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ICG: Turkey And Europe: The Decisive Year Ahead

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  • ICG: Turkey And Europe: The Decisive Year Ahead

    TURKEY AND EUROPE: THE DECISIVE YEAR AHEAD

    International Crisis Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id =5796&l=1
    Dec 15 2008
    Belgium

    Turkey is entering a critical year, in which its prospects for
    European Union (EU) membership are at make or break stage. Domestic
    crises over the past two years have slowed national reform, betrayed
    the promise of a new constitution and undermined the political will
    needed to pursue accession negotiations. Its leaders show scant sign
    of changing course, at least before the March 2009 local elections,
    and EU states are applying little pressure to reinvigorate reform. Both
    sides need to recall how much they have to gain from each other and
    move quickly on several fronts to break out of this downward spiral
    before one or the other breaks off the negotiations, which could then
    well prove impossible to start again.

    The dangers to Turkey of this loss of EU-bound momentum are already
    evident: weak reform performance, new tensions between Turks and Kurds,
    polarisation in politics and the potential loss of the principal anchor
    of this decade's economic miracle. For Europe, the cost would be longer
    term: less easy access to one of the biggest and fastest-growing nearby
    markets, likely new tensions over Cyprus and loss of leverage that real
    partnership with Turkey offers in helping to stabilise the Middle East,
    strengthen EU energy security and reach out to the Muslim world.

    Paradoxically, the reform program went off course in 2005 concurrently
    with the launch of EU membership negotiations. A first reason was
    bitterness that the Republic of Cyprus was allowed to enter in
    2004, even though it was Turkish Cypriots, with Ankara's support,
    who voted for the reunification deal (the Annan Plan) backed
    by the UN, the U.S. and the EU itself, while the Greek Cypriots
    voted it down. Then the AKP (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi - Justice
    and Development Party) government lost motivation as France and
    Germany worked to block Turkey's EU ambitions. It was disappointed
    by the failure of the European Court of Human Rights to overturn the
    Constitutional Court's rejection of a hard-fought amendment to allow
    women university students to wear headscarves. It was also distracted
    by need to concentrate on other Constitutional Court cases brought by
    the secularist establishment that narrowly failed to block the AKP's
    choice of president and to ban the party but deepened the polarisation
    of domestic politics and institutions. Simultaneously an up­surge
    in attacks by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) focused attention
    increasingly on security issues.

    Turkey now pledges to relaunch reforms with a new National Program
    for Adopting the EU Body of Law (the acquis communautaire). The draft
    text focuses on anti-corruption measures through regulation of state
    tenders and state incentives, judicial reform and more democratic laws
    governing political parties and elections. In particular, AKP officials
    mention lowering the 10 per cent national electoral threshold for a
    party to enter parliament; allowing 100 of that body's 550 seats to
    be determined by nationwide proportional voting; and lengthening the
    short daily broadcasts in Kurdish and liberalising their content.

    However, such plans are years late and fall short of EU expectations
    expressed in a 2007 Accession Partnership document and the European
    Commission's annual progress reports. While the EU seeks many
    changes within a one- or two-year timeframe, Turkey envisages longer
    horizons. Instead of showing determined political commitment to the EU
    process, some top Turkish leaders have preferred to adopt an injured
    tone of complaint about Brussels' demands and criticism. Above all,
    implementation has lagged: despite brave talk that it would replace
    the Copenhagen Criteria the EU has used since the early 1990s to
    assess a candidate's status with its own "Ankara Criteria", Turkey has
    passed only one sixth of a self-developed list of 119 legal reform
    measures announced in April 2007. Most disappointingly, the AKP has
    also dropped its prime promise in that year's election campaign of
    a new, truly democratic constitution.

    This slowdown comes just as Turkey's initiatives to encourage
    openness and calm tensions in the region are showing how much it can
    do to advance EU foreign policy goals. Ankara has helped de-escalate
    crises over Iran's nuclear policy and Lebanon; mediated proximity
    talks between Syria and Israel; and opened a new process of contacts
    with Armenia and cooperation with Iraqi Kurds. It is also supporting
    promising new talks on the reunification of Cyprus, where a settlement
    could provide a critical breakthrough for its relationship with the EU
    over the next year. Such initiatives helped win Turkey a two-year seat
    on the UN Security Council from January 2009. Conversely, however, a
    failure to live up to the commitment made in 2005 to open seaports and
    airports to Greek Cypriot traffic in 2009 would risk anti-membership
    EU states seeking to suspend Turkey's accession negotiations.

    EU member states should seize the chance to fix past mistakes over
    Cyprus by prioritising success in the new negotiations on the island
    and do more to encourage Turkey to revitalise its reform effort. EU
    politicians must stop pushing the qualifying bar ever higher for
    Turkey and restate that they stand by their promise of full membership
    once all criteria are fulfilled. For its part, Turkey should be
    less sensitive to slights and stop treating the EU as a monolithic
    bloc. It should take care to avoid the trap of self-exclusion, keep
    its foot in the still open door and, like the UK and Spain before it,
    refuse to take "no" for an answer.

    RECOMMENDATIONS

    To the Government of Turkey:

    1. Recommit to EU-compliant reforms at the highest executive level;
    immediately approve and begin implementation of the draft National
    Program for Adopting the EU Body of Law; and re-establish trust between
    parliamentary parties and cooperation on the EU membership goal.

    2. Sustain full support for the current round of talks on a Cyprus
    settlement and avoid navy intervention against oil exploration in
    waters claimed by Greece or the Republic of Cyprus.

    3. Broaden the policy of inclusion towards the Turkish Kurds by both
    sustaining economic development plans in Kurdish-majority areas and
    developing wider cultural and language rights.

    4. Extend freedoms and equal rights for members of all faiths in
    choice of religious instruction at school, access to seminaries and
    status of places of worship.

    5. Sponsor and encourage an inclusive process of national discussion
    leading to the adoption of a new, less authoritarian civilian
    constitution and reform political party and electoral legislation to
    increase transparency and representation.

    To the EU and Governments of EU Member States:

    6. Reassert firmly and often that Turkey can achieve full membership of
    the EU when it has fulfilled all criteria; lift unofficial blocks on
    the screening and opening of negotiating chapters; and familiarise
    Turkish companies with the requirements, benefits and costs of
    complying with the EU body of law.

    7. Take a greater, even-handed interest in Cyprus settlement talks;
    send senior officials to visit both community leaders in their
    offices on the island; underline willingness to give financial support
    for a solution; and consider delaying oil exploration in contested
    territorial waters while talks are under way.

    8. Support and coordinate with recent Turkish foreign policy
    initiatives to de-escalate crises in the Caucasus and the Middle East.

    9. Crack down more firmly on financing from Europe of the Kurdish
    militant group the PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party); ensure that requests
    in relation to the arrest and extradition of suspects accused of
    terrorist attacks in Turkey are fairly dealt with.

    10. Encourage Turkey to ensure that steps in support of more freedom of
    religion are taken not just for non-Muslim minorities but also involve
    a commitment to the rights of Muslims, including non-mainstream faiths
    like the Alevis.

    --Boundary_(ID_CEW9tGQlAP2jKU5oXtCELA)--
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