Παρασκευή, Σεπτεμβρίου 02, 2011

WIKILEAKS GREEK – CYPRUS CABLEGATE: Η ΣΗΜΕΡΙΝΗ ΕΚΠΡΟΣΩΠΟΣ ΤΥΠΟΥ ΤΟΥ ΕΥΡΩΚΟΙΝΟΒΟΥΛΙΟΥ ΣΤΗΝ ΚΥΠΡΟ «ΚΑΡΦΩΣΕ» ΤΟΝ ΙΓΝΑΤΙΟΥ ΣΤΟΥΣ ΑΜΕΡΙΚΑΝΟΥΣ

H σημερινή υπεύθυνη επικοινωνίας του ευρωπαϊκού κοινοβουλίου στην Κύπρο ήταν η πηγή της Αμερικανικής πρεσβείας στη Λευκωσία που «κάρφωσε» τον δημοσιογράφο Μιχάλη Ιγνατίου. 
Σε τηλεγράφημα με ημερομηνία 3 Σεπτεμβρίου 2006, ο Αμερικανός πρέσβης υποστηρίζει ότι οι ΗΠΑ πρέπει να εμποδίσουν σταδιακά την πρόσβαση του Ιγνατίου σε πληροφορίες, καθώς δημιουργεί προβλήματα στην πρεσβεία. Ο πρέσβης σημείωνε ότι δεν θα πρέπει να τον αποκόψουν τελείως γιατί μια τέτοια κίνηση θα μπορούσε να μετατραπεί σε μπούμερανγκ.



Αφορμή για την προσπάθεια αποκλεισμού του Μ. Ιγνατίου, είχε αποτελέσει δημοσίευμά του στην εφημερίδα Φιλελεύθερος, σύμφωνα με το οποίο ο Τουρκικός στρατός είχε χρησιμοποιήσει Έλληνες και Ελληνοκύπριους αιχμαλώτους σαν πειραματόζωα σε εγκαταστάσεις κατασκευής όπλων έξω από την Άγκυρα.   


Το δημοσίευμα είχε προκαλέσει έντονη ανησυχία στους Αμερικανούς διπλωμάτες καθώς θα μπορούσε να επηρεάσει αρνητικά την ενταξιακή πορεία της Τουρκίας στην ΕΕ.  


Η Αλεξάνδρα Ατταλίδου, η οποία στα τηλεγραφήματα της πρεσβείας χαρακτηρίζεται «αξιόπιστη πηγή της πρεσβείας» είχε πει τότε στους Αμερικανούς διπλωμάτες ότι ο Ιγνατίου έκανε την αποκάλυψη για λογαριασμό του Προέδρου της Κύπρου. Η σχετική καταγγελία διαψεύστηκε, αλλά όπως προκύπτει και από το τηλεγράφημα, έπαιξε καθοριστικό ρόλο στην μετέπειτα στάση της αμερικανικής διπλωματίας απέναντι στον γνωστό δημοσιογράφο.  


Η Ατταλίδου εργαζόταν τότε στο πανεπιστήμιο Intercollege της Κύπρου ενώ στη συνέχεια βρέθηκε σε αρκετές Μη Κυβερνητικές Οργανώσεις πριν αναλάβει επικεφαλής του γραφείου Τύπου του ευρωπαϊκού κοινοβουλίου στην Κύπρο. Στο σχετικό τηλεγράφημα ο πρέσβης ζητά από το Στέιτ Ντιπάρτμεντ να προστατεύσει την ανωνυμία της πηγής.


