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  • Turks Cool Towards 'Unfaithful' Europe

    TURKS COOL TOWARDS 'UNFAITHFUL' EUROPE
    By William Horsley
    BBC European Affairs analyst

    BBC News, UK
    Nov 6 2006

    Is Europe losing Turkey? New tensions threaten to harm a strategic
    bond that has long been seen as vital to the West's security.

    Turkish membership would show the EU was not just a Christian club
    Turkey became a member of the Nato alliance before Germany, and
    remains a bastion of stability in a region marked by undemocratic
    regimes and plagued by conflicts.

    But a year-end deadline for Turkey to make important concessions
    in its talks on EU membership is casting doubt on the future of the
    country's integration with Europe, which began back in 1963.

    Cyprus is the main sticking-point. Turkey's relations with Europe
    may suffer lasting damage unless a solution is found quickly.

    Anti-French anger

    In a recent opinion poll only one in three Turks said they definitely
    want their country to join the EU - about half the figure in similar
    polls two years ago.

    France's bill on Armenian 'genocide' denial triggered angry protests
    Turkey is the only candidate ever to have been obliged to start
    accession talks on the basis that it may never be granted full
    membership, even if it passes every test.

    And last month the French parliament sought to embarrass Turkey over
    the nation's past history, by voting for a bill which would make it
    a crime to deny Turkish responsibility for "genocide" against the
    Armenians in World War I. That provoked a wave of angry anti-French
    demonstrations in Turkey.

    In fact, Europe's reputation for arrogance among the Turks has united
    the main political currents there in protest against what they see as
    "unfair" treatment.

    Consider these recent statements by influential Turkish figures:

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he would rather see
    the suspension of the EU membership talks than bow to what he calls
    "unreasonable" demands over Cyprus.

    Former Turkish president and prime minister Suleyman Demirel says EU
    demands for legal rights for Turkey's Kurdish minority may threaten
    the unity of the state, which Turkey "will not accept."

    Onur Oeymen, deputy leader of the opposition Republican People's Party
    and a former ambassador to Nato, accuses the EU of seeking excuses
    to delay or block Turkish membership. He complains that Europe's
    present leaders lack "strategic vision", and fail to understand the
    importance of supporting Turkey, as the only secular democracy in
    the Muslim world.

    Mehmet Ali Birand, a popular TV newscaster, says Turkey has been
    faithful to Europe for 45 years, but Europe has not. Now he fears
    that Europe is going to "break the dream".

    Marriage hopes

    In Europe, the cooling of political attitudes towards Turkey,
    fuelled by public fears of immigration and suspicion towards Islam,
    has been dramatic.

    We will not do it!

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul on an EU demand to open ports to
    Cypriot shipping Some opinion polls suggest that opponents of Turkish
    membership account for two-thirds of the population in France, Greece
    and Cyprus. In Austria it is around 80%.

    A turning-point was last year's referendums in France and the
    Netherlands, when voters rejected the draft EU constitution.

    After that, conservative leaders such as Angela Merkel in Germany and
    Nicolas Sarkozy in France spoke out loudly against full EU membership
    for Turkey, even in 15 or 20 years time.

    Turkey's Muslim make-up has also become an issue.

    Hans-Joerg Kretschmer, the EU's ambassador in Ankara, says Europe
    wants to see "for the first time in the history of mankind whether a
    Muslim country is able and willing to embrace the values of Western
    civilisation".

    But Turkey's Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul says Turkish EU membership
    would prove that the EU "does not belong to a single religion".

    He insists his government is fully committed to a long-term political
    "marriage" with Europe, and speaks proudly of Turkey's radical
    pro-European reforms as a "silent revolution".

    Promises

    The European Commission itself has praised Turkey for abolishing the
    death penalty, taking action against police torture and changing the
    constitution to rein in the influence of the army.

    But now the Commission is focusing again on shortcomings in Turkish
    democracy. It has warned of a "train crash" unless Turkey bends to
    EU demands over Cyprus and moves to bolster civil rights.

    "We will not do it!" was Mr Gul's terse reply, when asked whether his
    government would fulfil the EU's demand to end its embargo on ships
    from Cyprus using Turkish ports.

    "The Europeans must first fulfil their promises", he said, meaning
    that the EU should first take steps to facilitate direct trade with
    the Turkish Cypriots in northern Cyprus.

    In 2004 the Turkish Cypriots voted in favour of an international peace
    plan to unite the divided island. The Greek Cypriots, who represent
    the only internationally recognised government there, voted against
    the plan but were anyway admitted as EU members. Now they, like every
    member-state, hold a veto over Turkey's progress.

    Trade and investment

    Still, a "train crash" is not inevitable. Turkish leaders now say they
    may amend a much-criticised law banning insults against "Turkishness",
    which has been used against authors who have written critically on
    Kurdish and Armenian issues.

    Britain, Finland and other supporters of Turkey's case argue that
    its progress must not be seriously held back.

    It is clear that the EU itself could hardly escape without damage in
    case the relationship turned sour.

    Turkey is now one of the most attractive partners for European trade
    and investment. French car-makers and Austrian banks are among those
    profiting from Turkey's booming economy and liberalising market.

    Michael Lake, a former EU envoy to Turkey, warns that to block Turkey's
    EU prospects would harm the EU's credibility.

    And Onur Oeymen says it would be a massive strategic mistake for the
    EU to write Turkey out of its future plans - because then, he said,
    "you are going to make Turkey your competitor, if not your enemy".

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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