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PRESIDENT WILSON
TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME COUNCIL OF THE ALLIED POWERS
MR. PRESIDENT:
By action of the Supreme Council
taken on April 26th of this year an invitation was tendered to
me to arbitrate the question of the boundaries between Turkey
and the new state of Armenia. Representatives of the powers
signatory on August 10th of this year to the Treaty of Sevres
have acquiesced in conferring this honor upon me and have
signified their intention of accepting the frontiers which are
to be determined by my decision, as well as any stipulation
which I may prescribe as to access for Armenia to the sea and
any arrangement for the demilitarization of Turkish territory
lying along the frontier thus established. According to the
terms of the arbitral reference set forth in part III, Section
6, Article 89, of the Treaty of Sevres, the scope of the
arbitral competence assigned to me is clearly limited to the
determination of the frontiers of Turkey and Armenia in the
Vilayets of Erzernm, Trebizond, Van and Bitlis. With full
consciousness of the responsibility placed upon me by your
request, I have approached this difficult task with eagerness to
serve the best interests of the Armenian people as well as the
remaining in habitants, of whatever race or religious belief
they may be, in this stricken country, attempting to exercise
also the strictest possible justice toward the populations,
whether Turkish, Kurdish, Greek or Armenian, living in the
adjacent areas.
In approaching this problem it
was obvious that the existing ethnic and religions distribution
of the population in the four vilayets could not, as in other
parts of the world, be regarded as the guiding element of the
decision. The ethnic consideration, in the case of a population
originally so complexly intermingled, is further beclouded by
the terrible results of the massacres and deportations of the
Armenians and Greeks, and by the dreadful losses also suffered
by the Moslem inhabitants through refugee movements and the
scourge of typhus and other diseases. The limitation of the
arbitral assignment to the four vilayets named in Article 89 of
the Treaty made it seem a duty and an obligation that as large
an area within these vilayets be granted to the Armenian state
as could be done, while meeting the basic requirements of an
adequate natural frontier and of geographic and economic unity
for the new state. It was essential to keep in mind that the new
state of Armenia, including as it will a large section of the
former Armenian provinces of Tran Caucasian Russia, will at the
outset have a population about equally divided between Moslem
and Christian elements and of diverse racial and tribal
relationship. The citizenship of the Armenian Republic will, by
the tests of language and religion, be composed of Turks, Kurds,
Greeks, Kizilbashis, Lazes and others, as well as Armenians. The
conflicting territorial desires of Armenians, Turks, Kurds and
Greeks along the boundaries assigned to my arbitral decision
could not always be harmonized. In such cases it was my belief
that consideration of healthy economic life for the future state
of Armenia should be decisive. where, however, the requirements
of a correct geographic boundary permitted, all mountain and
valley districts along the border which were predominantly
Kurdish or Turkish have been left to Turkey rather than assigned
to Armenia, unless trade relations with definite market towns
threw them necessarily into the Armenian state. Wherever
information upon tribal relations and seasonal migrations was
obtainable, the attempt was made to respect the integrity of
tribal groupings and nomad pastoral movements.
From the Persian border southwest
of the town of Kotur the boundary line of Armenia is determined
by a rugged natural barrier of great height, extending south of
Lake Van and lying southwest of the Armenian cities of Bitlis
and Mush. This boundary line leaves as a part of the Turkish
state the entire Saudjak of Hakkiari, or about one-half of the
Vilayet of Van, and almost the entire Sandjak of Sairt. The
sound physiographic reason which seemed to justify this decision
was further strengthened by the ethnographic consideration that
Hakkiari and Said are predominantly Kurdish in population and
economic relations. It did not seem to the best interest of the
Armenian state to include in it the upper valley of the Great
Zab River, largely Kurdish and Nestorian Christian in population
and an essential element of the great Tigris river irrigation
system of Turkish Kurdistan and Mesopotamia. The control of
these headwaters should be kept, wherever possible, within the
domain of the two interested states, Turkey and Mesopotamia. For
these reasons the Armenian claim upon the upper valley of tile
Great Zab could not be satisfied.
