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Q&A: Stumbling Blocks (EU & Turkey)

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  • Q&A: Stumbling Blocks (EU & Turkey)

    Q&A: STUMBLING BLOCKS

    The Daily Telegraph, UK
    Oct 3 2005

    After years of build-up, the launch of EU entry talks with Turkey in
    Luxembourg should have been an occasion for celebration.

    Why is Austria so against Turkey's membership?

    But Austria raised last-minute objections, and the EU only came
    up with a last-minute offer for Ankara. We look at the main issues
    of contention.

    Q: What had caused the deadlock in talks?

    A: Austria wanted to change the wording in the negotiating text to
    make it clear that Turkey might have to settle for less than full
    membership of the EU.

    Q: Is there anything else which held up the talks?

    There are two other issues of contention. Neither on their own are
    holding up the talks, but they are being used by Austria and other
    hostile countries as reasons for keeping Turkey out of the European
    bloc.

    Firstly, EU politicians have demanded that Turkey recognise the
    killing of more than one million Armenians between 1915 and 1923
    as genocide. Turkey refuses to do so, insisting the death toll was
    much less, and that most people died inadvertently from starvation,
    disease and exposure.

    Secondly, Turkey's unwillingness to recognise the Greek Republic of
    Cyprus causes a problem because southern Cyprus is a member of the
    25-nation bloc.

    Q: Why is Austria so against Turkey's membership?

    A: Austria's animosity towards Turkey goes back a long way. It began
    with a failed attempt by the Ottoman army to storm Vienna in 1683.

    Public opinion in Austria is also anti-Turk, and with general elections
    looming the current government may be playing to the electorate. Eighty
    per cent of Austrians don't want Turkey in the EU.

    Q: Can the Austrians alone spoil the talks?

    A: Yes, because agreement on the opening of any EU expansion talks
    requires unanimity.

    Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, keeps pointing out that the
    Austrians fully signed up to the exact terms of the Turkey enlargement
    negotiations last December and again in June.

    Q: So what's changed?

    A: Nobody's quite sure, but there has been a hardening of views
    in Vienna, based on two rejections of the EU draft constitution in
    France and the Netherlands. The proposed membership of Turkey was
    one of the reasons for the rejections.

    Linked to this is Austria's unhappiness that the EU has put enlargement
    talks with Croatia (Austria's close ally) on hold because Zagreb is
    not co-operating in the hunting down of war criminals.

    Q: So what does Austria want exactly?

    A: It wanted to toughen the Turkey text, deleting a reference to
    "full membership" as the EU's shared objective of the talks and
    amending that to a "privileged partnership".

    It also wanted to replace a reference to the "strongest-possible bond"
    with Turkey to "an alternative bond".

    Finally, it wanted to harden up a clause which allows the EU to pull
    the plug if it can't "absorb" Turkey by the time the enlargement
    negotiations end in about 10 years.

    Q: What does Jack Straw say?

    A: There is little room for concession on the first and second
    requests, but there may be some leeway on the wording "absorption".

    But Mr Straw says the final text already clearly states that the
    negotiations with the Turks are "an open-ended process, the outcome
    of which cannot be guaranteed".

    Q: Isn't that good enough for the Austrians?

    A: Clearly not, but they are totally isolated. France and a few other
    members have their doubts about Turkey, but all European states except
    Austria agree talks should begin.

    One reason given is that beginning the talks will send a positive
    signal to the Middle East that the EU is not merely a "Christian club".

    Q: If the talks do go ahead, when will Turkey join the EU?

    A: Even if the talks start on time, they will last 10 years, and
    some countries, including Austria and France, will have referendums
    on the outcome, which will almost certainly vote down the Turks.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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