Το θέμα είχε κυκλοφορήσει πριν από μήνες στην εφημερίδα Πρώτο Θέμα όταν ακόμη δεν ήταν γνωστή η ταυτότητα της «πηγής» της αμερικανικής πρεσβείας.   
http://www.thepressproject.gr/cablegate/tppdetails.php?id=5820
Διαβάστε το σχετικό τηλεγράφημα

JOURNALISTIC LICENSE, POLITICAL AMBITIONS BEHIND  
   
  C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 NICOSIA 001883 


SIPDIS 


SIPDIS 


DEPARTMENT FOR EUR/SE 


E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/31/2016 
TAGS: PGOV, PREL, PHUM, MOPS, CY, GR, TU 
SUBJECT: JOURNALISTIC LICENSE, POLITICAL AMBITIONS BEHIND 
LATEST CYPRUS SCANDAL 


Classified By: Ambassador Ronald L. Schlicher, Reasons 1.4 (b), (d) 


1. (C) SUMMARY: Nicosia awoke October 22 to "news" the 
Turkish Army twenty years ago employed Greek Cypriot (G/C) 
and Greek detainees as "guinea pigs" at weapons production 
facilities outside Ankara. According to preliminary accounts 
in leading daily "Philelefteros," the alleged victims, 
prisoners since the 1974 hostilities on the island, had 
suffered an unknown fate. Central to the allegations was a 
recent article in an obscure Washington think-tank's monthly 
journal. Despite the author's profound caveat -- "such 
references (to the guinea pigs) have not been confirmed or 
verified" -- the story snowballed, prompting prominent RoC 
officials to Turkey-bash and demand a full reckoning. Groups 
representing the Cypriot missing persons mobilized, and our 
closest contacts sought Embassy confirmation of the 
think-tank's bona fides. Within days, however, large holes 
in the account became evident. Turkey predictably dismissed 
the report out of hand. Opposition media questioned the 
objectivity of both the researcher and the Washington-based 
G/C journalist who broke the story here. And rumors surfaced 
that both men had acted under Tassos Papadopoulos's orders, 
the RoC president masterminding the scandal to tarnish 
Ankara's image and EU accession chances. "Philelefteros" has 
begun to backpedal under the public cross-examination, 
defending tooth-and-nail its decision to publish sketchy 
allegations. Even the Foreign Ministry, usually precise in 
its arguments, could only blast past Turkish noncooperation 
on missing persons, a sign that it, too, had doubts. 
Colleagues in Ankara and elsewhere can judge whether the 
think-tank's allegations merit further review. From our 
side, the scandal illustrates the poor performance, 
shameless bias, and "for sale" nature of most Cypriot 
journalists on both sides of the island. END SUMMARY. 


-------------------------- 
MIAs Still Front Page News 
-------------------------- 


2. (U) Some 1500 Greek Cypriots and 500 Turkish Cypriots 
went missing between the 1963 outbreak of inter-communal 
violence and the Turkish military intervention in July/August 
1974. Relatives' organizations wield considerable clout 
here, while the fate of the missing has long figured high in 
negotiations for a Cyprus settlement. Gravesite discoveries, 
even promising leads, generate significant media coverage on 
both sides of the island. 


3. (SBU) In this environment, "Philelefteros's" October 22 
front-page story spawned immediate buzz. "The Missing -- 
Turkey's Guinea Pigs" read the headline drafted by Washington 
correspondent (and regular thorn-in-our-side) Michael 
Ignatiou. At the top, Ignatiou identified his primary source 
document, an article in the September 2006 "Defense and 
Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy" (DFASP) journal. Its 
author, whom the G/C journalist did not name, argued in DFASP 
that Turkey had developed chemical and biological weapons for 
use against PKK rebels. Buried amidst accounts of the 
weapons' employment in southeast Turkey lay the following 
supposed revelation: "There were many references -- 
denounced mostly by Kurds but also Turks -- that, during 
1984-88, many missing G/C and Greek soldiers captured in 1974 
ended up in the secret biochemical labs of the Turkish Army 
and were used as guinea pigs. However, such references have 
not been confirmed or verified." The DFASP piece also 
alleged that Turkish secret police operating clandestinely in 
Cyprus in 1994 had assassinated a G/C journalist aware of the 
secret labs and their ethnic Greek lab rats. 


