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Open Letter From Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema: "Italy, T

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  • Open Letter From Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema: "Italy, T

    OPEN LETTER FROM ITALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER MASSIMO D'ALEMA: "ITALY, TURKEY'S CRITICAL ALLY IN EUROPE"

    Il Sole 24 Ore, Italy
    June 13 2007

    Dear Editor,

    In my institutional and political talks in Ankara, I have brought a
    message of strong support from Italy at a highly sensitive time for
    the country. Turkey has been going through a very sensitive time on
    both the domestic and international levels over the past few months.

    The force of attraction that Europe has exercised since the start of
    membership negotiations in October 2005 has unquestionably had a very
    positive impact on the political situation in the country.

    The widespread difficulties that we now see in Brussels are in danger
    of causing fault lines to re-emerge in Turkish society over complex
    issues of political ethics and of national identity, and of strongly
    undermining the support for the European project that the country's
    political, social, and economic forces have shared to date.

    That is another reason why Italy continues to back Turkey's journey
    towards membership of the European Union, above and beyond any
    current circumstances. We are prompted to do so, among other reasons,
    by geostrategic reasons linked to our common Mediterranean location,
    which is capable of imparting better balance to the Union's internal
    component parts. Also, Turkey represents a pivot between the Balkans,
    the Middle East, the Caucasus, and central Asia, and it is a hub
    for energy transit from the Black Sea to the Caspian. But above all,
    I am convinced that membership on the part of a country engaged in
    reconciling Islam and secular nonconfessionalism, development and
    stability, and modernity and tradition, can serve at one and the same
    time as an encouragement to the reformist forces in other countries in
    the area, and a challenge for Europe to prove that it is not closing
    in on itself.

    One of the most complex, and in many ways crucial, matches for Europe
    is being played out over the prospect of European membership for
    Turkey: namely, whether the Union should define itself in terms
    of an "exclusive" identity, or whether it should not, rather,
    be characterized as an open - albeit demanding and consistent -
    political project based on a sharing of values. The process of
    Turkey's rapprochement with the European Union has set out on a
    solid track, but the convoy's advancement, its speed, and its regular
    progress depend a great deal on those driving it today and on those
    who will be driving it in years to come. People in Turkey are aware
    that membership of the Union does not mean membership of an alliance
    with a vaguely defined outline, but that it involves a full fledged
    power of "transformation." Europe does not "export" democracy, with
    all the attendant risks and unknowns involved; it tends, rather,
    to generate or, if you prefer, to consolidate the local democratic
    tendency in those countries that join or aspire to join the Union.

    Turkey's membership process will have to be assessed on the basis of
    specific issues which are still open or unresolved (full freedom of
    expression and of worship; solutions, as yet unforthcoming, regarding
    relations with Cyprus; the "Kurdish question"; and relations with
    Armenia); it must not decided or influenced by considerations based on
    abstract identity-related or generically "cultural" criteria. A common
    idea and project joins some very different countries together in a
    solid bond today - countries such as Greece and Sweden, or Portugal
    and Denmark - without anyone invoking cultural homogeneity.

    What matters is what we want to do and become together.

    It is likewise important to have efficient institutions designed to
    make it possible to debate and to assess together, but to then reach
    a decision. Europe needs a "deliberative democracy." That is why
    institutional reform is so crucial to Europe's very credibility. Yet
    firmly backing the prospect of EU membership for Turkey does not mean
    that we underestimate the membership negotiations' complexity. Quite
    apart from the political aspects, the country's very demographic and
    economic size will necessitate the search for new, delicate balances
    in Community policies, from the Common Agriculture Policy to policies
    for cohesion. But then, the European Union's future depends also on
    its ability to resolve these difficult problems.

    For our part, we have imparted a fresh boost to our "strategy of
    attention" towards Turkey, setting up a "Turkey table" comprising
    members of the institutions and representatives of the worlds of
    business and of finance. Italy is Turkey's third most important trading
    partner, with trade figures constantly on the rise (over 15 billion
    [currency not specified] in 2006) and with over 500 firms operating
    in the country.

    We are determined to consolidate our presence not only in the major
    areas of industry and excellence such as transportation, energy,
    helicopters, and construction, but also in the fields of banking and
    of small and medium businesses. Technological innovation, finance,
    and trade are solidly rooted in a country with a very high growth rate
    (around 6 to 7 per cent) and with immense potential for expansion.

    In this complex, multilateral and bilateral, path, it is our ambition
    to act as a careful and aware interlocutor for Turkey, but also as
    a partner capable of using the credibility that it has acquired to
    keep alive a dialogue that is assiduous, vigilant, and if necessary,
    even critical, in order to support the country on its journey towards
    complete European integration.
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