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ANKARA: Telegraph: Why Are We So Afraid Of Turkey?

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  • ANKARA: Telegraph: Why Are We So Afraid Of Turkey?

    TELEGRAPH: WHY ARE WE SO AFRAID OF TURKEY?

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    via ABHAber, Belgium
    Feb 27 2007

    The anxieties of the West about Islam must not jeopardize the
    reconciliation between East and West, argued Boris Johnson, a Daily
    Telegraph columnist, in his article.

    "If we get it right with Turkey, we could rebuild the whole ancient
    harmonious union around the Mediterranean" and "heal the rupture
    created by the Muslim invasions," Boris Johnson argued in an extract
    from his book "The Dream of Rome."

    "What would be better for the long-term health of the planet -- a
    Turkey increasingly apathetic about Europe, and interested in forging
    links with Iran? Or one firmly entrenched in the European Union,
    reaching out to provide a stabilizing influence in what will remain,
    in our lifetimes, the most dangerous region of the world? I know what
    I want," Boris, himself of Turkish origin, wrote.

    After presenting a historical background of the relationships between
    Turkey and the Western world, especially the Roman Empire, he argues
    that after the conquest of Istanbul by the Ottoman Empire, Turkey
    joins Egypt and North Africa and the huge tracts of the former Empire
    which our Popes and prelates and politicians think are not culturally
    congruent with modern, western Europe - because they fell to Islam.

    "The French object to the Turks because of the Armenian massacres, as
    though France were guiltless herself. Brussels occasionally launches
    another of its sermons about gender equality, though it should be
    remembered that Turkey gave women the vote before Belgium," Johnson
    states, evaluating the issues that constitute the basic problems
    regarding Turkey's relations with the West.

    Stating that the in Turkish record on human rights is one of the
    most important reasons for keeping the Turks on the tram-tracks to
    EU membership, Johnson asserts that the Greek human rights record
    when she was admitted to the EEC was also very far from perfect.

    "We need reconciliation, not repulsion. We need reciprocity, not
    rejection. Instead of intensifying the differences, by burbling on
    about alien "values," we should see that we are coming to a critical
    moment in our discussions with Turkey," wrote Johnson, stating that
    a different way of understanding is necessary for the development of
    the relations.

    Johnson argued that the West and Turkey could rebuild the whole
    ancient harmonious union around the Mediterranean, the rich and free
    dissemination of produce described by Henri Pirenne, from the Straits
    of Gibraltar to the Bosphorus; from Tunis to Lyons, if the West gets
    it right with Turkey.

    Johnson also suggested that the EU needs to develop a new and deeper
    relationship with the Maghreb countries of North Africa, based on
    the old Roman idea of tolerance over time.
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