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  • Testing time for Turkey

    Testing time for Turkey

    Editorial

    Sentinel & Enterprise Online (Fitchburg, Mass.)
    Monday, January 03, 2005

    The European Union crossed a threshold recently that, just a few years
    back, would have seemed unimaginable. The members decided that
    negotiations could begin on the admission of Turkey to their union.

    This is good news for Turkey, which has sought E.U. membership since
    1987. But of course, admission is not a matter of mailing an application
    to Brussels and awaiting the verdict. Although Turkey has made
    substantial progress in the past years toward bringing its system of
    governance into alignment with Europe's, it has a long way to go.

    The Turkish democracy remains strongly influenced by the military, and
    the country's economy is still some distance from basic free-market
    principles.

    Turkey's treatment of minorities remains unsatisfactory, its
    human-rights record is decidedly mixed, and freedoms of religion and
    speech are far from the standards in Europe. Not least, Turkey continues
    to deny the history of the Armenian genocide, and the Turkish army
    occupies a third of the territory of a member of the European Union --
    Cyprus -- while refusing to recognize the Cypriot government. All of
    these facts are incompatible with E.U. membership.

    Talks are expected to last some dozen years, and in that time Turkey may
    well transform itself to satisfy the European Union. If so, this will
    mark a new day for Turks, and greatly benefit two immediate neighbors,
    Armenia and Greece, which suffer from longtime Turkish hostility and (in
    Armenia's case) a devastating economic blockade. The Turkish government
    has a sincere desire to move the country Westward, and the process of
    E.U. accession should yield innumerable benefits.

    Two questions, however, shadow the process: While the Turkish government
    strongly favors E.U. membership, it is not clear that Turkish citizens do.

    The second question is more complex. Turkey sits astride the border of
    Europe and Asia, and is a longtime member of NATO, yet whether the
    homeland of the onetime Ottoman Empire is "European" is debatable.
    Turkey is a very big, poor and overwhelmingly Muslim country: Can it be
    integrated into a European economic, political and cultural system that
    is now very different from its own? Moreover, Turkey would be the
    largest member of the E.U., which is already strained by several
    comparatively non-affluent members.

    None of these obstacles is insuperable, and while many Europeans have
    reservations about Turkey, many others think that Turkish E.U.
    membership makes sense. The next years will be a testing time: for
    Turkey, for Europe, and for the meaning and future of European identity
    and unity.


    http://www.sentinelandenterprise.com/Stories/0,1413,106~4989~2632159,00.html
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