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Turkey's chance / The Muslim country deserves a bid to join the EU
October 12, 2004 15:17:38
Editorial: Turkey's chance / The Muslim country deserves a bid to join the EU
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh Post Gazette Oct 12 2004
The European Commission recommended Wednesday that talks begin next year on whether to admit Turkey to the European Union.
A final decision on whether to hold talks won't be made until December when the 25 EU heads of state meet, but they are expected to accept the commission's recommendation unanimously.
That's good news for Turkey, but it does not mean the country is in. Negotiations could take as long as 15 years. That is as it should be, given both the gravity of the decision and the reservations held by some EU leaders and their nations' people.
Here is why Turkey is a hard case. It has a population of 71 million and, if admitted to the EU, would be second in size only to Germany. It is also 99 percent Muslim, and some Europeans see the EU's at least nominally Christian orientation as important to its nature. Turkey is also relatively poor, at a time when the EU is wrestling with the economic challenges of adding 10 new countries last May -- countries whose standards of living were below EU levels.
The admission of Turkey has geopolitical ramifications as well. Adding it will give the EU common borders with difficult countries like Iraq, Iran, Syria, Armenia and Georgia, presenting new potential problems for the organization.
Just the same, there are good reasons for the EU to include Turkey. Europe needs the large, young population of Turkey to help it remain productive; labor is short in most of Western Europe. Turkey wants very much to join the EU and has already made important changes to try to meet the EU's requirements.
More importantly in global terms, adding Turkey, a democratic Muslim country, to the EU -- in effect, to Europe -- could be helpful in steering the world away from increasing polarization between Christian and Muslim societies.
The war in Iraq, Western inattention to the problem between the Israelis and Palestinians and friction between Muslim immigrant groups and governments in Western Europe have opened the West to charges of religious and racial discrimination. Turkey as a member of the EU would help drive a stake through the heart of that old, unwelcome ghost.
The European Commission was right to recommend the beginning of talks and we encourage the EU heads of state to approve its recommendation in December. At the same time, the process should unfold at a measured pace, permitting thorough negotiation of issues that might lead, ultimately, to a more perfect union between Turkey and the rest of Europe.
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submitted by Emil Lazarian
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