{"id":20699,"date":"2010-07-13T19:08:19","date_gmt":"2010-07-13T17:08:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.turkishforum.com.tr\/en\/content\/?p=20699"},"modified":"2014-01-05T20:00:29","modified_gmt":"2014-01-05T18:00:29","slug":"so-europe-ends-at-the-bosporus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/2010\/07\/13\/so-europe-ends-at-the-bosporus\/","title":{"rendered":"So Europe Ends at the Bosporus?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>There is one largely unheralded, and outside its own  frontiers probably little mourned, casualty of the European crisis of  confidence\u2014Turkey. In its decades-long aspiration to become a member of the  European community, this nation on the fringes of the continent\u2019s southeastern  frontier has played the part of the poor little orphan boy, nose pressed firmly  against the glass shop window filled with sweets. Somehow, Turkey, despite its  most valiant efforts, has never managed to find a way inside.<\/p>\n<p>This may no longer matter. Turkey appears to have all but  given up on its aspirations and is finally prepared to cast its lot with the  Middle East\u2014neighboring nations it\u2019s traded with, even ruled, for centuries. If  there was any more persuasive evidence of this new reality, it was Turkey\u2019s  sudden and dramatic confrontation over the Gaza blockade with Israel, whose own  fate is so closely bound to Europe and America.<\/p>\n<p>The central question facing the European Union as it stares  down the barrel of potential fiscal collapse isn\u2019t which nation will fail next,  but which nations should not have been invited in the first place. Growth in  both Portugal and Spain has stagnated, and their debt is nearing junk level.  Greece\u2019s growth rate shrank by 0.8 percent, and the growth rates in Spain (1  percent), Portugal (0.08 percent), Germany (0.2 percent) and France (0.1  percent) have been anemic. Yet Turkey\u2019s GDP is growing at 2.3 percent. While  there are still \u201ccandidate members\u201d of the EU, who now seem quite likely to  remain in that status for the indefinite future, none outranks Turkey in the  metrics that should make its membership so compelling. Indeed, there is a  certain irony that Greece, rather than Turkey, was invited into the club that it  has now threatened to bring down. The two nearly came to blows repeatedly over  the divided island nation of Cyprus\u2014now a member of the very union that Turkey  has been so desperate to join. The case of Turkey is compelling because it  reflects a larger theme. What makes a bloc like the European Union thrive, or  even function effectively? And is the organization of the world by blocs the  future, or merely a brief historical hiccup that is now on the verge of  unraveling, perhaps catastrophically?<\/p>\n<p><em>Istanbul or  Constantinople?<\/em><\/p>\n<p>When I landed in Istanbul for the first time, more than 30  years ago, it was quite clear that I was not in Europe anymore. Minarets and  domed mosques dominated the skyline. Despite all warnings, I got lost in the  Great Bazaar, the Kapali \u00c7arsi or Covered Market\u2014a sprawling warren of tiny  alleys and more than 4,000 stalls packed with the mysteries of the East, from  centuries-old Korans and intricately-woven carpets to huge sacks of exotic  spices, glazed tiles and pottery, copper and brassware, leather, cotton and wool  clothing, carved meerschaum pipes and alabaster bookends. When the Sublime Porte  of the Ottoman sultans ruled half of the known world, this capital city was  known as Constantinople, and it held the bulk of southeastern Europe, the Middle  East and North Africa in its sway, its reign stretching into Spain and Portugal,  its armies spreading fear from the Balkans to the very gates of Vienna. But the  sultan chose the wrong side in the First World War. His empire was already  crumbling across Mesopotamia and North Africa, and the Treaty of San Remo, an  offshoot of the Paris negotiations that led to the Treaty of Versailles, put a  final stake through the heart of the Ottoman Empire. The Allied leaders created  several nations carved from its remains: Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon,  eventually Saudi Arabia, and one core country called Turkey. This territory and  its limited resources\u2014vastly reduced from the once grand empire\u2014would, the  Allied leaders hoped, be forever weakened.<em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p>As it happened, the Allies created a nation more viable,  stable and independent than any other in the region. It\u2019s a tribute, in part, to  Turkish energy and persistence and the vision of one gifted leader, Mustafa  Kemal Atat\u00fcrk, who believed passionately in the virtues of democracy, secularism  and the West. As Turkey\u2019s first prime minister, then president, Atat\u00fcrk was  determined to eradicate the last vestiges of the sultanate and set Turkey firmly  on the path to prosperity and success as a modern, secular democracy. The Arabic  alphabet was replaced by a Latinate Turkish version. Islamic and secular law  were clearly divorced, succeeded by a penal code modeled on Italian law and a  civil code modeled on the Swiss. Women were freed from the veil and given full  equality. And the final break with the past? The Hat Law of 1925 introduced the  use of the Western- style fedora, banning the ancient fez. Atat\u00fcrk delighted in  parading through the streets in a sparkling straw Panama.