SIPDIS 


4. (U) RoC reactions were swift. Papadopoulos offered 
measured comments, promising that administration officials 
would study carefully the allegations. Foreign Minister 
George Lillikas leaned further forward, calling the DFASP 
report "a shock, a human tragedy, especially for the victims' 
families." Sensing perhaps that Lillikas had leant too much 
credibility to the "unverified, unconfirmed" report, 
Government Spokesman Christodoulos Pashiardis backtracked, 
emphasizing that, while the RoC took seriously the 
allegations, it was in no position to verify them. 


5. (C) Contacts sought the Embassy's opinion on DFASP and 
the veracity of its report. UN Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) DCM 
Wlodek Cibor telephoned PolChief October 23, concerned the 


NICOSIA 00001883 002 OF 003 




allegations -- and the possible RoC response -- conceivably 
could hinder operations of the UN Committee on Missing 
Persons (CMP), the UN's most successful bi-communal 
operation. UN Special Representative Michael Moller shared 
his worries, Cibor added. In a working lunch with PolChief 
the following day, Greek Embassy First Secretary Costas 
Kollias opined that DFASP's "evidence" looked scant. As in 
Cyprus, however, the missing persons issue in Greece was 
quite sensitive, and the relatives of the 80-odd Greek 
nationals who disappeared in 1974 would demand government 
action. GoG investigative efforts were centered in 
Washington, Kollias added, with the Greek Embassy there 
canvassing its State, DoD, and think-tank contacts. 


------------------- 
Backtracking Begins 
------------------- 


6. (U) Additional details on DFASP emerged in the media on 
October 25. Media reported the think-tank was the brainchild 
of Gregory Copley, an Australian-born, Washington-resident 
"defense and foreign policy expert." "Philelefteros" 
published excerpts of Copley's CV, emphasizing the researcher 
enjoyed great influence within Pentagon walls. The 
pro-government daily continued its attack on Ankara's alleged 
culpability and unwillingness to tackle the missing persons 
issue in good faith. 


7. (SBU) Opposition-affiliated media took a different tack, 
however. Acquiring the source report from DFASP's journal, 
they attacked the hearsay that peppered the text. 
English-language daily "Cyprus Mail" called Copley "an 
American nutcase conspiracy theorist who runs a US-joke of an 
organization...that nobody with half a brain would take 
seriously." "Politis" and "Alithia" questioned why 
Philelefteros chose to publicize the inflammatory, 
unconfirmed accounts of G/C and Greek "guinea pigs," 
surmising that pressure from the Papadopoulos administration 
lay behind the ethically questionable decision. Gregory 
Copley was a hired gun, they continued. Websites of both the 
Cyprus Embassy in Washington and the American Hellenic 
Institute -- which rarely miss an opportunity to bash Turkey 
-- contained links to Copley-authored texts, the papers 
added. 


8. (C) Media buried deeply Turkey's response to Copley's 
revelations, or ignored it completely. "Greek Cypriots 
themselves don't believe this nonsense," asserted Levent 
Eler, political counselor at Turkey's "embassy" to the 
"TRNC." The Philelefteros story appeared a clumsy attempt to 
besmirch his country's reputation in the run-up to the 
December European Council meeting, where Turkey's EU 
accession course would be debated. Eler was reporting on the 
scandal, he told PolChief October 31, but his superiors in 
Ankara seemed completely disinterested. On the other hand, 
the Turkish Cypriot CMP member had issued a statement 
declaring Copley's accounts works of fiction. Turkey's "full 
support" of CMP activities would continue, Eler finished. 


