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  • Franco-Turkish Relations Strained

    FRANCO-TURKISH RELATIONS STRAINED

    ISN, Switzerland
    Oct 17 2006

    A bill to penalize Armenian genocide denial has put tension on
    relations between France and Turkey, as the latter attempts to shore
    up support for its quest to join the EU.

    Commentary by Federico Bordonaro in Rome for ISN Security Watch
    (17/10/06)

    The French National Assembly on 13 October passed a bill, which,
    if approved by the Senate and signed by President Jacques Chirac,
    would penalize anyone denying the Armenian genocide at the hands of
    the Ottoman Turks with a fine of up to ~@45,000 (US$56,000) and one
    year in prison.

    The bill was proposed by the Socialist Party.

    The French decision infuriated Turkey, whose government accuses Paris
    of using the memory of the Turkish-Armenian clash in a demagogic way
    and for domestic political reasons, as France prepares for the 2007
    general elections.

    Presidential candidates, according to an official in Ankara, are
    trying to win the votes of those citizens opposed to Turkey's EU
    accession bid. Moreover, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    administration believes that France is "permanently hostile" to
    Ankara's EU integration.

    Armenia claims that between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Empire
    systematically murdered 1.5 million ethnic Armenians when Ankara
    forced them out of its eastern regions. Turkey, however, says that
    Armenian casualties were between 250,000 and 500,000, and denies that
    any systematic genocide took place.

    Chirac expressed his view during a phone conversation with Erdogan
    on 14 October, reportedly saying that although France recognized the
    Armenian tragedy as a genocide, the proposed law was "useless." The
    French president's attempt to appease Ankara came after Turkey
    threatened the possibility of economic retaliation.

    However, the controversy is far from over, and its economic and
    political fallout is already spreading.

    Turkish citizens protested against France over the weekend, while
    Turkish Economy Minister Ali Babacan told media that although
    the Erdogan government would not start a boycott campaign, other
    organizations in Turkey might.

    In fact, on 16 October, the Turkish daily Hurriyet quoted Bulent
    Deniz, president of the Turkish Consumers' Federation, as saying
    that "a boycott against French products has already resulted in an
    observed 30 percent drop in sales of goods for [...] Total," a French
    oil company and one of Paris' top players in Turkey.

    Moreover, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said in an official
    statement on 14 October that Ankara had warned Paris that "if such a
    bill were passed by its parliament, the loser would be France. Paris
    will always be embarrassed by this."

    France's strategic and commercial relations with Turkey may be damaged
    in such a way that large industrial interests, as well as defense
    and energy-related cooperation projects, could be hindered.

    Frederic Saint-Geours, CEO of Peugeot Automobiles, said last week
    that economic retaliation by Turkey against French goods was "almost
    certain," and would likely be painful for Peugeot, which holds between
    5 and 6 percent of Turkey's automobile market.

    The Franco-German defense giant Eurocopter, which is owned by the
    European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company, competes with other
    big groups to provide Ankara with some 52 civilian and military
    helicopters. The company could also suffer from the deteriorating
    bilateral relations.

    Lucrative contracts for civilian nuclear power plants and the massive
    infrastructure of the fast-growing Turkish economy are also being eyed
    by big French corporations. Should Ankara decide to boycott Paris,
    the economic damage for France could be substantial.

    However, the dispute is a politically thorny issue for Paris and
    the EU. The French Parliament's move comes at a time of increasing
    difficulties in Euro-Turkish relations.

    Prominent politicians in France, Germany and the Netherlands have
    taken a hostile stance to Turkey's EU integration, and now openly
    speak in favor of a mere "special relationship" between the EU and
    Ankara as opposed to its accession.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Erdogan on 5 October that "Turkey
    must fully recognize [Greek-controlled] Cyprus" if it were to join the
    EU. Since Germany will take the helm of the EU's rotating presidency
    next January, the announcement was a sign that Merkel would again
    put pressure on Ankara.

    Although Turkey remains crucial for European security, including in the
    area of energy, Western European leaders appear increasingly sensitive
    to cultural aspects of the integration issue, as the intellectual
    debate over the political and social aspects of Islam is heats up
    in Europe.

    While Chirac may work to annul the bill, his chances of success are
    not high, and the short-term outlook for Franco-Turkish relations is
    bleak. Nicolas Sarkozy, the Union for a Popular Movement's candidate
    for the French presidency next year, is wagering on his electorate's
    opposition to Ankara's accession, while the Socialists do not show
    any enthusiasm for it, either. More generally, Euro-Turkish relations
    appear to be deteriorating even as Ankara remains determined to join
    the EU.

    Federico Bordonaro, based in Italy, is an analyst of international
    relations and geopolitics with the Power and Interest News Report
    and Strategic-Road.com. He is an expert on the new structure of the
    international system after the Cold War, the European integration
    process, security and defense issues and political realism.

    The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author only,
    not the International Relations and Security Network (ISN).
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