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Turkey and the EU: a foot in the door?

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  • Turkey and the EU: a foot in the door?

    The News International
    Jan 21 2005


    Turkey and the EU: a foot in the door?

    Dr Maqsudul Hasan Nuri

    The 25-member European Union's decision this past December to start
    talks with Turkey in October 2005 are a step towards Turkey gaining
    full European Union membership. Accorded associate membership in
    1962, its almost forty-year long wait to enter the EU club has much
    to do with its history, culture, geography and economy.

    Geographically, Turkey straddles the continents of Europe and Asia
    with 97 percent of landmass within Asia and only three percent in
    Europe. Although an extension of Asia and the Middle East, it has had
    a European countenance since the Byzantine Empire.

    The EU's 35 sovereign states have a common denominator in the
    Christian heritage of Roman and Greek civilisations. Turkey is "not
    an inheritor of cultural contributor of ancient Greece and Rome, has
    not experienced Reformation and Renaissance," remarked Valery Giscard
    d'Estaing, the former French President and President of European
    Commission, expressing apprehensions that its entry may contribute to
    Muslim fundamentalism in Europe. Many Europeans share these views.
    Despite President Chirac's approval, nearly 67 percent of French
    oppose Turkish entry into the EU. Germany, which since World War II
    has had a large Turkish population, is as sceptical.

    Turkey's human rights record may be a factor in this situation.
    Amnesty International (2004) has reported its discriminatory policies
    towards opposition, women, and ethnic and religious minorities, and
    the treatment meted out to the Kurd minority. Atrocities perpetrated
    under the Ottoman rulers are also brought up, like the Armenian
    genocide of 1915-17. Turkish military role, despite its secular
    traditions, also raises eyebrows.

    France, Denmark and Austria thus suggest only a "privileged
    partnership" status instead of full membership. But Turkey has many
    assets. With a population of 78.8 million, it is the largest
    contributor to NATO forces and a willing peacekeeper in many theatres
    of global conflict -- Herzegovina in 1995, Kosovo in 1999 and ISAF in
    Afghanistan since 2001. During the four decades of Cold War, it acted
    as a reliable and redoubtable shield against the Communist threat.
    The Kemalist tradition has enabled it to follow a secular,
    constitutional, parliamentary democracy. With proximity and cultural
    interconnectedness, it has worked hard to be part of Europe - as a
    member of Council of Europe since 1949, NATO since 1952 and part of
    the European Custom Union since January 1996.

    The Islamic government of Justice and Development Party (AKP) under
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repackaged itself as "Muslim
    Democrats" a la European Christian Democrats. Raised in a poor
    Istanbul neighbourhood, the charismatic firebrand Erdogan once
    thundered: "The mosques are our barracks, the domes our helmets, the
    minarets our bayonets, and the faithful are our warriors." Yet in the
    last two years his government has rewritten two-fifth of the
    Constitution, repealed the death penalty, brought the army decisively
    under political control, granted language rights to the Kurds,
    promoted free speech and liberalised the economy.

    Situated on the cusp of Asia and Europe, Turkey can act as a
    bridgehead between Islamic and Western civilisations. With an
    increased role in an expanding NATO and greater scope for economic
    interaction, it will bring vitality to the EU. It is also seen as a
    useful player in the global war against terrorism. (Napoleon
    Bonaparte once observed that if there was a Pan-European state
    Istanbul will be its capital.)

    The Ottoman Empire's record of dealing with minorities was generally
    benign (it was the Christians who persecuted the Jews and hounded
    them out of their homes). It is said that Turks have "tolerance in
    their bones." Present day Turkey, like Indonesia, represents moderate
    Islam and bears least sympathy for al-Qaeda. The government's agenda
    is to root out corruption and Western style immorality.

    Europe's GDP is about $11 trillion like the US. Presently a "soft
    power", with induction it is getting larger. New members in 2007,
    Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia, have a lower capita income than
    Turkey. The next candidate may well be Ukraine. Turkish entry would
    mean an increase in Europe's population, resources and military clout
    that may somewhat offset US hegemony. The EU has no ambition to
    either become a superpower or turn hostile towards the US, but the
    latter has to understand that this "lure of membership" is a
    testament to EU's increasing magnetic pull.

    Yet Turkey's road to full membership is fraught with pitfalls and
    will be long and bumpy. The "yes" for accession talks has to be
    followed up by Turkey's recognition of Greek Cyprus, as well as
    speeded up economic, political, social and economic reforms within
    the coming decade.



    The writer is Senior Research Fellow, Islamabad Policy Research
    Institute (IPRI). Email: [email protected]

    http://jang.com.pk/thenews/jan2005-daily/21-01-2005/oped/o4.htm
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