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European Turkey in the EU!

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  • European Turkey in the EU!

    ABHaber, Belgium
    EU-Turkey News Network
    Feb 2 2008


    European Turkey in the EU!

    We have read the article titled `La Turquie dans l'UE? C'est toujours
    non!' in your newspaper dated as of 29.01.08, not without a certain
    amount of resignation. Our surprise and indignation at similar
    comments has indeed been steadily decreasing since French politics
    entered its era of Sarkozian domination.

    The authors of the passionate letter begin by stating the need for
    clear geographical borders for the EU to exist as a political entity.
    They then go on to claim that Turkey is not geographically European
    because some of her territory is located in Asia Minor. This is a
    much utilised argument by those against Turkish membership to the EU.
    However, a certain EU Member State is currently situated much more to
    the East than most of Turkey's territory. This detail seems to be
    always deliberately left out. Furthermore, some Member States regard
    this phenomenon simply as a geographical aberration and try to
    correct the matter. For example, recent Euro coins will not feature
    Turkey on the map. Southern Cyprus, which should also disappear from
    the map in all logic, has been literally fictionally moved westwards
    and squeezed into the map . These Orwellian efforts would have been
    extremely entertaining if they were restricted to the realm of
    comedy. Since they are not, these are sobering indicators of the
    level of xenophobia and political manipulation in the EU.
    Fortunately, it is currently impossible to make Turkey disappear.
    That being said, Turkey's sense of identity is distinctly European.
    With all due respect, it is not up to any politician or the authors
    of the aforementioned comment to define Turkey's identity.

    The geographical `question' aside, the authors go on to base their
    objections to Turkey's membership on seemingly more tangible
    subjects. To put it simply, it is all about money. The authors claim
    that Turkey's membership to the EU would cost too much and disqualify
    some current EU regions from structural funds. These assertions would
    be true if Turkey's accession happened today. However Turkey is not
    expected to become a member before the next financial perspective of
    the EU is prepared. Therefore, the earliest date for accession is
    projected as 2014. This target was also confirmed by the Turkish
    government in its harmonisation program published in April 2007. In
    the meantime, Turkey continues to record very high growth rates year
    after year. Consequently, by the time of accession these numbers will
    no longer hold any significant meaning. The time for those
    considerations is still a long way away. Furthermore, one of the
    foundations of the EU is solidarity. Those considerations were never
    voiced this loud with previous enlargements and the fact that they
    are done so now raises suspicions of some pathological enmity.

    This brings us to other assertions in the unfortunate letter. The
    authors claim that it is impossible to integrate a state which does
    not recognize the `Armenian genocide'. There is no legal basis to
    that claim in terms of EU treaties and agreements, so we perceive
    this assertion as a moral issue. That period of history was extremely
    painful for everybody involved regardless of ethnicity. Recent years
    brought a resurgence of interest about the subject in the Turkish
    society. However, the insistence of some EU member states on the
    recognition of the events as `genocide' is seriously detrimental to
    the reconciliation of the societies. Moreover such seemingly moral
    claims look especially groundless when contrasted against the
    historical conduct of some member states. Mr. Sarkozy himself said
    that `leaders should focus on the future and not beat their breasts'
    on a recent visit to Algeria . According to Mr. Sarkozy, `the sons
    should not be hold accountable for the mistakes of their fathers' .
    Comments like these makes one wonder about the source of Sarkozian
    moral authority. `The Kurdish question', as the authors put it, is
    intimately tied to the larger democratization process ongoing in
    Turkey. More representative politics and respect for minorities is
    the main issue here. To that effect, there have been many reforms
    since the recognition of Turkey as a candidate in 1999 and new reform
    packages are on the way.

    The authors also make a point of the Cyprus question. What they omit
    is that the current situation is the result of EU's faulty strategy.
    This much was admitted by EU leaders and bureaucrats of the time. It
    was the Turkish Cypriots who voted for the reunification of the
    island and the Greek Cypriots who refused in the referenda for the
    Annan Plan in 2004. The EU however, went on to accept Southern Cyprus
    as a member representing the whole of the island. One of the
    fundamental tenets of EU enlargement policy concerns relations with
    neighbours. Yet S. Cyprus was made a member regardless of its
    problems with its neighbours. Besides creating double standards,
    today the EU is isolating some of its own citizens! Turkey is still
    supportive of a UN sponsored solution to the problem.

    The 301st article of the penal code is a disgrace. The government is
    working on a reformulation which will prevent abuses of the article.
    Moreover, a new constitution is currently being prepared which will
    bring new freedoms. That being said, the existence of restrictions on
    freedom of expression is not particular to Turkey. While this does
    not diminish the disgraceful nature inherent to articles limiting
    freedom of expression, many EU member states have similar articles in
    their penal codes .
    Turkey cannot become an EU member state without completing the
    necessary democratic reforms anyway, so the anxiety of the authors
    about integrating an undemocratic Turkey is simply unfounded. What is
    more, the democratization process coincides with the accession
    process and sometimes the promise of membership acts as a catalyst.
    But it is never intended solely as a compromise in return for
    membership. It is realized for Turkish citizens, first and foremost.
    Prime Minister Erdoðan said it best when asked what would happen to
    Turkey's reform process if accession negotiations were halted: `We
    will transform the Copenhagen criteria into Ankara criteria and
    continue on our way'.

    The signatories to the letter go on to state that `negotiations with
    Turkey should end up in a privileged partnership because it is
    necessary to have commercial relations with your immediate
    neighbours'. The tone of this sentence permeates the whole letter.
    What the signatories fail to mention is that this `necessity' has
    already been taken care of by the Customs Union which went into force
    in 1996. Turkey has been a `privileged partner' of the EU for 12
    years now. In fact without accession, the rules governing the Customs
    Union offer no net `privileges' to Turkey in the long run. The
    accession negotiations between Turkey and the EU are part and parcel
    of the acquis communautaire. Going back on that 45 year old promise
    now would be the real death of the European idea, as it has been
    conceived by Robert Schumann and Jean Monnet.

    Turkey is European. It is becoming even more European with every new
    reform it adopts. But there is a part of Europe which is
    short-sighted, intolerant and xenophobic. Turkey wants nothing to do
    with that part.


    Economic Development Foundation
    Ýstanbul, TURKEY

    ABHaber 02.02.2008 Ýstanbul
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