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Turkey: In French Election, Ankara Rooting For Sarkozy Rival

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  • Turkey: In French Election, Ankara Rooting For Sarkozy Rival

    TURKEY: IN FRENCH ELECTION, ANKARA ROOTING FOR SARKOZY RIVAL
    by Yigal Schleifer

    EurasiaNet.org
    April 24 2012
    NY

    As the French presidential election heads into a run-off, it's probably
    not surprising that Ankara is quietly but emphatically rooting for
    Socialist candidate Francois Hollande to defeat the incumbent Nicolas
    Sarkozy. Under Sarkozy, Turkish-French relations have been extremely
    strained, with the French President expressing his strong opposition to
    Turkey's European Union membership bid and also helping introduce a few
    months ago an ultimately unsuccessful bill that would have criminalized
    the denial of the Armenian genocide. On the foreign policy, front,
    meanwhile, Paris and Ankara have also frequently clashed in recent
    years, in particular with the two vying for influence in the Middle
    East. For example, after the end of the NATO operation last year in
    Libya, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Sarkozy were
    in a race to see which one of them could make it to Tripoli first and
    become the first major foreign leader to visit the newly liberated
    country. Sarkozy ended up winning the contest, arriving in the Libyan
    capitol only a day before Erdogan.

    So what would a Socialist victory in France mean for Turkey? The
    National takes a look:

    Cengiz Aktar, head of EU studies at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University,
    said he expected a better era to begin under Mr Hollande. "A socialist
    administration would lift the veto on the five chapters" of Turkey's
    EU membership talks now blocked by the Sarkozy government in Brussels,
    Mr Aktar said in an interview yesterday. "That will greatly ease the
    tense relations."

    Mr Aktar noted that French socialists were not adamantly opposed to
    Turkey's EU membership application and said Mr Hollande was likely
    to unblock the five EU chapters, even before the summer after an
    election victory in May. France says it has blocked the five chapters
    - economic and monetary policy, agricultural policy, regional policy,
    financial and budgetary provisions as well as a chapter on institutions
    - because talks about them would give Turkey a perspective of full
    EU membership. Mr Sarkozy says he is willing to negotiate closer
    ties between Ankara and the EU, under a concept called "privileged
    partnership", but does not accept talks that would mean Turkey,
    the only Muslim EU candidate, can expect to become a full EU member.

    Ioannis N Grigoriadis, a political scientist from Greece who teaches
    at Bilkent University in Ankara, also said a government change in
    France was likely to have positive effects.

    "The Sarkozy presidency has invested a lot in the opposition to
    Turkey's membership bid," Mr Grigoriadis said. He said Mr Sarkozy had
    made it clear that he was opposed to Turkey's accession and would bring
    Turkey's EU accession to a referendum, even if Ankara fulfilled all
    the necessary criteria. It's a position France had not taken towards
    any other EU candidate.

    "I don't think Hollande would repeat all that," Mr Grigoriadis said,
    adding he expected an improvement in relations under Mr Hollande,
    even though it would be difficult to restore the level of trust the
    two countries enjoyed under Jacques Chirac, Mr Sarkozy's predecessor,
    in the 1990s and early 2000s.

    Meanwhile, it appears that diplomats in Ankara are already getting
    ready for a Hollande victory, preparing for the opening of several
    chapters of the EU negotiation process that are currently being blocked
    by France. It would appear that they are betting on a winning horse:
    according to most polls, the Socialist contender is likely to win
    the May 6 runoff with a comfortable margin.

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