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Ankara: France And Turkey: New Horizons For A Long-Standing Relation

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  • Ankara: France And Turkey: New Horizons For A Long-Standing Relation

    FRANCE AND TURKEY: NEW HORIZONS FOR A LONG-STANDING RELATIONSHIP

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Dec 11 2012

    LAURENT FABIUS

    Send to friend Â" Share on linkedinThe president of the French
    Republic has marked France's will to establish a "stable and trusting
    relationship" with Turkey. In preparation for his forthcoming visit
    to Turkey, I would like to encourage us here and now to drive forward
    our bilateral relations.

    We often find that little is known about the importance of our
    economic and trade relations. Who today knows that Turkey is our
    12th customer worldwide, and our fifth largest market outside the
    EU and Switzerland, well ahead of emerging countries such as Brazil
    and India? In recent years, our trade has flourished with exports to
    Turkey having increased by two and a half times in just 10 years.

    France has an impressive network of 10 world-class, French-speaking
    establishments in Turkey. In the scientific field, we conduct joint
    world-class projects every year on the Programme Bosphore.

    As NATO allies, France and Turkey take part in joint missions. Our
    relationship offers all the more opportunities to work together,
    since Turkish foreign policy has largely broadened its horizons this
    last decade.

    The Arab Spring has challenged some well-rooted principles and views.

    The people have rallied and shown that the aspiration for freedom
    and justice is universal. France and Turkey have acknowledged this
    sea change by providing their support for the legitimate aspirations
    of the Arab peoples and supporting their move towards democratic,
    pluralistic institutions. Today our two countries are among the most
    active in seeking a resolution to the Syrian conflict, increasing
    the pressure on Bashar al-Assad's regime for him to stand down.

    I would like to tell the Turkish people how much I appreciate the huge
    efforts made by their country to receive Syrian refugees on their soil.

    When President Francois Hollande took office, he wasted no time in
    stepping up high-level meetings with President Abdullah Gul and Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. My government is keen to develop our
    relations with Turkey.

    The European Union needs a strong Turkey with a sound, buoyant economy,
    just as Turkey needs the European Union, which represents nearly 50
    percent of its foreign trade.

    With the adoption of the "Positive Agenda" and the prospect of visa
    liberalization, we have a certain number of tools on the table. We
    are set to take the negotiations forward on Turkey's accession in
    good faith, considering the past commitments without anticipating
    the future in all its details. Since the protection of individual
    and collective freedoms is a pillar of the European project, human
    rights and civil liberties need to be promoted further. I subscribe,
    in this regard, to President Gul's words when he said that Turkey's
    relations with its Western allies are not just a foreign and security
    issue but are based on common values which, he concluded, should lead
    Turkey to continue down the reform road.

    The question of the Armenian genocide is a sensitive and difficult
    subject that has all too often cast a shadow over our bilateral
    relations. In Turkey, many criticize France for embracing the "Armenian
    theses." In France, many feel that Turkey is trying to minimize, if
    not deny the tragedy that befell the ancestors of our compatriots of
    Armenian origin. Things are changing. My colleague Ahmet Davutoglu
    has made encouraging statements. I quote, "The Armenians have before
    them someone who is listening. This foreign minister does not claim
    that nothing happened in 1915."

    For myself, I am not unaware of Turkey's share of suffering during the
    gradual dismantlement of the Ottoman Empire, with its succession of
    massacres and exoduses. However, I do believe that the disappearance of
    the Armenian civilization from Anatolian soil warrants some thinking on
    Turkey's part as to what is needed to heal the wounds opened in 1915.

    I hope that one day soon, we can achieve a calm, fair reading of
    history. In the meantime, we should try to learn to live with respect
    for the diversity of the legacies of which we are the guardians.

    We have a great deal to do and to develop in all sectors of our
    cooperation, in the cultural and scientific areas, in internal
    security, in justice, in agriculture, and in business, in particular
    to encourage French businesses to work with the Turkish market and
    to encourage Turkish firms to invest in France.

    The progress made in these areas, and the progress ongoing, means
    that today we can look forward to our future relations with optimism
    and ambition. I welcome this progress and will personally work on
    further developments with strength and conviction.

    * Laurent Fabius is the minister of foreign affairs of the French
    Republic. This abridged article was originally published in the Fall
    2012 issue of Turkish Policy Quarterly (TPQ).

    December/11/2012

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/france-and-turkey-new-horizons-for-a-long-standing-relationship.aspx?pageID=238&nID=36551&NewsCatID=3 96

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