US embassy cable - 03ISTANBUL644

Disclaimer: This site has been first put up 15 years ago. Since then I would probably do a couple things differently, but because I've noticed this site had been linked from news outlets, PhD theses and peer rewieved papers and because I really hate the concept of "digital dark age" I've decided to put it back up. There's no chance it can produce any harm now.

THE "ARMENIAN ISSUE" IN ISTANBUL

Identifier: 03ISTANBUL644
Wikileaks: View 03ISTANBUL644 at Wikileaks.org
Origin: Consulate Istanbul
Created: 2003-05-07 08:15:00
Classification: CONFIDENTIAL
Tags: PREL PGOV AM TK Istanbul
Redacted: This cable was not redacted by Wikileaks.
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ISTANBUL 000644 
 
SIPDIS 
 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/29/2013 
TAGS: PREL, PGOV, AM, TK, Istanbul 
SUBJECT: THE "ARMENIAN ISSUE" IN ISTANBUL 
 
 
1. (C) Summary: Most of those Turks we have spoken with in 
Istanbul are largely ignorant of the tragic fate of at least 
hundreds of thousands of Armenians who were killed in 1894-5 
and especially in 1915-16 throughout Anatolia toward the end 
of the Ottoman Empire.  Turkish history books and readily 
available academic literature fail to address the subject, 
leaving Turks without an objective context to evaluate the 
claims leveled by the Armenian Diaspora.  As a result, such 
charges and the consequent international demands for Turkey 
to "recognize" the 1915 deaths as a "genocide" are merely 
dismissed by Istanbul Turks as part of a hostile propaganda 
campaign and a prelude to demands for "compensation."   A 
"Genocide Resolution" from the U.S. Congress would be greeted 
with public outrage and would strengthen anti-Americanism. 
End Summary. 
 
 
How does the average Istanbul Turk see the Armenian issue? 
--------------------------------------------- ------------- 
2. (U) We have spoken to a number of Istanbul Turks over the 
last several weeks in an effort to get a better sense of the 
range of opinion on this issue.  The subject appears to have 
been largely ignored in the Turkish history books and most 
have only a very dim understanding of what happened to the 
Armenians in 1915-16.  To the extent that Turks here have a 
historical understanding of the events, it is in the context 
of the invasions and uprisings that threatened the Ottoman 
Empire.  For most, however, the issue has come to their 
attention only as the result of what they see as a hostile 
propaganda campaign by the Armenian Diaspora -- the same 
Diaspora that earlier spawned a terrorist organization that 
assassinated 34 Turkish diplomats in the 1970s and 1980s, 
including several in the United States.  Predictably, for a 
population that is still mainly inward-looking and 
reflexively nationalistic, each new development in this 
international campaign provokes howls of protest here in 
Istanbul. 
 
 
Is the so-called Armenian "genocide" still taboo? 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
3. (C) In the past, Turkish authorities actively restricted 
what could be written or said on this and other subjects, but 
in recent years such restrictions have eased.  As an example, 
Hrant Dink, the editor of Turkey's only Armenian-language 
newspaper, Agos, told poloff that in the last few years three 
separate books that dealt with the subject were banned after 
publication.  One of the publishers spent six months in 
prison as a result.  But when the cases were taken to court, 
all of the charges were dismissed and the bans were lifted. 
Dink speculated that Turkish authorities have realized that 
these cases merely generate undesirable publicity while 
simply ignoring these publications consigns them to the dusty 
back shelves of bookstores and libraries. 
 
 
How would Turks in Istanbul react to a "Genocide" resolution? 
--------------------------------------------- ---------------- 
 
 
4. (C) The almost universal response from average Turks here 
would be outrage and would be reflected strongly in the mass 
media.  Beyond that, however, both Hrant Dink and Ilter 
Turkmen (former Foreign Minister and Turkish Coordinator of 
the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission) asked, "what 
more could Turkey do?"  A few even suggested that it might be 
better to go ahead and get it out of the way, rather than 
endure the annual suspenseful ritual of waiting to see 
whether the Congress will pass it or not.  Most, however, 
worry that such a development would aggravate a continuing 
anti-American, anti-Western current of public opinion and 
would have negative long-term repercussions.  Similarly, each 
year Istanbul Turks nervously await the U.S. President's 
April 24 statement, judging it largely by the simple measure 
of whether or not it uses the "g-word." 
 
 
What are the prospects for reconciliation with Armenia? 
--------------------------------------------- ---------- 
5. (C) This is obviously an issue that rests in the hands of 
the government in Ankara.  Those we have spoken to here are 
not hopeful that there will be much progress.  Turkmen 
expressed his frustration, saying that he had pushed Ankara, 
unsuccessfully, to unilaterally open the border with Armenia. 
 Turkmen blamed those in the mid-to-senior ranks of the 
Foreign Ministry, arguing that they have a narrow, 
nationalistic mindset that makes it impossible for them to 
see the way forward on this issue.  Turkmen told poloff that 
the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission had achieved 
only very limited progress and would need to be changed 
before it could continue its work.  Dink, too, expressed 
frustration with the government for not opening the border 
("Even the border between northern and southern Cyprus has 
been opened...").  Conceding that the Justice and Development 
(AK) Party government has had a lot on its plate (i.e., EU 
accession, Cyprus, Iraq) since coming to power last November, 
Dink held out little hope that they would be able to do much 
with Armenia. 
QUINN 

Latest source of this page is cablebrowser-2, released 2011-10-04