Short answer: no. Which was lucky for Greece because if they had managed somehow (meaning with French and English support) to keep an occupation strip in Smyrna and Ionia they would have paid the butcher bill in spades within a decade.
(1) No one was really serious in handing over Constantinople to Greece, notwithstanding all the nice promises of 1915 and 1916. Seeing that someone even wants Trabzon and Sinope is really too much
Given the proportions, it was like if Poland in 1920 had invaded Russia claiming Smolensk and Kiev
(2)
I'd like very much to see some substantiation (by preference not from Megali Idea sites) of the 5 millions
Greeks, Armenians and Assyrians allegedly killed in Anatolia during WW1
(3). The Ottoman census of 1906 (prior to the Balkan wars) listed 2.8 millions Greeks, 0.75 millions Bulgarians and 1.1 millions Armenians out of a population of 20-21 millions (all figures rounded). The census of 1914 registered 1.6 million Greeks and 1.2 million Armenians, out of a population of 16 million. I can accept a claim that the census results had been slightly fiddled with by authorities. However to kill 5 million of people over 3 years of war means killing 1/3 of the total Ottoman population (and twice the number of registered Greeks and Armenians).