Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Uniting Turkey, The EU

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Uniting Turkey, The EU

    UNITING TURKEY, THE EU
    By Tulin Daloglu

    Washington Times
    Oct 4 2005

    Afterlong,nerve-wrecking, last-minute negotiations, the European Union
    backed away from the precipice last night when Turkey's accession
    talks formally kicked off in Luxembourg.

    Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel believed his country
    represented a European majority in opposing Turkey's entrance into
    the talks. Though 24 members agreed, and in December Turkey was told
    it met the criteria to move forward, Austrians think it is nearly
    impossible to integrate into the EU a poor and populous country,
    culturally and religiously different than the Europeans. Or at least
    that was what held them back until yesterday.

    That concern is reminiscent of the old Turkish shadow play of
    Karagoz. The hero, a poor soldier named Visal, finds a wife through a
    matchmaker. After the wedding, he lifts the bride's veil to discover
    a horrifically ugly woman beneath it. Visal threatens both the
    matchmaker and the matchmaker's husband, and goes on a pilgrimage to
    purify himself.

    Mr. Schuessel is hardly delighted by the EU leadership under British
    Prime Minister Tony Blair, the leading matchmaker between Turkey
    and the EU, who pushed him to drop his objections to Turkey's
    membership. The last-minute intervention of Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice supporting Turkey may have even made him feel more
    isolated, and deepened the perception that Europeans are incapable of
    solving their problems alone. The Austrian demand to offer Turkey a
    "privileged partnership" is history now.

    In addition, Mr. Schuessel is so adamant that Turkey joining the EU
    will be disastrous that he has persuaded himself that he is in even
    a worse position than Visal - that when Turkey becomes a member to
    the EU, it will be ugly, and there is no way for it to become part of
    the European way of life. Which is why Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan said, "There are those who cannot free themselves
    from prejudice."

    The most amazing thing about those who hold such views is that they
    forget Turkey did not apply to the EU to promote its religion.

    It first became an associate EU member in 1963, applied for full
    membership in 1987, and in 1992 became the first associate country to
    sign the Customs Union agreement before becoming a full member. Yet,
    Turkey has been part of the EU process for 40 years because it is
    a secular, democratic country that cherishes the same values as
    Europeans - and it has also been a NATO ally since 1952.

    British Foreign Minister Jack Straw reminded the Austrians that "when
    Western Europe needed defense, along with the United States, it looked
    to Turkey for that defense on its eastern flank against the then-Soviet
    Union... No issues were then raised that it had an Islamic majority."

    Despite all the tough talk, Philip Gordon, director of the Brookings
    Institution's Center on the United States and Europe, is still hopeful
    about Turkey's future in the EU, saying that the 35 percent to 45
    percent of Europeans who support its full membership is a good start.

    Mr. Gordon also challenges the EU counter-declaration to Turkey,
    which insisted that it should recognize Cyprus (or more specifically,
    the Greek-Cypriot administration) before it becomes a full member.

    Mr. Gordon says the condition was a given, and was added to provoke
    Turkey into not cooperating with the EU. Turks also cite the European
    Parliament's demand to recognize the Armenian genocide as another
    means.

    Yet Turkey continues to beat the odds. Although public opinion polls
    in Germany and Austria significantly oppose Turkey's EU membership,
    the leaders who ran elections based on anti-Turkish sentiment lost
    their elections. The German Christian Democrat leader Angela Merkel
    lost, and Mr. Schuessel lost in a region that was a stronghold for his
    People's Party since 1945. And while France insists that its people
    have an opportunity to approve or reject Turkey in a referendum,
    Germany's outgoing foreign minister, Joschka Fischer, warns, "You
    can not build Europe on the basis of referendums."

    A recent Turkish public opinion poll showed nearly 60 percent still
    support the EU membership. Turks remain hopeful, like in a famous
    Turkish movie portraying the same story as the Karagoz play, but
    which cast a beautiful actress as the ugly bride. The groom had seen
    her ugly - it was the art of makeup - until it was time to unveil
    her. Yet when they wed, he was so surprised to see the bride because
    what he had seen was beautiful, and he fell in love.

    A senior American diplomat told me last week he was sure the talks
    would start because Turkey's full membership is 10 to 15 years down the
    road. But while the talk of Turkey's EU candidacy has always broken
    some crockery, Mr. Straw warned the EU that it should get it right,
    and "we reach the sunny uplands."

    Today we hope the future negotiations segue into smart, emotionally
    less exhausting, and legally tight conversations to make the full
    partnership between the EU and Turkey a reality.

    Tulin Daloglu is the Washington correspondent and columnist for
    Turkey's Star TV and newspaper. A former BBC reporter, she writes
    occasionally for The Washington Times.
Working...
X