Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Europe must clutch the cloak of history

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

  • Europe must clutch the cloak of history

    Europe must clutch the cloak of history
    By ADRIAN HAMILTON

    The Independent - United Kingdom
    Dec 17, 2004

    The vote this week of the European Parliament in favour of starting
    membership talks with Turkey should presage a decision by the EU
    leaders today to start the whole process rolling.

    One says "should" partly because one can never be quite certain in
    Europe that its leaders will do what is required of them - witness the
    extraordinary about-turns over the European constitution and the rows
    over keeping to the rules of the stability pact. The major players,
    including President Chirac, with important caveats, and Chancellor
    Schroder and Prime Minister Tony Blair, more enthusiastically, have
    all said that they will give it the green light.

    But there's a lot of bad politics about the Turkish application at the
    moment, especially in Austria, Germany, France and the Netherlands
    where the right-wing anti-immigration parties are rearing their
    head. Even Chirac has had to promise a referendum to let the French
    people decide when negotiations finally come to fruition.

    Such hesitations are understandable, but miss the urgency and
    importance of the moment. To say no at this stage, or to fob Turkey off
    with a "country membership" or something less than full conjunction
    would be an act of religious prejudice and historic recidivism of
    the worst and most parochial sort. Europe has an opportunity to reach
    out to a whole new world of a bigger, wider and more diverse Europe.

    All the objections and the last-minute hurdles being put forward
    against Turkey - the demands that it admit to the Armenian genocide,
    the imposition of additional rules on labour movement, the proposal
    for a "privileged partnership" instead of membership - are little
    more than masks for a much more fundamental fear and dislike, and
    that is of Turkey as a Muslim state. Even Nicolas Sarkozy, the world's
    favourite French politician, has made some deeply dispiriting remarks
    about non-Catholics. If anything, Europe should be wanting Turkey in
    precisely because it is a liberal, modernising country of Muslims
    (officially it is still a secular state, although it is now headed
    by an Islamic party).

    In that sense Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minster, is quite
    right to insist, as he did in The Independent earlier this week,
    that Turkey will not accept second-best, special requirements, lesser
    membership or anything other than the straight road to membership
    that every other country has followed. Anything less would be an
    insult, not least to all those in Turkey which have pushed, harried
    and argued for the huge changes that have been needed to get Turkey
    to this point of even beginning serious negotiations,

    Of course Turkey has a long way to go. Anyone who knows Turkey also
    knows how very far it is from properly integrating its Kurdish
    minority, accepting even a minimum standard for its workers and
    instituting the kind of law that would bring it into line with Western
    Europe. We are not talking here of a neat homogenous country like
    Sweden, but a largely Islamic nation developed through four centuries
    of empire and then dramatically wrenched away from imperial habit to
    modern national state by Ataturk after the First World War.

    The benefit of that change is to produce a formally secular state
    which, at least among the elite, feels its future looking westwards
    and its place in Europe. The price has been a state that is fiercely
    nationalistic, with an army at the centre of its constitution and an
    attitude to its Kurdish minority and to human rights that has more
    in common with Moscow than Brussels.

    Far from that being a bar to full membership, however, it is the
    very reason we should be insisting on it. Joining Europe brings
    with it stringent obligations in a whole host of fields, from equal
    opportunities to civil rights and financial disciplines. Lock Turkey
    in those negotiations, and keep absolutely firm on their requirements,
    and you help all those in Turkey wanting modernisation. Accept it as
    something less than an equal European and you accept it as a basically
    different country with lesser standards for its own people. Which is
    why so many Kurds and even Armenians want the negotiations to go ahead.

    Voting today for negotiations to start does not mean immediate
    membership. Talks could last a decade and there is no reason why the
    EU should compromise its own principles, at it seemed to be doing with
    Romania, in order to include it. But there is equally no reason to
    make Turkey a special case in negative terms, forcing on it special
    obligations which are not true of everyone.

    Of course politicians have to take note of their domestic opinion. At
    a time when a leading Dutch documentary director has been murdered in
    the Netherlands, 191 have been killed in the Madrid bombing and the
    police forces of almost every European country are issuing warnings
    about the dangers of attacks from Islamic extremists, now is not a good
    time to talk of Turkey's potential contribution to multiculturalism
    in the Union.

    But politics has to be about the promotion of causes in inconvenient
    times as well as propitious ones. The Muslim aspect to Turkey's
    membership is important, not only because to turn it down would
    be to send such hostile messages to Muslims within Europe as well
    as its neighbours outside. Yet in some ways one can exaggerate this
    aspect. Turkey has its own history and ethnic background which make it
    quite separate from the Arabs and Iranians around it, or the Pakistani,
    North African and Bangladeshi Muslims populations within Europe.

    More profoundly, Turkey is important because it represents a whole
    new leap towards regional integration in Europe. It brings with it not
    just an Islamic background but a military force in Nato, a reserve of
    labour and interconnections that spread out to Central Asia and beyond.

    This year's enlargement of the Union from 15 to 25 members was meant
    to be the end of the story for the time being. But everywhere round
    Europe - in Ukraine, Georgia, Turkey and now Romania - the older order
    is collapsing and new democratic governments are coming to power who
    see in the EU both a path to the future and a means of consolidating
    change. Belarus and even some Arab states around the Mediterranean
    could well follow in the coming years.

    It's a development most European politicians have been slow to grasp
    and fearful of embracing. The EU was desperately slow to respond
    to Viktor Yuschenko's call for EU partnership, and to the change
    in government in Bucharest. Even though they know that existing
    enlargement has changed forever the tight, inward-looking club of
    Western Europe, the instinctive response of EU governments is to look
    inwards and backwards. It won't work. The dam has broken, and leaders
    have the choice of either embracing this change or turning aside and
    pretending it isn't happening for fear that they cannot control it.

    In the nervy and uncertain days before the fall of the Berlin Wall
    and the reunification of Germany, Chancellor Kohl liked to quote
    Otto Bismark's statement about clutching the cloak of history (God,
    as he called it) as He swept by. Kohl took the chance, and he was no
    Bismark. Today's European leaders are arguably even less statesmen than
    Kohl. But history is passing by, and on Friday, and over the coming
    months in Central Europe, they have the chance to touch its cloak.

    [email protected]
Working...
X