Burak Bekdil
The truth is, Turkey's longer-than-half
a-century journey to full EU membership offers volumes of thick picture books
full of similar smiling faces, most of them no longer alive. But both the club
and the applicant know that Turkey has been dragged planets away from the EU in
terms of culture and socio-politics. Turkey is sometimes even hostile to
Europe.
While the Europeans wasted their time in
self-deception – that Turkey's Islamists were in fact pro-EU, post-Islamist
reformers – Turkey was implementing a plan to turn into, not a member of, but a
Muslim challenge to what its leaders privately view as a hostile
"Christendom."
Turkey, under Islamist rule, has keenly
pretended that it wants EU membership, while in reality deeply disliking
"Christian" culture; and the EU leaders have pretended that Turkey
would one day join the club, while knowing that it would not.
Judging from fancy, Kodak-moment photos that
appeared in the press over the past week as well as related statements from
European Union [EU] and Turkish bigwigs, one could be tempted to think that
things are coming up roses between Ankara and Brussels. Facts, as often, are
quite different from what smiling faces and repeated optimism reveal.
On Dec. 6, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu, accompanied by nine Turkish cabinet members, visited his Greek
counterpart, Antonis Samaras, in Athens, where the leaders of these traditional
Aegean rivals happily glossed over major differences and expressed support for
closer relations.
Davutoglu said that Turkey supports the return
of the Parthenon marbles to Greece. That was sweet. But no one cares about
whether Turkey does or does not support the return of the ancient marbles. And
Samaras said he supported Turkey's quest for EU membership, provided it
fulfilled the entry requirements. That was sweet, too, except that Greece has
been repeating the same wording and Turkey has been fulfilling the entry
requirements since 1987.
Both leaders expressed hope that talks for
reunification of the divided island of Cyprus would resume soon, probably
knowing privately that even if talks resumed they would break down soon after.
This author seriously doubts if either leader could recall how many rounds of
talks have been held since Turkey invaded the northern third of the island in
1974 in response to a Greek Cypriot coup aimed at annexing Cyprus to Greece.
For his part, Davutoglu said that "it is
very important that hearts and minds are meeting." But outside the
spiritual sphere of hearts and minds that meet, there is reality. Turkey has
threatened to send its navy to the eastern Mediterranean if Cyprus goes ahead
with its joint hydrocarbon exploration plans with Israel and Egypt. The three
Mediterranean neighbors have ignored the threat and are proceeding with the
exploration plan.
Pleased with a new -- but apparently fake --
détente with Greece, Davutoglu rushed back to Ankara to host a high-profile EU
delegation for a further exchange of pleasantries: Federica Mogherini, EU High
Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy; Johannes Hahn, European
Commissioner for European Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations;
and Christos Stylianides, the EU Commissioner Responsible for Humanitarian Aid
and Crisis Management. Another Kodak-moment with smiles, and literally some
futile talk about photography.
After their talks, the Turkish team called on
the EU to "make visible" the dialogue between Ankara and Brussels by
"inviting Turkish leaders, to EU meetings and taking them into EU family
photographs." The Union should "find practical formulas to invite
Turkish leaders to EU meetings to take part in family photos of the union in a
way visible to the public," Turkish EU Minister Volkan Bozkır said on Dec.
8.
The truth is, Turkey's
longer-than-half-a-century journey to full EU membership offers volumes of
thick picture books full of similar smiling faces, most of them no longer
alive. But both the club and the applicant know that Turkey has been dragged
planets away from the EU in terms of culture and socio-politics. Turkey is too
un-European in political culture; sometimes even hostile to Europe.
Only a week before the EU bigwigs arrived in
Ankara, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused western [Christian]
states of "not liking us [Muslims]," for "loving oil, gold,
diamonds, and the cheap labor force of the Islamic world," and for
"wanting us [Muslims] dead and liking seeing our children die."
Earlier, Erdogan had publicly said a few times
that Turkey would seek membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(SCO) instead of EU accession, if given the chance (SCO member states are
Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan -- no doubt a
better fit for Turkey's democratic standards.)
All the same, the EU keeps on playing its part.
"We decided to visit so early in our mandate in order to meet the good
steps the new Turkish government decided to make in the EU accession
process," was Mogherini's partly understandable euphemism.
The EU cannot slam the door in Turkey's face
for many geopolitical reasons. But it should realize that it lost almost all of
its leverage on steering Turkey toward pro-EU reforms in the last decade or so.
While the Europeans wasted their time in self-deception -- that Turkey's
Islamists were in fact pro-EU, post-Islamists reformers -- Turkey was
implementing a plan to turn into, not a member of, but a Muslim challenge to,
what its leaders privately view as a hostile "Christendom."
Today, only a third of Turks say they share the
same values "with Christian Europe." Nearly 80% of them say they
would not wish to have a Christian as a neighbor.
Turkey ranks 154th on the world press freedom
index, according to Reporters Without Borders.
Earlier this year, Freedom House, a prestigious
pro-freedom institute, put Turkey into the category of countries it labels as
"not free." Turkey, after Russia, ranks second in violations of civil
liberties, according to the European Court of Human Rights. Similarly, after
Russia, Turkey boasts the world's second biggest police force, at 475 police
officers per 100,000 residents.
Turkey under Islamist rule has keenly pretended
that it wants EU membership, while in reality deeply disliking its
"Christian" culture; and the EU leaders have pretended that Turkey
would one day join the club, while knowing that it would not.
Ironically, just a day before the EU delegation
arrived in Ankara, Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, who won the Nobel Prize for
literature in 2006, denounced what he called a climate of "fear" in
his country. A few years earlier, he had claimed that the
"post-Islamists" would take Turkey into the EU.
Burak Bekdil, Gatestone Institute, December 14, 2014 at 5:00 am
Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish
columnist for the Hürriyet Daily and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
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