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  • EU Reforms & Turkey

    EU REFORMS & TURKEY
    By Muhammad Ali Siddiqi

    Dawn.com
    Oct 20 2009
    Pakistan

    Only the Czech Republic now stands between the European Union and a
    president for the 27-nation grouping. Ratified by Ireland, the Lisbon
    Treaty provides for a foreign minister and a long-term president as
    against the rotating six-month job at present.

    Even Czech Prime Minister Jan Fischer is willing to go along, the sole
    opposition to the treaty coming from President Vaclav Klaus. Sooner or
    later, Prague will ratify the treaty, paving the way for a president
    of the European Council and a foreign minister. The Lisbon Treaty also
    has a social charter, about which even Britain and Poland have some
    reservations. For Turkey, all this should provide food for thought.

    Having a foreign minister or president at Brussels doesn't mean that
    all European states are ready to agree on common foreign and defence
    policies. With Ireland in the west and Cyprus almost off the coast
    of Syria, it is impossible for the EU's 27 states to have a common
    orientation in foreign and military affairs -- basic principles of
    geopolitics scoff at such an idea.

    The split between Britain (and America) on one side and France and
    Germany on the other over the Iraq war in 2003 clearly shows that no
    European state is ready to subordinate its national interests to the
    perceived common good of Europe. Nevertheless, in spite of formidable
    obstacles, the EU states have reason to think in terms of a higher
    degree of alignment in matters of foreign policy because of the rude
    shocks they received during the Bosnian and Kosovo crises.

    Both were European conflicts, but because of Europe's military
    weakness, it was America which called the shots and prevailed.

    Besides, to the consternation of Paris and Berlin, Britain's presence
    in the EU has meant a ceaseless projection of American policy on
    European affairs. This has served to give to the EU's foreign policy
    deliberations an overdose of Anglo-Saxon advice. Nevertheless, the
    trend towards greater coordination in defence and foreign policy is
    unmistakable, and Turkey cannot ignore it.

    Should it ever become a full EU member, Turkey will obviously have
    its own foreign policy compulsions which may not necessarily tie up
    with those of Brussels. On the Arab-Israeli conflict, notwithstanding
    differences in shades, all EU governments share Israel's concept of
    its security and are extremely reticent about Israeli war crimes and
    crimes against humanity in the occupied territories.

    That the Turks feel strongly about the plight of the Palestinian
    people became visible, literally, last January at Davos when Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stormed out of the conference hall after
    an angry exchange with Israeli President Shimon Peres. Earlier this
    month, Ankara snubbed Tel Aviv by excluding it from an air exercise,
    prompting America and Italy to pull out.

    For reasons of geography and history, Turkey enjoys a unique position.

    While it cannot reverse its European orientation begun by Kemal
    Ataturk 85 years ago, it cannot at the same time repudiate its past
    and be indifferent to its cultural affinities with Middle Eastern
    countries. Turkey has been an associate-member of the European economic
    grouping since 1963 when today's EU was the European Common Market.

    Minus four years, half a century has passed, and Turkey is still
    knocking on Europe's door for entry. In the meantime, Brussels has
    opened the floodgates of membership, accepting former Soviet bloc
    adversaries, states formerly part of Yugoslavia and those on Europe's
    periphery, like Greek Cyprus and Malta.

    Entry talks with Turkey began in 2005, but still there is no sign
    that Brussels will ever be satisfied that Ankara has undertaken all
    the legal and administrative reforms necessary to conform to the
    Copenhagen criteria. In fact, as cynics say, Ankara has rewritten
    one-third of its constitution to try to satisfy Europe but has failed.

    This humiliation has angered a proud people like the Turks, and
    popular support for membership has gone down from 70 to 42 per cent.

    The strongest opposition to Turkey's membership comes from Germany and
    France, both of which have large immigrant populations, mostly Muslim.

    Germany has three million people of Turkish descent, and France
    has five million migrants, mostly from North Africa and Francophone
    countries.

    >From the German and French points of view, a Turkish membership
    will mean a new and continuous wave of Turkish migrants to Europe's
    prosperous countries, especially Germany. This could significantly
    alter Germany's demographic character. No wonder, Chancellor Angela
    Merkel calls for a 'privileged partnership' for Turkey, and President
    Nicolas Sarkozy supports her.

    At the same time, Europeans realise that keeping Turkey -- the Muslim
    world's most liberal and western-oriented country -- out will not be
    in the interest of the European Union which will come to be regarded as
    a Christian club. Besides, Turkey has of late acquired new importance.

    Even though there is a relative fall in Turkey's importance as a key
    Nato nation because of the end of the Cold War, the country is now
    playing a greater regional role. Its economy has improved and the
    energy deals it has signed with Iran, Iraq and Qatar, especially that
    relating to the Nabucco pipeline, will help Europe in its quest for
    diversifying its energy sources.

    Turkey has also signed a gas agreement with Azerbaijan's autonomous
    republic Nakhchivan, and the energy deal with Moscow has enabled the
    Putin government to bypass Ukraine. Meanwhile, Ankara has improved
    its relations with its hard-line Arab neighbour to the south, Syria,
    is normalising relations with Armenia, is supporting Cyprus unity
    talks and is forging closer economic ties with Iran. Many Europeans
    feel all this goes to Europe's advantage.

    Still a full EU membership is likely to elude Ankara. What it should
    go for is the privileged partnership, though unfortunately neither
    Merkel nor Sarkozy has bothered to explain what it actually means.

    Common sense suggests that it should be an improvement on the existing
    associate membership. The best bet for the Erdogan government should
    be to get political and economic space for Turkey in the Merkel idea
    and seek maximum economic benefits.

    In such a privileged relationship, Ankara would not necessarily be
    called upon to abandon its known position on Cyprus or get endless
    rebukes from Brussels for failure to comply with the Copenhagen
    criterion. More important, such a relationship will remove the irritant
    that at present characterises Ankara's relationship with Brussels.

    PS: David Cameron and his Conservative colleagues can take heart from
    the fact that Tony Blair, the man who inflicted three consecutive
    defeats on the Tories, is now unlikely to be the first EU president.
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