Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04YEREVAN532
2004-03-04 09:05:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Yerevan
Cable title:  

EMOTIONS STILL STRONG IN ARMENIA OVER OFFICER'S

Tags:  PREL MARR PGOV AM AJ 
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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 YEREVAN 000532 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/CACEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/04/2014
TAGS: PREL MARR PGOV AM AJ
SUBJECT: EMOTIONS STILL STRONG IN ARMENIA OVER OFFICER'S
MURDER

Classified By: Ambassador John Ordway for reasons 1.5 (b) and (d)

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SUMMARY
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 YEREVAN 000532

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/CACEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/04/2014
TAGS: PREL MARR PGOV AM AJ
SUBJECT: EMOTIONS STILL STRONG IN ARMENIA OVER OFFICER'S
MURDER

Classified By: Ambassador John Ordway for reasons 1.5 (b) and (d)

--------------
SUMMARY
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1. (C) The axe-murder of Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian two
weeks ago in Budapest continues to elicit strong emotions
from Armenians. The government held a state funeral for
Margarian February 28, coinciding with the anniversary of the
1988 Sumgait killings in Azerbaijan. A Sumgait remembrance
ceremony drew 150,000 Armenians, the largest number in over a
decade. In private meetings, Armenian diplomatic officials
have expressed outrage over the killings, and expressed the
opinion that the United States should do more to hold
Azerbaijan accountable. End Summary.

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BURIAL AND SUMGAIT REMEMBRANCE COINCIDE
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2. (SBU) The GOAM provided a full state funeral February 28
for slain Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian, killed by an
Azerbaijani officer at a NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP)
language program in Budapest. Before the funeral, hundreds
of Armenians viewed the body on display in the central
Republic Square. The funeral coincided with the sixteenth
anniversary of the killing of Armenians in the Azerbaijani
town of Sumgait, one event that precipitated the Karabakh
war. Roughly 150,000 Armenians, the largest number in over
ten years, attended the annual ceremonies at the Genocide
Memorial in remembrance of the Sumgait victims. President
Kocharian laid a wreath at the memorial, and told those in
attendance, "Our response to the Azeri bellicose rhetoric is
as follows: we did not fear it either in 1988 or 1992; nor
do we fear it today."

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MFA OFFICIALS EXPRESS EMOTIONAL OUTRAGE
--------------


3. (C) Lilit Tutkhalian, Head of the Americas' Department at
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, quickly changed the focus of
a routine meeting to deliver the annual Human Rights Report
to Markarian's killing. Tutkhalian noted that the body of
the Armenian officer arrived in Armenia that morning and
began crying. Tutkhalian launched into an emotional tirade
stating that "personally and professionally" she and her

colleagues could now definitively say the Azerbaijanis were
"pure savages" (Note. Tutkhalian allegedly repeated the
phrase verbatim to a visiting United States National
Academies of Science delegation the next day. End note.)
She hoped that the murder finally proved to the United States
that it was impossible to work with the Azerbaijani
government, and that any compromise to the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict could not allow any Armenians to live under
Azerbaijani rule. Tutkhalian noted that the MFA was
reviewing its plans to send Armenian delegations to any
international conferences that included Azerbaijani
participants, saying that her Deputy Minister expressed
serious reservations about her own plans to travel to an
upcoming meeting of the Black Sea Economic Forum.


4. (C) Deputy Foreign Minister Tatul Margarian also used
charged wording when discussing deteriorating relations with
Azerbaijan with a delegation from the United States Air War
College March 2. Margarian said that new Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev had needlessly exacerbated bilateral
tensions, and seemed entirely unwilling to even contemplate
the necessary steps for a peaceful resolution of the Karabakh
conflict. Margarian told the delegation that if Aliyev
thought by bringing Armenian-Azerbaijani relations to "zero,"
he could "use oil money over time to buy tanks" for
re-capturing Karabakh then "he is wrong." Margarian said
that in meetings last week his Azerbaijani counterpart told
him that the Azerbaijani officer arrested for the Budapest
killing could not be faulted because he was a refugee forced
to flee his home during the Karabakh conflict. Noting the
Azerbaijani claims of a large refugee population from the
war, Margarian replied, "How can we give back any territory
if there are 500,000 axemen waiting to kill innocent
Armenians?"

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AZERBAIJAN "NOT A NATO PARTNER"
--------------


5. (C) Margarian said that the killing only highlighted
Armenia's and Azerbaijan's different polices regarding
cooperation with NATO. Margarian noted that Armenia had made
substantial progress in the past two years in its cooperation
with the organization, highlighted by the signing of a PfP
SOFA, the hosting of PfP military exercises in June 2003, and
the recent deployment of peacekeepers to Kosovo. He said
that Azerbaijan had consistently refused to live up to its
PfP obligations, as shown by the country's refusal to allow
two Armenian officers to participate in the planning
conference for Cooperative Best Effort 04 held in Baku.
Margarian told the delegation that he hopes the United States
"takes a strong stance" in light of the Azerbaijani behavior,
but if not, "you allow them to let NATO fail."

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COMMENT
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6. (C) The murder of the Armenian officer in Budapest, an
event exacerbated by the brutality of the crime, continues to
resonate with Armenians. The rhetoric employed by Tutkhalian
and Deputy Minister Margarian, two long-serving diplomats
noted for their professionalism, highlights the strong
emotions towards Azerbaijan exposed by the killing. In
addition, USG attempts to reserve judgment on the motivation
for the crime and to avoid the appearance of taking sides in
this conflict have been interpreted by government officials
(and Armenian diasporans we have talked to) as tacit support
for an Azerbaijani position they find unacceptable and
infuriating.
ORDWAY