enver and Talaat, took control of the Ottoman government in 1913. TheThree Pashas effectively ruled the Ottoman Empire for the duration of World War I.[citation needed]
Previously snubbed by the Allies, Djemal switched his attention to an alliance with the Central Powers, although he had at first been opposed to a full alliance with Germany. Nevertheless, he agreed in early October 1914 to use his ministerial powers to authoriseAdmiral Souchon to launch a pre-emptivestrike in the Black Sea, which led to Russia, Britain and France declaring war on the Ottoman Empire a few days later.[citation needed] After the entry of the Ottoman Empire into the war, Enver Pasha nominated Djemal Pasha to lead the Ottoman army againstBritish forces in Egypt, and Djemal accepted the position. In late 1914, he was assigned to the governorship and military command for the southern provinces of the Ottoman Empire.[9]
Djemal Pasha was appointed with full powers in military and civilian affairs as Governor of Syria in 1915. A provisional law granted him emergency powers in May of that year. All cabinet decrees from Constantinople concerning Syria became subject to his approval. Both hisfirst and second attacks on theSuez Canal failed. Coupled with the wartime exigencies and natural disasters that afflicted the region during these years, this alienated the population from the Ottoman government, and led to theArab Revolt. In the meantime, the Ottoman army usually commanded by ColonelKress von Kressenstein pushed towards and occupiedSinai. The two men had a thinly disguised contempt for each other, which weakened the command.[10]
He was known among the local Arab inhabitants asas-Saffāḥ (Arabic:السَّفّاح,lit. 'The Butcher'), being responsible for the hanging of many Lebanese and SyrianArab nationalists, including Sunni Muslims, Shia Muslims and Christians, wrongly accused of treason on 6 May 1916 inDamascus andBeirut.[11] In total between 1915 and 1916, Djemal had 34 Syrian and Lebanese politicians and nationalists executed.[12]
Jamal Pasha was praised for his good deeds by some Arab inhabitants of Aleppo, such as the water pipeline he built, which saved Aleppo's population from a severe drought in the summer of 1917. His popularity among some Arab inhabitants of Aleppo can be attributed to the city's orientation toward the Ottoman Empire.[13]
In his political memoirs, the leader of the "Beirut Reform Movement"Salim Ali Salam recalls the following:
Jamal Pasha resumed his campaign of vengeance; he began to imprison most Arab personalities, charging them with treason against the State. His real intent was to cut off the thoughtful heads, so that, as he put it, the Arabs would never again emerge as a force, and no one would be left to claim for them their rights … After returning to Beirut [from Istanbul], I was summoned … to Damascus to greet Jamal Pasha … I took the train … and upon reachingAley we found that the whole train was reserved for the prisoners there to take them to Damascus … When I saw them, I realized that they were taking them to Damascus to put them to death. So … I said to myself: how shall I be able to meet with this butcher on the day on which he will be slaughtering the notables of the country? And how will I be able to converse with him? … Upon arriving in Damascus, I tried hard to see him that same evening, before anything happened, but was not successful. The next morning all was over, and the … notables who had been brought over from Aley were strung up on the gallows.[14]
At the end of 1915, Djemal with viceregal powers is said to have started secret negotiations with the Allies for ending the war; he proposed to take over the Ottoman administration himself as an independent king of Syria. These secret negotiations came to nothing, in part because the Allies reportedly could not agree on the future territory of the Ottoman Empire; France objected strongly, and Britain was unwilling to fund the imperial operations.[15]
His most successful military exploit was against the BritishMesopotamian Expeditionary Force, which had arrived in early 1915 from India. 35,000 British troops marched north on Baghdad, hoping to take the citadel with relatively few casualties. Djemal Pasha was appointed to command and marshaled a vast army, ultimately led byHalil Kut Pasha, which by the time of thesiege of Kut al-Amara numbered 200,000 Turks and Arab auxiliaries. The British could only evacuate their wounded with Djemal's consent and attempted to send emissaries requesting permission to evacuate while the city was encircled on three sides. Djemal refused to compromise his advantageous position, and strafed enemy attempts by theTigris Corps to take relief boats up river. They had underestimated Djemal's considerable administrative capabilities and will to resist the Allied armies. The Ottoman troops fought hard at theBattle of Ctesiphon, but the subsequent fate of POWs and civilians later enhanced Djemal Pasha's wartime reputation as a capricious and cruel general. Nonetheless, the successes impressedT. E. Lawrence to write a significant account of their diplomatic encounters when finally Kut fell in April 1916, which provides for "a colourful character".[16] The ever-present threat of Arab Revolt fomented by British intelligence was rising throughout 1916 and 1917. Djemal instituted strict control over Syria Province against Syrian opponents. Djemal's forces also fought against the Arab nationalists andSyrian nationalists from 1916 onwards.[17] Ottoman authorities occupied the French consulates in Beirut and Damascus and confiscated French secret documents that revealed evidence about the activities and names of the Arab insurgents. Djemal used the information from these documents as well as from others belonging to theDecentralization Party. He believed that insurgency under French control was the main reason for his military failings. With the documents he gathered, Djemal moved against the insurgent forces which were led by Arab political and cultural leaders. This was followed by the military trials of the insurgents known asÂliye Divan-ı Harb-i Örfisi in which they were punished.
