Source: NRC Handelsblad
The Turkish leadership and several EU governments are currently in the middle of a diplomatic spat of rare magnitude. But the real challenge is the outcome of the April 16th referendum.
Hurling bad words for a reason
The reason for Ankara’s fiercely nationalist and hostile narrative is well known. The ruling AKP is not unanimous about a “yes” vote on April 16th. Worse, its ally the nationalist party MHP is leaning toward a “no”. As AKP leaders fear they will lose this crucial referendum, every vote counts. To ramp up the nationalist narrative, European electoral campaigns provide a battleground of choice.
The sad irony of the situation is that, while opponents to the AKP draft constitution cannot campaign freely in Turkey (some are in jail and freedom of expression is severely restricted under the state of emergency), EU governments are asked that a one-man-rule constitution which contradicts EU principles be promoted on European soil.
Europeans have clearly said that terms such as “excuses”, “sanctions”, “banana republic”, “fascist”, “supporter of terrorism” and “Nazi” are utterly unacceptable. No one should be surprised that Ankara has engineered negative unanimity among EU leaders and citizens. Yet, despite the Europe-wide outrage, the deluge of criticisms from Ankara should be met with dignified silence. It, after all, reflects primarily Ankara’s deep fear of losing a crucial vote on April 16th.
The EU was painfully constructed in the past 67 years from the devastation left by war, ethnic cleansing, racism and the Nazi rulers. For my generation of Europeans, hurling the word “Nazi” at German and Dutch leaders hurts deeply, it negates the values and principles on which the entire European Union was built. And despite the many EU woes, because of our own dreadful populists, these values and principles remain very dear to hundreds of millions of us, including many Turks who have become citizens of our countries. The Turkish leadership is ill-advised to criticize these principles for its own electoral gains.
A sober analysis
Let’s remember that, in 2004, Turkey had embarked upon a journey to be part of the liberal democratic system governing EU countries. Later, it gradually distanced itself from its core principles as soon as they appeared to be impediments to the absolute power structure sought by the AKP leadership, especially after the direct presidential election of August 2014.
What is now at stake should be named: the one-man-rule system with no checks and balances and no rule-of-law presented to the voters in the April 16th referendum is undemocratic and EU-incompatible. It will estrange Turkey from the democratic world and will put the accession process on hold until better times.
This is not about a Turkey-EU marriage turned bitter, it is a fundamental watershed. Turkey’s ruling party has been unable to implement a religious-conservative political and societal revolution through democratic means in the past 14 years for the simple reason that the Turkish society’s diversity is immensely resilient. It now seeks do so through a new constitution introducing an authoritarian presidential system where coexistence of different lifestyles will have no place. This is a stark choice for Turkish voters to make.
Life after the battle of words
Many policymakers are asking how the EU should reorganize its relationship with Turkey in this difficult context. Cutting off relations if indeed not an option, but there are other avenues.
The strong EU-Turkey trade, direct investment and technology relationship should continue for a simple reason: the EU represents 50% of Turkey’s total external trade and 75% of Foreign Direct Investment inflows (and the associated technology). The EU-Turkey Customs Union has brought immense benefits for both sides: it brought Turkey’s industry up to EU standards and integrated it in major production networks (Fiat, Ford, Renault) while the European counterparts benefitted from a dynamic workforce, a commitment to excellence and cheaper production costs. The Customs Union should be modernized in the coming months and years and may even become the centerpiece of EU-Turkish relations.
This will usher in a more transactional relationship, where the goal of aligning Turkey on the EU’s rule of law architecture may be definitively lost. Those citizens of Turkey who aspired to adhering to a European-style liberal democratic system will feel left alone, which will constitute a considerable political loss for the European Union.
Ultimately, there is a simple bottom line: the future of Turkey squarely belongs to those voting in the April 16th referendum. If these voters choose to adopt a one-man-rule system, it is their prerogative, but predictably Western democracies will frown and the Turkish Lira will plunge. If they don’t, it will be the responsibility of the Turkish leadership to go back to a properly working parliamentary system as per the existing constitution. The third possibility, i.e. a cancellation or postponement of the referendum, now rumored because the “no” vote may win, would represent the ultimate denial of democracy.
This article was originally published in Dutch by NRC Handelsblad.