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Turkey Between East and West

Ragan Updegraff | November 10, 2008

Editor: John Feffer

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Turkey has long aligned itself with Western powers, dating back to Ottoman participation in the Concert of Europe. It’s currently a member of the Council of Europe, the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC), and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Many Turks view accession to the European Union (EU) as the capstone to its longstanding ambition to be recognized as a modern European power. Others in Turkey, however, are leery of EU-inspired democratization schemes and wonder if admission is indeed worth the cost of the ticket.

If the accession partnership between the EU and Turkey ultimately falters, Turkey could well end adrift, isolated, and more sympathetic toward Russia, Iran, and possibly China. Long the most eastward player among Western powers, Turkey could well reposition itself as the most western power among a loose bloc of Eastern players.

Turkey — like Spain, Greece, and the Balkan states before it — must democratize further to successfully emerge from accession negotiations with a membership offer, but internal politics and frustrated relations with Europe threaten to imperil the process. In early November, the European Commission released its annual report on Turkey's progress toward accession. The report criticizes the slow pace of Turkish reforms and problems with their implementation, while highlighting the lack of compromise and political dialogue among Turkey's political parties.

When Turkey became an official candidate for membership at the Helsinki summit in December 1999, an avalanche of reforms soon followed in order to meet criteria required for accession talks to begin. Reform continued unabated following the Justice and Development Party's (AKP) landslide victory in the 2002 elections, and in October 2005, Turkey officially commenced accession negotiations. Following the Helsinki summit, however, the steam driving the reform revolution dissipated, causing the accession process to sputter.

Although such reform fatigue is perhaps inevitable — much like the exhaustion that sets in after the first third of a marathon race — the slow pace has seemed to take Turkey off the accession track and imperil Turkey-EU relations. Growing resentment of European demands, returning problems with Cyprus and the Kurds, and a revamped Turkish nationalism have all contributed to muting the hopeful ebullience of the early years of the reform process. While the AKP's recently proposed third national program to accelerate accession is designed to reignite the process, many within and outside the party still seem largely ambivalent. Turkey's relations with Europe and the United States — and by extension Turkey's future as a stable democracy allied with the West — thus remain largely up in the air.

Significance of the Accession Process

Turkey is lured by the prospects of EU membership for both historical and economic reasons. Its founder, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who modernized the country along European lines, aspired to see it recognized as a European power. The Europe that transfixed Atatürk is no longer an imperial collection of states but rather a thriving economic market. But the pending relationship between the EU and Turkey isn’t simply economic. Amidst the wreckage of World War II, Europe radically transformed itself into a post-national union, with an overwhelming commitment to participatory democratic institutions and the strongest human rights regime in modern history. Through accession, aspiring member countries must not only adopt EU political norms but, in doing so, undergo political transformation parallel to that taken by Europe after the Second World War. Thus, EU accession is as much a major domestic process as it is a cementing of external relations.

As Turkey undertakes the reforms needed to meet criteria needed for EU accession eligibility, its citizens face heady questions about the direction in which to take their country. At one end of the spectrum are Europhiles, who wish to see Turkey enter the EU and move closer to international norms of human rights and democratic governance. At the other end are Euroskeptics, who are less keen to see their country make the sacrifices to sovereignty that EU membership requires. Most Turks fall somewhere in between these two extremes. The Euroskeptics oppose reforms they see as diminishing the state's police power in dealing with ethnic and religious minorities, political dissenters, and other elements that "threaten the solidarity" of the Turkish nation-state. Euroskeptics are also leery of reducing the power of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) and the judiciary, both bastions of the old elite. Whereas Europhile Turks largely support continued and improved relations with Western powers, many Euroskeptics, sometimes called Asianists, are starting to look to emerging powers in the East with which to build future relations. Hurt feelings over a failed accession process could push Turkey closer to these non-Western powers, something that neither Europe nor the United States desires.

Building Positive Relations

Yet some European leaders seem determined to push Turkey further eastward. Both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have expressed support for a "privileged partnership" for Turkey in lieu of full membership. From similar arrangements the EU has made with other Mediterranean countries, it is clear that such an offer would in no way carry as much diplomatic leverage as full membership. At this point, such second-class membership represents backtracking from earlier European pledges.

