In 2002, ASİMKK recommended that the Turkish Historical Society (TTK) increase the number of publications devoted to denying the 1915 genocide, which resulted in the TTK establishing an Armenian desk and an explosion in denialist publications. One of ASİMKK's working groups was the National Education Working Group, which focused on educating Turkish schoolchildren with the official narrative of the Armenian genocide.[1] The agency also monitored recognition of Assyrian genocide and Greek genocide during World War I.[5] Marc Mamigonian comments, "Turkey is thus perhaps the only state with an official or semiofficial entity devoted exclusively to events that it maintains did not occur."[3]Ragıp Zarakolu said in 2009 that the agency should be shut down.[5]
ASİMKK disappeared after the 2017 Turkish constitutional referendum and consequent reconfiguration of Turkey as a presidential system.[4] In June 2020, it was announced that Turkey would form a new organization to replace ASİMKK in combatting "groundless and anti-Turkey allegations regarding the events of 1915", which were described by Hurriyet Daily News as one of "Turkey's main foreign policy issues".[6]
^ abcHofmann, Tessa (2016). "From Silence to Re-remembrance: The Response of German Media to Massacres and Genocide against the Ottoman Armenians". Mass Media and the Genocide of the Armenians: One Hundred Years of Uncertain Representation. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 99–100. ISBN978-1-137-56402-3.
Turan, Ömer; Öztan, Güven Gürkan (2018). "Asılsız Soykırım İddiaları ile Mücadele Koordinasyon Kurulu". Devlet aklı ve 1915: Türkiye'de "Ermeni Meselesi" anlatısının inşası [Raison d'État and 1915: Turkey's "Armenian Question" and the Construction of Narratives] (in Turkish). İletişim Yayınları. pp. 298–299. ISBN978-975-05-2349-6.