Gaza's head of garrison, Major Tiller, had 7 infantry battalions, a cavalry squadron, and some camel troops. The British under ColonelChetwode already had 2,000 troops in front of the city. Reluctantly, Djemal marched with the 33rd Division to relieve Gaza. Kressenstein was delighted to have repelled the British assault and wanted to mobilise aggressively by driving into Shellal,Wadi Ghazze, andKhan Yunis, but Djemal absolutely forbade it. The British had a whole division in retreat, so Djemal apprehended that a two-battalion sortie would have been annihilated.[18] One of Djemal's associates in Iraq was engineer ColonelHeinrich August Meissner who had built both theHejaz andBaghdad railways and who was employed on an ambitious project to construct a railway to the Suez canal at Bir Gifgafa. By October 1915, the Central Powers had already built 100 miles of track as far as the oasis ofBeersheba. Djemal insisted that an extended railway would be needed to attack British Egypt.
Djemal was completely committed to theTurko-German military machine, which he saw as necessary to resist the new wave of offensives launched by the British High Command.[19] Mustafa Kemal Pasha and Djemal Pasha became increasingly skeptical of German capabilities, but Djemal was not yet prepared to openly back the German allies. He insisted on the possibility of a planned allied assault behind theYıldırım Army, as theSeventh Army gathered at theTurco-German Aleppo Conference.[20] In the shake-up that followed, Djemal was demoted to a command of theFourth Army under GeneralErich von Falkenhayn. They now adopted a plan similar to the Kress Plan for Gaza and sent the Yıldırım Army to Baghdad. It was not until October 1917 that the Seventh Army could march south to face the growing threat fromEdmund Allenby, hampered by the limitations of the single-gauge railway, which was built away from the coastline to avoid Royal Navy salvos. During this time, Djemal presided over the1917 Jaffa deportation in which he was accused of allowing the Jewish population ofJaffa to be robbed, assaulted, starved and killed.[21]
On 7 November, theBritish captured Gaza, but Djemal had long since been forced to evacuate. Although chased, he managed to retreat at speed.[22] In December, the Turks were driven out of Jaffa, Djemal's army still in retreat, and the city fell without a fight. Falkenhayn had ordered an evacuation on 14th, and the British had begun to enter the same day.[23] But now the Turkish Eighth formed a much stronger line of entrenchment; Djemal's organized defence of Gaza had been amply anticipated by the British. His army delayed them further at the vital Junction railway station. But the British were probably unaware of its importance.
