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What Europeans Think About Turkey And Why

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  • What Europeans Think About Turkey And Why

    WHAT EUROPEANS THINK ABOUT TURKEY AND WHY
    Katinka Barysch, Centre for European Reform (CER)

    EurActiv
    http://www.euractiv.com/en/enlarge ment/europeans-think-turkey/article-166353
    Aug 31 2007
    Belgium

    For many politicians, journalists and think-tanks, the benefits of
    Turkish accession to the EU are "plain to see", writes Katinka Barysch
    in an August 2007 paper for the Centre for European Reform (CER).

    These range from the economic boost provided by a fast-growing and
    youthful Turkey to the soft power that the EU would gain from including
    a functioning Muslim democracy, she states.

    However, for most people, fears related to Turkish accession are
    "immediate" and "personal", she adds, and include job loss, the
    threat of terrorism and the weakening of national culture. Meanwhile,
    the benefits are perceived by EU citizens as being "rather abstract",
    she believes - such as future economic growth, a stronger EU foreign
    policy and increased energy security.

    Turkey's potential membership raises questions ranging from the future
    shape of the EU to the integration of existing immigrant communities
    and countries that face similar issues do not necessarily arrive at
    the same conclusions, observes the author - citing the view of some
    Poles, Czechs and Germans that Turkey has no place in a "Christian"
    EU, whereas this is not a problem for the "predominantly Christian"
    Spaniards.

    Barysch believes that a country's attitude depends on whether it sees
    Turkish accession as a question of foreign policy (Spain, the UK)
    or a matter of internal EU or national politics (France, Germany).

    Moreover, many people in Belgium, France, Germany and Italy are
    opposed as they fear it would bring an end to the federalist vision
    of political union, she claims. Paradoxically, countries less keen on
    political integration such as the UK and the Nordic countries support
    Turkey's candidacy for this very reason, she adds.

    Other points of view are specific to individual countries. Barysch
    claims that French opposition centres on the fear that their country's
    central role in the EU has already been weakened by enlargement
    and that Turkey would be a "step too far". Moreover, she ponders
    whether France's struggle to integrate its sizeable Muslim minority -
    emphasised by recent rioting - has "overburdened" the debate.

    Germans are concerned by the impact Turkey's accession would have
    on the EU balance of power and its ability to move forward, she
    believes. Meanwhile, Austria appears to be the most sceptical country,
    she reveals - citing cultural concerns rather than religious ones as
    the main reason for Austrian opposition.

    It may take events, not words, to convince the EU public of the
    merits of Turkey's accession, believes Barysch - such as a unilateral
    withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus, an opening of the border
    with Armenia, and an end to threats of army intervention and court
    orders against journalists.

    The paper concludes that although public opinion is a "challenge"
    for Turkish accession, it is not an "insurmountable obstacle".

    Centre for European Reform (CER): What Europeans think about Turkey
    and why (August 2007)
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