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Turkey And The European Tent - Part I

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  • Turkey And The European Tent - Part I

    TURKEY AND THE EUROPEAN TENT - PART I

    Yale Global Online, CT
    Oct 11 2005

    Opening the door to Ankara is a win-win for both the European Union
    and Turkey

    Welcome to the club, at last: British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
    (right), welcomes Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul in Luxembourg
    while meeting with the European Union foreign ministers. (Photo:
    Reuters)

    BRUSSELS: Years from now, historians looking back at the evolution of
    the European continent might consider October 3 a landmark. On that
    day, the start of negotiations on Turkey's membership in the European
    Union marked a triumph for reformists who have battled long and hard
    to whip the country into shape for EU entry. The talks signal the
    opening of EU doors for the first time to a predominantly Muslim
    country - albeit one with a secular constitution - and represent
    a new political maturity, ever since Spain's Catholic monarchy
    stamped out the last Islamic rule from the European continent in
    the 15th century. It marked a victory for European policymakers who
    reject the notion of the EU as a Christian club and of religion as a
    dividing force between people. But it was not an unalloyed victory,
    as significant obstacles remain in the path of transforming the dream
    of a truly secular multi-religious Europe into a reality.

    It is not just a historic move. Both sides stand to reap immediate
    rewards. Turkey wins kudos for surmounting an endless series of hurdles
    to qualify for EU membership, thereby proving its credentials as a
    modern and dynamic society ready to pursue the challenge of further
    reform. The EU, meanwhile, has boosted its flagging international
    reputation by showing it can take hard decisions despite months of
    moroseness following the French and Dutch rejections of a new EU
    constitution this summer.

    Even more significantly, Europe's embrace of Turkey provides vivid
    proof of the success of the bloc's "soft power" approach to ensuring
    political change and encouraging the emergence of moderate Islam in
    its neighborhood. The EU's use of gentle pressure to promote change
    in Turkey has won admiration from the many Muslim governments weary
    of hard-line US policies and unimpressed by Washington's heavy-handed
    public relations. By reaching out to Ankara, the EU has also sent
    a message of reassurance to its own 20 million Muslims, who are
    increasingly uneasy about their future in Europe - particularly with
    the rise in anti-Islamic sentiment following the September 11 attacks,
    the Madrid train bombings, and the London underground explosions.

    The start of the talks has not been easy. Last-minute Austrian
    demands that Turkey be offered a watered-down privileged partnership
    almost scuppered the negotiations before they started. As EU foreign
    ministers, meeting for crisis talks in Luxembourg, squabbled and
    bickered over the final membership terms, British Foreign Secretary
    Jack Straw engaged in a complicated juggling act including talks with
    Austria, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, and US Secretary of
    State Condoleezza Rice.

    Despite the unseemly quarrels, however, Straw and Gul did indeed make
    history. The launch of negotiations was a strong signal that a clash
    of civilizations is not inevitable, said Straw, adding: "This is proof
    we can live, progress, and work together." In Ankara, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdošan said, "This is a victory for common sense."

    Europe's challenge to doomsayers, who foresee conflict and
    confrontation between the West and Islam, marks the coming-of-age of
    an increasingly diverse and multi-religious continent, agrees Vural
    Oeger, a German social democrat of Turkish descent and a member of
    the European Parliament. By keeping its word to Turkey, the EU has
    boosted its standing in the Islamic world and rejected extremists'
    vision of a divide between the West and Islam, says Oeger, adding:
    "I am sure that al-Qaida is very angry."

    Sajjad Karim, a British liberal democrat member of the European
    Parliament, agrees that the EU-Turkey talks will help heal some of
    the wounds wreaked by continuing anti-Islamic discrimination. As a
    moderate and secular Islamic nation, Turkey can also contribute to
    the ongoing debate in Europe on modernizing Islam, he says. "Turkey is
    democratic, secular, and Muslim, a perfect model for many," adds Karim.

    However, Brussels and Ankara face an array of daunting day-after
    challenges, including continuing public hostility to Turkish accession
    in Europe and rising anti-EU sentiment in Turkey. In addition, many
    leading European politicians, including the next German chancellor
    Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, France's would-be candidate in
    2007 presidential elections, remain deeply skeptical about allowing
    Ankara into the Union.

    While some see Turkey as proof that Islam and democracy can co-exist,
    opinion polls in Europe show continuing public fear of the Muslim
    nation. European fears of increasingly militant Muslims in their
    own backyard have grown in the wake of recent terror attacks. Also
    fueling the unease is the murder last year of Dutch film maker Theo
    Van Gogh by a young Moroccan, as well as the recent French controversy
    over the ban on Muslim headscarves in schools. Echoing such concerns,
    French President Jacques Chirac has warned that Turkey will need to
    undergo a "major cultural revolution" to gain entry into the EU.

    Many in Europe also worry at the economic cost of integrating a vast
    and still largely underdeveloped country of over 70 million people.

    Proponents of Turkish membership insist, however, that Turkey is
    wealthier than the eastern European countries seeking EU entry and
    that the process of development will speed up even further during the
    accession negotiations. Many contend that the large Turkish workforce
    will be essential in helping the EU compete with the likes of China
    and India.

    Negotiations are expected to take between 10 to 15 years and could
    be suspended at any time if even one EU country raises objections.

    Ankara will have to press ahead with political and human rights reforms
    - and ensure their implementation in several areas. "Turkey will be
    under ever closer scrutiny by the EU, by European public opinion,
    and by member states," warned EU enlargement chief Olli Rehn. There
    will be pressure on Turkey to help find a political solution in Cyprus
    and to accept responsibility for the alleged genocide of Armenians
    by the Ottomans in 1915.

    Also, EU policymakers admit that although more and more countries
    are knocking on EU doors, there is a certain "enlargement fatigue"
    following last year's big-bang expansion to 25 states. Significantly,
    the EU membership conditions for Ankara spell out, for the first time,
    that Turkish accession will depend on the EU's ability to absorb the
    country as a full member.

    As negotiations start in earnest, EU and Turkish leaders will have
    to undertake the mammoth task of preparing their citizens to live
    together. EU politicians have too often taken the easy road by
    pandering to the anti-Islamic prejudices of the far-right parties,
    thereby increasing popular fears about Islam and Muslims.

    They will now have to encourage more cultural exchanges and contacts
    between students, non-governmental organizations, and business
    leaders. For the first time, the European leadership must start giving
    an honest, public account of the many advantages of embracing Turkey
    as an EU member. Whether history was indeed made on October 3 will be
    determined by how the European and Turkish leaders and public carry
    their new mandate to fruition.

    Shada Islam is a Brussels-based journalist specializing in EU policy
    and Europe's relations with Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.

    http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=6359

    --Boundary_(ID_F/sVkI+eDH+psA9F3s2D0g)--
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