Sharing the Burden
The Armenian Question, Humanitarian Intervention, and Anglo-American Visions of Global Order
Charlie Laderman
Reviews and Awards
Shortlisted for the Royal Historical Society's Whitfield Prize in British History
Winner of the Arthur Miller Institute First Book Prize
"A thoroughly researched and highly compelling account of how the Armenian question acted as a catalyst for an emerging American-British geopolitical alliance and the United States' rise as a predominant actor in the international arena....[A] truly visionary presentation of the Armenian question as a precursor for the future dilemmas of humanitarian intervention in general and of American global leadership in particular....The book will remain an essential read for current and future American policymakers as they reflect on their personal leadership's potential and limitations, the factors driving their nation's willingness to engage the world, and the risks that come with 'sharing the burden' of international leadership and humanitarian intervention." -- Tobias Cremer, Providence Magazine
"A fascinating and thoroughly assured work of international political history....With immense skill, Laderman weaves together numerous strands, including transatlantic relations, the politics of intervention, the role of missionaries, the rise of the US as a global power, various international and historical contexts, and World War I. Sharing the Burden is highly topical and immensely stimulating." -- from the shortlist citation for the Whitfield Prize of the Royal Historical Society
"By analysing a series of episodes many today have forgotten about, Laderman...reminds us that the dilemmas of humanitarian intervention that have bedevilled policymakers in recent decades are, in fact, not new problems at all....He persuasively argues that the 'Armenian question' is intimately tied up with the rise of the United States as a world power....The next time American leaders consider such an intervention, they would be wise to read Laderman's impressive book." -- Grant Golub, LSE Review of Books
"Laderman's persuasive and readable history has implications for the present day. The congressional resolutions last fall were, largely, a rebuke of Turkey for its current invasion of northern SyriaâCongressional resolutions are very welcome, but history suggests that these Christians should not expect much more from America. Just as in the last century, despite the best intentions, America's commitment to Christians in the Middle East today is limited: well wishes, exhortations for equality and tolerance, some humanitarian assistance-though nothing like the massive humanitarian campaign that took place in the last century and saved so many lives.... The sad lesson of Laderman's book is this: if Christians in Syria expect the American government to do more to help them, they will find themselves on their own" -- Mark L. Movsesian, Law and Liberty blog
"When -- if ever -- should liberal democratic States intervene abroad to stop atrocities and abuses of basic human rights, even when they have the power to do so? The problem of humanitarian intervention is no recent one, as Charlie Laderman shows in his incisive and empathetic study of the widely-covered Turkish atrocities against the Armenians. Again and again, leading US statesmen and opinion-makers considered the tempting possibility of 'sharing the burden,' of joint Anglo-American actions to rescue the desperate Armenians. Yet it was not to be. This is superb political and diplomatic history, with a sobering message for policy-makers and pundits today." -- Paul Kennedy, author of The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers
"In the early twentieth century, Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson believed it their duty as statesmen to prevent further killings of Armenian Christians, eventually reckoned at 1.5 million. Sharing the Burden is an invaluable account of reactions by missionaries, as well as the US and British governments, to genocide." -- Wm. Roger Louis, University of Texas at Austin
"A compelling and beautifully-written history of the centrality of the Armenian question in trans-Atlantic politics before and after the Great War. No other book gives humanitarianism in foreign policy making its due in this period using extensive archival research placed in the context of global history." -- Kathleen Dalton, author of Theodore Roosevelt: A Strenuous Life
"Anyone interested in US foreign relations during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era should read this important book. Focusing on the international politics of humanitarian intervention in the Ottoman Empire to aid the Armenians, Laderman provides new insights into the promise and failure of the League of Nations and its mandate system to create a new world order after World War I." -- Lloyd E. Ambrosius, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
"Charlie Laderman does an outstanding job showing how humanitarian and religious outrage at the Armenian massacres set the stage for American intervention in the Cuban war for independence from Spain and presaged America shaping the international order in the twentieth century. Sharing the Burden is an essential read for understanding the importance of shared values in American and British foreign policy." -- Kori Schake, author of Safe Passage: The Transition from British to American Hegemony