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Should EU Suspend Turkey's Accession Negotiations? - Analysis

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  • Should EU Suspend Turkey's Accession Negotiations? - Analysis

    SHOULD EU SUSPEND TURKEY'S ACCESSION NEGOTIATIONS? - ANALYSIS

    Eurasia Review
    December 18, 2014 Thursday

    By William Chislett

    The arrest of Turkish journalists, media executives and even the
    scriptwriter of a popular television series, ostensibly for 'forming,
    leading and being a member of an armed terrorist organisation',
    brought a swift rebuke from the European Commission and raised the
    question of whether Turkey's EU painfully slow accession negotiations
    should be suspended.

    Federica Mogherini, EU Foreign Affairs chief, and Johannes Hahn,
    Enlargement Commissioner, said the raids and arrests 'are incompatible
    with the freedom of media, which is a core principle of democracy'.

    They said Turkey's move towards membership depended on 'full respect
    for the rule of law and fundamental rights'.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded to the criticism in his
    characteristically abrasive style, telling the EU to 'mind its own
    business and keep its opinions to itself'.

    Those arrested, including Ekrem Dumanli, editor-in-chief of Zaman,
    the country's widest-circulating newspaper, are associated with
    the influential Hizmet religious movement, led by the Muslim cleric
    Fethullah Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in the US and runs
    an extensive network of schools and businesses.

    Erdogan, the former Prime Minister for 11 years and since August the
    country's first directly elected President, is locked in a power
    struggle with Gulen, a former ally, whom he accuses of running a
    'parallel state'.

    In December 2013, Erdogan accused the movement of being behind
    prosecutors and police who tried to arrest dozens of his supporters
    on charges of corruption. Erdogan transferred or fired thousands of
    police officers and prosecutors and managed to derail the charges.

    An Istanbul court rejected this week appeals to pursue the charges and
    dropped the case, drawing further fire from the EU. In a statement on
    Tuesday, EU Foreign Ministers said: 'The response by the government
    to the alleged cases of corruption in December 2013 cast serious
    doubts over the independence and impartiality of the judiciary,
    and demonstrated an increasing intolerance of political opposition,
    public protest and critical media'.

    Only one EU accession chapter (on regional policy) has been opened
    since 2010, bringing the total number of areas under negotiation since
    membership talks started in October 2005 to 14 (out of 35). And opening
    that chapter in November 2013 was delayed four months as a result of
    pressure from Germany, following the excessively harsh crackdown on
    anti-government protests over a development project in Gezi Park in
    the heart of Istanbul. Just one chapter (on R&D) has been opened and
    provisionally closed.

    The Council of Ministers suspended eight chapters in 2006 because
    of Ankara's refusal to extend the EU-Turkey Customs Union to Cyprus
    (an EU member since 2004). Cyprus, the northern third of which has
    been occupied by Turkey since its invasion in 1974, has unilaterally
    suspended another six chapters and France (during the presidency of
    Nicolas Sarkozy) has blocked four unilaterally. Talks to reunify Cyprus
    broke down yet again last October when Ankara said it would search
    for oil and gas in waters where Cyprus has already licensed drilling.

    Erdogan's latest outburst comes at a time when Euroscepticism is on
    the rise, and with it opposition to Turkey's EU membership. Last May's
    European elections produced stronger results for anti-EU parties in
    France, Denmark, Hungary and, in particular, the UK. Furthermore,
    David Cameron, the British Prime Minister and the most active
    supporter of Turkey's EU membership, has raised the prospect of
    the UK leaving the EU if it does not get its way on issues such
    as immigration. Furthermore, the EU is suffering from 'enlargement
    fatigue': Jean-Claude Juncker, the new European Commission President,
    sees no country joining the EU before 2019.

    Andrew Duff, a former MEP and president of the Union of European
    Federalists, believes Turkey's negotiations are 'at best useless and at
    worst fraudulent: they should now be suspended'. Duff, a self-confessed
    Turkophile, now says in public what many believe in private.

    Erdogan began well when his centrist Islamic Justice and Development
    Party (AKP) was swept to power in 2002, producing the equivalent
    of a tsunami for the Kemalist political establishment (the secular
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the modern Turkish state in 1923 on
    the ruins of the Ottoman Empire). The AKP revived Turkey's moribund
    EU accession process (which dates back to 1963 when it became an
    associate member), introduced much-needed reforms, including placing
    the military, the arbiter of political life, under civilian control,
    broke nationalist taboos by acknowledging, to some degree, the 1915
    Armenian massacres, pursued a solution to the division of Cyprus,
    which was unsuccessful, and reached out to Kurds by recognising
    cultural rights and approving a legal framework for peace talks with
    the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Per capita income has
    doubled in the last 12 years, reflecting economic reforms that have
    unleashed a dynamic private sector.

    But the longer he has been in power -winning just under 50% of
    the vote in the 2011 general election- the more authoritarian
    he has become. In Duff's words, 'Erdogan knows how to be elected
    democratically, but not to govern so'. Opponents are treated with
    disdain, if not persecuted. His majoritarian understanding of democracy
    a la Vladimir Putin was epitomised when he told the Gezi protestors:
    'If you don't agree with my decisions, win an election'.

    When he was mayor of Istanbul (1994-98) he stated that democracy
    was like a bus: 'You ride it until you arrive at your destination,
    then you step off'. Erdogan would appear to be getting off.

    The disregard for the rule of law is hard to square with the
    government's so-called 'new' EU strategy as set out in the policy
    document published by the Ministry of EU Affairs last September,
    shortly after Erdogan became President, which aims to eliminate the
    obstacles to Turkey's full membership. The political reform process,
    according to the document, 'will be based on advancing the reforms
    of the last 12 years in rule of law, democratisation, human rights,
    civilisation, freedom and security'.

    The repeated warnings to Ankara by Brussels about Turkey's slippage
    in the EU accession process are falling on deaf ears. For how much
    longer can the EU allow this to happen without losing credibility? Its
    patience is wearing thin. Neither side, however, wants to throw in
    the towel. For geostrategic reasons, Brussels wants to keep Turkey on
    board -it has been a NATO member since 1952- and the business class
    wants EU membership.

    One way to get the EU negotiations back on track and for Brussels to
    regain the influence it has lost in Turkey's accession process -as
    suggested in a recent report for Carnegie Europe by Marc Pierini, a
    former EU ambassador to Turkey, and Sinan Ulgen- would be to exempt
    chapters 23 and 24 from the current blockade of negotiations. This
    would allow for an in-depth discussion of judiciary and rule-of-law
    issues, of central importance for Turkey and the ones that raise the
    most concerns among EU member states. Erdogan would be then put on
    the spot.

    About the author

    William Chislett is Associate Analyst at the Elcano Royal Institute
    @WilliamChislet3

    Source:

    This article was published by the Elcano Royal Institute.




    From: A. Papazian
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