<\/p>\n<p>While Atat\u00fcrk sought to build a secular, westernized state,  he by no means intended to disestablish the dominant religion of Islam. Rather,  he sought to create a nation where all religions would be tolerated. There\u2019s no  doubt that this is where Turkey\u2019s problems with Europe began. Turkey is the only  Islamic nation with European aspirations. In that sense, Europe has always  considered the Bosporus\u2014the strait that flows past Istanbul and serves as the  entrance to the Black Sea\u2014the end of the continent. Most of Turkey is on the far  side, closer in so many ways to the Middle East that it once ruled than the  Europe it now aspires to join.<\/p>\n<p><em>Already Among  Us<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-20700\" src=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/worldpolicyjournal.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"400\" height=\"293\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/worldpolicyjournal.jpg 400w, https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/07\/worldpolicyjournal-300x220.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 400px) 100vw, 400px\" \/>The second set of obstacles obstructing Turkey\u2019s acceptance  into Europe are the gastarbeiter. European nations might have effectively  overlooked Turkey\u2019s Islamic leanings if they hadn\u2019t been thrust so directly,  even intrusively, in their collective faces beginning a half century ago. When  large stretches of Europe\u2014particularly its most economically and demographically  dominant nation, Germany\u2014began to run out of native workers to fuel a post-World  War II growth spurt, the solution was guest workers. At the start of the  Wirtschaftswunder or economic miracle, Germany signed guest worker agreements  with Italy in 1955, followed by Greece in 1960 and Turkey a year later. Almost  immediately, there was an influx of largely unskilled laborers. The Turks were  the first Muslims to arrive in great numbers, bringing their religion, language  and customs with them. Today, there are at least 1.7 million Turks in Germany  who\u2019ve retained their Turkish citizenship and another 1.2 million who\u2019ve become  German citizens. The total, including all those of ancestral Turkish descent,  may number 4 million. They comprise a nation within a nation, indeed a nation  larger than eight other member nations of the EU. While most began by taking on  the menial jobs that Germans shunned\u2014collecting the garbage, digging ditches,  pumping gas, and cleaning factories, offices and homes\u2014increasingly their sons  and daughters sought to work their way up the economic food chain. Often, they  moved from the faceless underclass to a far more visible\u2014and  threatening\u2014status.<\/p>\n<p>This was the situation under a treaty that still required  gastarbeiter to return to their home country after a year or two (few did, of  course). Imagine what could happen with such a nation legally within the walls  of Europe\u2014with a single passport, single currency and virtually no barrier to  movement or, for that matter, employment at will. These were the fears when  Turkey first formally applied for membership to the European Union on April 14,  1987. Today, the issue has become far more complex.<\/p>\n<p>First, there\u2019s terrorism. Islamic  communities in Europe, especially their mosques and their madrassas, are  increasingly being perceived as hotbeds of radical activism. While there is no  evidence that Turks are behind any terrorist actions\u2014indeed the secular nature  of their homeland would suggest quite the contrary\u2014the fear of terrorism is an  ever-present reality.<\/p>\n<p>But within the last several months,  economic imperatives have come to dominate the dialogue. Northern Europe  scarcely needs another drag on its tenuous recovery from the global recession.  But how real is such a fear? Turkey\u2019s growth rate is substantially higher than  virtually any other nation in Europe. While its unemployment is at 14.4 percent,  Spain\u2019s has hit 19.1 percent. At the same time, Turkey\u2019s private sector is  thriving. Its ISE stock market index has soared 57.8 percent in the past year,  compared with 21 percent for Germany\u2019s benchmark DAX index and London\u2019s FTSE,  which edged up just 17.4 percent in the same period.