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  • EU's door still open for Turkey

    The Standard (St. Catharines, Ontario)
    September 21, 2005 Wednesday
    Final Edition

    EU's door still open for Turkey: Close vote in German election could
    prevent de-facto veto of Ankara's membership application

    by Gwynne Dyer, Special to The Standard

    The near-tie in the German election, in which Chancellor Gerhard
    Schroeder came from 13 percentage points behind conservative
    challenger Angela Merkel in late August to less than one point behind
    her by the Sept. 18 vote, has thrown German politics into turmoil,
    but one thing is clear. The door through which Turkey hopes to enter
    the European Union, which Merkel had promised to slam shut, is still
    open. The entry negotiations begin Oct. 3 and Turkey is still a
    candidate for full membership.

    Merkel launched a high-profile campaign last month to block Turkey's
    entry, sending letters to EU leaders in other countries asking them
    to offer Turkey not full membership but only "privileged
    partnership." "We are firmly convinced," she wrote, "that Turkey's
    membership would overtax the EU economically and socially and
    endanger the process of European integration." In other words, Turks
    are poor (though she did not object to other candidates like Bulgaria
    and Romania that are not significantly richer), they're Muslim, and
    there are far too many of them.

    It was a cynical appeal to the anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim
    prejudices of German voters who are already uncomfortable with the
    growing diversity of their county (about three per cent of Germany's
    80 million people are of Turkish origin), and fear a further influx
    of immigrants if Turkey joins the EU. It was also bit late in the day
    to raise such objections, since Turkey has been a recognized
    candidate for full EU membership for the past six years. But if
    Angela Merkel had become the leader of a strong majority government
    in Germany, the biggest country in the EU, the Turks would have been
    betrayed and rejected once again.

    Turkey has tied itself into knots in order to meet the EU's standards
    for membership, and that has been a good thing for the Turks, who now
    live in a far more just, equal and democratic country than they did a
    decade ago. But they do feel that they have kept their side of the
    bargain, and only six months ago, all three of the most powerful EU
    countries, Germany, France and Britain, firmly backed Turkey's
    membership.

    But then came the French and Dutch votes last May and June that
    rejected the proposed new EU constitution and the whole scene turned
    sour.

    France wavered first, with new prime minister Dominique de Villepin
    pandering to anti-Muslim sentiments in France by sounding very cool
    about the prospects for Turkish membership. Then Angela Merkel in
    Germany went further, advocating only "privileged partnership" for
    Turkey -- and though Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder still backed
    Turkey's membership, her election victory seemed so certain that
    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul felt compelled to warn that
    "should (the EU) place anything short of full membership (on the
    table), or any new conditions, we will walk away. And this time it
    will be for good." Only Britain still backed Turkey unequivocally.

    To make matters worse, Turkey announced that while it would sign a
    customs deal opening up trade with all 25 EU members, it would still
    not recognize the government of the Republic of Cyprus, one of the 10
    countries that joined the EU in May, 2004. French president Jacques
    Chirac promptly tried to turn that declaration into a proof of
    Turkish bad faith, insisting that it "poses political and legal
    problems and is not in the spirit expected of a candidate to the
    Union."

    In fact, it was quite reasonable, since Cyprus has been divided since
    a Greek-Cypriot coup in 1974 that aimed to unite the island with
    Greece triggered a Turkish invasion to protect the Turkish-speaking
    minority. The government of the "Republic of Cyprus" rules only the
    Greek-speaking part of the island. Last year, both the
    Turkish-Cypriots and Turkey itself supported a United Nations plan to
    reunite Cyprus while the Greek-Cypriots rejected it, so Abdullah Gul
    felt fully justified in refusing to recognize the current government
    in Nicosia as the sole representative of all Cypriots -- but he did
    promise "to establish relations with the new partnership government
    that will emerge following a comprehensive settlement on Cyprus."

    Even the start of Turkey's membership talks early next month was
    looking in doubt. Cheat the Turks on that and they would surely walk
    away, abandoning the vision of a broader Europe that rises above the
    old mutual fear and suspicion between Christians and Muslims, and
    also ending all hope that countries east of Turkey, like Georgia and
    Armenia, might one day qualify for EU membership. The situation
    looked pretty grim -- and then Angela Merkel stumbled.

    She may yet end up as chancellor of Germany at the head of some
    awkward three-party coalition -- the outcome may not be known for a
    month or more -- but it would not be the kind of strong, cohesive
    government that could impose a de-facto German veto on Turkish
    membership of the EU. And it could even be the Comeback Kid himself,
    Gerhard Schroeder, a strong supporter of Turkey, who forms the next
    German government.

    As for Cyprus, EU ambassadors agreed in Brussels last Monday that
    while Ankara must eventually recognize the government of Cyprus, that
    can happen at any point in the entry negotiations, which are expected
    to last up to 10 years. That leaves plenty of time for a settlement
    that includes Turkish-Cypriots, too, so Ankara will go along with it.
    One more crisis has been surmounted and the talks will begin Oct. 3
    as planned.

    Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles
    are published in 45 countries.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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