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France, Germany Want New Turkey Ties, Avoids EU membership

France and Germany sought a new deal with Turkey on Friday to repair relations with President Tayyip Erdogan but would not say whether the Turkish … Continue reading France, Germany Want New Turkey Ties, Avoids EU membership


France and Germany sought a new deal with Turkey on Friday to repair relations with President Tayyip Erdogan but would not say whether the Turkish leader’s new powers and his crackdown on opponents had ended the country’s EU ambitions.

Worried by what the European Union sees as Erdogan’s growing authoritarianism, EU lawmakers called this week for a formal suspension of Turkey’s long-stalled EU bid, saying it does not meet democratic standards.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, who held talks in Malta with his EU counterparts and with Turkey’s top diplomat Mevlut Cavusoglu, said he was “strictly against” annulling Turkey’s decade-long bid for EU membership.

But after a day of talks, he said the real issue was to ensure the bloc had a new, looser agreement to offer Turkey before ditching the EU accession process.

Since its launch in 2005, the entry process has helped Turkey win foreign investment and become the world’s 15th largest economy, EU officials say. But talks have since stalled.

“It does not improve things by cancelling something before we have something new to offer,” Gabriel told reporters.

“We can try to open new channels for negotiations,” he said, referring to an idea to broaden the European Union’s trade ties with Turkey, giving Turkish companies greater tariff-free access to the bloc’s 500 million citizens.

That could soften any political blow from a formal suspension of accession talks, EU officials said.

Austria has led calls to abort the process, which has been frozen by political obstacles over Cyprus and resistance in some EU states to let in the majority Muslim country, even before this month’s referendum.

“It would be absolutely wrong to stick to the illusion of accession (to the EU),” Austria’s Sebastian Kurz said.

Ending Turkey’s five-decade-old dream of joining the European Union is sensitive because the West worries about isolating an important NATO ally that straddles Europe and Asia.

The European Union is Turkey’s biggest foreign investor and biggest trading partner, while Turkey shares a border with Iraq, Syria and with Russia in the Black Sea.