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ANKARA: Turkey and the EU a Lose-lose Situation?

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  • ANKARA: Turkey and the EU a Lose-lose Situation?

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    April 14 2005

    Turkey and the EU a Lose-lose Situation?


    The possible decline of the government and political instability in
    Turkey will be major themes in the coming days. The attacks against
    the Justice and Development (AK) Party government from within as well
    as without have already started. It's not a positive development but
    an expected one. Many critics of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's government agree that their "mental army" can't cope with
    Turkey's foreign policy challenges. Indeed, if everyone talks in the
    same way about the inadequacy of government policies there must be
    something behind it.

    Turkey's European Union membership negotiations are expected to begin
    in October, but this increasingl y seems to be unlikely. There are
    still many political issues which Turkey cannot and will not agree
    with the EU before October. Last weekend, at a conference organized
    by the Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodities Exchanges (TOBB) in
    Ankara on the negotiation experiences of several EU members and
    near-members, it became clear that Turkey is not going do appoint a
    chief negotiator as newly joined Poland and Hungary have, but was
    approaching the negotiations in a similar manner to Romania. Turkish
    representatives of the government were not giving any clear position
    and maintaining that the prime minister is intending to be the chief
    negotiator. This may be true in a political sense, but who is going
    to lead the technical talks?

    It seems that the government is also not happy about the EU's policy
    towards Turkey. Even the suggestion of a possible Ocalan retrial
    created a strong nationalistic climate in Turkey. If opposition
    Republican People's Party leader Deniz Baykal's claims that the
    decision to retry has indeed been made are true, then Turkey is
    headed towards more turbulent times in the future. The so-called
    Armenian genocide issue, which has become a hot topic in the French
    and German parliaments, is another problem that will surely test
    Turkey's limits of tolerance.

    But now the most important issue has become the reborn PKK issue.
    Erdogan's visit to Norway was expected to be problematic, but who
    would have expected an egg-throwing PKK militants? Actually, although
    it is certainly nothing new that a Turkish prime minister is attacked
    in this way, it was the first time that Erdogan has been. During
    Nevruz celebrations, the Norweigian ambassador to Turkey was
    "visiting" Diyarbakir and was criticized by the press. Norway and
    other northern European states are places where the terrorist PKK is
    perfectly organized. From this point of view, there is nothing new in
    the West!

    Erdogan's visits to any EU country will from now on be ridden with
    such demonstrations, and especially if he insists on holding public
    debates or press conferences. Of course, it's not only Erdogan who is
    insulted by these demonstrations, but the entire Turkish nation. This
    is why he is going to follow also a nationalistic policy. Yes, there
    are great debates amongst European political circles about whether
    the negotiations with Turkey should be postponed. The good will of
    the Turkish government and the Turkish people are not being met
    fairly. A solution for Cyprus is being put on the back burners
    because there can be no solution until October anyway. The more the
    EU insists on quick solutions to these issues, the more it will be
    considered as unseemly political pressure. Indeed, all signs show
    that neither the EU nor Turkey's government will be successful in
    starting the negotiations smoothly.

    The anti-EU forces in Turkey are on the rise, and the EU is not doing
    enough, other than simply criticizing Turkey's political responses to
    the Women's Day incidents last month and more recently in Trabzon and
    Samsun. These type of "innocent democratic expressions" will turn
    into a significant political instability virus that is certain to
    attack Turkey's nervous system. Though Turkey has ample political
    experience from the last 25 years, the upcoming negotiations will
    involve technical issues and instruments that are entirely different.
    Before it was the Soviet Union, now the EU. There has been a shift in
    the power bloc, but the country remains the same: Turkey.

    We need common sense to prevail now more then ever. Turks succumb
    very easily to provocation. Board of Higher Education (YOK) Chairman
    Erdogan Tezic said, after the recent Trabzon incidents, that he fears
    that such polarization will spread to the universities.

    For some EU countries, Turkey is socially and politically unstable
    and doesn't deserve to join the EU. Why then is the EU insisting on
    the negotiation start date? The EU is losing its attractiveness to
    Turkish society very rapidly and this tendency will only get
    stronger. Who is losing to whom doesn't matter at this point. The
    decision to go ahead with negotiations last December was considered a
    win-win situation, but now policies on both sides suggest we are
    heading for a lose-lose situation.

    By Prof. Huseyin Bagci
    The New Anatolian
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