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Tense Time For Turkey: EU To Decide On Its Future, Pope Makes Contro

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  • Tense Time For Turkey: EU To Decide On Its Future, Pope Makes Contro

    TENSE TIME FOR TURKEY: EU TO DECIDE ON ITS FUTURE, POPE MAKES CONTROVERSIAL VISIT
    by Peter Goodspeed, National Post

    National Post (Canada)
    November 20, 2006 Monday
    All but Toronto Edition

    Turkey's relations with Europe are at a crucial turning point. Not
    since the Polish King Jan Sobieski sent Pope Innocent XI news of his
    triumph over the Ottoman Turks at the gates of Vienna in 1683 have
    the civilizations of Europe and Turkey clashed so completely.

    Early next month, as European Union leaders gather for their annual
    summit meeting in Brussels, the European Commission will decide
    whether to continue negotiating with Turkey over its lengthy bid to
    become accepted as part of the European Union.

    The decision, which could totally transform the West's relations
    with the Muslim world, comes amid a flurry of cultural and political
    clashes that are fuelling mutual suspicions and contributing to a
    growing sense of crisis between Turkey and Europe.

    An unresolved 32-year conflict with Greece over Cyprus, concerns over
    Turkish censorship and complaints over official attempts to deny the
    Armenian genocide have collided with passionate disputes over religion
    and racism to disrupt relations.

    Even Pope Benedict XVI's Nov. 28 to Dec. 1 visit to Turkey -- his
    first as Pope to a Muslim country -- is expected to increase tensions.

    The Pope's pilgrimage was rooted in his desire to meet the spiritual
    leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch
    Bartholomew I. But it has been transformed into a major fence-mending
    exercise after the Pope outraged Muslims two months ago in a speech
    to his old university in Germany in which he quoted remarks critical
    of the Prophet Muhammad by a 14th-century Byzantine emperor.

    The controversy erupted almost a year after a wave of similar violent
    demonstrations swept the Muslim world in response to cartoons of the
    Prophet published by a Danish newspaper.

    In Turkey, the Pope's speech had an additional sting. It reminded
    people that, before he became Pope, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger staunchly
    opposed Turkey's admission to the EU.

    "Turkey has always represented a different continent, always in
    contrast with Europe," he said in a 2004 interview with the French
    newspaper Le Figaro. "Europe was founded not on geography, but on a
    common faith.

    "It would be an error to equate the two continents ... Turkey is
    founded upon Islam ... Thus the entry of Turkey into the EU would be
    anti-historical," he added.

    At other times, the Pope has criticized Europe's reluctance to
    acknowledge its Christian roots for fear of offending its growing
    population of Muslim immigrants.

    The Pope's comments struck a chord with a rising opposition to
    Turkey's EU membership in countries like France, Austria, Denmark
    and the Netherlands, where there is wariness at admitting a poor
    overwhelmingly Muslim country of 70 million people.

    Similar sentiments have led several EU members to suggest Turkey
    should be granted "privileged partnership" rather than full membership.

    The fact that only 3% of Turkey's land mass actually lies in Europe
    spurs continental skeptics who feel Europe is already struggling to
    integrate 12 million Muslim immigrants.

    Jose Manuel Barroso, the EU President, has suggested it may take more
    than 20 years for Turkey to gain admission.

    This month, the EU issued a report that was highly critical of
    Turkey's progress in accession talks. After a year, only one of the 33
    "chapters" Turkey must negotiate on has been closed, it said.

    "Further efforts are needed in particular on freedom of expression,"
    the report says. "Further improvements are also needed on the rights
    of non-Muslim religious communities, women's rights, trade union
    rights and on civilian control of the military."

    The EU had a long list of complaints: Senior members of Turkey's armed
    forces meddle in politics; Turkey lacks an independent judiciary;
    corruption is widespread; allegations of torture and ill-treatment
    outside detention centres are common.

    Still, the most pressing problem remains Cyprus.

    Turkey refuses to open its ports to Cypriot planes and ships until an
    international embargo against the Turkish-occupied portion of Cyprus
    is lifted.

    Greece and Cyprus, both EU members with the power to veto Turkey's
    entry, are threatening to block future EU talks with Turkey until
    the issue is resolved.

    Finland has proposed a last-minute compromise, suggesting the EU
    reduce some restrictions on Turkish-run northern Cyprus in return
    for Turkey opening its ports to Greek Cypriots.

    If Ankara fails to agree, the EU may decide as early as Dec. 14 to
    suspend all talks with Turkey.

    Philippe Douste-Blazy, the French Foreign Minister, has already told
    parliament the process should be "rethought," while Angela Merkel,
    the German Chancellor, has warned Turkey's refusal to act on Cyprus
    will be "very, very serious."

    In the meantime, Turkey's relations with individual EU members continue
    to deteriorate.

    This week, Ankara angrily suspended military ties with France, a major
    partner in NATO, in retaliation for a new French law that would make
    it illegal for anyone in France to deny the Armenian genocide of 1915.

    In addition, Turks themselves are having second thoughts. The latest
    public opinion poll by the Pew Research Center says their support
    for the EU has plunged to 35%, half of what it was two years ago.

    With national elections due next fall, that raises the possibility
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister, could walk away
    from the talks to avoid any further embarrassment. That could lead
    to a permanent rupture with the West that will dramatically change
    the Middle East.

    "How much longer will this secular democratic Muslim country look
    westward to a European future, instead of turning east?" asks Denis
    MacShane, Britain's former Europe minister.

    A frustrated Turkey could easily align itself with Iran and Russia.

    But even more ominous, its tradition of secularism and its democratic
    ambitions may come under renewed attack from Islamist radicals.
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