Open-Letter To The EU Foreign Ministers

OPEN-LETTER TO THE EU FOREIGN MINISTERS
Written by Dr Harry Hagopian

Newropeans Magazine, France
Sept 6 2005

Dear EU Foreign Ministers,

I refer to the EU Gymnich 2005 informal meeting today at the Celtic
Manor Resort near Newport in Wales. One of the key items on your
agenda will be the formal opening of accession talks with Turkey on
3 October 2005.

I have often written or spoken about the inter-woven issues surrounding
Turkey’s accession to the EU, and have also voiced my own support for
such membership so long as its fundamental criteria of admission are
neither overlooked nor overruled for the sake of politically-spun
expediency. Therefore, this Open Letter aspires to represent my
succinct guidebook to some of the topical points addressing Turkey’s
bid to accede to the European Union. I hope you would take it into
consideration as you steer the future of the European Union, and as you
vet new members wishing to join this club in future years or decades.

The talks between the EU & Turkey are open-ended. Therefore, there is
no need for any haste in the decision-making process, as more of your
time should be spent in verifying that Turkey is indeed adhering to
the five criteria of the Copenhagen Summit of 2002. After all, these
criteria, covering political and socio-economic factors, also focus
strongly on democracy, good governance and human & minorities’ rights.

I realise that Turkey recently extended its customs union protocol to
the ten new EU member-states (including the Republic of Cyprus), but
such extension does not include diplomatic recognition of Cyprus. As
the French Prime Minister stated, it is inconceivable let alone
impolitic to envisage a process of negotiation with a candidate
country that does not recognise another EU member-state or grant its
[Cypriot] ships and planes access to Turkish ports and airports under
the customs union.

I have noted that an idea mooted in the EU corridors for some months
now, mainly that of granting Turkey a privileged partnership rather
than full membership, has re-surfaced once more. Germany, in the throes
of an election between the incumbent Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder (SPD)
and Angela Merkel (CDU), as well as Austria and other EU and non-EU
European countries, are proponents of this Iceland-type approach.

In fact, and unless my reading of the EU compass is totally off-centre,
it is not possible to decide with finality on Turkey’s accession until
2014 anyway – corresponding to the date of the next EU seven-year
budget.

I have also been following the economic strides that Turkey has made
in the last period. There have been noticeable and praiseworthy
improvements in the fields of unemployment, inflationary rates,
banking system, education levels, income & corporate taxes – all
definitively helping strengthen the economy.

However, for the sake of being thorough, let me also add that much
of the optimism over Turkey’s economic roadmap has been over-egged
– possibly for political and PR purposes – and there still remain
serious indicators let alone concerns about the impact of Turkey’s
accession to the EU. For instance:

Subsidies that would go to Turkey alone are estimated to exceed.

[email protected] billion and, according to some predictions, balloon to [email protected]
billion – including vast agricultural subsidies and regional aid;
Rather than providing an educated and sophisticated labour force.

for Europe at large, those leaving Turkey to seek work in the EU
in a post-accession environment will in all likelihood be poor,
uneducated and in large numbers – causing an imbalance in employment
scales within the EU; In the last year, there has been a 134% rise
to $10.4 billion in.

the country’s current account deficit; Turkey is running a massive
debt, and includes $23 billion owed to the IMF as well as billions
borrowed via the international bond markets; Given that the mean
gross public debt is around 40% of gross.

domestic product in the new member-states, it is noteworthy that
Turkey’s gross debt is double that figure at c. 80% of its GDP.

At this stage, I must also raise another issue that is close to my
own heart. As an Armenian, who is also an international legal and
political consultant, I wish to remind you of the Armenian Genocide
of 1915 and link it with some of the rights and values that I cherish
most within the EU – including the fundamental freedom of expression.

Now, I do realise that this 90-year-old issue evokes different
reactions within different EU countries. On the one hand, it is clear
that the issue of the recognition of the Armenian Genocide still
produces a measure of indifference within a few of the twenty-five
countries of our Union. On the other hand, it generates various
degrees of irritable non-support, expedient support or full-fledged
support within most other member-states.

Mind you, I cannot understand the position of our own Government
as it constantly re-iterates its regret about the massacres in
1915 against Armenians but adds that there is no evidence that they
constituted genocide according to the 1948 United Nations Convention
on Genocide. Surely an unethical position, when one thinks of the
litany of eminent British and international historians who have
unequivocally stated that this was indeed genocide.

