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THE NATIONAL WAR
Emerging
defeated from the First World War, the Ottomans were forced to sign an
armistice embracing the most onerous conditions, whereby the Anatolian
Peninsula, that had been the Turkish homeland for a thousand years, was
divided up and subjected to imperialistic designs.
The
economy was a shambles, and from every standpoint the Ottoman society was
in ruins and in collapse. Seemingly there was no hope. The views expressed
at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 were that Turkey would be divided
up. But one thing had been forgotten, and that was that the Turks had
founded one of the world's most powerful states with Anatolia at its core.
Another fact was that the Turks had an ancient and deeply rooted past.
These
facts, plus the fact that a people who had lived for centuries on this
soil could not be dissolved, had to be made known to the world. To this
end associations were founded in various parts of the country, and
patriotic citizens did their best to organize. But meanwhile in the Aegean
region the Greek Army was advancing swiftly, equipped by Great Britain
with the most modern weapons of the day, the French were rapidly occupying
in southeastern Anatolia and in the east the Army of the Armenian Republic
was advancing. The Ottoman government, implementing the terms of the
armistice, was against any form of resistance on the grounds that it would
"anger" the enemies. What was to be done?
Mustafa
Kemal Pasha knew what had to be done. His thinking ran along these lines.
"The Ottoman Empire, which lasted more than six hundred years, has come to
the end of its natural lifespan. It is dead, and the dead cannot be
revived. The Ottoman governments have no power or decisiveness. Therefore
the Turkish nation must decide its own fate and map its own future. The
only path to this goal is the founding of a new state based on the
sovereignty of the nation. If the nation unbinds the knots that have held
it for centuries, and establishes unity, it can save the homeland."
It soon
became apparent just how correct this strategy was. On his return from the
front to Istanbul, Mustafa Kemal Pasha realized the hopelessness of the
situation, and that the time had come to put into action the plans he had
nourished since his youth. He decided to go into Anatolia and pursue the
struggle from there. In the early months of 1919 Anatolia was a hotbed of
troubles, and Mustafa Kemal requested that the government assign him to go
and deal with them. This request was accepted, and he left Istanbul with
this understanding. On May 19, 1919 he set foot in Samsun. Mustafa Kemal
Pasha was now in Anatolia, to unite it and reconcile antagonistic
factions.
His
first step would be to bring about the congresses he had planned, one by
one. An association known as the Legal Society for the Defense of Anatolia
and Rumelia wanted the Ottoman Parliament to convene and establish peace
conditions, but in this matter
Mustafa Kemal
was not hopeful. Nevertheless the Parliament, in the National Oath of
January 28,1920, asked for an honorable peace in which all borders were
removed that threatened the territorial integrity of Turkey. Only if this
condition were met could peace talks be held.
The
Entente Powers, who had thought the Eastern Question was resolved, were
greatly disturbed by this action taken under the influence of the
Anatolian National Movement, and in their anger occupied Istanbul on March
16,1920. Thus for the first time in 467 years the city no longer had the
status of Ottoman capital.
Not
long before this, on December 27, 1919, Ankara had been made the center of
national resistance, and it was now time to found a National Parliament.
On April 23,1920, a National Assembly deriving its authority from the
nation held its opening session, and by an unanimous vote Mustafa Kemal
was chosen to preside.
In
order to carry out their project of dividing Anatolia, the Entente Powers
wished to extinguish the movement, which in their view was not serious.
They therefore dictated the final peace of the First World War, the Peace
of Sevres (August 10,1920), which the Ottoman government was forced to
sign. Under the terms of this peace, all of eastern Thrace, plus Izmir and
the Aegean region, were ceded to Greece. The straits were to be managed
jointly, without the participation of the Turks. In addition, a large part
of the country's eastern territory was ceded to Armenia, which had been
established in Russia. Southern Anatolia was to be settled by French,
Italian and British populations, so that only a small Ottoman State was
left in Anatolia.
This
peace roused the patriotic fervor of the Turks even more, and the youthful
army of the new state began to win its first victories. The Armenian army,
which had occupied Eastern Anatolia at the end of World War I, was
expelled from these territories and signed a peace at Gümrü on December 3,
1920, while the progress of the Greeks, who had set their sights on
Ankara, was brought to a halt. The first diplomatic contacts with the new
Turkish state now began to be made, as the Soviet Union, impressed by the
victories we have cited, signed an aid agreement at Moscow on March
16,1921. Meanwhile the French advance in the southeast was put to a
definitive halt by the brave Turkish militia.
These
developments led Greece, at the instigation of Great Britain, to prepare a
major new offensive, and they advanced as far as the Sakarya River near
Ankara. Meanwhile the National Assembly was temporarily relieving Mustafa
Kemal of his powers so that he could devote his attentions to the war as
Commander in Chief. The Greeks renewed their offensive on August 23,1921,
and were repulsed on September 13 after 22 days and nights of fighting in
which no quarter was given. With this victory, a thousand years of the
Turkish presence in Anatolia were confirmed.
After
this victory won with the meagerest of means, the French signed a peace
with Ankara on October 20,1921, while the Italians also evacuated from the
territory they had occupied. This left the Greeks and British alone. The
following year, in September, 1922, the Greeks were expelled from Anatolia
as the result of a grand Turkish offensive.
The
British were determined to remain in eastern Thrace and the straits at all
costs, but thanks to the wise policies of the Turkish government they
found themselves isolated. They were thus compelled to sign an armistice,
at
Mudanya on October
11,1922. There was all the difference in the world between this armistice
and that of Mudros signed some four years previously.
After
his victory at the Battle of the Sakarya,
Mustafa
Kemal
was given the rank
of Marshal by the National Assembly and in addition was awarded the title
of
Gazi. This
title is reserved by the Islamic world for only its greatest heroes.
Mustafa Kemal
wanted to sign a
peace which would confirm the independence and freedom from conditions of
the new Turkish state, while the Allies, preparing to meet in Lausanne,
aimed for an agreement which would take the Treaty of Sevres as its model,
even though the National Assembly did not recognize this treaty. In order
to divide the Turks at the conference, the Entente Powers had also invited
the Istanbul government. This was taken as an outrage by the National
Assembly, which had no choice but to legally dissolve the Ottoman
Sultanate. This they did on November 1, 1922. Thus the Ottoman Sultanate,
which had already expired in fact, legally too became a thing of the past.
Henceforward there was only one government in Turkey, that founded by the
National Assembly.
The
Turkish state was represented at Lausanne by a national hero, Ismet Pasha
(Inönü). The Turkish delegation stood alone, for England, France and their
allies had formed a common front in order to preserve their interests.
There was no one to back Turkey's cause, so that Ismet Inönü and the rest
of the delegation were compelled to wage a diplomatic battle like that of
the Sakarya. The peace signed at Lausanne on July 24,1923, put an end to
the centuries-old Eastern Question, and gave the new Turkish State
complete independence. The forces of occupation in Istanbul, which had
arrived on November 13, 1918, departed on October 2, 1923, saluting the
Turkish flag as they left.
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