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Eye On Europe: Embracing Turkey, EU Style

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  • Eye On Europe: Embracing Turkey, EU Style

    EYE ON EUROPE: EMBRACING TURKEY, EU STYLE
    By Gareth Harding

    UPI - United Press International
    October 4, 2005 Tuesday 11:31 AM EST

    It may have been messy, over 40 years in the making and in the teeth of
    widespread public skepticism, but the decision to open membership talks
    with Turkey Monday is one of the boldest and potentially far-reaching
    ever taken by European leaders.

    "We have just made history," British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told
    reporters after clasping Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul in a
    bear-hug at the end of a 30-hour negotiating session of EU diplomatic
    chiefs in Luxembourg.

    Referring to the marathon talks on Turkey -- and the decision by
    foreign ministers to start membership negotiations with Croatia --
    a weary-looking EU Enlargement Commissioner Ollie Rehn said Tuesday:
    "After a long night, there is a new dawn for the western Balkans
    region and it is a European dawn."

    Turkish commentators were also ecstatic the four-decade wait to start
    accession talks was finally over.

    "A new Europe, a new Turkey," gushed the Milliyet daily newspaper,
    embellishing its front page with the yellow stars of the EU flag and
    a picture of Kemal Ataturk, the West-leaning secular statesman who
    founded modern Turkey in 1923.

    Politicians -- and journalists -- have a tendency toward hyperbole,
    but for once they are not exaggerating. If Turkey joins the European
    Union in 10-15 years time -- and it is a big if given the strength of
    public opposition and the reticence of certain "old" European member
    states -- the EU will undergo possible its biggest change since it
    was founded in the 1950s. The geopolitical map of the world will also
    never look the same.

    By 2015 -- the earliest the country is likely to join the bloc,
    Turkey's population is expected to jump from 71 million to 82 million,
    boosting the number of EU citizens to almost 600 million after the
    entry of Bulgaria, Rumania and Croatia later this decade.

    As voting strength in the Council of Ministers and the EU parliament --
    the club's two legislative bodies -- is based largely on population,
    Turkey would overtake Germany to become Europe's largest and most
    powerful state.

    The EU, a small, prosperous clique of Western European states
    for almost half a century, would also see its point of axis shift
    radically eastward. With the entry of Turkey, the bloc would share
    common borders with Syria, Iran, Iraq, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan,
    become a major player in the Caspian Sea and south Caucasus regions
    and increase its clout in the Middle East. A European club of nations
    would have a member with 95 percent of its landmass and 90 percent of
    its population in Asia -- reason enough for many to oppose Turkey's
    EU ambitions.

    The entry of Turkey will also strengthen the EU's fledgling defense
    arm, increasing the club's ability to carry out global peacekeeping
    operations and acting as a buffer zone between a stable Europe and a
    volatile Middle East. Turkey, a NATO member for more than 50 years,
    has the largest armed forces in Europe and spends more of its budget
    on defense than any other EU state -- both great assets for a union
    with big defense ambitions but pitiful resources.

    But the biggest change will be in terms of Europe's self-perception and
    outside image. For centuries, Europe has defined itself as a Christian
    continent whose borders end at the Bosporus Straits. If membership
    negotiations succeed, the EU -- which is increasingly synonymous with
    Europe -- will have a Muslim population approaching 100 million and
    frontiers stretching to the Middle East and the southern Caucasus.

    "Until we can get over the idea of Europe as a Christian club, whether
    in the minds of Europeans, or more importantly within the Muslim world,
    we are not going to be able to get on top of this problem of a clash of
    cultures," Graham Watson, leader of the European Parliament's Liberal
    grouping, told United Press International. "But once the Islamic
    world can see the EU has allowed in not just a Muslim country but
    a large Muslim country, then I think the perception of the European
    Union changes."

    For all the fears and anxieties it creates among many Europeans,
    the prospect of Turkey taking its seat in the family of EU nations
    is still a very long way off. First, Ankara will have to spend over
    a decade imposing the Union's 80,000-page rulebook into national law.

    Then, at the end of the process, both Turks and Europeans will have
    to consent to the membership agreement. This is looking increasingly
    unlikely on both sides. In Turkey, support for joining the EU has
    plummeted from 75 percent to 60 percent in a year and is likely to
    fall even further as Brussels Eurocrats make huge and often humiliating
    demands on a big and proud nation.

    With the Union suffering from enlargement fatigue after the entry of 10
    largely ex-communist states last year, there is also little enthusiasm
    for Turkish entry among EU voters. In a recent commission opinion poll,
    52 percent of Europeans said they were against Turkish membership,
    with only 35 percent in favor. In France and Austria, which both plan
    to hold referendums on Turkish accession, over three-quarter of the
    public are opposed.

    For the time being, though, there is palpable relief in Brussels --
    not because the EU has taken a historic decision to reach out to the
    Muslim world, strengthen its military might and boost its growth and
    population, but because a humiliating failure to agree a common stance
    on opening talks was narrowly avoided.
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