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Sarkozy mars Turkish EU aim

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  • Sarkozy mars Turkish EU aim

    Washington Times, DC
    May 11 2007


    Sarkozy mars Turkish EU aim
    By Andrew Borowiec
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    May 11, 2007


    NICOSIA, Cyprus -- Nicolas Sarkozy's election as president of France
    is likely to make Turkey's membership in the European Union more
    elusive than ever, Turkish analysts say.
    His categorical opposition to Turkish membership in the 27-nation
    bloc is "hammering the last nail into the coffin of Turkish-EU
    relations," one analyst said.
    "This is bad for Turkey," said Mehet Ali Birand, a leading
    Turkish liberal commentator.
    During his electoral campaign, Mr. Sarkozy stressed his view that
    Turkey is not a European country and that its membership would dilute
    the bloc's cohesion and dangerously stretch its borders. Mr. Sarkozy
    also has said he would sign a French bill passed by parliament
    penalizing all those who deny the genocide of Armenians.
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's embattled prime minister, asked
    the European Commission "to avoid statements and attitudes that would
    negatively affect our negotiating process."
    As it is, the process has been dogged by problems that include
    Turkey's refusal to recognize the Greek Cypriot government, the
    degree of Turkish freedom of expression, the army's role in politics,
    and its refusal to acknowledge World War I Ottoman massacres of
    Armenians.
    Turkey's negotiations with the European bloc have stalled. The
    European Union has suspended talks on eight of 35 parts of the
    negotiating process, but European Commission President Jose Manuel
    Barroso said the whole concept is based not on one country's views
    but "on the basis of a mandate decided unanimously."
    Instead of admitting Turkey, Mr. Sarkozy has proposed that the
    European Union give the country the leading role in a planned
    grouping of Mediterranean-area countries. Turkey has rejected
    suggestions of a "privileged association" with the bloc.
    Regardless of whether Mr. Sarkozy's election will have an
    immediate effect on Turkey's EU talks, relations between France and
    Turkey appear to be heading into troubled waters.
    After the French National Assembly vote on the massacres of
    Armenians in October, Turkey froze contacts with a French pipeline
    consortium and warned the United States that approval of a similar
    bill by the U.S. Congress would cast "a serious shadow" on its
    relations with Washington.
    According to the mass-circulation Istanbul daily Milliyet, Mr.
    Sarkozy's election "will further worsen the already chilly
    Turkish-French ties."
    Meanwhile, popular disinterest among Turks toward the European
    Union has been growing. "The enthusiasm is gone," said Can Baydarol,
    a Turkish political scientist. "Turkey could easily move toward a
    more isolationist policy."
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