The fighting in the hills was all but over by 1 December. On 6 December, Djemal Pasha was in Beirut to make a speech publicizing the allied deal to 'carve up' Syria-Palestine into partitioned spheres of influence in theSykes-Picot agreement.[24][page needed][25] At the end of 1917, Djemal ruled from his post in Damascus as a near-independent ruler of his portion of the Empire. On 9 April and then 19 April 1918, Djemal ordered the evacuation of civilians from Jaffa and Jerusalem. The Germans were furious and rescinded the order, revealing the chaos in the Ottoman Empire. Djemal's ambiguous attitude to the subject populations of the Ottoman Empire proved beneficial to the British colonial authorities. The Turkish line was solidified in readiness for the final onslaught at Nebi Samwell andNahr-el-Auja. To the south of Nebi Samwell were the defences ofBeit Iksa; the Heart and Liver Redoubts before Lifa; andDeir Yassin, two systems behindAin Karim. In all, there were 4 miles of fortifications.[26] Djemal Pasha was recalled to Istanbul in June 1918. He was sent back to the southern Syrian provinces in August 1918 to defend the Ottoman lines there however the Ottoman Army was forced to retreat and in an act of revenge, Djemal Pasha's forces committed theTafas massacre against the local Arab population for allying with the advancing British forces. After the defeat of Ottoman forces inWorld War I, he once again returned to Istanbul.
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Djemal's role in theArmenian genocide has been contested by historians. His policies allowed some Armenians to survive in the territories under his control. German historianWolfgang Gust states, "while preserving the lives of perhaps 150,000 Armenians—in terrible conditions—he helped kill another 150,000". In December 1915, he offered to the Entente powers that he would march to Constantinople, overthrow the CUP government, and end the genocide in exchange for the guarantee of the Ottoman Empire's territorial integrity in its pre-World War I borders.[27] HistorianÜmit Kurt argues that "The most fundamental difference between Cemal and the other two leaders [Talat and Enver] wasthe methods he wanted to employ to decrease the number of Armenians to a level that would no longer pose a threat to the Ottoman state." Instead of killing Armenians, he favored their forced conversion and assimilation to neutralize the perceived Armenian threat. Kurt furthermore argues: "Saving the lives of some fortunate Armenians does not exempt Cemal from the label ‘génocidaire’, for he was fully committed to the disappearance of Armenians from Ottoman soil."[28]
In the CUP's penultimate congress held in 1917, Djemal was elected to the Board of Central Administration.
With the defeat of the empire in October 1918 and the resignation ofTalaat Pasha's cabinet on 2 November 1918, Djemal fled[29] with seven other leaders of the CUP to Germany, and thenSwitzerland.
A military court in Turkey accused Djemal of massacringArab subjects of the Ottoman Empire and sentenced him to deathin absentia. Later in 1920, Djemal went to Central Asia, where he worked as amilitary advisor, charged with modernising theAfghan Royal Army.[30]
Due to the success of theBolshevik Revolution, Djemal traveled toTiflis to act as a military liaison officer to negotiate over Afghanistan with theCommunist Party of the Soviet Union. He also negotiated for the Soviets to send support to Mustafa Kemal Pasha in hisTurkish War of Independence. Together with his secretary, Djemal was assassinated on 21 July 1922 byArmenian Revolutionary Federation members Stepan Dzaghigian, Artashes Gevorgyan, and Petros Ter Poghosyan, as part ofOperation Nemesis, a global plan by Armenians to track down and assassinate the surviving chief perpetrators of the Armenian genocide.[31] Djemal's remains were brought toErzurum and buried there.[32]
Djemal Pasha married twice.[33] His first wife was a daughter of Bekir Pasha, and they married on 19 February 1897.[33] She died in childbirth.[33] He married Seniha Hanım inSerres on 2 June 1899, and later they settled inThessaloniki.[34] They had five children, a daughter and four sons.[35] His grandson,Hasan Cemal, is a well-known columnist, journalist and writer in Turkey.[36]
Djemal Pasha is known asJamal Basha as-Saffah (Arabic:جمال باشا السفاح,lit. 'Djemal Pasha the Bloodthirsty') in Lebanon and Syria for his treatment of the local population during WWI. Djemal Pasha named a street in Damascus after himself, but the name was later changed to "al-Nasr Street".
In Syria and Lebanon, 6 May isMartyrs' Day, a national holiday that commemorates the execution of seven Syrians in Damascus and 14 in Beirut by Djemal Pasha for their collaboration with the British and French at the height of WWI. The French and British had promised arms and financing for some Syrians and Lebanese actors with the ultimate independence and statehood status, provided they revolt and sabotage the Ottoman war effort. The squares in which the executions occurredin Damascus andin Beirut were renamed "Martyrs' Square" (Arabic:ساحة الشهداء).
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