<\/p>\n<p>By other measures, of course, Turkey  is still facing challenges\u2014inflation hovers at 10 percent and its trade deficit  is significant, especially with the EU. But this may simply mean that Turkey is  an enormous market for Europe\u2019s still ailing factories\u2014especially if it were  safely inside the EU and facing lower tariff barriers. Indeed, its vibrant  consumer market of 73 million people should be most attractive to EU  manufacturers and retailers.<\/p>\n<p><em>Barriers Rising<\/em><\/p>\n<p>For the moment at least, Europe is  as large as it is likely to become. It\u2019s increasingly popular to propose  chucking some members overboard to keep the whole European monetary system  afloat. Beyond Portugal and Spain, there are some awfully weak sisters. The  economies of Hungary and Ireland are already contracting at 13.5 and 1.3  percent, respectively. Slovenia has posted a feeble 0.1 percent growth rate,  while Austria and Finland show no growth at all. Candidate members of the EU  will likely remain can didates for the foreseeable future, dismaying such  fledgling democracies (and economies) as Croatia and Macedonia.<\/p>\n<p>Still, the goal of a united  Europe\u2014from its earliest incarnation as the European Coal and Steel Community  (ECSC) in the days following World War II\u2014was just that: unity. First proposed  by French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman on May 9, 1950, in a speech at the  Quai d\u2019Orsay in Paris, the ECSC was designed as a way to prevent further war  between France and Germany, serving to unify Western Europe during the Cold War  while creating a foundation for today\u2019s modern European Union. \u201cEurope will be  born from this,\u201d Schuman said in his message unveiling the proposal, and edited  by President Charles de Gaulle\u2019s Planning Commissioner, Jean Monnet. Monnet went  on to win the title, \u201cfather of a United Europe.\u201d The vision shared by Monnet  and Schuman was \u201ca Europe which is solidly united and constructed around a  strong framework. It will be a Europe where the standard of living will rise by  grouping together production and expanding markets, thus encouraging the  lowering of prices,\u201d Schuman observed, concluding, quite presciently, that  \u201cEurope will not be made all at once, or according to a single plan. It will be  built through concrete achievements which first create a de facto solidarity.\u201d  Europe has achieved all its initial aims, and much more. The six core nations  that formed the ECSC\u2014France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg and the  Netherlands\u2014would ultimately grow to 27 countries, including four kingdoms and  one grand duchy, stretching from Ireland to the Bosporus.<\/p>\n<p>Eventually, the EU began to welcome  nations on Europe\u2019s periphery\u2014states including former members of the Warsaw Pact  and the Soviet-dominated Comecon bloc, and, in the case of the Baltic Republics,  even portions of the former Soviet Union. At the same time, debates grew within  the original core states over whether these fragile economies were vigorous  enough to be subsumed into a single trading and, in time, currency bloc. The  vast disparities between the potent industrial nations of northern Europe, the  more agrarian states of southern Europe and the fledgling economies of Eastern  and Central Europe, all needed to find some sort of equilibrium. In December  1995, when the EU agreed to move beyond common tariff and immigration regimes to  a single, unified currency. It was an attempt by Europe to assume its place  alongside the United States, with its all but omnipotent dollar, the world\u2019s  premier global currency; the OPEC nations and their universal currency (oil);  the rising, newly-freed empire of China and its renminbi; and the long-time  powerhouse of Japan and the yen. For a time, this grand gesture by Europe  worked\u2014but no longer, at least not now.<\/p>\n<p>The euro is in retreat, the dollar  again is riding high, and China is being watched carefully from Wall Street and  Threadneedle to the Bahnhofstrasse for every indication about what it may do  with its vast holdings of both these global currencies and the debt in which  they are denominated. At this moment, at least, Europe needs no new members to  throw fresh uncertainty into the minds of those who trade and hold this  currency.<\/p>\n<p><em>Pressed Against Which Glass?<\/em><\/p>\n<p>So what is Turkey, its nose pressed  against an increasingly clouded glass, to do? If it has any alternative, it  should probably look elsewhere, return to its roots, face East rather than West,  at the same time forsaking its traditionally close ties with Israel\u2014the only  Middle East nation to maintain such ties at all. Indeed, Turkey could have quite  a lot to gain by embracing\u2014this time as a partner\u2014the Arab world its predecessor  once ruled.