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Could this be a part of the EU-Turkey deal?
http://www.dw.com/en/cypriot-leaders...016/a-19259686
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/tur...&NewsCatID=338
Erdogan leaves the US and does not attend Muhammad Ali's funeral because the organizers do not allow him to perform what I assume are muslim rituals. Laying a quran verse onto the coffin or reading it during the speech, apparently both requests were denied and he was taken off the list of speakers in favor of someone else as well.
What will be next? Erdogan threatens the US with sanctions?
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
He was denied because somebody had already done those rituals, he's not needed.
if turkey has turned away from western liberal democracy then it is in part the eu's fault.
this was not the attitude taken with the balkans, and turkey earned its place in the eu with 40 years on nato's front line.
Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar
Turkey has turned away from the liberal bit because it's embraced the democratic bit. AFAIK Kemalism was firmly established only in the metropolitan areas, where people like LEN embraced the western civilisation that Kemal loved. In the rural areas, which was a majority of the country's population, religion still held sway. So a Turkish government that reflects the will of the majority of the country won't be liberal. If we want Turkey to be more liberal, it'll have to be less democratic.
Nowt to do with the EU, which didn't exist when Kemal saw the problems that modernising Turkey would face, and still faces.
Strange on 2 levels:
1) Why would 40 years of being a military ally alone qualify a country to join what some also call a "value community" if their values are completely different in many dimensions? Would you always advocate choosing long-term partners based on one-dimensional criteria?
2) For someone who wants his own country out of the EU, that's just a very funny statement and not to be taken very seriously. Unless you want to say that you wouldn't support a Brexit if they had let Turkey in?
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar
Are you still whining about a wannabe dictator/conservative muslim not getting in?
I seriously don't get that at all.
I would understand your argument if the EU were a military club, then the purely military support could be grounds to let someone in, but the EU is (supposed to be) much more than that. Turkey simply does not behave in any way that would make them a good member at this time because it does not share our democratic values for example. Closing all the press outlets your president does not like is not something an EU member country should do, neither is torturing prisoners or bombing a part of the population the president doesn't like...
They are free not to accept that, but they will have to if they want to become an EU member.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
That’s something I’m sure everyone can agree on, but it’s not what this is about. Turkey is being driven away and it naturally reverts to its own values to ensure its own security. Saying Turkey should reform one way or another isn't realistic. There’s not enough trust from both sides to outright commit to sudden reforms, Turkey has to ease in and have incremental shifts.
Diplomatic shortcomings from both sides. You’re not acknowledging that it’s a vicious circle.
Whining? I'm replying, and it's only my second(?) post in this thread. When did you become so thin skinned?
I don't argue that Turkey is[n't] going in the wrong direction, I merely submit that europe is in part responsible for this change in direction as a result of europe not wanting a non 'european' nation inside the tent.
I repeat, they did not take this attitude to bosnia.
Last edited by Furunculus; 06-18-2016 at 16:12.
Furunculus Maneuver: Adopt a highly logical position on a controversial subject where you cannot disagree with the merits of the proposal, only disagree with an opinion based on fundamental values. - Beskar
Yes and no. If you said this 8-10 years ago it would have been an understandable sentiment. Erdogan actually showed a lot of promise in his early years, and still leaders like Sarkozy ruled out Turkey's membership. Many reasons for that, but it's safe to say that changing perceptions of islam had a lot to do with it.
But meanwhile, Erdogan has convincingly shown himself to be a thug. And arguably, Turkey's membership should not even have been seriously considered 10 years ago for reasons that are often forgotten. I'm thinking about the Cyprus dispute mostly, something that most people are dimly aware of but which I have an peculiar interest in. As it stands, Turkey doesn't recognise one of the EU's members as a sovereign state, and it's extremely easy to argue that Turkey is the largest obstacle for a permanent solution for the dispute.
Incidentally, the 2004 unification plan that the (Greek) Cypriots rejected was a completely one-sided deal engineered to placate Turkey. The United States and the United Kingdom strongly argued in favor of the deal because, as you said, Turkey is an important NATO ally.
