One day Turkey will run the EU

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28 September 2010 Die Presse Vienna
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Hassan Bleibel, Al Mustaqbal (Beirut)

Turkey isn’t even a member yet, but deputy prime minister Ali Babacan is already demanding a leading role in Europe for his country. All you have to do is look at Turkey’s economic and demographic growth to see it’s likely to get what it wants, says Die Presse

Wolfgang Böhm

“When Turkey becomes a member of the EU, it is not going to be in a secondary position, that’s one of the reasons why countries like Germany and France are quite nervous about our membership,” Turkish vice-premier Ali Babacan declared at a World Leadership Forum in New York during the recent UN plenary session.

And Turkey’s claim to a leading role in the EU is based on hard facts. With economic growth set to hit 7% this year, near-inexhaustible human resources, and mounting clout as a hub of international oil and gas pipelines, Turkey has recently moved into the European fast lane.

At present, Turkey is the 17th biggest economy in the world. Experts predict that in 20 years it will make the top ten, outstripping countries like Spain and Italy. According to forecasts by the IIASA (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis) and the Vienna Institute of Demography, the Turkish population will be around 85.5 million by then – surpassing Germany, now the most populous nation in the EU.

If Turkey were to be admitted into the EU despite resistance from countries like Austria, Germany and France, it would dominate policy in the EU institutions. Even as things are today, Turkey would be the second biggest political force in the European Parliament and on an equal footing with the heavyweights on the EU Council.

Although the EU power structure will have to be gradually adjusted under the rules of the Lisbon Treaty, not much would change for Turkey. By dint of its rapid demographic growth, Ankara’s influence would actually increase, since the number of seats in Parliament and the new representation ratios in the Council will essentially be based on population size.

Given its size, Turkey could not only push EU decisions through with ease, it would also be able to block those that are not to its liking. The Lisbon Treaty provides that as of 2014, countries whose combined populations exceed 35% of the EU population may constitute a blocking minority. That means Ankara could join forces with, say, London, Madrid and Warsaw to thwart any step backed by Paris and Berlin – which would jam the prevailing German-French axis.

What would change politically in the event of Turkish accession? With Turkey on board, European diplomats say, EU foreign and security policy would be even more heavily US-geared. In matters of commerce, Ankara would probably favour free trade more than the EU members do now. Ankara would, in all likelihood, get behind efforts to cooperate more closely on internal security – even while downplaying certain civil rights such as the protection of private data.

Babacan argued in New York that letting Turkey in would boost the EU’s standing on the world scene. “The weight of the European economy in the world has shrunk and will continue to shrink. And only with enlargement will the EU be able to protect its power and influence.”

An opinion seconded by Gerhard Schröder in Die Welt’s online edition. “Without Turkey the EU will sink into mediocrity,” writes the Social Democrat ex-chancellor, pointing to the rapid pace of growth there: this year alone the Turkish economy will grow four times as much as the French and twice as much as the German economy. Schröder expects Turkey to be the fourth or fifth biggest European economy in 20 years. Then there will be no ignoring it.

Translated from the German by Eric Rosencrantz


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2 responses to “One day Turkey will run the EU”

  1. Demir Karsan Avatar
    Demir Karsan

    Keep on dreaming.
    As detailed in Prof. Halil Inalcik’s “Osmanlilar, Chapter 3”; Starting with the Crusaders in 10th Century, most Europen Unions were formed to get the Moslem Turks out of Europe and Middle East and back to Asia. The last one was the 1st World War and the War of liberation. The European population is still committed to this “Crusading” ideals and they will not let their small enligteded class to accept Turkey as a EU member.
    Turkey does not need the “Old and tired Europe”. It is doing perfectly well without it. Trade, technical, and cultural realtions and associations is all Turkey needs from West.

  2. mok10501 Avatar
    mok10501

    It is the time to wake up and concentrate on our own Union. Turks from Anatolia to Mongolia when united under shared military, economic and political powers with independent local states, like in the US, will be the second most powerful union after the US. Both natural resources and human resources wise EU is crumbling (which is hardly a union in a first place anyway, except for their mutual benefits to appear together, that is all). The Union of Turks on the other hand is going to be so fearful for the Russians, Chinese, Persians and Arabs that the expenditure of Russia alone to keep troops in Armenia for example, is equivalent to 20% of combined GDP of the little states like Armenia, Greece and Israel. All their efforts are against the Turkish Union and their combined expenditure is reaching to prohibitive numbers. The Armenian Diaspora’s expenditure in the US and France combined can make each Armenian who live in Armenia, millionaires. Greek Lobby and the Greek Orthodox Church’s expenditure for blocking any interest of Turks, or Turkish Union in general, is currently under investigation.

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