Not only that, but the Blue Book (The Treatment of Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire, 1915-6), which the historian Arnold Toynbee compiled
for Lord Bryce during WWI, is of relevant historical evidence. It
is a written and textual indictment of Ottoman Turkey by eyewitness
accounts that described the atrocities committed against Armenians
during WWI. Turkey has attacked this book, published by Her Majesty’s
Stationery Office, as war propaganda. Yet, when this question was put
to Toynbee in a personal letter, he replied: – It is true that the
British Government’s motive in asking Lord Bryce to compile the Blue
Book was propaganda. But Lord Bryce’s motive in undertaking it, and
mine in working on it for him, was to make the truth known, and the
evidence was good: the witnesses were all American missionaries with
no political axe to grind. So the Blue Book, together with Lepsius’
book {Deutschland und Armenien, 1914-1918}, does give a true account.

Turkey’s reaction to the Armenian Genocide goes well beyond sheer
denial. In order to expunge itself of the burden of mens rea or
its criminal intent, it is now imputing this intent on Armenians
by claiming that they were the ones who perpetrated those genocidal
massacres against Turkey. Such a reaction regrettably reminds me of
the psychology of more recent genocidal chapters in Rwanda or Darfur
when victimisers try to project themselves as victims.

But Turkey is now also muzzling the fundamental freedom of expression
within its territories. Allow me to refer you to one instance. Orhan
Pamuk, perhaps the most acclaimed Turkish author whose books
include My Name is Red and Snow, gave an interview to the Swiss
newspaper Tages-Anzeiger on 6 February 2005 in which he was quoted as
saying that Turkey killed 30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians. A
prosecutor in Istanbul has now indicted Mr Pamuk under Article 301[1]
of the Turkish Penal Code on charges that his remarks amounted to a
‘public denigration’ of Turkish national identity – punishable by up
to three years’ imprisonment.

Dear EU Foreign Ministers, you are surely well aware that the overall
mood within the European Union has altered dramatically in the last
year or two. It can perhaps best be amplified by the volatile discourse
within the whole EU about the Constitution that culminated with
significant rejections in France and the Netherlands. As a European
citizen, I do not believe at all that the EU project is dead. Nor
do I believe that it should be shelved and later transmuted into an
ante factum free-trade market. Much of Europe would still support
the post-war philosophy of Europe and its coherent harmonisation,
so long as its structures are reformed, transparent and accountable,
and that the yawning gap between ruling politicians or bureaucrats and
the overwhelming European population is narrowed down. The tool cannot
become the toolmaker, and the EU needs to listen to its constituents
as it moves forward. After all, you need simply log on the newropeans
magazine web-site to assess the strength of innovative feelings
running within the EU – regardless of dubious political distinctions
made between old and new Europe.

My guidebook highlights those challenges that Turkey as the applicant
country, and the EU as the host body, both face today. I hope you
will not shy away from adopting those constructive decisions that
could ultimately help strengthen the EU. Do not seek discouragingly
paternalistic solutions. Sophistry or cosmetic powder will not dupe
the EU citizens any longer – certainly not at a time when they are
questioning you about their collective futures.

Today, in Wales, it behoves well for Turkey to remember that it cannot
keep using its hackneyed arguments – be it on Cyprus, the necessary
reforms it must undertake, its approach to the human and minorities’
rights of its own citizens or the Armenian Genocide. It is no longer
enough to hide behind arguments of Islam versus secularism, political
chauvinism or even geo-strategic interests.

Indeed, it does not bode well for Turkey’s admission to the EU when
it trashes a Report on minority and cultural rights, prepared by the
Human Rights Advisory Board and chaired by Professor Baskin Oran,
because it does not support the official Turkish thesis. It does
not bode well either when it cancels an academic conference on the
Armenian Genocide [at the Bogazici / Bosphorus University] because
the Turkish Minister of Justice Cemil Cecik believes it is ‘a stab
in the back of the Turkish nation’.

The EU project has taught me that narrow-minded ideological nationalism
no longer sits well anymore with our more freedom-friendly and open
EU today. You should call upon Turkey to move forward, not backslide
at every turn. After all, if I am to welcome Turkey into the European
fold, do you not think I have the right to ask that it uphold those
same Eurocentric principles that I as a European must uphold too?

I wish you success in your deliberations for the overall good of the
larger European Union.

Yours in Europe,

Dr Harry Hagopian, LONDON – 1 September 2005

LL.D- Executive Consultant Campaign for Recognition of the Armenian
Genocide (CRAG) [Committee of the] Armenian Community & Church Council
(ACCC)