ARMENIA: NAZISM IS WELCOME HERE - PART III
http://regionplus.az/
Oleg KUZNETSOV, Moscow
Nzhdeh and his "Racists" in the service of
the Third Reich intelligence
The Soviet intelligence and counter-intelligence
services have long kept an eye on Garegin Nzhdeh considering him an ideological
opponent of the USSR rather than an accomplice of intelligence services or
other institutions of the Third Reich, which were later recognised as criminal
by the International Military Tribunal (IMT) held in Nuremberg, Germany. His
name has never been mentioned in the directives of the Main Directorate of
Counter-intelligence (SMERSH) regarding the detection of foreign intelligence
or counter-intelligence agents except once in a special SMERSH directive no.
29200 dated April 14, 1945 ordering the search of Dashnaks in the East European
countries. It was this document that contributed to the arrest of Nzhdeh in
Bulgaria on October 12, 1944. On April 24, 1948, at a special meeting of the
USSR Ministry of State Security, Nzhdeh was sentenced to 25 years for
counter-revolutionary activities including the organisation of anti-Soviet
uprising in February-April 1921 in Zangezur, proclamation of the Republic of
Mountainous Armenia and the massacres of communists during this uprising (much
to the outrage of Nzhdeh, who knew that the accomplices were pardoned in 1921).
At the same time, the verdict did not mention anything
about his collaboration with the Nazi intelligence services against the Soviet
Union. This information appeared six months later, when the identity of Peter
Kamsarakan (see: Part II, R+) was established, and he provided evidence about
his service at the VI Department of the Reich Main Security Office (RSHA) and
the German military intelligence service (Abwehr). By that time, Kamsarakan had
been held captive in the USSR as Peter Karer, a Wehrmacht corporal and a
security officer of the German Embassy in Romania.
At least twice, on November
18, 1949 and January 10, 1949, the handwritten testimony of Peter Kamsarakan
was reprinted and sent to Joseph Stalin for personal review. More than half of
his 28-pages second testimony of typewritten text described the collaboration
of Nzhdeh with the VI Department of RSHA responsible for foreign intelligence
services (Ausland-SD). This second testimony is also available at the State
Archives of the Russian Federation (GARF) as part of the correspondence held
between the Secretariat of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs and Stalin in
January-May 1949. It is an extension of the first testimony providing the
details of activities of both Kamsarakan and those Armenian nationalists whom
he recruited to serve the intelligence services of the Third Reich.
Kamsarakan's role in this case was fundamental because he was personally
responsible for identifying eligible candidates, holding initial talks with
them and remunerating the most successful agents and undercover groups. Since
he was responsible for all the "technical" aspects of ensuring
collaboration of the Dashnaks and other Armenian nationalists with the special
services of the Nazi Germany, his evidence was extremely important and is of
exceptional historical value today.
Kamsarakan's confessions can still be found as part of
the confidential cases of the NKVD stored at the GARF. Front pages of
corresponding archive records bear codes and special notes, although the
academic community has been aware of their existence and content since at least
2010. All electronic catalogues of GARF contain redirection links to these
documents, which means their availability to researchers. Nevertheless, the
Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs is insisting that the country's leadership
does not have sufficient evidence of Nzhdeh’s connections with the Nazis,
implying that the glorification of Nzhdeh's personality and teachings does not
violate the principles of international law and is an "internal
affair" of Armenia, albeit this statement fundamentally contradicts the
historical reality. In fact, it is not difficult to verify this, if the Russian
political leadership bothers looking into its own archives.
Kamsarakan's testimonies contain fragments indicating
even a closer-than-official type of relations between Nzhdeh and Nazis.
Therefore, we excluded such quotes from the following text while trying not to
disturb the plot and logic of the narrative. So, let's listen to Peter
Kamsarakan:
“Until leaving the SD (Nazi
security service, R+) in early 1942, I had not worked directly with the famous
Dashnak general Ter-Harutyunian, also known as Nzhdeh, and his collegues. But I
had known Nzhdeh personally since 1937, when I first met him in Sofia while
being there for private affairs. We have met quite often afterwards. He has not
been involved in intelligence work because the VI Department of the SD had
agreed with the Dashnak representatives to recognise the monopoly of the
Dashnak Party over the cooperation between the SD and Armenian émigrés.
Thanks to this agreement,
Nzhdeh, who was absolutely pro-German, and his supporters have been used on a
very limited scale until 1942, when I moved to the Abwehr. Nevertheless, German
intelligence was interested in Nzhdeh as in the leader of an Armenian émigré
organisation, the Racists, which he represented in the U.S. in 1935, and which
had supporters in a number of countries. <…>
He rejected the Communist
system and any chance for cooperation with it as much as he rejected any
possibility of a peaceful resolution of the Armenian question with Turkey. On
the other hand, he used to tell me about his great admiration for Adolf Hitler.
