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Turkey And The EU: Keeping A Friendly Distance

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  • Turkey And The EU: Keeping A Friendly Distance

    TURKEY AND THE EU: KEEPING A FRIENDLY DISTANCE
    by Michael Radu

    Spero News
    Oct 26 2006

    The immediate problem is Cyprus, where the EU has committed every error
    possible, and an issue which more than any other unites all Turks.

    The alienation between Turkey and the EU has grown on both sides
    to the point that more and more people in Brussels and Ankara are
    beginning to realize that not only is Turkey's EU membership unlikely,
    but that it is not in the interest of either party.

    The immediate problem is Cyprus, where the EU has committed every
    error possible, and an issue which more than any other unites all
    Turks. To begin with, the EU's decision to admit Greek Cyprus as
    a full member was made apparently without a full understanding of
    the implications. In April 2004, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's
    plan for reunification-which 65 percent of Turkish Cypriot voters
    approved-was rejected by the Greek Cypriots by over 75 percent in a
    referendum. But Brussels went ahead with the admission of Greek Cyprus
    anyway, even though Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had
    risked all his political capital (and perhaps the existence of his
    government) to pressure the Turkish Cypriots to accept the plan. He
    did so even though he was fully aware that, once Cyprus was in the EU,
    Nicosia would be in a position to demand more and more concessions from
    Ankara. Meanwhile, under Greek pressure, the EU continues to punish,
    through blockade and isolation, the Turkish side, while threatening
    Ankara for not opening its ports to the Greeks. As correctly perceived
    in Turkey, Erdogan and the Turkish Cypriots made all the unpopular
    concessions and received only humiliation from Brussels.

    The more long-term and profound issue is the EU's political
    demands on Turkey, demands that are a case study of contradiction
    and confusion. Turkey has complied with many of Brussels'
    demands-constitutional changes regarding human rights, freedom of
    expression, minority rights, etc. Kurds now have the right to use their
    own language and have a Kurdish media, again against popular sentiment
    and well-founded fears of Kurdish separatism. The EU continues to
    push, often vocally and, in the eyes of many in Turkey, irresponsibly,
    for the elimination of the military's political role and influence.

    Why is this irresponsible on the EU's part? Because, despite government
    denials, Islamism, including fundamentalism, has been on the rise
    in Turkey ever since the present Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    came to power in 2003. That fact has been repeatedly brought to the
    public's attention by Chief of General Staff Gen.

    Yasar Buyukanit and Land Forces Commander Gen. Ilker Basbug.

    Moreover, Navy chief Admiral Yener Karahanoglu has clearly stated
    that "The Turkish armed forces will never make the concessions
    that have been asked of it on the road to the European Union." The
    military leaders have a constitutional obligation to protect
    secularism-something that seems to have escaped notice by its Brussels'
    critics. The seldom mentioned but most powerful reason for opposition
    to Turkey's membership in the EU in Europe is its Muslim identity and
    fear of the impact some 70 million Muslim Turks in a post-religious
    Europe already threatened by growing Islamism among its existing
    20 million Muslim residents. While that is a legitimate fear, it is
    counterproductive to at the same time insist on Turkey's weakening
    its most powerful and popular secularist force-the military.

    In Turkey, the issue of "minority rights" is directly related to
    the Kurdish issue and territorial integrity. At a time when the
    interpretation of "minority rights" especially in territorial terms,
    threatens the integrity of EU members such as Spain or Belgium,
    and Turkey itself is experiencing a limited revival of Kurdish
    Marxist/separatist terrorism, one experienced Turkish observer has
    observed that "To gain admission into the EU, Turkey is being asked
    to solve the problem of Kurdish separatism with the kind of methods
    that the EU countries have abandoned. Turkey cannot solve that problem
    and fight Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) terror with such methods." By
    pushing for more and more "rights" for a separatist minority (including
    PKK terrorists) within the Kurdish minority, amounting to the very
    same multiculturalism that is now widely under assault within Europe,
    Brussels demonstrates, if not a tin ear, hypocrisy.

    When Turkish prosecutors bring to trial and courts condemn separatists
    or supporters of Armenian claims of "genocide" by the Ottoman Empire in
    1915, Brussels' human rights arbiters are prompt in criticizing Turkey
    for denying "freedom of expression." But when three Dutch-Turkish
    politicians were purged from their parties' electoral lists for
    dissenting from the Armenian interpretation of those events, the
    French Parliament voted to make it a crime to do so, and Jacques
    Chirac, traveling to Erevan, conditioned Turkey's membership in the
    EU on Ankara's recognizing the Armenian "genocide."

    Whatever one's opinion on the events of 1915 in the now-defunct Ottoman
    Empire-and beyond Armenian nationalist pretensions, it is hard to
    see the relevance of those events for today's Turkish Republic-such
    attitudes suggest a persistent double-standard which, not surprisingly,
    is increasingly resented in Turkey.

    While the European attitude toward Turkey's membership is full of
    contradictions and hidden agendas, developments inside Turkey are not
    boding well for the country's integration in the EU, either. The old
    debate over secularism, never far from the surface, has taken on a new
    and increasingly open intensity. Turkish nationalism is also on the
    rise, lately manifested as anti-Americanism. The AKP government is
    more attracted to its initial Islamic roots, while the new military
    leadership, especially Gen. Buyukanit, who took office in August, is
    less diplomatic than its predecessor in publicly opposing that trend.

    The combination of growing Turkish nationalism and anti-Americanism
    (a trend in Europe as well) means, in addition to complications for
    the U.S. position in Iraq, that the traditional U.S. support for
    Turkey's EU accession is both less enthusiastic and less effective.

    That is not necessarily a bad thing for Ankara: after all, is
    membership in the Brussels club good and necessary for Turkey's
    national interest? More and more Turks are answering that question in
    the negative. Public support for EU membership has dropped dramatically
    in the past year, from 70 percent to less than 50 percent.

    While for many Turks the reasons may be more emotional than
    objective-such pushbutton issues as the Kurdish and Armenian questions,
    or Cyprus, create instant resentment-there are level-headed reasons to
    oppose membership. First, the membership issue is directly related to
    issues of secularism and the role of the military; second, the issue
    of human rights, especially Kurdish minority rights, is inseparable
    from terrorism. None of these are seen as being easier to cope with
    under the rules imposed by Brussels.

    In economic terms, considering the problems facing the EU in terms
    of economic growth, unemployment, and budgets, the likely benefits
    of membership for Turkey are increasingly hard to see. Indeed,
    when most of the EU members are already unhappy with the cost of the
    newly admitted Central and East European countries and the soon to be
    admitted Romania and Bulgaria, which ten new members combined have
    a smaller but richer population than Turkey, it is hard to see how
    much, if anything at all, is left for that country, in terms of both
    good will and funding. Moreover, Turkey already enjoys, independent
    of its candidacy, some of the membership benefits in areas such as
    tariffs and investments. It has already implemented some of the key
    economic reforms required by Brussels, with good results. Perhaps
    German Chancellor Angela Merkel's opinion that Turkey should remain
    a "preferred partner" rather than member of the EU is beneficial
    for Turkey. It certainly is more honest than that of many of her
    colleagues, whose demands on Ankara are as great as their understanding
    and concessions are limited.

    Michael Radu, Ph.D., is Co-Chair of FPRI's Center on Terrorism,
    Counter-Terrorism, and Homeland Security. He is currently at work on
    a book on Islamism in Europe.

    http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.as p?idCategory=34&idsub=158&id=6303&t=Tu rkey+and+the+EU%3A+Keeping+a+friendly+distance
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