The Wall Street Journal published a feature by L. Gordon Crovitz about the U.S. ambassador Henry Morgenthau’s pro-Armenian activities in the Ottoman Empire and during the Genocide that claimed the lives of as many as 1,5 Armenians. The ambassador’s testimonies remain the leading source of information about what happened in 1915. The slightly abridged version of the article reads:
“Turkey’s massacre of its Armenian citizens remains controversial on its centennial, with Ankara doing its best to whitewash what happened. That’s impossible thanks to a U.S. diplomat who, long before social media and online video, called his fellow Americans’ attention to the atrocities.
In 1915 Henry Morgenthau Sr. was U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire. He witnessed the first targeted arrests and killings of hundreds of leading Armenians in Istanbul. He gathered reports of forced deportations of Armenians from their homes in eastern Turkey, which few survived. His State Department cables and candid discussions with Turkish officials became a 1918 book, “Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story,” which remains the leading source of information about what happened.
Morgenthau became U.S. ambassador in 1913 and served until 1916, when the U.S. was still neutral in World War I. He established close communications with leading Turkish officials. During the deportations, he collected daily reports from Western missionaries and consular officers across Turkey about the fate of Christian Armenians.
The marches of Armenians from their homes “represented a new method of massacre,” Morgenthau reported—a “campaign of race extermination”: “When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations, they were merely giving the death warrant to a whole race; they understood this well, and, in their conversations with me, they made no particular attempt to conceal the fact.”
The only modern communication tool Morgenthau had was a telephone, one of the few in Istanbul. He used it to try to persuade the Turkish authorities to stop the atrocities. They were “annoyed” by his pestering.
Interior Minister Talaat Pasha asked him: “Why are you so interested in the Armenians anyway? You are a Jew; these people are Christians. . . . Why can’t you let us do with these Christians as we please?”
Morgenthau replied: “I am not here as a Jew, but as American ambassador. My country contains something like 97 million Christians and something less than three million Jews. So, at least in my ambassadorial capacity, I am 97% Christian. But after all, that is not the point. I do not appeal to you in the name of any race or religion, but merely as a human being.”