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ANKARA: The Meaning Of Sarkozy

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  • ANKARA: The Meaning Of Sarkozy

    THE MEANING OF SARKOZY
    View by Sahin Alpay (TZ)

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    June 4 2007

    Last month Nicolas Sarkozy was elected president of France. France
    is not a country that is familiar to me. I have neither lived in
    France, nor have the ability to read or write French. I follow
    what is happening there mostly by reading books and newspapers in
    the languages available to me. I am aware that Sarkozy has promised
    France more authority, more uniculturalism, less immigration, more
    work, less bureaucracy, more market, closer relations with America,
    among other things. He does not, however, give me the impression
    that he is to achieve more "power and grandeur" for France. If I were
    French I would undoubtedly have voted for his rival Segolene Royal,
    but the choice of the leader is surely up to the French people.

    The election of Sarkozy concerns me only with respect to what he
    promises for the future of the EU and of Turkey. The question I have
    in mind is this: What is the meaning of Sarkozy from the perspective
    of the EU and of Turkey in the EU? Let me begin with Turkey. Turkey
    was perhaps the country where the "soft power" of the EU, that is
    its ability to attract and persuade countries to adopt its norms and
    goals, proved most effective. The promise of EU membership encouraged,
    especially in the period between 1999 and 2005, Turkey to adopt under
    various governments -- particularly under the Justice and Development
    Party government (dubbed "Islamist" by its opponents) -- remarkable
    reforms to broaden its democracy and to modernize its economy. The
    recognition of Turkey's European identity by the EEC in 1963, and
    its confirmation by the EC in 1989 and by the EU in 1999 has surely
    been the greatest incentive for the Turkish reform program which has
    rightly been called a "Quiet Revolution."

    Sarkozy's shift from his party's traditional position of supporting
    Turkey's EU bid and adoption of Giscard d'Estaing's ("Turkey's
    membership would be the end of the EU") position, his pronouncements
    that "Turkey should recognize the Armenian Genocide", that "Turkey
    cannot become a member of the EU even if it recognizes the Armenian
    Genocide," and his offer to Turkey of membership in the "Mediterranean
    Union" instead of the EU has definitely helped the soft power of the
    EU over Turkey to approach the point of extinction.

    Will Sarkozy in power, as is argued by some, behave differently towards
    Turkey than Sarkozy during the election campaign? I am in no position
    to tell. I do know, however, that the growing role of the military
    in Turkey's politics as witnessed by the e-memorandum of April 27,
    and the increased risk in Turkey of the reversal of the gains of the
    "Quiet Revolution" is closely related with the opposition to Turkey's
    EU membership that began with Angela Merkel in Germany and continued
    with Nicolas Sarkozy in France. I disagree with those who claim
    that the military in Turkey has from the outset opposed Turkey's EU
    accession process. I believe that the military in Turkey is once again
    immersed in politics as a consequence of European leaders trying to
    derail that process.

    It is in a strange twist of history that France under the leadership
    of Sarkozy has assumed the leading role in pushing Turkey out of
    Europe. France is the country which has historically made perhaps the
    greatest impact on Turkey's Europeanization. Had Turkey's Unionist and
    Kemalist leaders been attracted more by British than French ideas,
    the course of history in Turkey would certainly have followed a
    different path. The role of ideas that originate from France in
    the shaping the secular fundamentalist, nationalist and centralist
    ideology of state elites of Turkey cannot be underestimated.

    Merkel, under the pressure of her social democratic partners, at least
    abides by the "pacta sund servanda" principle. Sarkozy and his likes,
    on the other hand, seem to have no respect for that principle, and
    no concern at all for the EU's credibility and respectability.

    Their attitude boils down to the abandonment of the ideal of Europe
    united on the universal values of human rights, rule of law, democracy,
    and respect for cultural diversity, and the embrace instead of the
    ideal of Europe as a cultural union, as a "Christian Club."

    By trying to push Turkey out of Europe, Sarkozy and others not
    only send the signal to millions of Muslims in Europe that they
    are second-class citizens and are to remain so, but by refusing
    to lend support to the consolidation of democracy and the rule
    of law in Turkey, they are also likely to alienate the social and
    political forces in the Muslim world who are struggling for freedom
    and democracy.
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