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Turkish Foreign Minister Expects EU To Come Around On Membership

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  • Turkish Foreign Minister Expects EU To Come Around On Membership

    TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER EXPECTS EU TO COME AROUND ON MEMBERSHIP
    Desmond Butler

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Feb 08, 2007

    The Turkish foreign minister said that the European Union will
    eventually offer membership to Turkey.

    Despite the EU's recent decision to partially freeze talks on
    membership, Abdullah Gul said his government expects a long process
    ending in Turkey's accession.

    "I believe that the EU will realize the strategic importance of Turkey
    soon enough and reverse its negative approach," he said in a speech
    at the German Marshall Fund.

    Gul said that Turkey's importance to Europe as a Muslim-majority
    country on the cusp of the Middle East with rising importance to the
    West as a transit point for energy sources would make it irresistible.

    "The effect of EU membership will be felt across the world," he
    said. "There is too much at stake to fail."

    Gul also repeated warnings he has made throughout a visit to Washington
    against a proposed congressional resolution that would recognize the
    World War I era killings of Armenians at the end of the Ottoman empire
    as genocide. He said a resolution would insult the Turkish people.

    "Do you think the people in Turkey will understand when their boys are
    in Afghanistan and are together with your troops?" he said referring
    to the 800 Turkish troops operating in Afghanistan under NATO command.

    The congressional resolution, which was introduced for consideration
    last month, is opposed by the Bush administration, but has been
    supported by the Democratic leadership. Gul said this week that if
    it was passed, it would damage relations between the two countries.

    In talks with top U.S. officials, Gul has also raised Turkish
    frustration with U.S. policy in Iraq, particularly concern that the
    U.S. is not doing enough to help root out militants from the Kurdistan
    Workers Party, or PKK, holed up in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

    Gul has expressed Turkish nervousness about the status of the northern
    Iraqi city of Kirkuk. Turkish officials have said they will not rule
    out military intervention amid growing tensions among ethnic Turkmens,
    Arabs and Kurds in the oil-rich region around Kirkuk. Kurdish leaders
    want to annex the city, which lies just south of the autonomous
    Kurdish region stretching across Iraq's northeast.

    Iraq's constitution calls for a referendum on the issue by the end
    of this year.

    Gul said that Turkey would like to see Kirkuk remain a multiethnic
    Iraqi city.

    "This one city, this important city does not belong to one group,"
    he said.

    "There are no borders within Iraq."
    From: Baghdasarian
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