Category: EU Members

European Council decided to open accession negotiations with Turkey on 17 Dec. 2004

  • THE ENEMY AT THE GATE

    THE ENEMY AT THE GATE

    THE ENEMY AT THE GATE

    Habsburgs, Ottomans and the Battle for Europe

    By Andrew Wheatcroft

    Illustrated. 339 pp. Basic Books. $27.50

    By 1683, Kara Mustafa, grand vizier of the Ottomans, was still a pasha with something to prove. He had been raised in the household of the illustrious Koprulu family, which would supply an unbroken succession of brilliant — if often ill-fated — grand viziers to the Ottoman court. Described by a contemporary as “corrupt, cruel and unjust,” Kara Mustafa had risen to become admiral of the Aegean galley fleet but had also succeeded in navigating the treacherous cross currents of palace intrigue; by 1675, the sultan had offered him his daughter’s hand.

    His steady rise did nothing to satisfy his fierce ambition. For Kara Mustafa, the ultimate prize lay to the West. More than a century before, in 1529, Suleiman the Magnificent had besieged Vienna, but the onset of winter forced him to abandon the assault. To succeed where Suleiman had failed represented the pinnacle of imperial glory.

    As Andrew Wheatcroft brilliantly shows in “The Enemy at the Gate,” the skirmishes and the pitched battles that raged for centuries between Habsburgs and Ottomans, and their numerous vassals on both sides, represented not so much a “clash of civilizations” as a collision of empires. For all the pious sloganeering that accompanied it, the struggle was only incidentally one between Islam and Christendom. Territory was the aim, along with something less tangible but equally compelling: the right to claim the legacy of the Roman Empire. Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, took it as given that the legacy belonged rightfully to the Habsburgs, but the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed IV believed just as fervently that the title of Roman Caesar was his. Had not his ancestor, Mehmed the Conqueror, toppled the Byzantines and seized Constantinople two centuries before? Far from wishing to obliterate the Byzantine past, the Ottomans meant to assume it as their own, and Vienna, the seat of the Habsburg empire, was the final prize.

    Kara Mustafa is only one of many bold and complex characters Wheatcroft brings swaggering to the stage in his scholarly but fast-paced narrative. He is especially attuned to the hidden contradictions of his personages. Leopold I is seen as simultaneously rigid and dithering, a disastrous combination, while Mehmed IV, though bookish and retiring, reveled in martial exploits; he would lead his vast army as far as Belgrade before transferring command to Kara Mustafa. Wheatcroft relies on such adroit contrasts to depict these distant figures. Thus, Prince Eugene of Savoy, the “noble knight” of Habsburg legend, was not only the greatest general of the age but an impassioned bibliophile, a discerning connoisseur who managed his private life so discreetly that it remains a mystery to this day. Beside him, Charles V, Duke of Lorraine, another Habsburg hero, emerges as all raw courage and bristling audacity, a man most alive in the saddle amid the thick of battle.

    Charles once remarked, “He that feareth not an enemy knows not what war is.” That observation is central to Wheatcroft’s account. His theme isn’t merely “Europe’s fear of the Turks” but “fear itself.” (As he notes in his coda, that fear is still rampant, camouflaged beneath recent — especially Austrian — dismay over Turkey’s continuing campaign to join the European Union.) Despite his best intentions, Wheatcroft’s narrative isn’t likely to allay such fears. Describing an attack by Ottoman cavalry and infantry — the dreadedsipahis and janissaries — he writes, “To face a howling tide of janissaries racing towards you, to watch the heads and limbs of your companions spin off the sharp edge of a sipahisabre required exceptional courage.” He conveys the spooky sense of stifled panic the besieged Viennese experienced as Turkish attackers began tunneling beneath the city’s defenses and the populace had to prick up its ears day and night for the telltale “noises of picks and shovels below the streets.”

