The Sevres Peace Treaty and U.S. policy

in regard to the Republic of Armenia in 1919-1920

                   

The Sevres Treaty revealed the U.S. unwillingness to put Armenians in ward, since it was unsufficiently profitable. W.Wilson had substituted the large-scale relief for military and political cooperation with the Republic of Armenia; and Senators warned that the treaty would urge the wide-front Turkish offensive. All the delays of the U.S. President were not for the benefit of Erivan, where politicians dod not bring themselves to face-to-face talk with the Kemalists; were inferior in creation and operation of the armed forces, and lost the war of 1920.