Thursday, October 9, 2025
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Erdoğan’s propaganda site on 1915 events full of information refuting Turkey’s claims

April 27, 2021
A A
Erdoğan’s propaganda site on 1915 events full of information refuting Turkey’s claims
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Following US President Joe Biden’s formal recognition of the Armenian genocide, which sparked a heated debate in Turkey, the Presidential Communications Directorate announced on April 25 that government website 1915.gov.tr presents all the facts, documents and academic sources regarding the Armenian issue for the benefit of the public. A Nordic Monitor study shows that the two-year-old site is not only insufficient in explaining Turkey’s official narrative but also lacks critical information that was censored and instead focuses on the promotion of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

So it is not surprising that a message from Erdoğan welcoming visitors says In today’s world deriving enmity from history and creating new antagonisms are neither acceptable nor useful for building a common future. It is a sentence from then-Prime Minister Erdoğan’s official statement of condolence to Armenians in 2014, a gesture that was welcomed by all parties.

Presenting previous work from the Turkish Historical Society and Turkish Foreign Ministry that was apparently collected in a hurry, the website does not offer anything new or original apart from Erdoğan’s commitment to peace and mutual understanding. The site mainly suggests that the inescapable relocation of Armenians during conditions of war caused civilian tragedies but that millions of Muslims also died during World War I and onwards. It also underlines Turkey’s official and long-standing assertion that the Holocaust and the Armenian genocide are historically and legally two different issues that are not comparable.

Firstly, the website attaches much importance to a 2013 European Court of Human Rights ruling regarding the criminal conviction of Doğu Perinçek, President Erdoğan’s neo-nationalist (Ulusalcı) ally, for publicly challenging in Switzerland the occurrence of the Armenian genocide. The court decided that Perinçek’s right to freedom of expression was violated. Despite the court having said it was not called upon to rule on the legal characterization of the Armenian genocide, unlike international criminal courts, and that it had no authority to make legally binding pronouncements, Turkey presented it as an international victory as the top European rights court rejecting the Armenian allegations, which was not the case.

 

Ironically, the ultranationalist, revolutionist Perinçek, the leader of the Homeland Party who currently supports Erdoğan’s Islamist government, might have been the last person to defend Turkey’s official narrative of the Armenian issue.

Doğu Perinçek

Perinçek and his party formally established a political working group called the Talat Pasha Committee, aimed at gaining popularity by raising awareness of sensitive nationalist issues like the Armenian genocide allegations, the Lausanne Treaty and the Turkey-Greece conflict, a move intended to put Erdoğan’s government in an awkward position. The person the committee is named after, Talat Pasha, was the then-minister of interior who ordered the arrest and deportation of Armenian intellectuals in İstanbul on April 24, 1915. He is widely considered the main perpetrator of the genocide, although Perinçek and his inner circle continue to call him a hero.

Additionally Perinçek, who promotes the idea of Turkey, Russia and Iran becoming allied powers along with China against the West, said Joe Biden’s recognition would cause Turkey and Russia to grow closer. Russia formally recognized the Armenian genocide in 1995, a fact very few people in Turkey know.

The website claims the issue of the 1915 events is not taboo in Turkey and that defending diverging narratives is legal in the context of freedom of expression. However, in the ruling of Perinçek v. Switzerland, which is published in its entirety on the website, the court document mentions a significant number of people who suffered for calling the events of World War I in Turkey “genocide.”

For instance, lawyer and politician İbrahim Güçlü said at a press conference in 2001 that for him the events of 1915 and the following years had amounted to genocide and that Turkey needed to come to terms with this and engage in an open debate on the issue. He was then convicted under a legal provision prohibiting propaganda against Turkey’s territorial integrity and sentenced to a year’s imprisonment for the statement. 

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink, editor-in-chief of the Agos weekly, was killed in an attack in 2007 in front of the Agos headquarters in İstanbul.

Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist who was later assassinated in 2007, had been convicted of denigrating “Turkishness” (Türklük), a criminal offense under the Turkish Penal Code. The European Court of Human Rights ruled that Dink’s articles had not been gratuitously offensive or insulting.