The boundary upon the west from
Bitlis and Mush northward to the vicinity of Erzingan lies well
within Bitlis and Erzerum vilayets. It follows a natural
geographic barrier, which furnishes Armenia with per fect
security and leaves to the Turkish state an area which is
strongly Kurdish. Armenian villages and village nuclei in this
section, such as Kighi and Temran, necessarily remain Turkish
because of the strong commercial and church ties which connect
them with Kliarput rather (than?) with any Armenian market and
religious centers which lie within Bitlis or Erzermn vilayets.
This decision seemed an unavoidable consequence of the inclusion
of the city and district of Kharput in the Turkish state as
determined by Article 27 11(4) and Article 89 of the Treaty of
Sevres.
From the northern border of the
Dersim the nature and the direction of the frontier decision was
primarily dependent upon the vital question of supplying an
adequate access to the sea for the state of Armenia. Upon the
correct solution of this problem depends, in my judgment, the
future economic well-being of the entire population, Turkish,
Kurdish, Greek, Armenian, or Yezidi, in those portions of the
vilayets of Erzerum, Bitlis and Van which lie within the state
of Armenia. I was not unmindful of the desire of the Pontie
Greeks, submitted to me in a memorandum similar, no doubt, in
argument and content to that presented to the Supreme Council
last March at its London Conference, that the unity of the
coastal area of the Black sea inhabited by them be preserved and
that arrangement be made for an autonomous administration for
the region stretching from Riza to a point west of Sinope. The
arbitral jurisdiction assigned to me by Article 89 of the Treaty
of Sevres does not in. elude the possibility of decision or
recommendation by me upon the question of their desire for
independence, or failing that, for autonomy. Nor does it include
the right to deal with the littoral of the independent Sandjak
of Djanik or of the Vilayet of Kastamuni into which extends the
region of the unity and autonomy desired by the Pontic Greeks.
Three possible courses lay open
to me: to so delimit the boundary that the whole of Trebizond
Vilayet would lie within Turkey, to grant it in its entirety to
Armenia, or to grant a part of it to Armenia and leave the
remainder to Turkey. The majority of the population of Trebizond
Vilayet is incontestably Moslem and the Armenian element,
according to all pre-war estimates, was undeniably inferior
numerically to the Greek portion of the Christian minority.
Against a decision so clearly indicated on ethnographic grounds
weighed heavily the future of Armenia. I could only regard the
question in the light of the needs of a new political entity,
Armenia, with mingled Moslem and Christian populations, rather
than as a question of the future of the Armenians alone. It has
been and is now increasingly my conviction that the arrangements
providing for Armenia's access to the sea must be such as to
offer every possibility for the development of this state as one
capable of reassuming and maintaining that useful role in the
commerce of the world which its geographic position, athwart a
great historic trade route, assigned to it in the past The
civilization and the happiness of its mingled population will
largely depend upon the building of railways and the increased
accessibility of the hinterland of the three vilayets to
European trade and cultural influences.
Eastward from the port of
Trebizond along die coast of Lazistan no adequate harbor
facilities are to be found and the rugged character of the
Pontic range separating Lazistan Sandjak from the Vilayet of
Erzerum is such as to isolate the hinterland from the coast so
far as practicable railway construction is concerned. The
existing caravan route from Persia across the plains of Hayazid
and Erzcrum, which passes through the towns of Baiburt and
Gumush-khana and debouches upon the Black Sea at Trebizond, has
behind it a long record of persistent usefulness.
These were the considerations
which have forced me to revert to my original conviction that
the town and harbor of Trebizond must become an integral part of
Armenia. Because of the still greater adaptability of the route
of the Karshut valley, ending at the town of Tireboli, for
successful railway construction and operation I have deemed also
essential to include this valley in Armenia, with enough
territory lying west of it to insure its adequate protection. I
am not unaware that the leaders of the Armenian delegations have
expressed their willingness to renounce claim upon that portion
of Trebizond Vilayet lying west of Surmena. Commendable as is
their desire to avoid the assumption of authorship over a
territory so predominantly Moslem, I am confident that, in
acquiescing in their eagerness to do justice to the Turks and
Greeks in Trebizond I should be doing an irreparable injury to
the future of the land of Armenia and its entire population, of
which they will be a part.
