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ANKARA: One Disaster And Lots Of Advice

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  • ANKARA: One Disaster And Lots Of Advice

    ONE DISASTER AND LOTS OF ADVICE
    By Orhan Bursali

    Anatolian Times, Turkey
    Dec 8 2006

    CUMHURIYET- EU policy has come to a halt. Both conservative EU
    states and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) have halted
    relations. The EU is following a long-term strategy to block Turkey's
    EU membership. The first county they used for this purpose was Greece,
    followed by the Greek Cypriots. The strategy was determined by letting
    the Greek Cypriots into the EU ranks despite their problems. The
    strategy was clear: Turkey would be forced to give into every request
    by Greece and the Greek Cypriots. This wasn't enough, because other
    issues were waiting after Turkey gives up its rights in the Aegean
    Sea and leaves Cyprus: the Kurdish and Armenian questions, etc. This
    strategy bore fruit in the first obstacle: You're not implementing the
    additional protocol? Then you'll pay. So it's clear what next week's EU
    summit will bring. The US and some EU countries are trying to prevent
    this recommendation from going in effect, but nothing will change. When
    could they change? When the EU starts to believe that it can't continue
    without Turkey. There's no prospect of this on the horizon.

    And why has the AKP cooled its relations? It thought it could get
    EU support for its cause of wearing headscarves in public places and
    fundamentalism under the guise of human rights. But it didn't happen.

    What did the AKP not do? It didn't immediately appoint a chief
    negotiator. State Minister Ali Babacan was appointed to his chief
    EU negotiator post six months late. And lastly, the EU only made
    a declaration that it would lift the embargo against the Turkish
    Republic of Northern Cyprus, but never applied it.

    One disaster has created a common ground for a discussion on what to
    do. Not for EU membership, but for developments without the EU.
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