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  • Turkey: Military to boycott EU if pressure continues

    ANSA English Media Service
    April 21, 2005

    TURKEY: MILITARY TO BOYCOTT EU IF PRESSURE CONTINUES

    ANKARA

    By Lucio Leante

    (ANSA) - ANKARA, April 21 - The Turkish military threatened
    to withdraw its support for the country's accession to the
    European Union (EU), if European pressure for further Turkish
    concessions on sensitive issues result in actions that are
    unacceptable and outrageous for the Turkish people.

    Issues mentioned by the military, the guardian of democracy
    and the legacy of modern Turkey founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
    included the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) terrorist group, Cyprus
    and the so-called Armenian genocide of 1915.

    The Turkish military general staff, headed by General Hilmi
    Ozkok, has never been very supportive of Turkey's bid to join
    the 25-nation union.

    That was the gist of a lengthy speech Gen. Ozkok delivered to
    students at the Istanbul Military Academy on Wednesday.

    "Not only the EU has the right to say Yes or No. Turkey can
    do that as well," Ozkok said in a crucial point of his address
    in which he criticised the U.S. for not keeping its promise to
    stop PKK's activity in north Iraq.

    Ozkok also expressed dissatisfaction with the EU for acting
    as mediator to PKK's requests hidden under the disguise of human
    rights and although the U.S. and the EU had included PKK in
    their list of terrorist organisations.

    Ozkok criticised European countries for demanding from Turkey
    new steps after having failed to keep their promise to end the
    international isolation of the Turkish Republic of Northern
    Cyprus (TRNC) as a reward for the Turkish Cypriots' support for
    the Annan plan for the reunification of the island.

    The Turkish military general staff called on Armenia to give
    up its demand for Ankara to admit the Ottoman massacres of
    Armenians were genocide. Armenia's request is openly backed by
    the European Parliament (EP) and more cautiously supported by
    the European Commission (EC) and the Council of Ministers.

    Referring to the recent recommendations on behalf of European
    Commission chairman Jose Manuel Barroso that Turkey had to
    maintain good relations with Athens, Ozkok determinedly claimed
    the Greek defence policy was mainly aimed at thwarting a
    presumed "Turkish menace" and that Greek military costs were
    still to high.

    The political meaning of Ozkok's speech is clear, according
    to analysts: the Turkish army is striving to demonstrate it is
    still capable of relying upon the great decisions made in the
    country and of better synchronising with the nation's opinion
    than the government. According to many people, the latter seems
    ready to pay any price for reaching by October its goal for a
    start of accession talks with the EU.

    A renowned analyst said Ozkok had been sage enough to assume
    such a position after Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan stated last
    week there were European circles, trying to divide Turkey and
    accused those "circles" of fomenting the spiral between Kurdish
    and Turksih nationalism in order to debilitate the requests of
    Turkey for EU integration. With this regard, Ozkok is most
    probably trying to prove the strategic unity of the Turkish
    leadership, also in order to avoid the usual European
    accusations of an excessive influence of the army on Turkish
    policy. (ANSA).
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