It was upon such a basis, Mr.
President, that the boundaries were so drawn as to follow
mountain ridges west of the city of Erzingan to the Pontic range
and thence to the Black Sea, in such a way as to include in
Armenia the indentation called Zephyr Bey. The decision to ]eave
to Turkey the harbor towns and hinterland of Kerasun and Ordu in
Trebizond Sandjak was dictated by the fact that the population
of this region is strongly Moslem and Turkish and that these
towns are the out lets for the easternmost sections of the
Turkish vilayet of Sivas. The parts of Erzeium and Trebizond
Vilayets which, by reason of this delimitation, remain Turkish
rather than become Armenian comprise approximately 12,120 square
kilometers.
In the matter of demilitarization
of Turkish territory adjacent to the Armenian border as it has
been broadly described above, it seemed both impracticable and
unnecessary to establish a demilitarized zone which would
require elaborate prescriptions and complex agencies for their
execution. Fortunately, Article 177 of the Treaty of Sevres
prescribes the disarming of all existing forts throughout
Turkey. Articles 159 and 196-200 provide in addition agencies
entirely adequate to meet all the dangers of disorder which may
arise along the borders, the former by the requirement that a
proportion of the officers of the gendarmerie shall be supplied
by the various Allied or neutral Powers, the latter by the
establishment of a Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control
and Organization. In these circumstances the only additional
prescriptions which seemed necessary and advisable were that the
Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control and Organization
should, in conformity with the powers bestowed upon it by
Article 200 of the Treaty, select the superior officers of the
gendarmerie to be stationed in the vilayets of Turkey lying
contiguous to the frontiers of Armenia solely from those
officers who will be detailed by the Allied or neutral Powers in
accordance with Article 159 of the Treaty; and that these
officers, under the supervision of the Military Inter-Mijed
Commission of Organization and Control, should be especially
charged with the duty of preventing military preparations
directed against the Armenian frontier.
It is my confident expectation
that the Armenian refugees and their leaders, in the period of
their return into the territory thus assigned to them, will by
refraining from any and all form of reprisals give to the world
an example of that high moral courage which must always be the
foundation of national strength. The world expects of them that
they give every encouragement and help within their power to
those Turkish refugees who may desire to return to their former
homes in the districts of Trebizond, Erzerum, Van and Bitlis
remembering that these peoples, too, have suffered greatly. It
is my further expectation that they will offer such considerate
treatment to the Laz and the Greek inhabitants of the coastal
region of the Black Sea, surpassing in the liberality of their
administrative arrangements, if necessary, even the ample
provisions for non-Armenian racial and religious groups embodied
in the Minorities Treaty signed by them upon August 10th of this
year, that these peoples will gladly and willingly work in
completes harmony with the Armenians in laying firmly the
foundation of the new Republic of Armenia.
I have the honor to submit
herewith the text of my decision.
Accept (etc.).
WOODROW WILSON
WASHINGTON, NOVEMBER 22, 1920.
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DECISION OF PRESIDENT WILSON
Respecting the
Frontier Between Turkey and Armenia, Access for Armenia to the
Sea, and the Demilitarization of Turkish Territory Adjacent to
the Armenian Frontier.
