Diabolic Digest
Turkey
and Europe must get ready to go back to the future
April 2005
Turkey has entered
the final stage of its bid to join the EU club, but its candidacy still stirs
controversy. Even advocates of Turkish membership point to legitimate concerns
over Ankara’s human rights and democratic record. The heavy-handed repression
of a women’s rally in Istanbul on 6 March reawakened those concerns. The
European Parliament condemned the repression and called on the Commission and
Council of Ministers to monitor women’s rights closely.
While the Turkish government attempts reform to meet these concerns, outspoken
opponents of Turkey’s membership have still deeper objections. They cite
cultural, religious and geographical differences as reasons for keeping Turkey
outside the Union’s walls. Former French president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing
famously warned that Turkish membership would spell “the end of the EU”.
Just before Turkey got the green light to begin accession talks in December,
Frits Bolkestein, the then internal market commissioner, warned against what he
called the “Islamisation of Europe”. If certain predictions came true, he
warned, then, “the relief of Vienna in 1683 will have been in vain”.
The Dutch politician was dramatically comparing Turkey’s application with the
Ottoman siege of Vienna which was broken by the Polish king, John III, but not
before the Turks gave Vienna its famous coffee houses. Viennese bakers created
the crescent-shaped croissant to celebrate this victory.
This ‘clash of civilisations’ idea breaks down when one considers that all
Europe’s major powers have come to blows on numerous occasions, and the
continent was brought to the brink of annihilation, without any Turkish
intervention, in the Second World War.
“All cultural, religious and historic identities are constructed,” says Senim
Aydin of the Centre for European Policy Studies. “We have to deconstruct all
the myths [and] assumed ‘essences’.”
Rather than stressing the differences between Turkey and the EU, it is possible
to look at their similarities. “The Europe that we should all wish for is a
Europe that is… inclusive and tolerant, multiethnic and multicultural,” says
Amanda Akcakoca of the European Policy Centre. “That Europe is a Europe that
would, without doubt, include Turkey.”
Some argue that Turkey has always been a part of modern Europe. For more than
half a millennium, the Turks have had a profound influence on the European
stage. In the early 14th century, they gained a foothold when Byzantine
political factions employed Ottoman mercenaries in their struggles for
supremacy. But with Mehmet II’s conquest of Constantinople in the 15th century
the Ottomans became a force to be reckoned with.
King Francis I of France (1494-1547) once said that he considered the Ottoman
Empire to be the only power capable of protecting European states against the
Hapsburg Empire. Subsequently, the Ottomans created close ties with the Dutch
and the English against Spain.
Although the Ottomans were the nominal rulers
of a vast empire, they were not interested in changing local systems. Instead,
they asked their non-Muslim citizens to pay an extra tax in return for the
protected – albeit second class – dhimmi status. An important part of this
framework was the millet system – essentially a division of the empire into
relatively autonomous communities based on religious affiliations.
The Ottoman Empire also welcomed asylum seekers, such as the Jews fleeing the
Spanish Inquisition who ended up in Istanbul, leading Sultan Bayezid II to
comment: “They tell me that Ferdinand of Spain is a wise man but he is a fool.
For he takes his treasure and sends it all to me.”
The Turks withdrew from offensive conflicts in the 18th century and promoted
cultural exchange with the ascending powers of Europe through their Ottoman embassies
– the precursors of modern international diplomacy. In the 19th century, the
Ottoman Empire became know as the ‘sick man of Europe’ because of its continued
failure to keep pace with its rivals.
At around the same time, the Ottoman Empire, Austria and Germany were faced
with the pan-Slavic movement which indirectly led to the various wars of
independence in the Balkans. But Turkey’s siding with Germany in the First
World War was the final blow for the empire and the Turks committed deplorable
crimes, like the slaughter of the Armenians, that put a massive black mark on
traditional Ottoman tolerance.
The father of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, president in 1922-28, was
determined to mould Turkey into a modern European secular state. He revamped
the legal system, purged the language of much of its Arabic influence, and
introduced Roman script.
And, since the Second World War, Turkey has
been working hard to integrate itself into the western political machinery.
Institutionally, the claim that Turkey is not European is weakened by its
membership of the Council of Europe (1949), NATO (1952), the Organisation for
Security and Co-operation in Europe (1975) and the European Customs Union
(1995) for longer than some EU member states.
Part of the problem has been the pace of Turkish reform. “The main culprit in
holding back Turkey’s membership aspirations has been Turkey itself,” Akcakoca
believes. Perhaps ironically, it is the moderate Islamist government of Recep
Tayyip Erdogan that has done the most to ready Turkey for EU membership.
“Since the Copenhagen summit of 2002…stronger conditionality [from the EU] has
triggered a serious reform movement in Turkey,” notes Aydin. “However…debates
over the absorption capacity of the EU, the ratification of the constitution
and…identity still remain to cloud relations between the two.”
But supporters are optimistic that Turkey will become a member of the EU,
probably by 2015. This would bring economic, political and security advantages
for the two. It would also send a welcome signal to an increasingly divided
world.
“Turkey’s membership should… strengthen the relations between the Christian and
Muslim worlds,” says the Akcakoca, “refuting the ‘clash of civilizations’
scenario”.
This article appeared in the 17-23 March 2005
issue of European Voice
ã2005 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.