<\/p>\n<p>On May 25, 1981, the six Arab  nations bordering the Persian Gulf signed an agreement creating the Gulf  Cooperation Council (GCC). There was a certain symmetry here \u2014 six members, all  sharing a common geography and contiguous heritage, banding together for  purposes of joint economic advancement and, ultimately, security. It was the  European Coal and Steel Community, a quarter century later and a world apart.  All shared a host of traits. Each of them\u2014 Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi  Arabia and the United Arab Emirates\u2014was a major oil producer and member of OPEC,  which includes a number of non-Arab and non-Middle East nations. But in contrast  to polyglot Europe, the GCC members were all Arabic speaking and overwhelmingly  Muslim.<\/p>\n<p>In many respects the nations of the  GCC have far more in common with each other than do most members of the EU with  their own neighbors. Beyond a common language, all have much the same tribal,  Bedouin origins, virtually identical natural resources and source of wealth  (oil), similar topography and comparable rates of development and growth. All  share common challenges and threats\u2014a theocratic Iran seeking to assert is  dominance over the region; a powerful West anxious to preserve its access to the  oil resources so vital to its own economic viability; and the growing Asian  nations of China and India, anxious to assure their own access to the same  sources of wealth and expansion.<\/p>\n<p>The GCC has considered a common  currency from the moment of its creation. But several intra-bloc frictions\u2014like  whether the central bank will be in Saudi Arabia or the UAE\u2014have slowed the  process. And now, of course, the very stability of such common currencies has  been called into question. In May, the bloc decided to push off the proposed  date for a common currency from 2010 to 2015, and may launch the project without  two of its members, Oman and the UAE. As Abdulrahman al-Attiyah, the GCC  Secretary-General, observed the GCC should draw some lessons from the European  debt crisis.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond the UAE and Oman, however,  there are other nations waiting eagerly in the wings to join up. Just as the EU  has its candidate members, including Turkey, so the GCC has Iraq and Yemen. Each  brings enormous strengths and the potential for enormous tensions as well.  Together, Yemen, with 23.6 million people, and Iraq, with 30.7 million, would  dwarf their fellow members. Iraq, with the world\u2019s fourth largest proven oil  reserves, would add some serious economic muscle, though following years of  torturous conflict, it is still the scene of instabilities unlike any in current  GCC member states. Equally, Yemen is a nation torn by conflicts and Al Qaeda  operations that pose an enormous threat to neighboring Arab nations.<\/p>\n<p>What the GCC has demonstrated,  however, is that the ECSC was not the last organization to be based on the  principles of supra- nationalism. Soon after its formation, the GCC set forth a  host of ambitious goals\u2014unified regulations that governed the economies of  member countries and their trade relations, as well as tourism, legislation and  administration; growth in science and industry, mining and agriculture; and  conservation of precious water and other resources. The GCC nations promoted  joint scientific research and business ventures. Most notably, they formed a  unified military presence under \u201cThe Peninsula Shield.\u201d While the shield\u2014a  two-brigade unit of some 10,000 infantry and armored troops based in Saudi  Arabia near the Kuwait-Iraq border\u2014is still a viable, if flimsy, military force,  the common market aspects of the GCC have flourished and hold a substantial  promise for the future. With a total GDP of some $1.1 trillion, the GCC is  barely a tenth the size of the United States or the EU, but the six Middle East  nations boast a population of just 38.3 million, barely the size of Poland and  half that of Turkey. The result is an average per capita income of $28,720, just  $4,000 below that of France, and some $10,000 above Hungary and Poland. All the  strengths should be an enormous attraction to a potential candidate nation like  Turkey.<\/p>\n<p><em>Turkish Challenges<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Should it finally disabuse itself of  its European aspirations and turn toward its Middle East roots, Turkey brings  along its own series of challenges and opportunities. In terms of scale, its  $880 billion GDP and its population of 73 million would nearly double the size  of the GCC with a single stroke.<em> <\/em>But  there are some serious differences and historic frictions that would also make  such a union fraught. While Turkey is unquestionably an Islamic nation, the  ancestral enslavement by the Sultanate of much of the Arab world for six  centuries still resonates. At the same time, Turkey would be the only nation  within the GCC that fails to use the Arabic alphabet\u2014a significant obstacle,  though clearly the EU has managed to succeed, if not always thrive, despite its  multilingual nature.