www.spectator.co.uk

FEATURES 
Ankara should be wary of Brussels
Turkish membership of the EU will be good for Europe, says Owen Matthews, but bad for 
Turkey 


 Earlier this month Turkey's bid to join the European Union crept past the tipping 
point from possibility to probability. The European Commission recommended that 
accession negotiations be opened with Ankara, and the outgoing enlargement 
commissioner G�nter Verheugen announced that 'no further obstacles remain' on Turkey's 
path. The news sent the Turkish press into frenzies of enthusiasm, with headlines 
screaming, 'Europe, here we come!', as though egging on the national sports team in 
the Euro championships, or a conquering Turkish army on its way to, say, Vienna. While 
no one was actually dancing in the streets, they no doubt will when the EU's Council 
of Ministers sets a starting date for talks come December. Turkey joining the EU will 
be a great thing for the Union. However, despite the fact that most Turks equate 
entering the EU with winning the lottery, it will be a terrible thing for Turkey. 

That Turkey will change the EU for the better is clear - the bigger the Union, the 
greater the centripetal forces within it, and the more difficult it will be to create 
a United States of Europe ruled from Brussels. When the former French president Val�ry 
Giscard d'Estaing, author of the controversial new European constitution, said that 
Turkey's accession would be 'the end of Europe', he meant the end of an introspective, 
protectionist, over-regulated, Franco-German-dominated Europe. That's exactly the 
reason why the French - with the rather odd exception of President Jacques Chirac - 
continue to oppose Turkish accession, and why British prime ministers have 
consistently supported it. 

Sadly, the deal doesn't look so good for Turkey itself. As Daniel Hannan has so 
forcefully argued in these pages, countries like Iceland and Norway, which have chosen 
to stay on the fringes of the Union but not be in it, can reap great economic 
benefits. This is especially true of Turkey, which, unlike the above-mentioned 
countries, has the added competitive advantage of a huge, cheap labour market. Turkey 
has the best of both worlds - it is in Europe's customs union, and can trade freely 
with the EU while remaining outside its constrictive practices such as the social 
chapter, the 48-hour week and the crushing raft of health and safety and environmental 
legislation which make it so expensive to do business inside Europe. Turkey is ideally 
placed to be Europe's outsourcing paradise. It has inexpensive skilled labour, and 
land and construction costs are low, as are the cost of living and transportation. In 
an ideal world, Turkey would do far better if it worked to cut down on its own 
corruption and bureaucracy (instead of importing Brussels's), make foreign investment 
easier by scrapping regulation (instead of increasing it), and foster a functional 
banking sector. True, the EU will give structural funds to ease the costs of 
implementing all the bells and whistles of the 80,000-page acquis communautaire, but 
the bottom line is that Turkey, in implementing them, will be systematically 
undermining its competitiveness. 

Pro-European Turks (who make up about 75 per cent of the population, according to 
newspaper opinion polls) are understandably enthused by the idea of free money from 
Brussels, and point out that European cash fuelled booms in Ireland and Spain, and 
have transformed Greek and Portuguese living standards. They hope for the same effect. 
But it isn't going to happen. Times have changed since the free-spending, 
motorway-building, enterprise-park-sponsoring days of the 1980s, and the 
structural-fund cupboard will be pretty bare in a decade's time, once the Eastern 
Europeans have finished raiding it. The other great lures of Europe - visa-free travel 
and work, and agricultural subsidies - will also lose their glitter by the time Turkey 
is ready to join. Already the Commission's report has suggested 'indefinite' 
restrictions on freedom of movement for Turks even after they join, and similar 
derogations on the CAP which will effectively exclude Turkey's farmers from the 
subsidy trough, while at the same time forcing restrictive quotas upon them. 

Sadly, one of the most compelling arguments for Turkey joining Europe is a negative 
one: the kind of reforms which are currently transforming Turkey into an open society 
are only possible when underpinned by the promise of EU membership. Turkey's reformers 
have always been inspired by imported models. Starting from the Tanzimat reforms of 
1839, when Sultan Abd-ul-Medjid created a Western-style army and began wearing frock 
coats, reform in Turkey has always been synonymous with the adoption of European ways. 
General Kemal Atat�rk, the avatar and founder of modern Turkey, set the pattern for 
today's intercourse with Brussels - better to serve in the heaven of European 
civilisation than reign in the hell of the Middle East. Turkey's current Prime 
Minister, Tayyip Erdogan, has done more to transform Turkey in two years than his 
predecessors did in the previous half century, but he could not have done so, admits a 
senior Erdogan adviser, without the 'multi-purpose tool' of Europe with which to crack 
entrenched resistance to change in the army, judiciary and civil service. But the fact 
that the journey towards Europe is doing Turkey a power of good is not the same as 
saying that actually joining the EU will be a good thing. Like a bracing walk to a 
distant country pub, the benefit is in the journey, not the destination. 

Unfortunately, Erdogan sees the whole thing in rather different terms. He is starkly 
uncompromising: if the EU refuses to admit Turkey, it will be proved to be a racist 
'Christian club' of hypocrites with 'double standards'. He may be right in his 
assessment: it already seems that Turkey's ultimate accession will depend on 
referendums in at least one Turko-sceptic (and arguably Islamo-sceptic) country, 
France, and probably others. The people of Europe may prove to be more instinctively 
anti-Muslim than their leaders. 

Turks, in their pride, have a horror of the kind of 'privileged relationship' sort of 
membership that the German Christian Democrats' leader Angela Merkel proposes, 
assuming it to be the synonym of second-class citizenship. But they are wrong: 
associate membership is closer to Turkey's fundamental interests, and not just for 
economic reasons. Outside the Union, Ankara will be free to pursue its regional 
interests which are no concern of Brussels. Turkey, like Britain, has unique 
political, historic and economic interests which lie outside the sphere of Brussels's 
interference - its troubled relationship with Armenia, its free-trade relations with 
Iran, its ties to the Turkic republics of central Asia and role as a hub for the 
export of Caspian oil, its concerns over irredentism spilling over from the Kurds of 
northern Iraq to its own Kurdish population. Turkey's strategic richness has for 
centuries lain in its two-headed position between two worlds - hence the double-headed 
imperial eagle of Byzantium, subsequently borrowed by Muscovy. Hitching itself to a 
solely European axis will be to put a hood over one of those heads, and thereby deny 
the half of Turkey's identity which looks eastwards to Tartary. 

Ultimately, though, the problem is that Turks don't see their Great March to Europe in 
purely rational terms. At the heart of their nationalism is the kernel of a fear, sown 
by Atat�rk, that they are somehow imperfectly civilised unless they are accepted as a 
member of the club of Western nations. That fear of exclusion will drive them to push 
for membership of the EU, whatever the cost to their own vital interests. Too bad for 
them - good news for us. 

Owen Matthews is Newsweek's correspondent in Istanbul. 





------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Make a clean sweep of pop-up ads. Yahoo! Companion Toolbar.
Now with Pop-Up Blocker. Get it for free!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/L5YrjA/eSIIAA/yQLSAA/RR.olB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

EuroAtlantic Club: http://www.europe.org.ro/euroatlantic_club/ 

***
Birou de traduceri autorizate. Oana Gheorghiu - tel/fax: 252.8681 / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/romania_eu_list/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Raspunde prin e-mail lui