Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Athens: Vision and facts

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Athens: Vision and facts

    Vision and facts
    By Costas Iordanidis

    Kathimerini, Greece
    Sept 7 2006

    The recent European Parliament report calling on Ankara to recognize
    the genocide of Armenians during World War I and that of the Assyrians
    in the country's southeast and the Pontic Greeks in the Black Sea
    region may have irked Turkish officials but it does not come close
    to constituting official European Union policy.

    As a representative body, the European Parliament reflects public
    reservations toward the prospect of Turkey's EU membership. However,
    the EU's political elites have often adopted policies that run against
    popular sentiment.

    A similar thing is currently taking place in Turkey, as the security
    establishment and the government are turning their back on public
    sentiment. The EU's attraction is on the wane and Turkish people
    feel more affiliated with Muslim countries, some of which - Iran,
    Syria and Lebanon - have been targeted by the West.

    Turkey is experiencing a sort of schizophrenia. While the political
    system is supposedly representing the general will, its style of
    governance is actually bordering more and more on "enlightened rule."

    Increasingly, government policy is becoming eschatological: Political
    leaders are convinced about the correctness of their actions, despite
    the fact that the implementation of their policies has failed to bear
    much fruit - at least enough to win public consent.

    So much will depend on the European Commission report on Turkey's
    reform progress, due for release in October. Although the document
    is expected to contain some warnings for Ankara, EU leaders will by
    no means halt Turkey's path to Europe.

    The decision to admit Turkey is so firmly rooted among the EU's
    political elites, particularly in Greece, that it looks unshakeable.

    Political vision, it seems, matters more than facts.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X