    Wheatcroft, the author of several earlier books on both Habs burgs and Ottomans, states that he set out here to portray the Ottoman “face of battle,” borrowing a phrase from the classic work by John Keegan, and in this he succeeds; his narrative is thrilling as well as thoughtful, a rare combination. Even so, a subtle imbalance prevails. The Ottomans inspired dread in their enemies; fear was part of their arsenal. But, as Wheatcroft repeatedly demonstrates, the Habsburgs were fearsome too, and perhaps even crueler than their opponents, engaging not only in full-scale massacres but in flayings, beheadings and impalements.

    Perhaps because Wheatcroft hasn’t drawn on Ottoman Turkish sources, his Ottomans, for all his skill at depicting them, appear oddly imperturbable. After Kara Mustafa’s debacle before the walls of Vienna, he retreated to Belgrade; there, on Christmas Day 1683, he greeted the sultan’s executioners, kneeling with “stoic Ottoman calm,” and even courteously lifting his beard to expose his throat to the silk garrote. The story is legendary, and Wheatcroft recounts it well. Still, here as elsewhere, we’d like to hear the fierce heart beating beneath the legend.

    Eric Ormsby’s latest book is “Ghazali: The Revival of Islam.”

    Source:  www.nytimes.com, June 12, 2009

  • Greek Cyprus and Turkey clash over oil exploration

    Greek Cyprus and Turkey clash over oil exploration

    Published: Thursday 11 June 2009   

    Cyprus said on 10 June it would press on with offshore oil exploration, despite strong objections from Turkey, and would open new fields for hydrocarbon research by early next year.

    Cypriot Industry Minister Antonis Paschalides told Reuters in an interview that Turkey’s decision to send warships to the area last year had not deterred investors eager to search for oil and gas in the eastern Mediterranean. 

    The first exploration deal was clinched with US company Noble Energy, which has already found a large gas reservoir off nearby Israel. 

    “The first round has been completed,” he said. “We expect that around the end of this year, the beginning of next, we can proceed with the second licensing round.” 

    In 2007, Cyprus launched its first licensing round for hydrocarbons in 11 offshore blocks, most in deepwater locations, despite objections from Turkey, which invaded the north of Cyprus in 1974 after a brief Greek-inspired coup. 

    In November last year, EU member Cyprus protested to the United Nations that Turkish warships had repeatedly harassed Norwegian research vessels off the southern rim of the island over blocks earmarked for exploration. 

    Turkey, which lies north of Cyprus, said the research ships had encroached on its continental shelf. 

    On Wednesday, Turkish officials called on Cyprus to abandon the project, saying the Greek Cypriot government in the south did not represent the whole island. 

    “We expect the Greek Cypriot authorities to end their calls for international tender,” said a Turkish foreign ministry official who requested anonymity. “Insistence […] will adversely affect the peace and stability on the island of Cyprus, as well as in the Eastern Mediterranean region.” 

    Paschalides said the incidents involving Turkey were not deterring companies from a second round, which would offer 12 blocks in a process where companies acquire data with the option of moving on to exploration, then exploitation. 

    “From the interest shown, there is no discouragement. We are optimistic that big companies are interested, international companies from many countries such as the United States, Russia, China and European countries.” 

    Israel’s find encouraging 

    The 12 plots include 10 from the first round but with more research data, and another two which have just opened for exploration. 

    Cyprus, over-reliant on heavy fuel oil imports and slow to switch to cleaner energy, was encouraged by Israel’s discovery because the area is only 65 km from the Cypriot field that Noble Energy will be exploring. 

    “We are optimistic if we take into account the Israel plot, where huge quantities of gas were found, neighbouring our own,” Paschalides said. 

    Asked whether Cyprus would change its planning after Turkey’s reaction, he said: “Not at all […] any natural wealth of Cyprus belongs to the Republic of Cyprus and the Cyprus people, and only them. We wish that the Cyprus problem would be solved so the Turkish Cypriots, as citizens of this Republic, could reap the same benefits.” 

    Turkish Cypriots in the north of the divided island say their Greek Cypriot rivals have no authority to explore for oil or gas and have warned the dispute could upset reunification talks. 

    Paschalides said Cyprus would continue to block EU aspirant Turkey’s energy negotiations with Brussels as a result of this dispute and intended to open more areas for exploration in future. 