In a lesser-known example Jeanne Cox, a lecturer at Istanbul University, was deported from Turkey in 1986 and banned from re-entering the country for saying in front of students and colleagues that “the Turks [had] assimilated Kurds” and “expelled and massacred Armenians.” In 1996 she initiated proceedings seeking to have the re-entry ban lifted but was unsuccessful.  

Most recently, following Biden’s announcement, the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party called on Turkey to face its history and recognize the Armenian genocide, sparking strong reactions not only from the ruling party but also other opposition parties. Presidential communications director Fahrettin Altun said, “Your history is the history of the terrorist organization,” an oblique reference to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Then-Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and then-Turkish President Abdullah Gül,

The funny part of the website is that it gives the impression that the history of Turkey’s foreign relations started with Erdoğan. No other Turkish leaders are mentioned. The first attempt at rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey started with the common efforts of then-Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and then-Turkish President Abdullah Gül, who is now at odds with Erdoğan. Similarly the Zurich Protocols of 2009 were signed by Ahmet Davutoğlu, a former foreign minister and prime minister who was never mentioned. Needless to say, Davutoğlu is currently the leader of an opposition party he established after his expulsion from Erdoğan’s party.

The website is also quite complicated to read and difficult to follow. It is unclear why the photos on the site were chosen, and it is a serious omission that they don’t have any captions in English or Turkish.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Turkish intelligence infiltrated a militant cell in Switzerland but kept authorities in the dark about plots

Next Post

Turkish Embassy escalated harassment of dissidents and critics in South Africa, documents reveal

Levent Kenez

Levent Kenez

[email protected]

Next Post
Turkish Embassy escalated harassment of dissidents and critics in South Africa, documents reveal

Turkish Embassy escalated harassment of dissidents and critics in South Africa, documents reveal

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

October 9, 2025
Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

October 8, 2025
Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

October 7, 2025
Turkey’s release of ISIS detainees fuels European terrorism threat, Dutch court case shows

Turkey’s release of ISIS detainees fuels European terrorism threat, Dutch court case shows

October 6, 2025
Erdogan pushes for northern Cyprus election win amid allegations of interference and mafia links

Erdogan pushes for northern Cyprus election win amid allegations of interference and mafia links

October 3, 2025
Erdoğan government believed Muslim Brotherhood would make a huge comeback in Egypt in few years

Turkey’s top court quashes terrorism conviction of 2 Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood members

October 2, 2025
Turkey emerges as key haven for Iranian who launched $88M Bittrex crypto case

Turkey emerges as key haven for Iranian who launched $88M Bittrex crypto case

October 1, 2025
Turkish military journal claims NATO is using Ankara without giving it a voice

Turkish military journal claims NATO is using Ankara without giving it a voice

September 30, 2025
$100 billion OmegaPro scandal highlights Turkey’s role as a haven for global fraudsters

$100 billion OmegaPro scandal highlights Turkey’s role as a haven for global fraudsters

September 29, 2025
Turkey shifts away from Russia with new gas deals, hoping to win Trump’s favor

Turkey shifts away from Russia with new gas deals, hoping to win Trump’s favor

September 26, 2025

Nordic Monitor

Nordic Monitor is a news web site and tracking site that is run by the Stockholm-based Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. It covers religious, ideological and ethnic extremist movements and radical groups, with a special focus on Turkey.

Tags

al-Qaeda Andrei Karlov Cyprus Diyanet Egypt Erdogan espionage Germany Greece Gülen Movement Hakan Fidan Hamas Hulusi Akar Ibrahim Kalın IHH Iran IRGC Quds Force ISIL ISIS Isis al-qaida Israel Libya Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı MIT Muslim Brotherhood NATO President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Profiling Qatar Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Russia SADAT spying Spying Activities Suleyman Soylu Sweden Syria Torture Turkey Turkish Intelligence Turkish Intelligence Agency Turkish intelligence agency MIT Ukraine United States

Recent News

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

October 9, 2025
Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

October 8, 2025
Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

October 7, 2025

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.