Turkey-EU relations have been further soured by Turkey's failure to abide by its commitment to open its ports to Cyprus. As a result, in 2006, the European Council suspended eight of the 35 policy chapters to be successfully negotiated if Turkey is to become a member, and ruled that no chapter can be closed until Turkey reverses its position on Cyprus. Negotiations focus on the candidate's adoption, implementation, and enforcement of EU policies. After unanimously closing a chapter, the European Council decides that an acceding country's policies are adequately in line with those of the EU. Only upon closure of all 35 chapters will a treaty be executed to finalize Turkey's accession into the EU. So far only one chapter, science and technology, has been closed. The EU's suspension of chapters has no effect in preventing Turkey from moving forward with legislation, especially in those policy areas where negotiations are expected to be difficult. However, the suspension has deeply offended many Turks and remains a source of political ill will on which Turkish politicians frequently harp.

In the meantime, EU politicians should remain positively consistent in their positions on Turkish membership, assuring full accession if it successfully meets the accession criteria. In recent months, Europe's position on this point has improved. In June, the French Senate rejected a law that would have required Turkish membership to be submitted to referendum. Also, France's turn with the EU presidency has resulted in the opening of two more chapters of EU policy — company law and intellectual property law — and an expressed hope that two more, information society and media and free movement of capital, will be opened at the European Summit in December. France also created goodwill in November, when its Senate struck down a bill to make it illegal to deny claims of Armenian genocide. Much can also be said of gestures like Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's celebration of iftar — the breaking of the Ramadan fast — with Turkish politicians in Istanbul this September. Another encouraging factor in EU-Turkey relations is that Turkish attitudes toward Europe seem to have improved following the attempt by anti-democratic forces to close the AKP this past March. Right now, support for EU membership is at its highest level since 2005.

Turkish politicians need to stay focused on the accession process and eschew verbal confrontations with EU politicians. Sadly, this is something neither Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan nor Foreign Minister/EU Chief Negotiator Ali Babacan has succeeded in doing. At a meeting of the EU troika in Brussels this past September, Erdoğan lambasted the EU for double standards and intimated that Turkish membership was solely up to the Europeans. In fact, Turkey has much to do if it is to meet the political and economic criteria for membership, and such claims do little to assuage very real concerns in Europe about Turkey's lackluster human rights regime. Many EU citizens are also skeptical of the EU's already stretched economic capacity to absorb less affluent member states, and a smaller group has reservations about Turkey's Muslim identity.

While the xenophobia of the latter is difficult to address, Turkish politicians can certainly do more to alleviate the concerns of reluctant Europeans. To begin, Turkey could send a powerful message to assuage reservations about its treatment of religious minorities by re-opening the Halki Greek Orthodox seminary the state has kept closed for some time. Both Greece and Cyprus would approve of such a simple gesture. In Cyprus, Turkey should strengthen fledging alliances with Greek Cypriots to build support for a bicommunal solution, as well as look for and publicize foreign policy positions it shares with Europe, such as criticism of ally Uzbekistan for the Andijan massacre in 2004. Turkey would do well to work with Europe to devise mutually beneficial energy solutions, in particular the construction of the Nabucco pipeline, to supply Europe with natural gas from Central Asia. The Nabucco pipeline is vital for European energy independence from Russia. The Turkish government should also bolster support for Europe within Turkey, highlighting the rewards of membership while debunking baseless rumors about the costs of membership that have ranged from mandates to remove images of Atatürk from public buildings to outlawing the selling of kokoreç (Turkish tripe) on the streets.

U.S. Interests in Turkey

Turkey's AKP-led government, having survived a recent court case attempting to close it down for anti-secular activities, will be expected to move forward with its newly drafted third national program. However, as the only political party in power with a pro-EU position, the AKP has little incentive to push for reforms with which it disagrees or put it at political risk. At the moment, opposition political parties protest even the smallest, most cosmetic of reforms, and too often the accession process is used as a pawn in internal political gamesmanship.

The AKP, for its part, has lost the support of many liberal reformers who have come to doubt its sincerity and/or competence in moving Turkey toward liberal democracy and eventual EU membership. Thus, implementation of the party's third national program will be a test for the party, as well as the Turkish public, although significant progress will not likely be made on the reform package until after local elections in March 2009.

As Turkey struggles to position itself somewhere between Europhilia and Euroskepticism, the United States must continue to support Turkish accession into the EU. For its part, it should ignore neoconservative efforts to undermine the AKP, meanwhile doing all it can to improve its own relations with Turkey, mainly through encouraging dialogue between Turkey and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) The more the Turkish government works directly with the KRG, the less likely the United States will be caught in disputes between the two. Any convergence of interests arrived at through talks between Turkey and the KRG is to the benefit of the United States. Further welcome is Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's recent praise of Turkey's efforts to build a regional alliance in Central Asia, after a period of initial resistance to the initiative resulting from its exclusion of the United States and the EU. Turkey as an EU member would be valuably cemented to the West, serving as an important bridge to Central Asia as well as a potential peacemaking force in the Middle East.