    “How can Turkey stake claims and want to get into Europe, want to open the energy chapter, yet question the sovereign rights of an EU member state?,” he said. “What will Turkey do? Go and attack US research vessels?” 

    (EurActiv with Reuters.) 

  • Controversy over abuse conviction of BNP candidate

    Controversy over abuse conviction of BNP candidate

    By Tom Smithard

    The lead BNP candidate for Yorkshire in tomorrow’s European elections was once convicted of abusive chanting that included calling a ethnic minority police officer an “inferior being”, it can be revealed.

    Andrew Brons was fined £50 by Leeds magistrates in 1984 for using insulting words and behaviour after a confrontation with police when he was leader of the far-right group the National Front.The 61-year-old, who was 37 at the time, was also found guilty of acting in a manner calculated to blemish the peace.

    Mr Brons, then a politics lecturer at Harrogate College, was leading a group of supporters leafleting in Leeds city centre in October 1983. A shop assistant heard them shouting “National Front” and saw clenched-fist salutes, while a policeman heard other slogans including “white power” and “death to Jews”.

    PC John Raj, the area’s community constable and of Malaysian-origin, told the group to disperse after elderly shoppers voiced their fears. But when he asked Mr Brons to leave, the politician said: “I am aware of my legal rights. Inferior beings like yourself probably do not appreciate the principle of free speech.”

    Since being chosen as the BNP’s lead candidate in this week’s elections, Mr Brons has attempted to skirt over his controversial past. He denied the allegations at the time and last night continued to claim he had not made any abusive statements.

    But Mr Raj’s evidence was accepted over that of Mr Brons by both Leeds magistrates and a Leeds Crown Court judge who heard an appeal.

    Last night Mr Brons said: “I would not have said anything that would have jeopardised my employment at Harrogate College, which lasted from 1970 to 2005. “I categorically denied the allegations at the time which were clearly absurd.”

    But Denis MacShane, the Labour MP for Rotherham and author of a recent book on anti-semitism, said: “How much more proof is needed of the Nazi antecedents of the BNP?

    “The obsession of BNP candidates with Jews and the denial of the Holocaust should not be rewarded on Thursday.”

    Source: www.yorkshirepost.co.uk, 03 June 2009

  • BNP Candidate’s Sickening Holocaust Claims

    BNP Candidate’s Sickening Holocaust Claims

    By Erica Morris

    A British National Party candidate for today’s European election aroused further controversy last week, after a video clip surfaced on YouTube showing her calling “dentistry and plastic surgery” positive outcomes of the Holocaust.

    Marlene Guest from Sheffield made the comments during a television interview for Sky One in January of last year, during which she also minimised the number of Jews murdered in the Nazi death camps.

    She said: “Now Nick Griffin queried numbers… I’ve read a thing called Did 6 Million Jews Really Die?… If they’d have kept the crematorium going in this little camp for 24/7 for 50 years they still couldn’t have burnt that amount of bodies.”

    Guest is standing for the far-right party as its South Yorkshire candidate, acting as the local organiser for the BNP in that area, and has stood as a councillor for the party in five different elections but has never been elected.

    Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust said: “These comments are pure racism and an insult to the millions who died and survived the Nazi death camps. I encourage people to go out and vote next week and prevent those who espouse racist views from being elected.”
    Sheffield Jewish figures Sir Irvine Patnick, former Hallam MP and current vice president of the Orthodox Synagogue, and John Speyer, chair of the Reform Synagogue, said in an open letter: “In a normal democratic party, a candidate who quoted such material would surely be expelled.

    “We think the electorate should understand that this party remains a fascist organisation, in the tradition of Oswald Mosley.”

    The letter, signed by Jewish residents from across Yorkshire, added: “We believe a party which is so comfortable with neo-Nazi material and denial of the truth of the Holocaust, which decimated Jewish families and communities, is not fit to represent the people of Yorkshire.

    “We call on everyone to go out and vote. A high turnout will ensure the BNP’s message of division and hate is rejected.”

    Gordon Brown also lent his backing to the anti-BNP campaign, urging Britons to get out and vote to ensure the party is blocked from gaining seats in the European Parliament.