WOODROW WILSON, PRESIDENT OF THE
UNITED STATES,
TO WHOM IT SHALL CONCERN,
GREETING:
Whereas, on April 26, 1920, the
Supreme Council of the Allied Powers, in conference at San Remo,
addressed to the President of the United States of America an
invitation to act as arbitrator in the question of the boundary
between Turkey and Armenia, to be fixed within the four
Vilayets of Erzeru:n, Trebizond, Van, and Bitlis;
And whereas, on May 17, 1920, my
acceptance of this invitation was telegraphed to the American
Ambassador in Paris, to be conveyed to the Powers represented on
the Supreme Council;
And whereas, on August 10, 1920,
a Treaty of Peace was signed at Sevres by Plenipotentiary
Representatives of the British Empire, France, Italy and Japan,
and of Armenia, Belgium, Greece, Poland, Portugal, Roumania, and
Czecho Slovakia, of the one part; and of Turkey, of the other
part, which Treaty contained, among other provisions, the
following:
"ARTICLE 89. Turkey and
Armenia as well as the other High Contracting Parties agree to
submit to the arbitration of the President of the United States
of America the question of the frontier to be fixed between
Turkey and Armenia in the Vilayets of Erzerum, Trebizond, Van
and Bitlis, and to accept his decision thereupon, as well as any
stipulations he may prescribe as to access for Armenia to the
sea, and as to the demilitarization of any portion of Turkish
territory adjacent to the said frontier"; And whereas, on
October 18, 1920, the Secretariat General of the Peace
Conference, acting under the instructions of the Allied Powers,
transmitted to me, through the Embassy of the United States of
America in Paris, an authenticated copy of the above mentioned
Treaty, drawing attention to the said Article 89;
Now, therefore, I, Woodrow
Wilson, President of the United States of America, upon whom has
thus been conferred the authority of arbitrator, having examined
the question in the light of the most trustworthy information
available, and with a mind to the highest interests of justice,
do hereby declare the following decision:
I
The frontier between Turkey and
Armenia in the Vilayets of Erzerum, Trebizond, Van, and Bitlis,
shall be fixed as follows:
1. The initial point* shall be
chosen on the ground at the junction of the Turkish-Persian
frontier with the eastern termination of the administrative
boundary between the Sandjaks of Van and Hakkiari, of the
Vilayet of Van, as this administrative boundary appears upon the
Bashkala sheet of the Turkish map, scale 1 :200,000, editions
published in the Turkish financial years 1330 and 1331
(1914-15). From this initial point the boundary shall extend
southwest- ward to the western peak of Merkezer Dagh, situated
about 6 kilometers west ward from point 3350 (10,990 feet),
about 2 kilometers southeastward from the village of Yokary
Ahvalan, and approximately 76 kilometers southeastward from the
city of Van.
*It is my understanding that
this initial point will lie upon the former Turkish-Persian
frontier referred to in the Article 27 II (4) of the Treaty of
Sevres; but 40 miles of the said frontier, within which the
initial point of the Armenian frontier is included, were left
undemarcated by the Turko-Persian Frontier Commission in 1914.
The initial point contemplated lies about 1 kilometer southward
from the village of Kara Hissa and approximately 25 kilo meters
southwestward from the village of Kotur, and may be fixed on the
ground as near this location as the Boundary Commission shall
determine, provided it lies at the junction of the Van-Hakkiari
Sandjak boundary with the frontier of Persia.
The sandjak boundary specified
above, then the administrative boundary between the Kazas of
Mamuret-ul-Hamid and Elback, then the same sandjak boundary
specified above, all modified, where necessary, to follow the
main water-parting between the Zap Su (Great Zab River) and the
Khoshab Su, and dividing equably the summits of the passes Krdes
Gedik and Chokh Gedik;
then northwestward about 28
kilometers to Klesiry Dagh, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings between the Khoshab Su and the
streams flowing into the Shatak Su, and traversing the pass
south of the village of Yokary Ahvalan, and passing through
Shkolans Dagh (3100 meters or 10,170 feet) and the Belereshuk
pass; thence southwestward to the junction
of an unnamed stream with the Shatak Su at a point about 10
kilometers southward from the village of Shatak, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, and passing through Koh Kiran
Daghlar, Sari Dagh (3150 meters or 10,335 feet), Kevmetala Tepe
(3,500 meters or 11,480 feet, point 3,540 (11,615 feet), in such
a way as to leave to Armenia the village of Eyreti, and to
Turkey the village of Araz, and to cross the Shatak Su at least
2 kilometers southward from the village of Dir Mouem Kilisa; thence westward to the point where
