Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Despite this deal, the road ahead remains rocky indeed

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

  • Despite this deal, the road ahead remains rocky indeed

    Guardian, UK
    Dec 18 2004

    Despite this deal, the road ahead remains rocky indeed

    Turkey's bid for European membership is full of contradictions

    Martin Woollacott


    The European Union and Turkey took a fateful decision this week.
    Unease, pride, anger and an element of guile are evident on each
    side. The settlement which it brings over Cyprus - much as it is to
    be desired - should not conceal from us the collisions between
    different values, and between the aims of decision makers and the
    instincts of their peoples, that lie ahead.
    Nothing illustrated so well the disjunction between carefully
    formulated common aspirations and the reality of divergent values
    than the situation earlier this year. A final assessment of Turkey's
    application was being undertaken at about the same time as the
    European parliament was revolting against Jose Manuel Barroso's
    choice of Rocco Buttiglione as justice commissioner. The objections
    to Buttiglione were that he held traditional Catholic views on
    homosexuality and the role of women. Can we imagine for a moment how
    a majority of Turkish MEPs, had they been present, would have voted
    on the issue?

    The party from which most of them would have been drawn had just
    withdrawn a proposal to criminalise adultery because it had
    discovered to its surprise that the measure was offensive to the
    union. Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, nevertheless made
    it clear that Turkey had no intention of trading its social and
    cultural values for EU membership. And why should he not do so, as a
    conservative Muslim? Yet the same MEPs who were outraged by
    Buttiglione's views have now voted for accession negotiations with
    Turkey to begin. They are either oblivious to contradiction, or they
    conceive of the negotiations as a project to transform Turkey into a
    country happy to be in the close company of a Britain soon to abolish
    the blasphemy laws, or a Spain moving to endorse gay marriage.

    That may happen. After all, 30 years ago Spain, Italy, and Ireland,
    to take just three examples, were societies that appeared to be
    deeply religious, and they appear much less so today. But that does
    not mean Turkey will go in the same direction, and it is not the
    direction in which Erdogan and his Justice and Development party, the
    AKP, wish to take their country.

    When the AKP's predecessor, the Welfare party, came to power in 1996,
    a party journal declared: "For almost a century, the foes of Islam
    have governed Turkey. Now a new period begins." Erdogan clearly has
    no intention of confronting the Kemalist division between religion
    and the state, but a shift of power toward the religious and, in
    particular, toward the religiously educated has been obvious in
    Turkey for at least the past 10 years.

    The irony is that the European political forces opposed to Turkey's
    entry because it is Muslim are precisely those likely to be in broad
    agreement with the conservative social views of Erdogan and his
    party, and with their conviction of the centrality of religious
    faith. Equally, the political forces in Europe most in favour of
    Turkish entry are the left and liberal groups least likely to share
    such views.

    Surely there are grounds for trouble here. The stage is set for a
    struggle in which Turkey, at least as long as the AKP is in charge,
    tries to take from Europe what it wants in terms of economic and
    security advantage, and tries to change what it deems essential as
    little as possible - while Europe demands its pound of liberal flesh.
    It is not only religious values that will be at issue, but deeply
    established habits of Turkish nationalism, such as the denial that
    anything happened to the Armenians worse than the general suffering
    of all the peoples affected by the collapse of the Ottoman empire - a
    position that must surely change before Turks can claim to have
    purged themselves of past sins.

    On the surface, there seems to be a sharp contrast between European
    public opinion, in the main dubious about Turkish entry, and Turkish
    public opinion, strongly in favour. But if you go deeper, the
    asymmetry is not so obvious. It can be argued that Europe is a
    curiously unifying factor in Turkey only because so many different,
    competing and sometimes mutually hostile groups see it as a solution
    to their problems, a way to move on the long game of modern Turkish
    politics in their favour.

    For ethnic minorities such as the Kurds, and religious minorities
    such as Orthodox Christians, Europe could provide a guarantee of
    secure minority status, even autonomy. For the business class, at
    least the upper tier of it, the present arrangements with the union
    have already brought benefits, and more are in prospect. For those
    sections of the working class in western Turkey, which already have
    strong European connections, full EU membership would make easier the
    dual existence that is already a reality for their families.

    For Turkish liberals Europe is a hedge against both religious
    extremism and secular authoritarianism. For the armed forces, uneasy
    about American policy in the Middle East, Europe may represent a way
    of reducing its US links. And, very important, for Turkey's
    decision-makers, who worry about population growth, unemployment and
    what will happen to the rural masses, Europe is the only visible
    answer.

    For the Turkish political class, moreover, Europe was a policy that,
    pursued in the right way, could bring permanent advantage to the
    party that brought home the prize. Against the expectations of only a
    few years ago, it is the Islamic party that seems closest to this
    goal. Having for years opposed entry and talked about an Islamic
    common market as an alternative, it shrewdly stole the European
    clothes of the secular parties and presented itself to the electorate
    as able both to maintain traditional and religious values and to reel
    in what Europe had to offer. Its coup has, however, put it in an
    exposed position, for it must now deliver this contradictory package.
    It has also left the Turkish party system in a state of disarray,
    which is not often noted in discussions of Turkish democracy.

    There are Turks who feel strongly European, and there is a true
    European sense in some classes in that country. But "If not Europe,
    what?" calculations, and a prickly "We're as good as you" sentiment
    also mark the Turkish approach. This latter feeling appears to have
    ruled out the halfway house of a special relationship. Thus Turkey is
    embracing Europe less in enthusiasm than with a mix of pride and
    desperation, while Europe is embracing Turkey with reluctance and a
    degree of fear. Not fear of Turkey, but of its own population,
    because there is no getting away from the fact that this will be
    another big thing the European elite has done that its peoples on the
    whole do not want.

    The ways in which, through lost referendums and other national votes,
    this could damage the European project are clear enough. A rocky road
    indeed.
Working...
X