Small countries join EU, big countries bargain
YAYINLAMA
GÜNCELLEME
Small countries were joining the European Union while big countries were bargaining, Turkey's president said late Dec. 9 after Turkey's disappointment in not progressing in its EU bid while Croatia signed its accession treaty. "Small countries are joining the EU, but big countries are bargaining," Gul said at the fourth World Policy Conference in Vienna, Austria. Gul's remarks came after Croatia, whose negotiation process with the union began at the same time as Turkey, signed an accession treaty with the EU. Croatia will become EU's 28th member in July 2013. Gul said Turkey's real goal was to conclude the negotiation process successfully, and then it may decide not to join the union, just like Norway. When asked how many EU member countries were also members of the G-20, Gul said, "Only three or four of them, and therefore this should be evaluated well." Turkey is a member of G-20 and became an EU candidate country in December 1999. The union launched accession talks with Turkey on Oct. 3, 2005. The EU has so far opened 13 of the 35 chapter headings to negotiations with Turkey. Meanwhile, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said Dec. 10 from Indonesia where he was attending the fourth Bali Democracy Forum that they would ask about the EU membership issue to the Turkish people. "Turkey wants to join the EU… We have been given many obstacles… But the EU is not a single choice for Turkey. We will ask about the EU membership issue to our people," Arinc said during a meeting with Indonesian media representatives. The EU was not sine qua non for Turkey, Arinc said, and Turkey had a model partnership with the U.S. as well as Asia and Africa. Turkey recently opened 30 embassies in Africa, he said.