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Amid Disquiet, Turkish Support For EU Membership Wanes

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  • Amid Disquiet, Turkish Support For EU Membership Wanes

    AMID DISQUIET, TURKISH SUPPORT FOR EU MEMBERSHIP WANES

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    Sept 29 2005

    ANKARA -- Turks are losing their enthusiasm for EU membership amid
    increasing doubts on whether their mainly Muslim country will ever
    be welcome in the bloc and mounting pressure on Ankara to tackle its
    most nationally explosive issues, analysts say.

    Ankara's four-decade drive to join the European Union has always
    enjoyed strong public support, but the latest polls suggest a
    significant drop as the country gears up for long-craved accession
    talks on October 3.

    A survey released in early September by the US-based German Marshall
    Fund of some 1,000 Turks showed that only 63 percent believe that EU
    membership would be a good thing, compared to 73 percent last year.

    "I have no faith in the EU, they will never allow us in," said Cengiz
    Aybar, a 34-year-old lawyer. "Even if membership talks begin they
    will go on forever with no result."

    Hulya Aslan, a 41-year-old retired banker, was just as pessimistic,
    arguing that Turkey would never be welcome because of its Muslim faith.

    "They are only playing with us," she said. "They will try to extract
    as many concessions as possible before selling us off."

    The main reason for the sour mood is a mounting debate in Europe on
    whether Turkey should actually become a member of the bloc. This is
    giving Turks the feeling that they are being badly treated, Cengiz
    Aktar, director of the EU center at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University,
    said.

    Rejection of the EU constitution in referenda in France and the
    Netherlands earlier this year, influenced in part by opposition to
    Turkey's membership, has taken its toll on the euphoria in Turkey that
    followed the EU's commitment at a December 17 summit in Brussels to
    begin accession talks.

    In Germany conservative leader Angela Merkel, whose Christian Union
    bloc narrowly won the September 18 general elections and is aiming to
    lead a ruling coalition, has long wanted to offer Turkey a "privileged
    partnership" rather than full membership.

    In France another political heavyweight, Nicolas Sarkozy, president
    of the ruling UMP party and a possible successor to President Jacques
    Chirac, argues against opening membership talks with Turkey for the
    immediate future.

    "These are not the expressions of new partnership but of new animosity
    - Turkey is presented like a bitter enemy of Europe," Aktar said.

    "This has created a bitter and negative environment of which even
    the most pro-EU circles in Turkey have had enough," he added.

    Adding to what appears to Turkey like a U-turn on the EU's commitment
    is increasing pressure on Ankara to take steps that many would
    consider betraying the country's basic policies, said Cigdem Nas,
    of Marmara University's European Community Institute.

    Tensions have flared over the divided island of Cyprus since July,
    when Turkey extended a customs union agreement to the bloc's 10 newest
    members, including Cyprus, but insisted that the move did not amount
    to recognition of the island's internationally acknowledged Greek
    Cypriot administration.

    The EU hit back by insisting on proper recognition.

    Another hot topic is the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman
    Empire during World War I, the forerunner of modern-day Turkey.

    Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million of their people were slaughtered
    in an Ottoman "genocide", a claim that Turkey strongly rejects.

    "Turkey is being gradually pushed into an internal settling of accounts
    and this creates a backlash in a country where nationalism runs high
    and the EU has come to symbolize all the foreign pressure on Ankara,"
    Nas said.

    The past few months have seen the rise of several new civic
    organizations that take their names from armed resistance groups
    that fought against allied occupation during Turkey's 1919-21 War of
    Independence, and which say that their aim is to save the country from
    "treasonous collaborators".

    "Even though there is an ideological anti-EU movement in Turkey,
    many know that the EU will be to the country's benefit. So support
    of EU membership will once again increase," Nas predicted.

    "But cornering Turkey on national issues such as Cyprus and the
    Armenian massacres would lead to a further backlash," she warned.
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