the Bitlis-Van Vilayet boundary reaches the Moks Su from the
west, situated about 18 kilometers southward from the village of
Moks,
a line to he fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, leaving to Armenia the
villages of Kachet, Sinpass, and Ozim, passing through Kanisor
Tepe (3,245 meters or 10,645 feet), an unnamed peak about 3
kilometers southward from Arnus Dagh (3,550 meters or 11,645
feet), crossing an unnamed stream about 2 kilometers southward
from the village of Sinpass, passing through point 3,000 (9,840
feet), following the boundary between the Vilayets of Van and
Bitlis for about 3 kilometers southwestward from this point and
continuing southwestward on the same ridge to an unnamed peak
about 2 kilometers eastward from Moks Su, and then descending to
this stream;
thence northward to an unnamed peak
on the boundary between the Vilayets of Van and Bitlis about 3
kilometers westward from the pass at Mata Gedik, the administrative boundary between
the Vilayets of Van and Bitlis, modified south of Vankin Dagh
(3,200 meters or 10,500 feet) to follow the main water-parting; thence westward to the peak Meidan
Chenidiani, situated on the boundary between the Sandjaks of
Bitlis and Sairt about 29 kilometers southeastward from the city
of Bitlis, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, passing through Veberhan Dagh
(3410 meters or 10,200 feet), crossing the Kesan Dere about 2
kilometers southward from the village of Khoros, leaving to
Turkey the villages of Semhaj and Nevaleyn as well as the bridge
or ford on the trail between them, and leaving to Armenia the
village of Chopans and the trail leading to it from the
northeast; thence westward to the Guzel Dere Su
at a point about 23 kilometers southward from the city of Bitlis
and about 2 kilometers southward from Nuri Ser peak (2450 meters
or 7,050 feet), the administrative boundary between
the Sandjaks of Bitlis and Sairt, and then, a line to he fixed
on the ground, following the main water-partings, and passing
through points 2,750 and 2,700 of Kur Dagh (9,020 and 8,860 feet
respectively), Biluki Dagh (2,230 meters or 7,315 feet), and
Sihaser Tepe (2,250 meters or 7,380 feet); thence westward to the junction of
the Bitlis Su and the unnamed stream near the village of
Deshtumi, about 30 kilometers southwestward from the city of
Bitlis, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, leaving to Turkey the
villages of Lered and Daruni, and to Armenia the village of Enbu
and all portions of the trail leading northeastward to the
Bitlis Su from Mergelu peak (1,850 meters or 6,070 feet), and
passing through Mergelu Tepe and Shikh Tabur ridge;
thence westward to the Zuk (Gharzan)
Su at the point about 11 kilometers northeastward from the
village of Hazo and approximately 1 kilometer upstream from the
village of Zily, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, leaving to Armenia the
village of Deshtumi, passing through the eastern peak of Kalmen
Dagh (2.710 meters or 8,890 feet) and continuing in such a
manner as to leave to Armenia the upland dolina, or basin of
interior drainage, to traverse the pass about 3 kilometers
westward from the village of Avesipy, passing through Shelash
Dagh (1,944 meters or 6,380 feet);
thence westward to the Sassun Dere
at a point about 4 kilometers south. westward from the village
of Kabil Jeviz and approximately 47 kilometers southward from
the city of Mush, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings through Cheyardash peak (2,001
meters or 6,565 feet), Keupeka peak (1,931 meters or 6,335
feet), an unnamed peak on the Sassun Dagh about 4 kilometers
south westward from Malato Dagh (2,967 meters or 9,735 feet),
point 2,229 (7,310 feet), and leaving to Turkey the village of
Gundenu;
thence northwestward to the Talury
Dere at a point about 2 kilometers upstream from the village of
Kasser and approximately 37 kilometers north. eastward from the
village of Seylevan (Farkin), a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings and passing through an unnamed
peak about 2 kilometers eastward from the village of Seyluk, and
through point 2,073 (6,800 feet), leaving to Armenia the village
of Heyshtirem; thence northwestward to the western
tributary of the Talury Dere at a point about 2 kilometers
eastward from the village of Helin and approximately 42
kilometers southwestward from the city of Mush, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, and passing through point
2,251 (7,385 feet); thence northwestward to the junction
of the Kulp Boghazy (Kulp Sa) and Askar Dere, approximate]y 42
kilometers southwestward front city of Mush, a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings ]eaving to Turkey the village
of Helin and to Armenia the village of Kehirvanik; thence northwestward to a point on
