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After long wait, EU decision at hand for Turkey

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  • After long wait, EU decision at hand for Turkey

    Agence France Presse
    Dec 15 2004

    After long wait, EU decision at hand for Turkey

    BRUSSELS, Dec 15 (AFP) - Turkey will soon learn if its long-running
    campaign to enter the European Union is reaching fruition as EU
    leaders prepare to resolve one of the most divisive issues facing the
    bloc.

    When they convene Thursday evening for the EU's winter summit, the 25
    heads of government are expected to give the green light that Turkey
    has long sought for the opening of accession negotiations.

    But diplomats say the leaders will likely defer the actual start of
    the talks until the autumn of 2005, and their approval will come
    hedged with a raft of caveats unprecedented for an EU candidate
    state.

    And last-minute objections that might stymie Turkey's hopes cannot be
    ruled out. Cyprus is one obstacle.

    As the price for its accord, the internationally backed Greek-Cypriot
    government wants Turkey to move on normalising relations frozen since
    Turkish troops occupied the Mediterranean island's northern third in
    1974.

    France, though nominally on Turkey's side, has fuelled Turkish
    frustration by using the word "genocide" for the first time to
    describe the 1915-1917 Ottoman Empire massacre of Armenians.

    French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier told parliament Tuesday that
    Paris would ask many questions, "notably that of the Armenian
    genocide", in eventual EU-Turkey negotiations.

    It is French pressure above all that is likely to result in the EU
    failing to abide by a promise to launch accession talks with Turkey
    "without delay" once the leaders give their approval.

    Fearful of the Turkey question overshadowing a referendum on the EU's
    first constitution, the French government wants the launch of the
    negotiations put back to the second half of next year.

    The French government's fears are not without foundation given that
    in France, as in Germany, public opinion is largely hostile to
    Turkey's EU bid.

    With an eye on winning their publics over, the EU leaders are
    expected to impose a series of stringent conditions on Turkey and
    warn that the accession talks will last a decade at least, with no
    guarantee of success.

    Turkey, which physically spans the Bosphorus divide between Europe
    and Asia, has been knocking on the European bloc's door for more than
    four decades, first signing an association agreement with the
    then-EEC in 1963.

    Its big breakthrough came two years ago, when the EU agreed -- at the
    same time as agreeing to let in 10 states in the bloc's biggest-ever
    expansion -- to decide in December 2004 on whether to start talks
    with Turkey.

    Now that moment has come, and the arguments are, if anything,
    stormier than ever.

    The most pro-Turkey EU states -- including Britain, Italy, Spain and
    Germany -- argue that admitting Turkey is a strategic priority as a
    bridge to the Muslim world.

    But there is a hardcore of sceptics including Austria, Denmark and
    Cyprus. They argue that Turkey is simply too big, too different and
    too poor to join. The alternative proposed is a "special partnership"
    rather than membership.

    But Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who will be in
    Brussels for the summit, has insisted time and again that the EU must
    treat Turkey like any other candidate.

    He said Tuesday his government had met all the criteria required to
    begin accession talks through major democratic and human rights
    reforms adopted over the past two years, and now expects the EU to do
    its part.

    "I believe the EU will not undersign a historic mistake which will
    weaken its own foundations and will make a decision in line with
    Turkey's expectations," Erdogan said.
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