Turkey gears up for normalizing ties with EU

Source: Xinhua| 2018-07-25 03:17:04|Editor: Mu Xuequan
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ANKARA, July 24 (Xinhua) -- Turkey is gearing up for seeking reconciliation with the European Union (EU) following President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's victory in the June 24 elections.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Tuesday vowed to restore ties with its European partners, which have been strained by tension in the past few years.

"In the new term, we will make further efforts to resolve current problems," Cavusoglu was quoted by local media as saying.

"Normalization with the Netherlands has already started. We have good dialogue with France. In the upcoming period we will realize tripartite and quartet meetings in Europe," he said.

In the past few years, especially after the 2016 failed coup, Turkey's ties with its European partners, including Germany, Netherlands and Austria, have deteriorated due to the campaign tours by Turkish officials targeting Turkish diaspora in the European countries and the EU criticism of Turkish massive crackdown on dissidents.

The tensions in the Turkey-EU ties have adversely affected Ankara's EU membership bid.

Cavusoglu was pessimistic about resuming EU membership talks, but adding that his government should continue reforms whether Turkey's EU process gains momentum or not.

"Maybe, we cannot take many steps on the process of membership, but we can enhance our cooperation on other issues," he said, underlining the mutual interests of Turkey and the EU for upgrading existing Customs Union agreement.

Experts said that the Turkish minister's remarks signalled Ankara's wiliness to reconcile with EU countries, which could pave the way for restarting the membership talks.

"Normalization of the relations between Turkey and the West does seem to be appearing on the horizon," said Beril Dedeoglu, a professor of international relations at Galatasaray University, who served as the minister of EU affairs in the interim government in 2015.

The Europeans are recently taking a "relatively milder position" towards Turkey, Dedeoglu noted.

But if the EU proposes once again a "privileged partnership" to Turkey instead of full membership, this will only provoke new crises, he said.

Turkey apparently has started to realize that the climate of permanent crisis with Europe has reached its limits, according to Dedeoglu.

Mesut Hakki Casin, of the University of Istinye, suggested that neither Turkey nor EU can give up each other.

"Relations with the EU will continue based on mutual and pragmatic interests," he stated.

Casin pointed at the fact that Turkey has a huge number of tourists visiting from Europe and 52 percent of its export go to the EU.

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