Barack Obama’s presidential win offers further opportunity to strengthen relations with Turkey. As a function of his opposition to the Iraq War and his message of "change," the president-elect enjoys popularity in Turkey akin to the popularity with which former President Bill Clinton was met on his visit following the 1999 earthquakes. Obama's promise to restore good relations with Turkey is eagerly received by many Turks, though not without caveats. Many Turks are leery of Obama's position on the Armenian massacres of 1915, and his recognition of them as genocide would badly damage U.S.-Turkey relations. Also feared are Vice President-Elect Joe Biden's previously expressed plans for a tripartite division of Iraq, which Turkey believes would empower the KRG and possibly foment calls for a united and independent Kurdistan. However, if Obama treads carefully on the Armenian issue, and supports a regional solution to terrorist efforts of the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), which involves Turkey and the KRG as well as Baghdad, the next administration has a tremendous possibility to rebuild relations that the Iraq War badly damaged.

Ragan Updegraff is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus, a freelance writer and observer of Turkish politics. You can find more of his work in his blog, Turkish Politics in Action.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Ragan Updegraff, "Turkey Between East and West," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, November 10, 2008).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/5660

Production Information:
Author(s): Ragan Updegraff
Editor(s): John Feffer
Production: Jen Doak

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name SAS Date: Nov 10, 2008
Good article !
Name thetruth Date: Nov 11, 2008
Modern day Turkey is founded upon the Armenian Genocide. They have not only denied any responsibility but have never offered an apology or felt any remorse. The US doesn't need a genocide perpetrator like turkey but rather Turkey needs US dollars way more. The idea that we need to lie for a genocide perpetrator ‘or else’ is nonsense. Turkey is no ally but an opportunistic pariah state who after receiving 26 billion US dollars at the start of the Iraq war, still refused our troops through. No amount of political, economical or strategic gain is worth lying about mass murder. You argument doesn't hold water anymore. Turkey needs to come to terms with its past.
Name Vandra Hall Date: Nov 11, 2008
A prognostic Foreign Policy, especially in the region of Turkey and its neighbors, is a necessity. The United States must be omnipresent in all aspects. We cannot afford to be superficial and archaic in our involvement. All pitfalls must be avoided. Emphatic statements by this author display a clarity which must be taken soberly.
Name john Date: Nov 12, 2008
the murderous genocidal criminal turks are the SAME OLD blood thirsty muslim barbarians. they use all kinds of subterfuge to hide their ugly faces.
Name no more propaganda Date: Nov 14, 2008
stop being another apologist and propagandist of the criminal turk. This kind of nonsensical "article" with abviously dark and hidden motives is designed ONLY serve the interest of the turks "ally" in the region and NOT the ideals this country. shame on you for allowing this kind of shameless propaganda to go on.
Name Cyrous Moradi Date: Nov 15, 2008
1-I think Turkey has a very vital case in the world current history. The main question is: Is there universal values for emerging different countries? I think human rights, political and cultural tolerance and commitment to free and fair election are pillars for new globalization. Turkey is moving in this direction. Although the human rights situation is far from European standards, but they are trying to be the first Muslim country in the world to reach these standards.

2- Turkey has good relation with Israel and Muslim countries simultaneously. This stance is a great privilege to Ankara and by this tool Turkey can play vital role in the Middle East peace process. Turkey’s Prime Minister’s recent efforts to mediate between Israel and Syria about Golan Heights leaked to the media.

3- Turkey success to join EU and other western biased institutions, makes strong and empower the moderate countries in the Middle East and it is a practical soft tool to futile the extremists endeavor to bring instability to the region.

4- Turkey’s Achilles’ heel is human rights, especially regarding the ethnic groups. For decades Kurds are under pressure in the country’s eastern parts and there are long time and erosive civil war against PKK guerillas. Turkey frequently raids to the northern part of Iraq, supposed to be the heaven for these guerillas. I think by better relation with Ankara; West can act very effective to encourage Turks to modify the course.

5- Turkey has long time (since 1915) quarrel with Armenian about the alleged massacre the Ottomans did about. Recently president Abdullah Gul visited Yerevan, but it takes long time to thwart the ices. Turkey is very inflexible in this regard, but it seems two sides are going to start a new chapter in their hostile relations.