He said it is in part the eu's fault, which is hard to argue.
The moment the EU showed its willful concessions, support for the EU in Turkey increased. According to one poll 62% of Turks want to join the EU, up from 42% in last year. About 7/10 believe Turkey will never be allowed in (http://www.economist.com/news/europe...ky-deal-turkey). Whether Turkey fits into this "value community" or not, you could argue that Turkey has been backing these values in an international scale for decades and by right deserve to have their allies search for a middle ground as they are now.
Don't pretend that Turkey's aggressive diplomacy and bullying of low profile countries isn't shared by a handful of EU states.
Wow, how one-dimensional is it that you granted the Arab Gulf visa-free travel before your own neighbor, who is closer to your own "values," doesn't sabotage your interests as much, and pulls out its ambassadors from you the same way?Originally Posted by Husar
Last edited by AE Bravo; 06-16-2016 at 03:06. Reason: Source
Internal policy of a country doesn't and shouldn't depend on what someone thinks. If a country favors dictatorship, it is its own prefrence/fault.
Being a military ally presupposes intense cooperation and adapting to common standards at least in some sphere(s). Which promotes mutual understanding and makes it easier to cooperate on in other fields.
Erdogan goes against a whole lot of democratic values, the whole torturing in prisons and other human rights abuses are still not out of the way, then you have the unwillingness to even aknowledge past crimes, new crimes against the Kurdish population, possible ties to ISIS and so on. Where in this do you see a backing of liberal European values?
You can tell me all day how some EU countries do or at least support similar things but none of that is mainstream public perception and that is what counts. Politicians don't get elected based on the truth but on the mainstream public perception. Or you could say it is about how Europeans want to see their countries even if they fail to be like that and Turkey does not fit this at all.
I have absolutely no idea on what grounds visa-free travel is given and there is usually about zero public discussion on the topic when it happens. In fact I did not even know that, you bring about the least relevant point here when it comes to public perception of other countries because visa restrictions do not seem to reflect public perception at all in this case.
And please explain how this visa-situation is one-dimensional, do you know they used only one criterium to decide this or are you just making this up?
Turkey is a military ally of NATO and NATO is not the EU. Being in a good position to nuke the USSR is not the same as having a good human rights record or promising future in that regard. Saddam Hussein and Gaddhafi were also military allies at one point and Egypt has a lot of US tanks. Does that make all these countries eligible to join NATO or the EU? If Russia sells us gas for 40 years, did they earn their right to be in the EU for having been such a reliable business partner for 40 years? They kept millions of Germans warm in the winter for 40 years after all!
We also have more common basic standards with Russia than the US: the meter, the liter, the gram...
Last edited by Husar; 06-16-2016 at 12:11.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
So being one of the top three (?) trade partners, supporting European interests in the frontline of the most sensitive region, and having a potential democratic future isn’t enough to be promised something in the next few decades. You do realize that one of the initial aims of this whole thing was to provide incentive for reform? It’s torn between two worlds, and it basically got told to f off for not committing to anything at the doorstep right off the bat.Originally Posted by Husar
Maybe you should decide first whether the EU is a "value community" or a security community. I don't see Turkey totally abandoning its political Islam tendencies as that undermines its interesting position in the middle east.
Counterterrorism legislation was one of the two criterium used, which in Turkey is virtually identical to the other states that were granted this. I don’t think it’s as irrelevant as you make it out to be because 1) This was one of the first things to be implemented, so obviously a priority in that regard and 2) for the reason that arbitrary, and in some cases discriminatory, travel restrictions affect public perception.I have absolutely no idea on what grounds visa-free travel is given and there is usually about zero public discussion on the topic when it happens. In fact I did not even know that, you bring about the least relevant point here when it comes to public perception of other countries because visa restrictions do not seem to reflect public perception at all in this case.
And please explain how this visa-situation is one-dimensional, do you know they used only one criterium to decide this or are you just making this up?
Last edited by AE Bravo; 06-16-2016 at 22:17.
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