WASHINGTON,
December 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. President George
W. Bush said Tuesday, December 10, that he stands "side by
side" with Turkey in its bid to join the European Union, with the
E.U. backing French-German proposal on starting membership talks in
2005.
"We
join you, side by side, in your desire to become a member of the
European Union," said Bush, who hoped to secure Turkey's support
in the event of U.S.-led military action against Iraq, after a meeting
with the popular leader of Turkey's ruling Justice and Development
Party (JDP) Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Erdogan,
speaking through an interpreter, said Turkey viewed accession to the
European Union as "the most important modernization project of
our country since the establishment of the republic."
Joining
the 15-member union would be "a great jump-start for enhancement
of democracy," said Erdogan.
U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, National Security Adviser Condoleezza
Rice, and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz were all present for
the meeting, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
In
a related development, the European Union "overwhelmingly"
supported a Franco-German proposal to begin E.U. membership talks with
Turkey in 2005 if the country is in suitable shape, Germany said
Tuesday.
German
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said his E.U. colleagues had been
"overwhelmingly positive" in talks Monday, December 9, about
the offer to open talks in July 2005, which depends on the European
Commission giving a favorable review of Turkey's bid in 2004.
"There
was a very large majority which could back this proposal,"
Fischer told reporters in Brussels, clarifying the support from the 15
E.U. members as "double-digit".
"I
hope Turkey will see how far the door has opened," he added.
The
E.U.'s Danish presidency said the Copenhagen summit would take up the
proposal by German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and French President
Jacques Chirac.
"We'll
make a good text for Turkey in Copenhagen," promised Danish
Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller.
"The
[German-French] proposal will be an inspiration for us, but I cannot
tell you what will be in the final text," he told a news
conference, adding the E.U. needed to see implementation of reforms
announced recently by Turkey.
Turkey
took a major leap forward in August with a series of ground-breaking
reforms, among them the abolition of the death penalty and cultural
freedom for the Kurds.
Ankara
argues the reforms justify a start date for accession talks, four
years after the country officially became an E.U. candidate.
"Turkey
wants to have its justified place in the enlargement process,"
Turkish Prime Minister Abdullah Gul told a parliamentary meeting of
his Justice and Development party.
"We
want a concrete date from the Copenhagen summit," he added.
"If
injustice is done against Turkey at Copenhagen, it would be a
political decision by E.U. leaders.
"If
they employ tricks and pretexts against our clear, honest, determined
and courageous behavior, it would be their own decision."
Britain,
Italy and Spain favor opening E.U. membership talks with Turkey
immediately after the proposed European Commission review in 2004,
rather than waiting to 2005, Spanish Foreign Minister Ana Palacio
said.
"It
does not make any sense, this intermediate period between Turkey
accomplishing the Copenhagen criteria and beginning the
negotiations," she told reporters here.
"The
date could be 2004, but we have to have a consensus among the
15."
Four
years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, an E.U. summit in the Danish
capital in June 1993 agreed on tough criteria to judge when the newly
liberated nations of eastern Europe would be ready to join the Union.
The
Copenhagen criteria require a country to have stable institutions
"guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law [and] human
rights", a "functioning market economy" and the ability
to comply with E.U. law "through appropriate administrative and
judicial structures".
Unlike
the 10 candidates set to receive their accession invitations at this
week's summit, Turkey appears a long way off from meeting those
exacting demands, according to Brussels.
A
Commission report in October said Turkey had made "considerable
progress" but "had not fulfilled the political
criteria" necessary to start E.U. negotiations.
Gul
counter-argues however that Turkey has "fulfilled the Copenhagen
political criteria."
On
Monday, December 2, the United States leaned hard on the E.U. to open
its doors to Turkey, saying it would be a crucial step to encouraging
democratic reform in the Muslim world.
Wolfowitz,
speaking in London, conceded it was up to E.U. leaders - not
Washington - to decide if and when to open accession talks with
Ankara.
But
he left no doubt that the United States' strategic interests would be
best served if Turkey were to take its place in the European Union.
"It
really is impossible to overstate how decisive this period is,"
he said, referring to the EU summit in Copenhagen that will address
the Turkish question.
"The
Turks are striving to develop a free and democratic and tolerant
society that could be a useful model for others in the Muslim
world," said Wolfowitz at the International Institute for
Strategic Studies (IISS).
"It
is the great good fortune for NATO and the West, indeed of the world,
that Turkey - one of the strongest, most reliable, most self-reliant
of allies - occupies one of the most strategic crossroads of the
world," he said.
A
breakthrough on Turkey at Copenhagen, he said, would be "to the
benefit not only of Turkey and of Europe, but to the entire world -
including my country."
"History
suggests that a European Union that welcomes Turkey will be even
stronger, safer and more richly diverse than it is today,"
Wolfowitz said.
"The
alternative exclusionary choice is truly unthinkable," said
Wolfowitz