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The Pope Is Right: Let Turkey Into The EU

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  • The Pope Is Right: Let Turkey Into The EU

    THE POPE IS RIGHT: LET TURKEY INTO THE EU

    National Post (Canada)
    November 29, 2006 Wednesday
    Toronto Edition

    Rarely do pontiffs create geopolitical sparks of the sort Pope
    Benedict XVI set off yesterday during a visit to Turkey. According
    to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Pope stated
    that he now supports Turkey's bid to join the European Union --
    a reversal from his pre-papal opposition to EU membership for the
    largely Muslim country. The Pope also told the press: "The best way
    forward is via authentic dialogue between Christians and Muslims,
    based on truth and inspired by a sincere wish to know one another
    better, respecting differences and recognizing what we have in common."

    All these fine words may have been motivated by the Pope's desire
    to mend fences in the wake of his controversial Sept. 12 speech,
    which many Muslims believed contained a grave insult to Islam.

    Nevertheless, the Pope's flip-flop on Turkey joining the EU is welcome.

    Turkey is an officially secular nation. Indeed, it applies the division
    between church and state more strictly than any Western country. It
    is also a NATO member, a Western ally in the Middle East, a friend
    to Israel and a loyal partner in the war against terrorism.

    After over 40 years as an associate member of the European Union,
    and with an improving human rights record, the country deserves an
    opportunity for full membership.

    That is not to say the Turks' membership application doesn't have
    its blemishes. For instance, the country is maddeningly stubborn
    in refusing to admit its genocidal treatment of Armenians during
    the First World War. Ankara also has shown itself inflexible in its
    quarrel with the EU over the status of Cyprus, itself an EU member.

    In particular, Turkey refuses to trade with the Greek-speaking half
    of the island. This, despite the fact that the EU made it clear more
    than a year ago that ending this dispute would be a condition for
    entering formal EU membership talks.

    But such matters can be negotiated and should not be allowed to stand
    in the way of cementing Turkey's place in the Western camp by allowing
    it into the EU.

    The Pope was correct when he told Prime Minister Erdogan that Turkey
    is a bridge between religions and cultures. Now that so much of
    the interaction between the Muslim world and the West has all the
    appearances of a clash of civilizations, this is the sort of bridge
    that Europe -- and the entire Western world -- very much needs.
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