Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Engaging Turkey

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

  • Engaging Turkey

    ENGAGING TURKEY

    FT
    September 8 2009 19:59

    Turkey and Armenia, neighbours divided by bitter conflict for almost
    a century, are intent on early diplomatic recognition and reopening
    their long-closed border. That was the good news that slipped out last
    week. The plan still has to get mutual parliamentary approval. There
    is strong nationalist opposition on both sides. But the Swiss-mediated
    negotiations have made much better progress than was expected.

    Ankara's announcement last week of new measures to ease cultural
    restrictions on the restive Kurdish minority was also good news. They
    stop short of constitutional amendments or an amnesty for former
    militants, but they are a step in the right direction.

    Both actions should encourage faster progress in the languishing
    negotiations on Turkey's membership application to join the European
    Union. Yet those talks are caught in a vicious cycle of mutual
    disenchantment, as spelt out this week in a disturbing report by
    the Independent Commission on Turkey, a group of eminent Europeans
    chaired by Martti Ahtisaari, former president of Finland.

    They argue that EU credibility is at stake because Turkey is
    not being treated as a normal accession candidate. In spite of
    a unanimous decision five years ago to open the talks, France,
    Germany and Austria are all now backing an alternative "privileged
    partnership" that stops well short of full membership. France is bloc
    king negotiations on several issues. So is Cyprus. Such behaviour is
    dangerously counter-productive.

    Failure to reach agreement on the reunification of Cyprus has poisoned
    the process. The EU members made a fundamental mistake in allowing
    that divided island to join without a deal. Now there is little
    incentive for the Greek Cypriots, already enjoying the full benefits
    of membership, to negotiate one in good faith.

    As Europe hesitates, Turkey also drags its feet. There is little
    political incentive in backing EU membership in Ankara. Young Turks
    are increasingly sceptical. There are worrying signs of anti-democratic
    behaviour, too, such as the government's latest imposition of massive
    fines on the Dogan media group, the country's largest.

    Both the EU and Turkey should urgently refocus attention both on
    the Cyprus talks and the wider accession negotiations. To allow them
    to fail by default would be a tragedy. It would also sour relations
    between the EU and a vital partner whose engagement is essential for
    Europe's future security, prosperity and dynamism.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009. You may share using our
    article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute
    by email or post to the web.
    Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
    Content-Description:

    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; format=flowed
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
    From: [email protected]
    Subject: Engaging Turkey

    Engaging Turkey

    FT
    September 8 2009 19:59

    Turkey and Armenia, neighbours divided by bitter conflict for almost a
    century, are intent on early diplomatic recognition and reopening their
    long-closed border. That was the good news that slipped out last week.
    The plan still has to get mutual parliamentary approval. There is
    strong nationalist opposition on both sides. But the Swiss-mediated
    negotiations have made much better progress than was expected.

    Ankaraâ??s announcement last week of new measures to ease cultural
    restrictions on the restive Kurdish minority was also good news. They
    stop short of constitutional amendments or an amnesty for former
    militants, but they are a step in the right direction.

    Both actions should encourage faster progress in the languishing
    negotiations on Turkeyâ??s membership application to join the European
    Union. Yet those talks are caught in a vicious cycle of mutual
    disenchantment, as spelt out this week in a disturbing report by the
    Independent Commission on Turkey, a group of eminent Europeans chaired
    by Martti Ahtisaari, former president of Finland.

    They argue that EU credibility is at stake because Turkey is not being
    treated as a normal accession candidate. In spite of a unanimous
    decision five years ago to open the talks, France, Germany and Austria
    are all now backing an alternative â??privileged partnershipâ?? that stops
    well short of full membership. France is bloc
    king negotiations on
    several issues. So is Cyprus. Such behaviour is dangerously
    counter-productive.

    Failure to reach agreement on the reunification of Cyprus has poisoned
    the process. The EU members made a fundamental mistake in allowing that
    divided island to join without a deal. Now there is little incentive
    for the Greek Cypriots, already enjoying the full benefits of
    membership, to negotiate one in good faith.

    As Europe hesitates, Turkey also drags its feet. There is little
    political incentive in backing EU membership in Ankara. Young Turks are
    increasingly sceptical. There are worrying signs of anti-democratic
    behaviour, too, such as the governmentâ??s latest imposition of massive
    fines on the Dogan media group, the countryâ??s largest.

    Both the EU and Turkey should urgently refocus attention both on the
    Cyprus talks and the wider accession negotiations. To allow them to
    fail by default would be a tragedy. It would also sour relations
    between the EU and a vital partner whose engagement is essential for
    Europeâ??s future security, prosperity and dynamism.
    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009. You may share using our
    article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute
    by email or post to the web.

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