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Is The EU Afraid Of Ankara?

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  • Is The EU Afraid Of Ankara?

    IS THE EU AFRAID OF ANKARA?
    Jean-Paul Marthoz

    PressEurop
    March 25 2010

    Following recent declarations by the Turkish Prime Minister on the
    deportation of Armenian immigrants, Europe's silence is testimony to
    the EU's ambiguous attitude towards the aspiring member state. Seen
    as not sufficiently European for immediate inclusion, Turkey is at
    the same time too important and powerful to be ignored.

    Imagine if Angela Merkel threatened to deport undocumented Turks,
    because she did not appreciate a declation in Ankara on the subject of
    the Holocaust. Such a reaction on the part of the German Chancellor
    would prompt a huge outcry, because everyone expects Germany to
    take full responsibility for the darkest chapter in its history
    and to comply with international law, which unequivocally forbids
    collective punishments. However, there was no strong condemnation from
    any European country when, last week, the Turkish Prime Minister,
    irritated by the international reprimands on the subject of the
    Armenian genocide, threatened to deport "100,000 natives of the
    Republic of Armenia who are living without residence permits in
    Turkey." The silence that followed Recep Tayyip Erdogan's sally was
    more than surprising. And the European Union has continued to hold
    its peace on the matter in official statements.

    Why has there been no response? You might be tempted to think that
    European authorities are resigned to considering Turkey, which is
    nonetheless a candidate for enlargement, as a country apart that does
    not have to be judged with regard to the standards and values that the
    Union claims to promote. No, they are behaving as if they were afraid
    of "losing Turkey," the world's 17th-ranked industrial power, a key
    link in Europe's energy supply chain, a "strategic pawn of the West"
    and a "bridge between the Judeo-Christian and Muslim civilizations."

    Shoe-horning Turkey into the Union

    In private, the same European leaders acknowledge that, notwithstanding
    the real progress that has been made, Turkey does not meet essential
    criteria for a European democracy. Its constitution (which a bill
    presented to the national parliament on 22 March now proposes to
    revise) and its penal code contain articles that are incompatible with
    European legal models. And although its dominance may be a thing of
    the past, the army remains all too powerful, while the issue of the
    Kurdish minority remains a major stumbling block.

    Recognition of the Armenian genocide is still a taboo subject, in
    spite of the thousands of signatures collected by the "I apologise"
    petition launched by a group of progressive Turkish intellectuals. And
    even if the conservative Muslim democratic AKP, which is currently in
    power, styles itself as a political moderate, its reign has coincided
    with an increasing albeit slow-moving Islamisation of Turkish society
    and institutions.

    Confronted by their own doubts, European partisans of Turkish
    enlargement are wondering how the country can be shoe-horned into the
    Union, in view of limited public support for the plan to make Ankara
    a new European capital. But they are also worried by a more immediate
    concern: Turkish exasperation with European equivocation on the issue
    is now palpable. Although Turkish leaders continue to insist that
    they want their country anchored in Europe, they are beginning to
    allude to possible alternatives and the fact that Turkey may choose
    to go its own way.

    Conscious of its demographic, economic, cultural, geopolitical, and
    lay-religious advantages, Turkey no longer sees itself as a state
    on the borders of Europe with a mission to defend Western interests
    in one of the world's most tormented regions. It views itself as a
    country that can play "a central role," with the capacity to define
    its own vision and interests -- and this is already evident in its
    independent positions on Iraq, Israel and Iran, which are clearly
    distinct from those adopted by Europe and the United States. Having
    acquiesced to some of "Brussel's demands," Turkey now appears less
    willing to make concessions. In the negotiation process, it discovered
    the real implications of inclusion in the EU -- notably a loss of
    sovereignty that would undermine fundamental aspects of the Turkey's
    state system and political culture.

    Turkish question in conflict with European project

    In other words, if Turkey became a member of the European Union and at
    the same time maintained what a significant proportion of its leaders
    and Turkish public opinion consider to be non-negotiable elements
    in any deal with Europe (uncompromised nationalism, the primacy of
    Sunni Islam, Turkism etc.), its accession would effectively modify the
    nature of the European democratic model. The "Turkish question" cannot
    be resolved by the granting of British or Danish style exemptions and
    opt-outs, because it is clearly in conflict with the post-nationalist
    and pluralist political model that underlies the European project. The
    Turkish public has yet to fully understand this model, which has only
    been fully accepted by a "lay-liberal" and Islamic Modernist elite
    that may be growing but still remains a minority.

    Turkey and the European Union are now embroiled in a deadlock where
    both parties are being forced to define the values that they believe
    to be non-negotiable. This is not a matter of business and development
    strategy. The issues have fundamental implications for the future
    planning and destiny of both European and Turkish society. And at
    this existential moment, it is clear that Turkey is not alone in
    having to cope with a difficult political position.

    http://www.presseurop.eu/en/content/art icle/217471-eu-afraid-ankara
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