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Turkey's Place In Europe

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  • Turkey's Place In Europe

    TURKEY'S PLACE IN EUROPE

    The Irish Times
    October 30, 2007 Tuesday

    Turkey presents a particular problem for Europeans as they consider
    whether it should join the European Union. The issue seems to invite
    identity questions along the following lines: "Are they like us? Are
    they not so different in values, culture and religious practice that
    we cannot share a political community with them?"

    These questions are in fact also about Europeans themselves: "Who
    are we and what are we like? What are the relevant values, cultures
    and beliefs that bring us together?"

    Such questions cannot be answered abstractly or by cultural
    introspection alone, nor only by geography or history. They require
    accurate reportage, information and analysis about contemporary
    Turkey and its developing relations with a European Union that is
    equally evolving. We need to know more about our differences and
    similarities with this other society. Nor can these questions be
    answered prematurely, since the EU negotiations with Turkey will take
    another 10 years and its accession, if agreed, may not happen until
    2020, during which time both sides will have changed.

    Lara Marlowe's reports on Turkey over the last month help readers
    of this newspaper understand it better. It is a more rich, complex
    and surprising picture than many may have realised. Turkey is a
    dynamic society going through an extraordinary political and economic
    transformation. Having been run for decades by a secular and military
    elite inspired by Kemal Ataturk's nationalist revolution in the 1920s,
    Turkey is now governed by the centre right Justice and Development
    Party (AKP) which emerged from Islamic movements but is no longer
    determined by that past.

    It has just been returned to power on a strong popular mandate, led by
    one of the most impressive figures in contemporary European politics,
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The party combines a radical reformist programme
    with more conservative social values. It represents a new commercial
    class with roots in Anatolia and a broad appeal throughout the
    country. Its reformism has been centrally inspired by the aspiration
    to join the EU, believed to vindicate the AKP's programme of change
    by better recognising Turkey's own diversity.

    Turkey's national mentality and character are strikingly alert and
    sensitive to external attitudes and criticism. This is evident
    during the ebbs and flows of EU negotiations. Rapid mood swings
    follow negative responses to Turkey's membership application. The
    same volatility applies to the recent crisis with the US over the
    Armenian catastrophe during the first World War and the current much
    more serious one on Kurdish militant groups based in Iraq.

    The existential questions posed by Turkey's application to join the EU
    need a long period of open engagement. They should not be foreclosed
    at this stage by those who object in principle to such a large state
    with an Islamic culture. We have a lot to gain from Turkey's dynamism,
    difference and location but need more time to learn about them and
    decide how best to respond.
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