<em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p>Turkey has already succeeded in  cultivating close economic and trade relations with much of the Arab world. In  May, Saudi Arabia and Turkey signed a military cooperation pact, though Turkey  remains at least nominally a member of NATO. And when it came time in June for  the UN Security Council to impose new sanctions on Iran, Turkey was one of two  countries to vote against the measure. The other was Brazil. Two years ago,  Turkish foreign minister Ali Babacan and Qatari Prime Minister Shaikh Hamad Bin  Jasem Bin Jabr Al Than, then chairman of the GCC Ministerial Council, signed a  joint agreement declaring Turkey a strategic partner of the GCC. In the  aftermath of the Israeli attack on Turkish ships seeking to run the Israeli  blockade on Gaza. Turkey\u2019s president hosted Russian Prime Minister Vladimir  Putin and Iranian President Mahmoud Amadinejad, as well as leaders of  Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Palestinian Authority and a dozen other nations at a  regional security summit in Istanbul\u2014a direct challenge to Europe and the United  States. \u201cThe consequences of acts undertaken with feelings of hatred and  vengeance are obvious. Unfortunately, we saw a merciless example of that  recently,\u201d Turkish President Abdullah Gul told the leaders gathered for the  summit\u2014a pointed reference to Israeli actions against the flotilla. In the  economic sphere, Turkey\u2019s Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said in February on a  visit to Bahrain that a free trade agreement\u2014an important first step in any  economic unification\u2014would be signed with the GCC by the end of this year.<\/p>\n<p>Clearly, Turkey has been hedging its bets. And there are  compelling reasons for it to do so. Today\u2019s transient troubles within the EU  notwithstanding, during the next several decades, large blocs will increasingly  dominate the world\u2019s economic, financial, political and security systems.<\/p>\n<p><em>Bloc-ing and  Tackling<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The EU and the GCC are perhaps the most advanced regional  blocs in terms of their overall development and unification, but by no means the  only such groupings that have been launched in recent years. In 1996, China,  Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan formed the Shanghai Cooperation  Organization (SCO), which was joined five years later by Uzbekistan and, without  China, comprises the overlapping Eurasian Economic Community. While any sort of  common currency for the SCO is unlikely in the foreseeable future\u2014their  economies being so vastly divergent\u2014a host of other cooperative ventures could  make them an important regional force.<\/p>\n<p>The SCO has served as an umbrella for joint Russia-China war  games, and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov has begun talking about  bringing India into such exercises in the future. At the same time, joint  actions are underway in counter-terrorism and counter-narcotics trafficking.  Seven years ago, Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao proposed that the members of  the SCO begin moving toward a free trade zone, though there appears to have been  little concrete movement in this direction. And like the EU and the GCC, there  are states that seem quite passionate about joining the SCO for a host of  strategic and economic reasons. Thus far, India, Pakistan, Iran and Mongolia  have been awarded observer status, while the United States has been rejected.  Two years ago, Iran applied to become a full member.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, the bitter conflict between Kyrgyzstan and  its Uzbek minority could poison whatever good will remains between these two  countries. If the ultimate outcome is a partition of Krygyzstan into its ethnic  Kyrgyz north and its Uzbek south, yet another member could be added to the SCO,  which could ultimately serve in some fashion as an arbitrator.<\/p>\n<p><em>Asia and  Beyond<\/em><\/p>\n<p>In 1967, long before the GCC or the SCO, five other Asian  nations\u2014Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand\u2014 signed a  document in Bangkok creating the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).  At the time, at the height of the Cold War and the war in Vietnam, it was seen  as an economic counterpart to the American-dominated Southeast Asia Treaty  Organization (SEATO), the equivalent of the European Union and NATO or Comecon  and the Warsaw Pact. Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Myanmar and Papua New Guinea have  since joined ASEAN, which now comprises 10 countries with a staggering 577  million people and a GDP of $3.4 trillion, though a per capita annual income of  under $6,000. The vast disparities of wealth again make it an unlikely candidate  for a common currency anytime soon. Nevertheless it has pledged to create an  ASEAN Economic Community by 2015, and has already achieved some internal tariff  accommodations. In a region that stretches across four time zones, there\u2019s even  talk of a single ASEAN Common Time.