Throughout the spring of 1915, information had been reaching Russia about the genocide of the Armenians, most notably a detailed report that arrived in Tbilisi, the capital of the
viceroyalty of the Caucasus on 18 April 1915. At the suggestion of the Viceroy
Illarion Vorontsov-Dashkov, on 20 April 1915,
Gevorg V, the
Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church, sent an appeal to the Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Sazonov asking him to publicize the genocide. Accordingly, Sazonov passed on the appeal from Gevorg to the neutral nations of the United States and Italy, asking for their ambassadors to the
Sublime Porte to protest against the genocide. After the Ottoman empire entered the war, Italy and the United States became the joint protecting powers for the interests of Britain, France and Russia in the Ottoman empire. On April 27 1915, Count
George Bakhmeteff, the Russian ambassador in Washington, passed on Gevorg's appeal to President
Woodrow Wilson asking for the United States "in the name of humanity and our holy Christian faith" to do something to stop the genocide. On the next day, a joint conference was held where
Henry Morgenthau Sr. and
Eugenio Garroni, the American and Italian ambassadors to the Sublime Porte, met with Ottoman ministers only to receive a blanket denial with the ministers claiming that the Armenians were being relocated for their own protection. Dissatisfied with the response that Morgenthau and Garroni were receiving in Constantinople, Sazonov later on 28 April wired a cable to
Théophile Delcassé, the French foreign minister arguing the Allies should release a joint statement promising to punish the Ottoman officials after the Allied victory, saying this was the only way at present to stop the genocide. On 5 May 1915, Sazonov again pressed for a joint statement. On 6 May, appeals for help from Gevorg were passed on to
King George V and President
Raymond Poincaré. On 11 May 1915, Sazonov passed on a draft statement to the
Foreign Office and the
Quai d'Orsay that denounced "these fresh crimes of Turkey against Christianity and civilization". Russia initially suggested the wording "crimes against Christianity and civilization", but France and the United Kingdom insisted that this be changed to "crimes against humanity and civilization". In November 1914,
the Sublime Porte had proclaimed a jihad (holy war) against Russia, Britain and France with the sultan-caliph Mehmed V issuing the declaration of
jihad on 4 November 1914 that called upon all Muslims throughout the world to fight against Britain, France and Russia. As both the British empire and the French empire had millions of Muslim subjects, there were serious concerns in both London and Paris about the loyalty of their Muslim subjects, whom it was believed might rebel. The French had a massive number of Muslim soldiers from the
Maghreb fighting in their army while much of the
Indian Army was Muslim. In February, the Muslim
5th Light Infantry regiment of the Indian Army
mutinied in Singapore, an incident that at the time was believed to be a response to the Ottoman call for
jihad.
Sir Edward Grey, the British Foreign Secretary together with Delcassé objected that the Russian draft played into the Ottoman line that the war was a religious war. At the insistence of Grey and Delcassé, the references to Christianity were removed. The final version of the declaration read: The declaration was printed in newspapers throughout the world. ==Ottoman response==