He highly respected and honoured Germany, both ancient and present, expecting
that it would redivide the world and would resolve the Armenian question. He
hoped that Nazi Germany would help creating Armenia and both countries would be
closely linked to each other.
Nzhdeh actively used his
pro-fascist views among the youth. He said that he had a large group of
adherents, Armenian nationalists, in Bulgaria. Even supporters of the Dashnak
Party in Bulgaria and other countries respected him despite his expulsion from
the party.
In early March 1940, after
receiving instructions from the representative of the VI Department of the SD
in Vienna, Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Höttl, I met with Nzhdeh in Sofia. My task
was to contact prominent political figures of the Armenian émigré community and
to convince them of cooperation with Nazi Germany. I told Nzhdeh openly about
my intention. In principle, he agreed to work with Germans but advised me to
talk to one of his politically-savvy friends from the Dashnak Party, Araratian,
who lived in Bucharest. At that time, I also met with one of his closest
associates, Dr. Hayk Assaturian, the editor of Armenian newspaper Razmig, which
was published by racists in Sofia. Assaturian was also a big fan of the fascist
Germany. Nzhdeh gave me a letter of recommendation for Sarkis Araratian, who
helped to get the members of the Dashnak Party collaborate with the Germans.
When Nzhdeh learned about the
contacts between the Germans and the Dashnaks without his participation, to
which he had contributed with his letter of recommendation to Araratian, he
became extremely angry and used to reproach me during our subsequent meetings.
In Plovdiv, Burgas, Varna, and
Ruse, Nzhdeh introduced us to his people, young Armenians, who were ready to do
anything under his command. Nzhdeh mainly called them by first names being
reluctant to call their last names. I remember only a few of them: in Varna, he
had only Seto Jamalian, a Russian-speaking schoolteacher who headed a large
group of young Armenian racists. He was considered suitable to act as the
eldest of Armenians selected to be sent to the Eastern Front.
... SD representatives in
Sofia, Koob or Obersturmführer Vollmann, who was working there as an employee
of the German embassy, loaded these people onto a German steamboat (illegally,
without visas and passports) heading to Germany. I think it was at the Vidin
Port. Later, they were accommodated in a small farm near Erkner, not far from
Berlin, to serve under the command of two training officers. In autumn 1942,
Nzhdeh himself took Dr. Hayk Assaturian as an interpreter and left for Berlin
to intensify cooperation with Germans. He was afraid that Dro could outride him
when the German troops occupy the Caucasus.
In January 1943, Nzhdeh was in
Berlin, while his ten people from Bulgaria continued to live in the farm near
Erkner. Nzhdeh used to visit them and watch them prepare for the Eastern Front.
In February 1943, he quarrelled with Jamalian and managed to withdraw him from
the group thanks to Hengelgaupt from the VI Department. SD later helped Seto
Jamalian be employed at one of the factories in Hamburg. Shortly after my
return to the SD, Hengelgaupt ordered the dispatch of these ten people to the
Crimea because the Germans hoped to launch an offensive in the Caucasus and to
use them for intelligence work... However, in autumn 1943, they were sent back
to Germany because the military situation had worsened making the use of these
people in Armenia impossible. At the insistence of Nzhdeh, they all returned to
Bulgaria, and Nzhdeh left for Sofia.
Since Turkey suspended its
diplomatic relations with Germany, and Bulgaria plunged into turmoil because of
the deteriorated situation on the Eastern Front, in July 1944, Höttl ordered me
to meet with Nzhdeh in Sofia to strengthen our intelligence in Bulgaria and in
the Middle East. A research officer from Section E responsible for Bulgaria,
Hauptsturmführer Pratsch, who no longer trusted his Bulgarian informers, was
particularly interested in the outcome of our meeting.
I was instructed to get
Nzhdeh’s consent to let his people collect intelligence data in Bulgaria. I was
also instructed to contact in Sofia with a representative of the Section E
under the VI Department of the SD, Hauptsturmführer Koob, to solve all the
issues concerning the organisation of work with Nzhdeh…
... We left with Koob to
Nzhdeh, to whom I introduced Koob under the name Kolberg. After Nzhdeh and Koob
agreed to work together, Koob asked him about funds that would be needed to
accomplish these tasks. We agreed that I would pay the people responsible for
information supply at my own discretion. Koob said that he was ready to pay a
hundred thousand levs each month for these purposes. After that, Nzhdeh and I
went to his people.
Nzhdeh and I instructed these
people to report on any actions or instructions of Bulgarians against the
Germans, activities of Bulgarian communists, as well as the connections and
activities of the Turks, especially the Turkish consuls.
In August 1944, I left Vienna
for Budapest to meet with Höttl. He instructed me to meet with Nzhdeh in Sofia
and to find more people for intelligence. My last meeting with Nzhdeh was
around August 21. With no practical results, I left for Bucharest, where I was
captured on August 25, 1944 along with the entire staff of the German embassy
in Romania.