<\/p>\n<p>In Africa, regional groupings are  also in various stages of gestation. The African Economic Community hopes to  move toward a free trade zone in 2019 and have a common currency by 2028;  there\u2019s a five-member East African Community with its own customs union; an  Economic Community of Central African States already shares a common currency  called the CFA franc; and the Economic Community of West African States has,  like the other African blocs, free trade areas. But integration of such  disparate, often feuding economies, governments, and even tribes suggests that  any true union may be in a somewhat more distant future.<\/p>\n<p><em>Onward and Inward<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The world is watching what will  happen to the euro, and the European Union. There seems to be little doubt that  both will, in some fashion, survive. Putting such a large, intricate genie back  into its bottle is unlikely and potentially catastrophic. At the same time, it  will become ever more vital for small groups of nations to band together,  ensuring their ability to navigate the increasingly turbulent waters of a global  economy dominated by a handful of powerful currencies. Then there\u2019s the added  benefit of ensuring their own national security in a time of transnational  terrorism and cross-border threats.<\/p>\n<p>How the world organizes itself is  an essential issue. Small nations gravitate to the orbit of larger neighbors in  some form of union, which, if successful, inevitably provokes stronger, closer  and more comprehensive ties. In my previous column, I examined how a small  Himalayan kingdom, Bhutan, was able to survive being crushed between China and  India. For geographical reasons, it chose India as its partner, though in  cultural, linguistic and religious terms it was far closer to Tibetan Chinese on  the northern slope of the Himalayas. Since the relationship with India allows it  to retain its independence and prosper, inevitably that relationship has  strengthened. When Yugoslavia returned to its ancestral roots and broke into  seven component nations, the stronger components found a unity of sorts within  the EU, which allowed each to retain an individual identity while guaranteeing  prosperity and security. Equally, many nations of the former Soviet Union are  finding a new unity in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which will likely  flourish only as it manages to avoid dominance by a single member\u2014Russia or  China.<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, artificial  boundaries created decades, even centuries, in the past by statesmen and  adventurers with little understanding of the people and tribes who live there,  will cease to play an important role in international organization. Borders will  cease to be the subjects of conflicts and bickering as nations make voluntary  choices on just how much sovereignty they are pre-pared to relinquish in the  interests of peace and security. Above all, the issue may increasingly become  which bloc a nation decides to cast its lot with. Turkey, for one, appears to be  making such a choice. In the process, it\u2019s sounding a wakeup call to many in the  West, especially Washington, that nations left on the outside will need to make  some difficult choices\u2014sooner rather than later.<\/p>\n<p>\u2014David A. Andelman*<\/p>\n<p>*David Andelman is the editor of  World Policy Journal.<\/p>\n<p>Download .pdf version of this document<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>There is one largely unheralded, and outside its own frontiers probably little mourned, casualty of the European crisis of confidence\u2014Turkey. In its decades-long aspiration to become a member of the European community, this nation on the fringes of the continent\u2019s southeastern frontier has played the part of the poor little orphan boy, nose pressed firmly [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":83,"featured_media":20700,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[21],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-20699","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-eu-members"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20699","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/83"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=20699"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20699\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/20700"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=20699"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=20699"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.turkishnews.com\/en\/content\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=20699"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}