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ISTANBUL: France Faces Blowback For Sarkozy's Fight With Turkey

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  • ISTANBUL: France Faces Blowback For Sarkozy's Fight With Turkey

    FRANCE FACES BLOWBACK FOR SARKOZY'S FIGHT WITH TURKEY
    by ABDULLAH BOZKURT

    Today's Zaman
    April 16 2012
    Turkey

    Lost in popular rhetoric and cynical campaign speeches amid a rapidly
    rising xenophobic and anti-Muslim mood among the French population was
    the embattled French President Nicolas Sarkozy's deliberate attempt to
    pick a fight with Turkey, which was Europe's fastest growing economy
    as of 2011.

    By doing so, Sarkozy did in fact a great disservice to his fellow
    countrymen, especially for blue-collar workers, farmers and retirees in
    France. While heading towards presidential elections, he unsuccessfully
    pushed a major "nuisance law" on Turkey with a shortsighted attempt
    to criminalize Armenian genocide denial in French territory. Yet,
    I must regretfully say, Sarkozy fared well in alienating the most
    vibrant economy in Europe, which has a young, well-educated labor
    force, people with great business savvy and an entrepreneurial spirit
    as well as industries that enjoy a strong manufacturing base.

    With a misguided sense of French nationalism up for grabs in political
    rallies across France, understandably it was not easy for French
    citizens to realize how much damage this failed law did to future
    job creation for working class families, on the security of benefits
    French retirees seem to have taken for granted, and on the income of
    farmers who have been selling over $1.5 billion worth of livestock
    to Turkey annually.

    The fact is that many multinational firms, including French, have
    already moved their regional headquarters to Turkey to capitalize
    on, first and foremost, the rising political clout of Ankara in
    southeastern Europe, Central Asia, Africa and the Middle East. That
    includes some French multi-nationals as well. Yet Sarkozy has been
    doing his best to sever ties with Turkey for reasons unknown to even
    French government officials, who acknowledge privately that they have
    no idea what the French president is trying to accomplish.

    This is not the first time we've tested the waters in France. When
    France officially recognized the 1915 killings of Armenians as a
    genocide in 2001, Turkish-French relations took a serious blow, which
    took years to repair. By the time everything returned to business as
    usual, at the initiative of the Socialist Party and with the support
    of conservative French President Jacques Chirac, the French Assembly
    approved another bill that criminalized the denial of "Armenian
    Genocide" in Oct. 12, 2006, throwing ties into chaos once again. The
    Senate never took up the bill, effectively killing it in its tracks,
    but the damage was done, and repairing the frayed relationship took
    many more years than did the 2001 episode.

    Now the French did it again with the center-right party leader Sarkozy
    pushing a new bill criminalizing the denial of the genocide on the
    eve of presidential elections. The bill was approved in the assembly
    on Dec. 22, 2011, and was passed by the senate on Jan. 23, 2012. But
    France's Constitutional Council struck it down on Feb. 28, 2012,
    ruling that the law was contradictory to the principles of freedom of
    expression written into France's founding documents. Sarkozy vowed
    to keep fighting when he instructed the government to reintroduce
    a new bill to parliament, which they submitted on the same day. But
    Sarkozy simply ran out of time when the parliament went into recess
    on March 6 for the presidential election, which is slated for the
    April-May period.

    Nonetheless, the sanctions announced by the Turkish government in its
    first batch of reactionary measures against France are still being
    enforced because the French government did not change its position on
    the bill. This time the damage seems to be having a longer-lasting
    effect on French interests in Turkey. All of the activities in
    terms of exchange of visits, education, training and seminars at
    the bilateral political and military levels as well as economic
    cooperation are still suspended. The decision to ban all of the EU
    twinning projects with French involvement is in effect. There are
    no political consultations going on at the bilateral level. France
    was shunned from participating in joint military exercises while
    France naval vessels are denied entry into Turkish ports. Turkey has
    started to examine the overflight, landing or re-fueling permissions
    for French military aircraft on a case-by-case basis, revoking the
    earlier right to ask for blanket permission for all flights annually.

    These measures carry some weight, but they are mostly political
    messages. The disturbed bilateral relationship took a real toll on
    the business between Turkey and France. The trade volume in the first
    two months of 2012 has pretty much stayed dormant with respect to the
    same period last year albeit with some slight increases. Turkey's
    trade with other EU partners have by and large increased. We could
    have and should have done much better with France, provided that there
    were no obstacles to the bilateral ties, which thanks, but no thanks,
    are owed to Mr. Sarkozy himself.

    Even if Cabinet members in the Turkish government announce publicly
    that the French are welcome to invest in and do business in Turkey,
    the way they are treated in the government bureaucracy is no picnic.

    The licensing and permission applications filed by French companies
    have obviously been slowed down in the government maze and there is
    an undeclared embargo on French companies being offered government
    tenders and contracts. All these inevitably have a blowback impact
    on French economy in terms of lost jobs and trade revenue.

    There is also a sensitive opposition factor in Turkey, which the
    government now needs to take into account when dealing with the
    French. In the new legislative session of the Turkish Parliament,
    there are at least two dozen question motions filed by opposition
    party members asking each and every minister to detail what kind of
    business relations their ministry is currently pursuing with French
    companies or French institutions. As each minister needs to respond
    to these questions by law, now even a small amount of cooperation
    in Turkish agencies with French counterpart is under scrutiny. For
    example, according to the EU ministry, Turkey has implemented 14
    "twinning projects" with France out of a total of 118 with EU partners
    since 2002. French projects, which were no big deal as they run at
    the value of $25 million, are now under parliamentary probe.

    But there are other projects valued in multi-million or even
    billions of dollars. Just to give you some idea, let me mention two
    statements from two different ministries. In a letter dated March
    20, 2012 and addressed to Parliament, Environment and Urban Planning
    Minister Erdogan Bayraktar listed Bureau de Recherche Géologiques et
    Minières (BRGM), the French national institute for research on earth
    and environment sciences; the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle
    (MNHN), the National Museum of Natural History in Paris; French banking
    and insurance firm Groupama; and French consortium Société Anonyme
    Francaise d' Etude de Gestion et d' Entreprises (SAFEGE) as partners
    doing business with his ministry in Turkey. He said he would comply
    with any government directive to slash the business deals when one
    is issued.

    On March 5, 2012, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yildiz
    disclosed to Parliament that French company Vivirad has been working
    with the Turkish Petroleum Refineries Corporation (TupraÅ~_), Turkey's
    main oil supplier, on a project funded by the Turkish Atomic Energy
    Agency (TAEK). He also noted that Turkish Coal Enterprises (TKÄ°)
    is working with France's largest governmental research organization,
    the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), while Turkey's
    Electricity Generation Holding Company (EUAÅ~^) is cooperating with
    French firm Alstom on different projects. Yildiz named French companies
    Geostock, NVT Perenco, Réseau de Transport d'Ã~Ilectricité (RTE),
    SNF SAS Andrezieux, Ardatem and Saint-Gobain SA as companies doing
    business with Turkish government agencies. The list is by no means
    an exhaustive one.

    The French elite understood all the risks associated with Turkish
    wrath over genocide allegations and tried to prevent Sarkozy from
    dragging France into an uncalled-for dogfight with Turkey, which is
    being hailed as a fast-emerging power in Eastern Europe. France's
    Constitutional Council put a stop to Sarkozy's love of adventure for
    now. I guess the upcoming presidential election will tell us what
    direction we are headed towards on the bilateral ties as well.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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