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Turks Frustrated Over Tough Bid To Join EU

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  • Turks Frustrated Over Tough Bid To Join EU

    TURKS FRUSTRATED OVER TOUGH BID TO JOIN EU
    By Tom Hundley
    Tribune foreign correspondent

    Chicago Tribune, IL
    Dec 8 2006

    Many experts say shunning the modernizing Muslim democracy would send
    negative signal

    ISTANBUL -- The last few weeks have been a roller coaster ride for
    Turkey's European Union aspirations.

    The next day, the European Commission, the EU's executive body,
    announced that it would recommend suspending accession talks with
    Turkey because of Ankara's long-standing refusal to open its ports
    and airports to Greek Cyprus, an EU member since 2004.

    On Wednesday, Turkey offered to open one port and one airport to the
    Greek Cypriots, but only if the Greek Cypriots agreed to the same
    for the Turkish portion of the divided island. The EU said it would
    study the offer.

    Next week's EU summit in Brussels could produce what EU enlargement
    Commissioner Olli Rehn gloomily described as the slow-motion "train
    wreck" of Turkey's hopes to join the club--bad news not only for
    Turkey and the EU, but also for the United States, which has been an
    energetic cheerleader for Turkey's inclusion.

    Many international relations experts believe that failure to find
    a way to integrate a modernizing Muslim democracy into the EU would
    send a negative signal to moderates across the Islamic world and to
    the 15 million Muslims already living within the EU. It also could
    encourage Turkey to reconsider its Western orientation and seek
    alliances elsewhere, most likely with Russia or Iran.

    Former U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke recently likened Turkey's
    importance to that of West Germany during the Cold War, calling it a
    "frontline state" that the West could ill afford to abandon.

    Invited to join in 1999

    The EU extended an invitation to Turkey in 1999. The process was
    expected to take 10 to 15 years, and few would deny that Turkey already
    has made huge progress toward meeting the EU's membership criteria.

    But Sept. 11 happened, followed by terrorist attacks in Madrid
    and London. Those events widened the gulf between the West and the
    Islamic world.

    The EU's self-confidence took a hit in 2005 when voters in France and
    the Netherlands rejected a new EU constitution. In the minds of many
    voters, the question of Turkey's membership had become conflated with
    fears about immigration.

    Polls show that only about 1 in 3 EU residents supports Turkey's
    membership bid.

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair says that excluding Turkey would
    be a "serious mistake." But Blair, who steps down next year, does
    not have to face worried voters.

    Nicholas Sarkozy and Segolene Royal, the expected pairing in France's
    presidential elections next spring, do. Sarkozy kicked off his
    candidacy by declaring that "Turkey's place is not in the EU" and
    challenging Royal to match that. Royal responded that she shared the
    view of the French public.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country is home to 3 million
    Turks, favors a "privileged relationship" for Turkey, not full
    membership.

    At times it seems that European politicians are doing everything they
    can to poke a sharp stick in Turkey's eye. In October, the French
    National Assembly passed a bill making it a criminal offense to deny
    the 1915 Armenian genocide.

    Linking Turkey's membership to a resolution of the Cyprus dispute,
    and in effect giving the Greek Cypriots blackball power over Turkey's
    application, also seems provocative.

    In 2004, when UN Secretary General Kofi Annan brokered a deal on the
    Cyprus question, Ankara worked hard to persuade Turkish Cypriots to
    support it. They did, but Greek Cypriots turned it down. The Greek
    side of the divided island got into the EU anyway.

    "Why is the side that said `no' in the EU, while the side that said
    `yes' is being punished?" asked Nazlan Ertan, an Ankara journalist.

    Feeling unwanted and disrespected, Turks have started to turn their
    backs on the EU.

    A recent German Marshall Fund survey found that the percentage of Turks
    who saw EU membership as a good thing had fallen from 74 percent in
    2004 to 54 percent today.

    Among young, self-aware Turks, there appears to be a growing sense that
    the cultural gap between Turkey and Europe may be too wide to bridge.

    "Economically and strategically, we are important to Europe, but
    culturally we are very different," said Merve Yildirim, an English
    literature student at Istanbul's Bogazici University.

    "The Ottoman Empire has a long history, and our traditions are
    different from the Christian world, especially in eastern Turkey,"
    she said. "Improving living standards for these people [in eastern
    Turkey] would be a good thing, but in some ways these are Christianized
    standards, and imposing them could be dangerous."

    Others, usually a bit older, remain deeply influenced by the secular,
    pro-Western outlook of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, modern Turkey's
    founder. Soban Kotukoglu, a merchant in Istanbul's bazaar, said he
    no longer believes the EU is crucial to Turkey's economic success
    but that it would be disastrous if Turkey slipped out of the West's
    orbit. He doesn't trust Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling
    Justice and Development party, which has Islamist roots.

    "They have two faces," he said, "the one they show to the West
    and another one which they keep hidden, and which is much more
    fundamentalist."

    Turkey, straddling Europe and Asia, often seems to be looking in two
    directions at once.

    This month Christmas lights that would put Macy's to shame are
    twinkling in the shopping malls of Turkey's major cities. Turkey is
    99 percent Muslim, but the Christmas custom has spread rapidly in
    the last decade or so. Turks say they are celebrating the New Year.

    Head scarves are banned in schools, universities and government
    offices--the result of the country's rigorously enforced
    secularism--but Islamic swimwear, covering females from head to toe,
    made gains at the beach last summer.

    Turkey produced a Nobel laureate in literature in 2006, Orhan Pamuk,
    but earlier, when he spoke publicly of Turkey's mistreatment of
    Armenians and Kurds, right-wing nationalists tried to prosecute him
    for "insulting Turkishness." The case was a reminder that Turkey still
    has a way to go in the human-rights department, but Meliha Altunisik,
    a political scientist at Ankara's Middle East Technical University,
    said the EU accession process had helped consolidate many reforms.

    "We have to admit that the EU anchor has been good for Turkey's
    democracy. It has really transformed the Turkish state," she said.

    Ertan, the journalist, doesn't think this week's summit will produce
    the slow-motion train wreck predicted by Rehn and others but merely
    a slow train.

    "The danger with a slow train," she said, "is that it might get slower
    and slower until it finally just stops."
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