Name very good article Date: Nov 19, 2008
!!! "the murderous genocidal criminal turks are the SAME OLD blood thirsty muslim barbarians"! This statement by itself shows the sad mentality that Turks are facing whenever they want to do something good. The USA needs Turkey as an ally in the region, this interest goes far beyond helping the Armenians with their so-called genocide claims. People, get real!
Name dzenana Date: Jan 17, 2009
my comment ia an answer to john:
John,when I see comments like yours,it makes me very angry and full of hatred even though i don't know you.obviousley your knowledge of history and politics is very poor,so you talk things which you don't know.It's not polite to offend!!
Name sa Date: Feb 03, 2009
I am, just as many educated, informed and internationally aware Turks, appalled by the ignorance and lack of knowledge that are reflected here by some of the commenters -they obviously speak without any concern for knowledge based on historical evidence. These comments also show clearly that the humanity today, more than ever, requires re-education, a new mindset and learning to assess things with objectivity and critically. It is shameful that these racist and uneducated opinions are stated so freely all over and that they are found legitimate enough to be published here without any concern for their possible many adverse implications.

Turks are tired of these ungrounded allegations (Ottoman archives are open to anyone interested in research and investigation into the events that took place in 1915-whereas Armenian, German and French archives (where there are said to be thousands of documents that show that the events in 1915 were actually the making of these actors jointly who each had interests in breaking apart the Ottomans) are yet too open. Has anyone wondered why this may indeed be the case? We are equally tired of the silly hatred that are shown toward us even by the most ignorant and uneducated people in particularly the West/Europe (it is ironic that these same people are hardly even aware of their own local politics and of some of the current killings of the civilians that are ongoing in a so-called war started in name of democracy by their respective governments., but for some reason they know so well about what actually happened 100 years ago -hmmmnn!!!). The very financially strong lobbies are making wonders in this regard.

In response to the commenter SAS above, I would like to remind that perhaps all countries along with their current and past governments should also come to terms with their past. When that happens believe me Turkey will be among the least of the world's barbarians... just peruse through the annals of history .. If they apologize for what they did, I am certain that Turks will also be more than willing to do so...

Name Elen Date: Mar 08, 2009
Turks will never do things for no reason... Turks are disliked, and hated in some cases, by all of their neighbors. When acountry that is disliked from north to south and east to west should ask itself why! There's obviously a reason for that.

Turkey can get its act togerther by recognizing the Armenian genocide, which they cowardly deny. They should also completely withdraw from Cyprus. Then, it should fix its policy towards its minorities, especially the Kurds.

Hopefuly, there will be a time when Turkey will break into two..or even three parts...Kurdish state, the return of the stolen Armenian territories, and the return of Anatolian part of Greece to the Greeks... After that, the best thing the Turks can do for the region is if they migrate back to Central Asia for good. The whole region has seen nothing but blood and territorial losses ever since the Turks migrated to Anatolian region.

I don't understand why the American policy makers tend to kiss Turkish a$$ so much. If dirty politics and deal makings are above human right and human lives, then the US should stop claiming that it stands to defend human life and that it is also the defender of human rights all around the world.

Name Todo Palante Date: Aug 18, 2009
Since we are talking American foreign policy it would be worth noting the following:

US support of Turkey's accession has one objective: to expand US influence in the region through Turkish-Israeli cooperation and the weakening of EU resolve into achieving Pan European military power outside of NATO.

Turkey's self confessed imperialist aspirations through the mouths of various leaders and academics generate serious doubts as to its European conviction and orientation. It is also clear that Turkey within the EU would play the US agent's role and with its huge voting power in the different EU institutions would block many European military economic and social projects that would threaten US dominance.

Turkey currently refuses to sign the international treaties over territorial waters (1982 treaty) which the vast majority of the countries on the planet have done. If Turkey were to become a member of the EU it would have to respect those rules. Doing otherwise shows ulterior motives.

Turkey still illegally occupies territory of an EU member state, namely Cyprus. All this under the auspices of US foreign policy.

Lastly there is the cultural divide. Although there are admittedly many democratically oriented citizens and worthy scholars in the country the majority have other inclinations basically due to economic inequalities and neo-chauvinist nationalist rhetoric.

It is clear then that certainly Europe would welcome an EU committed Turkey but before that the country has to undergo severe restructuring and pass many tests before it can be accepted as a member. Turkey must decide whether it wants to be part of the waning US-Israeli system or a part of the emerging more egalitarian EU project which will benefit the globe as a whole. Under the present circumstances Europe will be good for Turkey but Turkey not good for Europe.

 
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