the administrative boundary between the Sandjaks of Gendj and
Mush northeast of Mir Ismail Dagh, and situated about 5
kilometers westward from the village of Pelekoz, and
approximately 19 kilometers southward from the village of
Ardushin, a line to he fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, and passing through the
Komiss Dagh; thence northwestward to the Frat
Nehri (Murad Su, or Euphrates) at a point to be determined on
the ground about 1 kilometer upstream from the village of Dorne
and approximately 56 kilometers westward from the city of Mush, the administrative boundary between
the Sandjaks of Gendj and Mush northward for about 2 kilometers,
then a line to be fixed on the ground, following the main
water-partings westward to an unnamed peak approximately 6
kilometers east of Chutela (Akche Kara) Dagh (2,940 meters or
9,645 feet), then northward passing through Hadije Tepe on
Arshik Dagh, leaving to Turkey the village of Kulay and to
Armenia the village of Kluhuran; thence northwestward to the Gunik Su
at a point about midway between two trails crossing this river
about half way between the villages of Elmaly and Chenajki, and
approximately 26 kilometers northeastward from the village of
Cholik (Chevelik), a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, passing through an unnamed
peak about 2 kilometers westward from the village of Shanghar,
along Solkhan Dagh, and through point 2,200 (7,220 feet),
leaving to Turkey the villages of Shanghar and Chenajky, and to
Armenia the villages of Kumistan, Lichinak, and Elmaly; thence
northwestward to the boundary between the Vilayets of Erzerum
and Bitlis at an unnamed peak near where a straight line between
the villages of Erchek and Agha Keui would intersect said
vilayet boundary, a line to be fixed on the ground, following
the main water-partings, passing through point 2,050 (6,725
feet); thence northward to an unnamed peak on said vilayet
boundary about 8 kilometers northwestward from Kartalik Tepe on
the Choris Dagh, the administrative boundary between the
vilayets of Erzerum and Bitlis; thence westward to the Buyuk Su
(Kighi Su) at a point about 2 kilometers upstream from the
junction of the Ghabzu Dere with it, and approximately 11
kilometers northwestward from the village of Kighi, a line to be
fixed on the ground, following the main water-partings of the
Sheitan Daghlar, passing through points 2,610 (8565 feet),
Sheitan Dagh (2,906 meters or 9,535 feet), Hakstun Dagh, and
leaving to Armenia the village of Dinek and the ford or bridge
southwest of this village; thence westward to the Dar Boghaz (Kuttu
Dere) at a point about 3 kilo meters southward from the village
of Chardaklar (Palumor), a line to be fixed on the ground,
following the main water-partings, leaving to Armenia the
villages of Shorakh and Ferhadin, passing through Ghabarti Dagh
(2,550 meters or 8,365 feet), Sian Dagh (2,750 meters or 9,020
feet), the 2450 meter pass on the Palumor-Kighi trail near
Mustapha Bey Konaghy, Feziria Tepe (2,530 meters or 8,300 feet),
point 2,244 (7,360 feet), and point 2,035 (6,675 feet) thence
westward to the point common to the boundaries of the Sandjaks
of Erzingan and Erzerum and the Vilayet of Mamuret-ul-Aziz,
situated at a sharp angle in the vilayet boundary, approximately
24 kilometers westward from the village of Palumor and 32
kilometers southeastward from the city of Erzingan, a line to be
fixed on the ground, following the main water-partings, and
passing northwestward through an unnamed peak about 2 kilometers
southwestward from Palumor, through Silos (Kersinod) Dagh (2,405
meters or 7,890 feet) to an unnamed peak on the southern
boundary of the Sandjak of Erzingan, about 8 kilometers
southwestward from the Palumor-Erzingan pass, then turning
southwestward along said Sandjak boundary for nearly 13
kilometers, passing through Karaja Kaleh (3,100 meters or 10470
feet) thence westward to an unnamed peak on the boundary between
the Vilayets of Erzerum and Mamuret-ul-Aziz about 3 kilometers
northeastward from the pass on the trail across the Monzur
Silsilesi between Kennakh on the Euphrates and Pelur in the
Dersim, the peak being approximately 40 kilometers southwestward
from the city of Erzingan, the administrative boundary between
the vilayets of Erzerum and Mamuret ul-Aziz; modified*, in case
of a majority of the voting members of the Boundary Commission
deem it wise, to follow the main water-parting along the ridge
between an unnamed peak about 2 kilometers southwest of Merjan
Daghlar (3,449 meters or 11,315 feet) and Katar Tepe (3,300
meters or 10,825 feet);
*At the locality named. the
vilayet boundary (according to Khozat-Dersim sheet of the
Turkish General Staff map, scale 1:200,000) descends the
northern slope of the Monzur-Silsilesi for about 7 kilometers.
