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  • EU Talks With Turkey Could Alter Landscape

    EU Talks With Turkey Could Alter Landscape
    By CONSTANT BRAND

    The Associated Press
    12/18/04 16:21 EST

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - Turkey can expect to be put through a test
    of fire when it launches negotiations to join the European Union, and
    the process - which will last more than a decade - could transform the
    political and social landscape of both Turkey and the 25-nation bloc.

    It took a tough, two-day summit to hammer out a compromise agreement
    allowing the talks to begin, and now Ankara is looking at an Oct. 3,
    2005 date to start negotiations.

    The decision is among the most important the EU has made in its
    46-year existence but there were few signs of euphoric celebration of
    the deal amid deep concerns among many Europeans over the prospect
    of letting in a Muslim nation that - with 71 million people - would
    be one of the largest members of the club.

    French President Jacques Chirac, reflecting staunch opposition among
    French citizens, had few positive words at the end of the gathering.

    "The route will be long and difficult for Turkey to take all measures
    to meet all the conditions demanded to join Europe," he said.

    The divided Mediterranean island of Cyprus was the most prominent
    obstacle at the summit, which ended Friday. In the end, Turkey met the
    EU demand that it agree to sign a customs deal with the 10 nations -
    including Cyprus - that joined the bloc this year. But Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said later the signing does not mean
    official recognition of the Greek Cypriot-led government.

    So the question of Cyprus - where Turkey has troops stationed in
    Turkish-Cypriot-run enclave in the north - remains open. The summit
    also set a number of other conditions on internal reforms before the
    start of talks.

    And many EU states are lukewarm to even starting talks with Turkey -
    so they may try to appease opposition at home by putting up added
    stumbling blocks during the negotiations to delay its entry.

    Chirac, who has promised a referendum on Turkish membership if the
    talks succeed, said Ankara would have to recognize the mass killings
    of Armenians in the early 20th century.

    Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel said he would also call a
    referendum because bringing a Muslim country into the EU "must not
    be decided in an ivory tower ... We cannot be indifferent about
    public opinion."

    While Turkey takes on changes to win membership, some Europeans fear
    that Turkey's entry would mean devastating change for the union, even
    causing the bloc's collapse setting back the nearly 50-year drive to
    unify the continent so it can rival the United States and China.

    Countries may be less willing to tear down barriers within the bloc
    if it means dealing with the economic and social consequences of a
    Muslim nation of Turkey's size.

    For example, France and Poland, who benefit most from EU farm
    subsidies, have said they are opposed to granting similar benefits
    to Turkey's agricultural sector, which will dwarf all others, and so
    put an end to joint handouts.

    Also many countries fear that further integrating rights of free
    movement across the EU would lead to a mass migration of poorer Turks
    to other EU countries, something they want to avoid, fearing they
    will take away local jobs.

    Then there is the widespread worry among many Europeans that Turkey's
    Muslim culture - though its government is resolutely secular - will
    not click with their Judeo-Christian values.

    Jacques Attali, a former adviser to French President Francois
    Mitterand, wrote in the Belgian daily Le Soir, advocating a breakaway
    "core" of countries pursuing closer ties within the EU. "We need to
    recreate the federation with only a few states, but not with the same
    EU structures," he said.

    Several critical newspapers said the deal with Turkey would mark
    the end of the EU's political ambitions to become a power on the
    world stage.

    Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said German Chancellor Gerhard
    Schroeder, who staunchly backed Turkey's bid, "could go down in history
    ... as the German chancellor during whose term in office and with
    whose approval the idea of a politically united Europe was abandoned."

    The Czech Republic's biggest daily, Mlada Fronta Dnes said Turkey's
    membership might be a "bite too hard for Brussels to swallow."

    "The individual states ... will lack will to closely cooperate,"
    it said in an editorial.

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso had to deny rumors
    this week of fears that the EU's constitution, which still faces
    ratification, would have to be scrapped to reformulate how the EU
    makes decisions ahead of Turkey's entry to ensure its influence would
    not dominate over older members.

    Although Turkey's current population of 71 million is smaller than
    that of Germany - currently 82 million - it is expected to grow to
    80-85 million by 2020 and nearly 89 million by 2025, while Germany's
    population is predicted to fall slightly. As the largest country in
    the EU, Turkey would have the most votes in the bloc's decision-making
    bodies.

    The clock has already started ticking for Turkey to meet the conditions
    prior to starting the October negotiations, which the EU warned offered
    "no guarantee" of success.

    It will have to deliver results in meeting "benchmarks" on a number of
    key issues from Kurdish rights to ensuring "zero-tolerance" of torture,
    and passing additional penal code reforms. Erdogan will also have to
    make good on recognizing Cyprus.

    Jumping that first hurdle, Turkey then faces a test in a vast array
    of policy areas to meet minimum standards before talks begin in such
    complex policy issues like environmental protection laws or food
    safety standards.

    And during the negotiations, any of the EU's 25 nations can call for
    a freeze in the talks if they feel Turkey is backtracking on reforms.

    Josep Borrell, president of the European Parliament reiterated calls
    that EU leaders as well as Turkey had to sell the negotiations to
    their citizens if they wanted them to succeed and be welcomed.

    "Turkey ... is not a candidate like any other," Borrell wrote in
    Le Soir. "The question of Turkey divides Europeans. It pushes the
    geographical, historic and political limit of Europe ... but Turkey
    should not be rejected because the majority of its population is
    Muslim."

    EDITORS NOTE: Constant Brand has covered European Union affairs for
    The Associated Press in Brussels since 1999.
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