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ANKARA: Turkey, EU discuss common foreign and security policy

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  • ANKARA: Turkey, EU discuss common foreign and security policy

    Turkey, EU discuss common foreign and security policy

    The New Anatolian
    Oct 7 2006

    Saturday , 07 October 2006

    Turkish and European officials on Friday discussed Ankara's progress
    in aligning its foreign and security policy with that of the European
    Union, as part of the country's accession talks with the 25-member
    bloc.

    The meeting in Brussels was the 31st of 35 major meetings of the
    detailed screening process, which is expected to continue with
    the opening of substantive talks on this chapter. Turkey has to
    successfully conclude substantive talks on 35 chapters to be eligible
    for membership, a process expected to last least 10 years.

    Diplomatic sources told The New Anatolian on Friday that Turkey,
    as a candidate country, has done a great deal of harmonization for
    the EU's common foreign and security policy.

    Recalling Turkey's contribution to the largest peacekeeping mission
    ever undertaken by the EU, in Bosnia-Herzegovina , the same sources
    stressed that Turkey had contributed 370 personnel to the EU Force
    in Bosnia-Herzegovina (operation EUFOR-ALTHEA).

    "Turkey's combat group with Romania and Italy will have been
    established by the end of 2009 and they will be ready for inclusion
    in the EU's forces," one source said.

    Highlighting that Turkey has harmonized its foreign policy with the EU
    on the Southern Caucasus, Middle East, Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan,
    diplomatic sources also underlined that Turkey, like EU countries,
    decided to send forces to the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)

    But despite parallel policies between Turkey and EU on major foreign
    policy issues, there are also differences. Sources have highlighted
    that the EU's approach to a normalization of relations with Armenia,
    allowing Greek Cypriot participation in EU-NATO strategic cooperation
    and the Aegean problems with Greece are where the most differences are.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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