Although the German
intelligence preferred Dashnaks instead of cooperation with Nzhdeh and his
supporters, Nzhdeh was one of their loyal agents, who had made all his
potential available for the Nazi Germany.”
As follows from Kamsarakan's
testimony, his recruit, Nzhdeh, collaborated with two different sections of the
SD: VI C (responsible for political intelligence in the USSR, Central and
Eastern Asia, and the Far East) and VI E (responsible for the study of
attitudes in hostile states). Incidentally, his collaboration with Section VI C
was based purely on ideological reasons. In other words, he did this work practically free of
charge compensated only for the incurred expenses, whereas his work for Section
VI E was a paid job. It seems that Nzhdeh's hatred for the USSR, which expelled
Dashnaks from Armenia, and for anything more or less associated with Russia was
so great and irrational that he was ready to fight for free. Nevertheless, he
agreed to be a Nazi spy in Bulgaria, which provided him with a shelter in
difficult times, only for money.
Remarkably, Peter Kamsarakan
gave his second testimony only after one of the most senior Soviet political
leaders has acquainted with the first, who then demanded additional information
about cooperation with the German intelligence agencies during World War II.
This request concerned not the Dashnak Party, about which the Soviet leaders
and intelligence services knew almost everything, but the collaboration between
the Hitlerites and a part of the Armenian diaspora that was not Dashnak. Given
that the subsequent testimonies of Kamsarakan are a part of the correspondence
between the Secretariat of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs and J. Stalin,
we can fairly assume that the latter was personally interested in information
about the collaboration of Nzhdeh with Nazis.
I think such a close attention
of the Soviet leader to Kamsarakan can be explained only by the Soviet Union's
territorial claims to Turkey at that time. USSR was preparing to demand the
return of the territories in the South Caucasus (Kars, Artvin and Ardahan)
ceded during the First World War. For this purpose, the repatriation of Soviet
Armenians had been declared and the deportation of Azerbaijanis from the
Armenian SSR had begun in order to liberate this territory for temporary
relocation of Armenians. Therefore,
the top political leadership of the Soviet Union was extremely interested in
information about its other opponents, besides the Dashnaks, inside the
Armenian diaspora. It was necessary to take adequate and proportionate
preventive measures to neutralise them by the state security forces, which
required the most complete and accurate information on this issue.
Advocates of Nzhdeh and his
theories actively disseminate information that this Nazi henchman has
repeatedly offered his services and connections in the Armenian diaspora to the
top Soviet political leadership and intelligence services to fight against
Turkey. Stalin, Beria, Molotov and others have indeed discussed this proposal,
which also explains their interest in the past of Nzhdeh during the World War
II.
However, the proposal was rejected, for Nzhdeh's infamous background overpowered any benefits from cooperation with him. In fact, none of the Stalinist people's commissars was an angel; each of them had a certain degree of pragmatism that triumphed over ethics and humanism. However, Garegin Nzhdeh's associations with the Nazis was a taboo so strong that they could not defy despite lack of political principles. Otherwise, the totalitarian communist regime would have faced the Tseghakron theory of Nzhdeh, which was even more totalitarian in spirit and practice; an idea that the communist system could not implement fearing of destruction. That is why Nzhdeh ended his days in the Vladimir prison of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs, despite his intention to serve the Bolsheviks, a job he had previously did for the Nazis.
However, the proposal was rejected, for Nzhdeh's infamous background overpowered any benefits from cooperation with him. In fact, none of the Stalinist people's commissars was an angel; each of them had a certain degree of pragmatism that triumphed over ethics and humanism. However, Garegin Nzhdeh's associations with the Nazis was a taboo so strong that they could not defy despite lack of political principles. Otherwise, the totalitarian communist regime would have faced the Tseghakron theory of Nzhdeh, which was even more totalitarian in spirit and practice; an idea that the communist system could not implement fearing of destruction. That is why Nzhdeh ended his days in the Vladimir prison of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs, despite his intention to serve the Bolsheviks, a job he had previously did for the Nazis.
Fifty years ago, the top
Soviet political leaders knew perfectly well that Garegin Ter-Harutyunian, also
known as Nzhdeh or the Guest Worker was not just a Nazi supporter but also an
interpreter, populariser and promoter of the Nazi ideas and racial theory for
Armenians. It is therefore surprising that the political elite of modern Russia
considers the erection of Nzhdeh's monument in Yerevan an “internal matter” of
Armenia. This is just a
new form of glorification of Nazism and racism, which is absolutely
incompatible with the provisions of the resolution adopted by the UN General
Assembly on December 18, 2013 'Combating glorification of Nazism and other
practices that contribute to fueling contemporary forms of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance' (A/RES/68/150).
Комментарии: