Sunday, 28 04 2024
Sunday, 28 04 2024
11:19
Idram and IDBank as participants of Career City Fest
15:07
Ukrainian pilots are training on F-16 fighters in France
14:48
“Now it is more protected.” NA Speaker about Tavush
14:29
Blinken arrived in Beijing
14:10
China is servicing a Russian ship carrying weapons from North Korea to Russia
13:51
We always attach importance to the development of Armenian-French parliamentary relations
13:13
Warsaw is ready to help Kyiv to return Ukrainians to Poland
12:54
Gasparini’s team reaches the Italian Cup final
12:35
“Liverpool” loses in the Merseyside derby
12:16
No precipitation is expected, and the air temperature will rise by 4-6 degrees
11:57
Armenian boxers continue to win in Serbia
A commemorative event was held in Vienna
11:19
Aliyev noted how much territory Armenia and Azerbaijan have demarcated
11:00
The Syrian People’s Assembly delegation visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial
10:41
“We remember and demand.” Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada
10:32
Cash transactions over 10,000 euros have been banned in the EU
“In Canada, April is considered the month of condemnation of the Genocide.” Trudeau
USA
10:03
Biden signed a $61 billion aid project to Ukraine
17:01
“The ideology that dictates genocide must be condemned.” Alain Simonyan
16:42
Let us keep alive the memory of the victims of pogroms, deportations and persecutions. Macron
16:23
Great Britain will supply high-precision aerial bombs to Ukraine
16:04
France proposed to the EU to impose new sanctions against Russia
USA
15:45
“We also pay tribute to the endurance of the Armenian people.” Biden
The US ambassador paid tribute at the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex
We commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Ambassador Decotigny
In the 21st century, 2020-2023, we witnessed another policy of ethnic cleansing. RA MFA
14:29
The highest leadership of the country visited Tsitsernakaberd
14:10
Today is the 109th anniversary of the Genocide
13:51
Let the martyrs of the Armenian Genocidee and all our other martyrs sleep comforted by the Republic of Armenia. prime minister
The Secretary of the Security Council will not go to Russia

Which EU to join?

Joost Lagendijk from Turkish Zaman touched upon the recent statement by Erdogan on Turkey’s EU perspectives. Find the full article below.

Looking at recent speeches of the prime minister and the chief negotiator, one gets the impression that the European Union is making a modest comeback in Turkey. On a trip to Germany last week, Justice and Development Party (AKP) leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan confirmed that EU accession is still Turkey’s strategic goal. For good reasons, he blamed the EU for not doing its part in making this possible, and for the first time announced a sort of unofficial deadline: 2023.

I agree with Erdoğan, in the sense that if and when Turkey is not able to become a member by its centennial, the whole accession process is doomed. In order to get in before 2023, both Turkey and the EU will have to engage in a serious restart, in 2014 at the latest.

That was probably also the reason why Egemen Bağış, the person responsible for such new dynamism on the Turkish side, said in an interview that he expected a meaningful push from the EU in 2013, after the crippling Greek Cypriot EU presidency comes to an end. I am not so sure whether next year is the most appropriate one for the start of what one could call the second part of Turkey’s EU negotiations under AKP rule, after the first successful term from 2002 till 2005. The EU will still be obsessed with trying to get out of the economic and political crisis it is confronted with, and in the run-up to the German elections in September 2013 one should not expect a substantial change in Berlin’s position on Turkey’s EU membership.

Still, the visit of François Hollande to Turkey in the beginning of 2013 could be the beginning of a more constructive phase in EU-Turkey relations. The French president, who does not share the ideological Turkophobia of his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy, is expected to announce the end of the French blockade of several chapters in the technical negotiations. That would be a highly important symbolic step in the right direction that would allow Turkey and the EU to start talking on some key issues. But we will need a new German government and some major breakthroughs in the internal EU struggle for a new institutional framework to prevent another crisis in the eurozone in order to be able to shift to a higher gear in the negotiations in 2014.

A remarkable element in Erdoğan’s remarks on Europe in Berlin was his announcement that when Turkey becomes an EU member, it will not join the eurozone but keep the lira. He quoted British politicians and experts who had apparently been able to convince the prime minister and his advisers that Turkey should look for a “British” position in the EU: focus on the internal market, stick to its own currency and try to keep out of those European policies that are considered not in its own interests.

That prospect touches on some of the key discussions in today’s EU: How should a more integrated union be organized, both economically and politically, and will it be possible in the future to be a member of the EU without participating in the core group of countries that share a common currency and all the institutional arrangements that go with it? The UK, Sweden and Denmark have already opted for that position, in what is often called the second tier of the EU framework. It may well be that some of the new EU members from Central and Eastern Europe will come to the same conclusion after witnessing the current euro crisis and the solutions that are being discussed. Joining the eurozone brings a lot of advantages, but it also means that countries have to give up large parts of their economic and financial sovereignty.

I would be very happy if the words of Erdoğan and Bağış meant that Turkey would start discussing the real questions for every present and future member of the EU. What kind of further integration do we want, and what would be the benefits, the risks and the disadvantages of each model? It makes much more sense for Turkey to play a role in that debate than to stand on the sidelines, complaining about the bad treatment it is getting and missing out on the real decisions to be made about the union it apparently still wants to join one day.

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