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ANKARA: Analysts: French Election Could Boost Turkey's EU Bid

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  • ANKARA: Analysts: French Election Could Boost Turkey's EU Bid

    ANALYSTS: FRENCH ELECTION COULD BOOST TURKEY'S EU BID

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    May 10 2012

    With Sarkozy gone, Turkey-France relations have a chance to improve.

    With the victory of socialist Francois Hollande over incumbent Nicolas
    Sarkozy in Sunday's presidential elections, there are expectations
    that a new page could open in Turkey's troubled relationship with
    the France -- and hence the EU.

    Under Hollande, who staked his election bid on an anti-austerity
    platform, analysts expect France to adopt a friendlier stance towards
    Turkey, as the new president struggles with the urgency of the eurozone
    crisis and domestic reforms.

    Commenting on the election results during an official visit to the
    Slovenian capital, Ljubljana, on Monday (May 7th), Turkey's Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan aknowledged that dialogue with the
    Socialists would be easier because they have traditionally supported
    Turkey's EU bid.

    "Following the election of Francois Hollande, the Turkish government
    now hopes that relations between Paris and Ankara can be more
    constructive and that talks on Turkey's rapprochement with the EU
    will progress," the prime minister was quoted as saying by Slovenian
    news agency STA.

    Relations between Ankara and Paris deteriorated sharply during
    Sarkozy's presidency as his anti-Turkey populism was often perceived as
    anti-Muslim in Turkey. When a Sarkozy-backed draft Armenian genocide
    bill was passed earlier this year by the lower and upper houses of
    the French Parliament, relations hit new lows.

    The draft bill, which many in Ankara considered as pre-election
    posturing to attract the Armenia diaspora vote, was ultimately ruled
    unconstitutional, but the episode caused severe damage to bilateral
    relations.

    Hollande has promised to repair ties with Turkey. The Socialist's
    promise to lift France's 2007 veto over five blocked EU chapters
    that could bring Turkey closer to the EU is likely to win them fans
    in Ankara.

    But as Didier Billion, a Turkey expert from the Paris-based Institute
    of International and Strategic Relations, notes, Hollande has close
    links with the Armenian political party Dashnaktsutyun.

    "Francois Hollande intends to make the genocide bill constitutional,
    and this is not pre-election posturing, but rather a position of
    principle," Billion told SES Turkiye.

    As a result, Billion says that as long as the genocide bill issue is
    on the agenda, relations would remain tense, despite the more open
    policy towards Turkey's EU accession.

    Cengiz Aktar, an EU expert from Istanbul's Bahcesehir University,
    says the socialists should reformulate French policy concerning the
    genocide issue, especially since Dashnaktsutyun doesn't represent
    all Armenians living in France.

    When formulating French policy on the genocide issue, the socialists
    should "consider all possible political and economic repercussions,"
    he warns.

    As Europe struggles to contain the eurozone crisis and create growth,
    economics and trade interests may ultimately trump the genocide issue,
    while a French government supportive of Turkey's EU bid could help
    to smooth over past differences.

    "Economic relations between the two countries generate jobs in France.

    As a rapidly growing G20 economy, Turkey has a significant trade
    deficit vis-a-vis France and French companies operating in Turkey
    have always been profitable, even in times of global crisis," Bahadir
    Kaleagasi, the international co-ordinator and European representative
    of the Turkish Industry and Business Association (TUSIAD), told
    SES Turkiye.

    Kaleagasi also says that deeper co-operation between Paris and Ankara
    could "reactivate the EU's transformational power on Turkey" in the
    field of democratic reforms. "Therefore, a new era of win-win-win is
    possible for France, Turkey and the EU," he said.

    For Ozdem Sanberk, a veteran Turkish diplomat, Turkey needs to work
    wıth France on establishing a common vision for Europe -- something
    which he says is currently lacking -- rather than limiting relations
    to narrow issues at the bilateral level.

    "Such a convergent strategic vision will create a broad area of
    interests for the both countries to interact, and as long as this space
    does not narrow, any challenges concerning the Armenian issue will
    take only a limited and small space within it," he told SES Turkiye.

    "As long as these two countries opt for a global vision for their
    relations, this subject will not have any great capability to shape
    and determine the path of the relations," he concluded.

    Thursday, 10 May 2012

    Setimes Turkiye

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