The junction of the boundary between the Kazas of Erzingan and
Kemakh in Erzingan Sandjak of Erzernm thence northward to the Frat
Nehri (Kara Su, or Euphrates) at a point to be determined on the
ground about 6 kilometers eastward from the village or Kemagh
and approximately 35 kilometers southwestward from the city of
Erzingan, a line to be fixed on the ground, following the main
water-partings, leaving to Turkey the trail from Pelur in the
Dersim to Kemakh on the Euphrates, and to Armenia the village of
Koja Arbler; thence, northward to the boundary between the
vilayets of Erzerum and Trebizond at a point to be determined
about 1 kilometer west of peak 2,930 (2,630 or 8,625 feet) and
about 4 kilometers southward from the village of Metkut, or
approximately 39 kilometers northwestward from the city of
Erzingan, a line to be fixed on the gronnd, following the main
water-partings, leaving to Turkey the villages of Chalghy Yady,
Toms, and Alamlik, and to Armenia the village of Erkghan and the
road and col south of the village of Metkut, passing through
Utch Kardash Tepe, Kelek Kiran (Tekke Tash, 2,800 meters or
9,185 feet), Kehnam Dagh (or Kara Dagh, 3,030 meters or 9,940
feet), dividing equably between Armenia and Turkey the summit of
the pass about 2 kilometers westward from the village of Zazker
and, similarly, the summit of the pass of Kral Kham Boghazy near
the village of Chardakli, passing through point 2760 on Kara
Dagh (9,055 feet), point 2,740 (8,990 feet), and a point to be
determined on the ground, situated near the Iky Sivry stream
less than 2 kilometers westward from the Chimen Dagh pass, and
located in such a manner as to leave to Turkey the junction of
the two roads leading westward to the villages of Kuchi Keui and
Kara Yayrak, and to Armenia the junction of two other roads
leading to the villages of Metkut and Kirmana; the Boundary
Commission shall determine in the field the most equable
disposition of the highway between points 2,760 and 2,740; Vilayet with the boundary of
Dersim Sandjak of Mamuret-ul-Aziz Vilayet lies within 14
kilometers of the Euphrates River. This leaves to Turkey a
military bridgehead north of an 11,000 foot mountain range and
only 20 kilometers south of the city of Erzingan. I am not
empowered to change the administrative boundary at this point,
and these 40 square kilometers of territory lie outside the four
vilayets specifid in Article 89 of the Treaty of Sevres.