    In a letter in The Guardian on Monday, the Prime Minister was joined by sports and entertainment stars including Little Britain’s Matt Lucas and Manchester United defender Gary Neville urging voters to show up en masse and send a clear message rejecting the BNP, who are fielding dozens of candidates in today’s election.

    The letter, which is also signed by Shoah survivor Ben Helfgott, says: “The British National Party and its allies are a threat to everything that makes us proud of this country we love. The BNP is working hard to conceal its extremism because it knows that people in Britain totally reject the politics of racism and hatred.”

    Meanwhile, French comedian Dieudonne M’bala M’bala has found a spot on today’s ballot, drawing on anti-Zionist narrative for his campaign which aims at “wiping out Zionism” and condemns “the pro-Israeli lobby and the tyranny of neo-Liberalism”.

    Calling for the comic’s party to be banned from standing, France’s National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism said images of a crossed out Israeli flag over a map of France “constitute an insult and a threat to oust Jews from their country”.

    Source:  www.totallyjewish.com, 4 June 2009

  • Obama, Sarkozy disagree Turkey’s entry to EU

    Obama, Sarkozy disagree Turkey’s entry to EU

    AP foreign

    CAEN, France (AP) – €” President Barack Obama and French President Nicolas Sarkozy don’t see eye to eye on whether Turkey should be allowed to join the European Union.

    Obama supports EU membership for the largely Muslim country. Sarkozy (sahr-koh-ZEE’) opposes it.

    Obama says Turkey is an important NATO ally is helping with the war in Afghanistan. He says Turkey’s economy is growing and that the country wants closer relations with Europe — something Obama says he encourages.

    Sarkozy says he supports Turkey’s integration into Europe, but that he and Obama disagree on how to achieve it.

    The two leaders spoke at a news conference Saturday before D-Day celebrations in Normandy, France.

    Source: www.guardian.co.uk, June 7 2009

  • BNP ‘wife’ hits out at TV show

    BNP ‘wife’ hits out at TV show

    By Richard Marsden
    A BRITISH National Party Euro election candidate from South Yorkshire has been condemned by Jewish leaders for remarks made about the Holocaust in a television documentary.
    Marlene Guest, of Kimberworth Park, Rotherham, claimed ‘dentistry and plastic surgery’ were positives to come out of the genocide, while being filmed for Sky One documentary ‘BNP Wives’.

    Mrs Guest, standing for the far-right party as a candidate in next week’s European Parliament elections, also questioned the scale of the atrocity, saying: “I’ve read a thing called ‘Did Six Million Jews Really Die?’.

    “If they’d have kept the crematorium going 24/7 for 50 years, they still couldn’t have burnt that amount of bodies.”

    Afterwards she claimed her comments had been ‘twisted’ and said that before the offensive remarks she had told film-makers: “You can’t say anything good came out of the Holocaust.”

    But leading Jewish figures from Sheffield, former Hallam MP Sir Irvine Patnick, vice president of the Orthodox Synagogue, and John Speyer, chair of the Reform Synagogue, said: “In a normal democratic party a candidate who quoted such material would surely be expelled.

    “The BNP, on its website, congratulated Marlene Guest on her TV appearance.

    “We think the electorate should understand that this party remains a fascist organisation, in the tradition of Oswald Mosley.”

    In a letter signed by other leading Jews from across Yorkshire, Sir Irvine and Mr Speyer added: “We believe a party which is so comfortable with neo-Nazi material and denial of the truth of the Holocaust, which decimated Jewish families and communities, is not fit to represent the people of Yorkshire.

    “We call on everyone to go out and vote. A high turnout will ensure the BNP’s message of division and hate is rejected.”

    Mrs Guest said: “I am not anti-semitic and never have been. I have grandfathers who fought in both World Wars and I think the Holocaust was a horrible, evil thing.

    “I am sick of people going on about this film.”

    She added she had asked the makers to remove her from the documentary after she caught them looking at her correspondence but they refused to edit her out and she said she ‘couldn’t afford a lawyer to stop them’.

    Source:  www.thestar.co.uk, 27 May 2009