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  • Austria's Games Over Turkey

    AUSTRIA'S GAMES OVER TURKEY

    The International Herald Tribune
    October 6, 2005 Thursday

    The European Union has finally cleared the way to opening membership
    talks with Turkey, after wisely rejecting an attempt by Austria to put
    unacceptable conditions on the negotiations. Jack Straw, the British
    foreign secretary, should be congratulated on leading the rescue effort
    in Luxembourg. And a reassuring phone call from Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey also
    helped mitigate the Turks' understandable bitterness over this process.

    The debate over expanding the EU to include a huge, poor, Muslim
    country has become the focus of a whole host of problems and
    frustrations. But the way to accession negotiations had seemed
    clear after the Union decided last December that Monday was to be
    the starting date. Then came the crushing rejections of a proposed
    European constitution in France and the Netherlands, leadership
    crises in member states, and the "expansion fatigue" brought on by
    the induction of 10 new countries.

    As the deadline neared, Austria suddenly declared that it would agree
    to open talks with Turkey only if alternatives to full membership were
    declared a viable option. An overwhelming majority of the Austrian
    public is opposed to Turkish membership, and Chancellor Wolfgang
    Schlussel apparently thought he could wring some votes out of the
    issue in a by-election on Saturday. (His party was trounced.)

    With the Turks already feeling profoundly humiliated over the entire
    process, going down that road would have been disastrous. Erdogan's
    reformist government, which has invested huge political capital in EU
    membership, would have become vulnerable before Muslim and military
    hard-liners, and Europe's millions of Muslims would have felt even
    more marginalized.

    The effort to save the day included a phone call from Rice to Erdogan
    to assure him that Turkey's role in NATO would not be reduced,
    as well as an EU agreement to start accession talks with Croatia,
    something Austria is keen to do. The trick now is to move along the
    tough process of these talks without further alienating Turkey from
    Europe, and vice versa. Turkey still needs to make big changes in
    its attitudes and practices on human rights, the role of women, the
    rule of law, the slaughter of Armenians early last century and the
    aspirations of its Kurdish minority. But Erdogan's progress on many
    of these issues has demonstrated a commitment to change. The ball is
    rolling, and it was disgraceful of Austria to endanger the process
    for petty domestic posturing. We hope those games are now over.
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