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Emerging Threats: Walker'S World: Can France Veto Turkey?

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  • Emerging Threats: Walker'S World: Can France Veto Turkey?

    EMERGING THREATS WALKER'S WORLD: CAN FRANCE VETO TURKEY?

    AMBy MARTIN WALKER

    United Press International
    June 12 2008

    Who said President George W. Bush has no influence in Europe? On the
    eve of his arrival in Paris, and just as he was urging the European
    Union to welcome Turkey into its ranks, the French Senate moved to
    do his bidding.

    The Senate's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee deleted a proposal
    for a constitutional amendment that would require a referendum in
    France on the admission of any new EU member state whose population
    was more than 5 percent of the EU total. That seemed aimed directly
    at Turkey (although it could also affect Ukraine).

    The amendment "might be considered as being against Turkey,
    which is a friend and ally country, and thus might deal serious
    damage to diplomatic relations between France and Turkey,"
    noted a written statement from the French committee. That was an
    understatement. Turkey's Foreign Ministry could hardly have been
    more clear.

    "It is inevitable that this kind of discriminative approach will
    harm our bilateral relations and will also have a negative impact
    on images of Turkey and France in each country as well as on the
    traditional friendship between the peoples of the two countries,"
    commented Turkey's Foreign Ministry in a written statement.

    The controversial clause was passed last month by the National
    Assembly, the lower house of France's two-chamber Parliament, as part
    of a package of constitutional amendments. The committee's vote may
    not be the end of the matter. It can be taken up on the floor of the
    Senate and put to a full vote, but would almost certainly need a strong
    push from President Nicolas Sarkozy to rally a sufficient majority.

    This presents Sarkozy with a difficult choice. French opinion polls
    are against admitting 73 million predominantly Muslim Turks into the
    495 million EU. Sarkozy himself has argued against it. But with 10
    percent of France's population now immigrants and their children from
    traditionally Muslim countries, the issue of Europe's relations with
    its Islamic neighbors across the Mediterranean cannot be ducked.

    President Bush and the British argue there are three main reasons
    to admit Turkey. The first is strategic, that as a longstanding and
    loyal member of NATO, Turkey is key to European and Western security
    in the region.

    The second is economic. With European birthrates falling, the EU
    needs Turkey's large young workforce and its potential for economic
    growth. Turkey's current GDP per capita is just over $5,000, a quarter
    of the EU average. Doubling Turkey's GDP per capita means an extra
    market worth $400 billion; bring Turkey up to the EU average, and it
    is worth another $800 billion on top of that. That would mean selling
    a lot more Mercedes cars and Swedish refrigerators, French perfumes
    and Finnish mobile phones.

    The third is cultural: that Europe needs to demonstrate that its
    traditional happy mix of democracy and prosperity is also open to
    Muslim countries that abide by the EU rules on human rights and
    political freedoms, free markets and free institutions. If there is
    one large Muslim country that can show the world that Islam is no
    bar to democracy and modernity, it is Turkey.

    The importance of that latter argument runs far beyond the EU-Turkish
    relationship. It plays directly into the EU's relations with the
    150 million Muslims just across the Mediterranean in North Africa,
    let alone the Arab world to the east and the Muslims in Asia. As Tony
    Blair told his colleagues at his last EU summit, "There can be few more
    important goals for the West in the long term" than to help establish a
    successful and prosperous democracy in a predominantly Islamic country.

    But down in France's political trenches, local issues intervene. The
    original amendment to exclude Turkey was backed by Justice Minister
    Rachida Dati (herself the symbolic immigrant of Muslim origin in the
    government) but was reliably said to be opposed by Prime Minister
    Francois Fillon. A further factor for the ruling UMP party is the
    strength and lobbying power of France's Armenian community, which
    insists on no deal with Turkey until it accepts responsibility for
    what they call "the genocide" against their people back in 1915.

    Sarkozy is hoping to finesse this row over Turkey by pushing for
    what he calls a "Mediterranean Union," a much broader and closer
    relationship between the EU and all the Muslim countries around the
    Mediterranean coast, with a generous new budget for foreign aid and
    much closer trading relationships.

    It sounds good, but it already has been tried with a special trade
    and aid deal called the Barcelona Process, started over a decade
    ago, which has shown only modest success. Moreover, Turkey has long
    had a customs agreement that gives it essentially free trade with
    the EU. Along with Turkey's NATO membership, that means Turkey has
    long enjoyed precisely the kind of special relationship that Sarkozy
    now wants to extend more widely. And since Turkey says its current
    second-class status is no substitute for full EU membership, other
    Arab countries are likely to say the same.

    Sarkozy's plan is to be launched July 15, but five North African
    states and Syria met in a summit last week in Tripoli and were highly
    critical. Algeria denounced the idea that Israel could be included in
    the Mediterranean Union as a backdoor way to normalize Israel-Arab
    relations. Libya's Moammar Gadhafi called the whole Sarkozy plan
    "an insult."

    "This is taking us for fools," Gadhafi said. "We do not belong to
    Brussels. Our Arab League is located in Cairo, and the African Union
    is located in Addis Ababa. If they want cooperation, they have to go
    through Cairo and Addis Ababa."

    The final decision on the French constitutional amendment will be
    taken in July when the upper and lower houses gather for a plenary
    meeting. The text has to be agreed to by a three-fifths majority. By
    then, Sarkozy will have launched his Mediterranean Union, President
    Bush will be back in Washington, and Turkey will still be trying to
    decide whether it is a Western democracy that happens to be Muslim
    or a Muslim country that is not welcome in the West.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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