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Turkey-Europe: The Widening Gap

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  • Turkey-Europe: The Widening Gap

    TURKEY-EUROPE: THE WIDENING GAP
    Prepared by: Carin Zissis

    Council on Foreign Relations, New York
    Oct 24 2006

    A supporter of the True Path Party marches under a giant Turkish flag
    during an anti-France protest. (AP/Murad Sezer)

    The possibility of Turkish EU accession appears increasingly
    uncertain. In recent weeks, European leaders have voiced unease over
    Ankara's membership bid, citing concerns over Turkey's infringement
    on freedom of expression and its embargo on Cypriot ships and planes
    (AP), the latter a manifestation of a long-standing dispute over
    division of the Aegean Sea with Greece. Some EU members, including
    France and Germany, have suggested Turkey seek "privileged partnership"
    rather than full membership. Olli Rehn, commissioner of EU enlargement,
    opposed this idea, but warned the Turkish accession process that began
    in October 2005 has been slowed by Ankara's failure to repeal Article
    301, which gives the government free reign to arrest journalists
    and activists for disparaging Turkey. In an interview with the BBC,
    EU President Jose Manuel Barroso said it could take twenty years for
    Turkey to become a member nation.

    Recent events have done little to ease growing EU-Turkey tensions
    and Europe seems hesitant to absorb the overwhelmingly Muslim nation
    of more than 70 million people. France's parliament recently angered
    Ankara when it decided to make criminal the denial of mass killings of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Empire. The law was condemned by Turkish
    author Orhan Pamuk (Reuters), who was previously indicted under Article
    301 for raising the issue of the genocide and who received the Nobel
    Prize for Literature the same day the French rule passed. Europe-Turkey
    relations also took a hit last month when Pope Benedict XVI's comments
    about Mohammed sparked widespread Muslim protests and temporarily
    put the pope's November visit to Turkey in doubt.

    Experts say such obstacles to Turkey's EU membership could lead
    to missed opportunities for making inroads in Christian-Muslim
    relations. Denis MacShane, Britain's former Europe minister, writes
    in the Financial Times that the Armenian genocide had little to do
    with modern Turkey and warns against Europe's increasingly demeaning
    attitude toward Ankara. He asks, "How much longer will this secular,
    democratic, Muslim country look westwards to a European future,
    instead of turning east?" Sedat Laciner, director of Ankara-based
    think tank International Strategic Research Organization, criticizes
    "unsuccessful politicians" in Europe for condemning his country, and
    argues that EU accession would help "erode the unilateral policies"
    of the United States and Israel in the Middle East by drawing Europe
    closer to the region.

    The problems in Europe coincide with a breakdown in U.S.-Turkey
    relations, despite Washington's support for the country's EU
    membership. This Council Special Report from June describes the
    "fractured alliance" and says that although Washington and Ankara
    agree that an Iraq splintered into three independent states is not in
    either country's interests, Turkey is frustrated by the U.S. handling
    of the Iraqi war. Tensions also exist over America's failure to
    support the Turkish fight against the separatist Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK). In an August interview, CFR Fellow Steven A. Cook said
    the United States is unwilling to go after PKK cells in northern
    Iraq because "it would be foolhardy from a military perspective...to
    go after the PKK and destabilize the one region where people really
    aren't shooting at Americans." Michael Rubin of the American Enterprise
    Institute says the United States is too soft on Turkey's government
    (WSJ) and U.S. diplomats should stop delivering "PC platitudes" that
    fail to address the "anti-secular agenda" of Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party.
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