9. (C) On account of FM Lillikas's pledge to investigate and 
of DFASP's U.S. address, we expected the Foreign Ministry to 
request consultations. The call never came. Curious, we 
followed up with Second Secretary Christina Tzika, who tracks 
human rights issues at the MFA. Tzika October 31 revealed 
her ministry had obtained no verification of Copley's claims. 
Nor had expected pressure for action from missing persons 
groups materialized. Despite her near-admission that DFASP's 
account appeared baseless, Tzika criticized Turkey's overall 
handling of the prisoner issue. Ankara, she argued, had 
delegated all responsibilities to the CMP, an institution 
tasked only with identifying gravesites and exhuming corpses 
on the island. Other reports -- "confirmed," she claimed -- 
proved Turkey was holding G/C and Greek prisoners of war as 
late as the mid-1980s. Turkey most open its files, Tzika 
ended. 


--------------------------- 
And Attack Yields to Defend 
--------------------------- 


10. (SBU) With public opinion seeming to turn against 
"Philelefteros," journalist Ignatiou assumed the defense. In 
a prominently placed October 30 article, he offered a 


NICOSIA 00001883 003 OF 003 




seven-point justification for breaking the DFASP story. 
Copley, Ignatiou explained, had great Pentagon support (but 
none at Foggy Bottom), towed the Administration's 
counter-terrorrism line without fault, and once worked for 
Caspar Weinberger. U.S. Embassy websites featured links to 
his works, and prominent North American universities promoted 
them, as did the National Defense University. Finally, the 
Justice Department "supported" his reporting on the Muslim 
world. The journalist pressed the Send button only after 
Copley had "insisted" he had numerous Turkish Army sources 
who had corroborated the story. Nowhere did Ignatiou mention 
personal efforts to inspect evidence or confirm witness 
accounts, however. 


11. (U) Copley, too, saw the need to clear his name. In a 
"press advisory" transmitted to major Cypriot media October 
31, the think-tanker, under the byline "President of 
International Strategic Studies Association (ISSA)," struck 
back at "Politis" and "Cyprus Mail." Their attacks, Copley 
stressed, "were designed to embarrass the elected Government 
of Cyprus...while supporting the interests of the Turkish 
Government." ISSA stood behind its story, but revealing 
sources' names and positions, as critics were demanding, 
could threaten their well-being. The organization reserved 
the right "to respond more substantially, legally, against 
'Politis'." 


-------- 
Comment: 
-------- 


12. (C) Four hundred miles separate Nicosia from the "secret 
biochem weapons facilities" of suburban Ankara; we therefore 
are in no position to comment on the substance of Copley's 
allegations. Similarly, we cannot verify his claims that 
ISSA "directly employs 200 field collectors and intelligence 
analysts to service clients in 246 countries and territories" 
(a figure that exceeds the UN's roll, "Politis" chuckled.) 
Yet the editors among us can differentiate well-researched 
texts from conjecture and hearsay. Copley's unverified and 
unconfirmed account falls neatly into the latter category. 
From there, it's no great leap to accept opposition media 
claims that the RoC itself had fomented the scandal. 
Alexandra Attilidou (protect), a reliable Embassy contact at 
Intercollege, the Nicosia institution where Copley has 
spoken, lent credence to "Politis's" counter-accusations 
October 29. Not only had the Presidency commissioned the 
Turk-bashing story, she contended, but it directed Ignatiou 
to break it just two weeks before the European Commission 
issues its accession process report card. Papadopoulos had 
hoped to cement public support for hard-line anti-Ankara 
tactics, the reasoning went. 


13. (C) If Attilidou's allegations prove true, Ignatiou 
likely played the willing co-conspirator, since numerous and 
varied Embassy interlocutors declare he is in the President's 
pocket. While the journalist's actions did not directly 
compromise U.S interests on this occasion, more often than 
not he causes us problems. Criticizing our Cyprus policy is 
no crime, of course (it's more the national sport here, 
actually.) But "Philelefteros's" star snoop uses the access 
we grant him against us. Cutting Ignatiou off completely 
would backfire, but we ought consider weaning him soon. End 
Comment. 
SCHLICHER 
http://www.thepressproject.gr/searchlabdetails.php?type=wiki&ref=06NICOSIA1883&key=%28protect%29
ΠΡΕΖΑ TV
2-9-2011

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