However, I venture to call the attention of the Boundary
Commission to the desirability of consulting the local
inhabitants with a view to possible modification of the vilayet
boundary at this point. thence northwestward to the
Kelkit Chai (Kelkit Irmak) at the point where the boundary
between the Vilayets of Trebizond and Sivas reaches it from the
south, the administrative boundary between the Vilayets of
Trebizond and Erzerum, and then the administrative boundary
between the Vilayets of Trebizond and Sivas; thence northward to
an unnamed peak on the boundary between the Vilayets of
Trebizond and Sivas about 4 kilometers southwestward from Borgha
Paya (2,995 meters or 9,825 feet) the latter being situated
approximately 38 kilometers southwestward from the city of
Gumush-Khana, a line to be fixed on the ground, following the
main water-partings, leaving to Armenia the villages of Halkit,
Sinanli, Kiliktin, and Kirtanos; and to Turkey the villages of
Kar Kishla, Sadik, Kara Kia, and Ara, crossing the pass between
the western tributaries of the Shiran Chai and the eastern
headwaters of the Barsak Dere (Kara Chai) about 43 kilometers
eastward from the city of Karahissar Sharki (Shebin Karahissar);
thence northeastward, northward, and westward to an unnamed peak
on the boundary between the Vilayets of Trebizond and Sivas
situated about 7 kilometers northwestward from Yerchi Tepe
(2,690 meters or 8,825 feet) and approximately 47 kilometers
south southeastward from the city of Kerasun, the administrative
boundary between the Vilayets of Trebizond and Sivas; thence
northward, from the point last mentioned, on the crest of the
Pontic Range, to the Black Sea, at a point to be determined on
the seacoast about 1 kilometer westward from the village of
Keshab, and approximately 9 kilometers eastward from the city of
Kerasun, a line to be fixed on the ground, following the main
water-partings, leaving to Turkey the fields, pastures, forests,
and villages within the drainage basin of the Komit Dere (Ak Su)
and its tributaries; and to Armenia the fields, pastures,
forest, and villages within the drainage basins of the Yaghaj
Dere (Espiya Dere) and the Venazit Dere (Keshab Dere) and their
tributaries, and drawn in such a manner as to utilize the
boundary between the Kazas of Tripoli (Tireboli) and Kerasun in
the 7 kilometers just south of Kara Tepe (1,696 meters or 5,565
feet), and to provide the most convenient relationships between
the new frontier and the trails along the ridges, as these
relationships may be determined by the Boundary Commission in
the field after consultation with the local inhabitants.
2. In case of any discrepancies
between the text of this Decision and the maps on the scales of
1:1,000,000 and 1:200,000 annexed, the text will be final.
The limits of the four vilayets
specified in Article 89 of the Treaty of Sevres are taken as of
October 29, 1914.
The frontier, as described above,
is drawn in red on an authenticated map on the scale of
1:1,000,000 which is annexed to the present Frontier Decision.
The geographical names here mentioned appear upon the maps
accompanying this text.
The chief authorities used for
the names of Geographical features, and of elevations of
mountains, and the location of vilayet, sandjak, and kaza
boundaries, are the Turkish General Staff map, scale 1:200,000,
and, in part, the British map, scale 1:1,000,000.
The maps on the scale of
1:200,000 are recommended to the Boundary Commission, provided
in Article 91, for their use in tracing on the spot the portion
of the frontiers of Armenia established by this Decision.
II
The frontier described above, by
assigning the harbor of Trebizond and the valley of Karshut Su
to Armenia, precludes the necessity of further provision for
access for Armenia to the sea.
III
In addition to the general
provisions for the limitation of armaments, embodied in the
Military, Naval and Air Clauses, Part V of the Treaty of Sevres,
the demilitarization of Turkish territory adjacent to the
frontier of Armenia as above established shall be effected as
follows:
The Military Inter-Allied
Commission of Control and Organization provided for in Articles
196-200 of the Treaty of Sevres shall appoint the superior
officers of the gendarmerie stationed in those vilayets of
Turkey lying contiguous to the frontiers of the state of Armenia
exclusively from the officers to be supplied by the various
Allied or neutral Powers according to Article 139 of the said
Treaty.
These officers shall, in addition
to their other duties, be especially charged with the task of
observing and reporting to the Military Inter-Allied Commission
of Control and Organization upon any tendencies within these
Turkish vilayets toward military aggression against the Armenian
frontier, such as building strategic railways and highways, the
establishment of depots of military supplies, the creation oC
military colonies, and the use of propaganda dangerous to the
peace and quiet of the adjacent Armenian territory. The Military
Inter-Allied Commission of Control and Organization shall
thereupon take such action as is necessary to prevent the
concentrations and other aggressive activities enumerated above.
In testimony whereof I have
hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to
be affixed.
Done in duplicate at the city
of Washington on the twenty-second day of November, one thousand
nine hundred and twenty, and of (SEAL) the Independence
of the United States the one hundred and forty-fifth.
By the President: WOODROW
WILSON
BAINBRIDGE COLBY
Secretary of State.
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