European Union Enlargement: A Status
Report on Turkey’s Accession Negotiations

Vincent Morelli
Section Research Manager
April 5, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS22517
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

European Union Enlargement: A Status Report on Turkey’s Accession Negotiations

Summary
October 2009 marked the fourth anniversary of the European Union’s decision to proceed with
formal negotiations with Turkey toward full membership in the Union and launched the annual
period when all three European Union institutions, the Council, Commission, and Parliament,
were required to assess the progress Turkey had made or failed to accomplish in the accession
process and to issue recommendations on whether and how the process should continue.
Many “Turkey-skeptics” saw the end of 2009 as a deadline for Turkish action that would have
marked a critical juncture for the future of Europe’s relationship with Turkey. At issue was not
only the positive progress Turkey had achieved in meeting the requirements of the EU’s acquis
communautaire
but whether a specific lack of progress by Turkey would force EU member states
into a difficult debate pitting loyalty to another member state, being shunned by a candidate for
Union membership, versus Europe’s long-term strategic interests in Turkey. The principal issues
regarding Turkey’s accession center around what the EU believes has been too slow of a pace for
certain critical reforms within Turkey; a perceived ambivalence toward the EU by the current
Turkish leadership; Turkey’s failure to live up to its agreement to extend the benefits of its
customs union with the EU to Cyprus, including the continued reluctance by Turkey to open its
sea and air ports to Cypriot shipping and commerce until a political settlement has been achieved
on Cyprus; and a continued skepticism on the part of many Europeans about whether Turkey
should be embraced as a member of the European family. Further complicating the attitude
toward Turkey was the lack of a settlement of the political stalemate on Cyprus and the ongoing
debate within parts of Europe over the implications of the growing Muslim population in Europe
and the impact Turkey’s admission into the Union would have on Europe’s future. Thus, the talk
once again was of a potential “train wreck,” the suspension of negotiations, revised talk of a
different relationship with Turkey, and renewed expressions of doubt over whether Turkey should
ever be admitted into the Union.
On October 15, the European Commission issued its fourth formal report on Turkey’s accession
progress followed by the EU Council, which issued its conclusions on Turkey’s progress on
December 8. Both 2009 reports, like their previous reports, were marked by a mixed assessment
of Turkey’s accomplishments thus far in working through the various chapters of the accession
process that have been opened. The reports noted some progress in judicial reform and relations
with the Kurds and Armenia, but little progress in other areas such as media freedoms. Contrary
to some views within Europe, neither the Commission nor the Council viewed their 2009 reports
as any more significant or important than previous annual reports.
In February 2010, the EU Parliament completed its review of Turkey’s progress and adopted a
resolution regarding the Union’s enlargement strategy. The Parliament’s assessment, although
similar to that of the Commission and Council, did include rather tough language in its
accompanying resolution.
During this period, unification talks continued between Greek and Turkish Cypriots, but an
overall settlement remained elusive. Short of such a settlement, Turkey was unwilling to open its
ports to Cyprus. Although the debate in all three institutions was animated in part, the Union
clearly decided to defer any difficult decisions regarding Turkey’s accession negotiations to a
later time.

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European Union Enlargement: A Status Report on Turkey’s Accession Negotiations

Contents
The EU Accession Process .......................................................................................................... 1
The Cyprus Dilemma .................................................................................................................. 2
Turkey’s Initial Path to European Union Accession ..................................................................... 4
Current Status of Turkey’s Accession .......................................................................................... 5
Possible Scenarios..................................................................................................................... 11
U.S. Perspectives ...................................................................................................................... 12
Assessment ............................................................................................................................... 13

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 14

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European Union Enlargement: A Status Report on Turkey’s Accession Negotiations

The EU Accession Process1
The European Union (EU) views enlargement as an historic opportunity to promote stability and
prosperity throughout Europe. The criteria for EU membership require candidates to achieve
“stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for
and protection of minorities; a functioning market economy, as well as the capacity to cope with
competitive pressure and market forces within the Union.”2
Under Article 49 of the Treaty on the European Union, any European country may apply for
membership if it meets a set of criteria established by the Treaty. In addition, the EU must be able
to absorb new members, so the EU can decide when it is ready to accept a new member.
Applying for EU membership is the start of a long and rigorous process. The EU operates
comprehensive approval procedures that ensure new members are admitted only when they have
met all requirements, and only with the active consent of the EU institutions and the governments
of the EU member states and of the applicant country. Basically, a country that wishes to join the
EU submits an application for membership to the European Council, which then asks the EU
Commission to assess the applicant’s ability to meet the conditions of membership.
Accession talks begin with a screening process to determine to what extent an applicant meets the
EU’s approximately 80,000 pages of rules and regulations known as the acquis communautaire.
The acquis is divided into 35 chapters that range from free movement of goods to agriculture to
competition. Detailed negotiations at the ministerial level take place to establish the terms under
which applicants will meet and implement the rules in each chapter. The European Commission
proposes common negotiating positions for the EU on each chapter, which must be approved
unanimously by the Council of Ministers. In all areas of the acquis, the candidate country must
bring its institutions, management capacity, and administrative and judicial systems up to EU
standards, both at national and regional levels. During negotiations, applicants may request
transition periods for complying with certain EU rules. All candidates receive financial assistance
from the EU, mainly to aid in the accession process. Chapters of the acquis can only be opened
and closed with the approval of all member states, and chapters provisionally closed may be
reopened. Periodically, the Commission issues “progress” reports to the Council (usually in
October or November of each year) as well as to the European Parliament assessing the progress
achieved by a candidate country. Once the Commission concludes negotiations on all 35 chapters
with an applicant, in a procedure that can take years, the agreements reached are incorporated into
a draft accession treaty, which is submitted to the Council for approval and to the European
Parliament for assent. After approval by the Council and Parliament, the accession treaty must be
ratified by each EU member state and the candidate country. This process of ratification can take
up to two years or longer.3
The largest expansion of the EU was accomplished in 2004 when the EU accepted 10 new
member states. In January 2007, Romania and Bulgaria joined, bringing the Union to its current
27 member states. Since then, the EU has continued supporting the enlargement process.

1 For more detailed information on EU accession see, “The Process of Joining the EU” on the European Commission’s
website at http://ec.europa.eu/enlargement.
2 Conclusions of the European Council, Copenhagen, Denmark, June 1993.
3 CRS Report RS21344, European Union Enlargement, by Kristin Archick.
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Currently, there are three candidate countries—Croatia, Turkey, and Macedonia. There also is
speculation that Iceland will soon join this list.
Prior to October 2009, in order for enlargement to continue, two barriers that existed had to be
overcome. First, and although not explicitly stated, certain conditions established by the 2000
Treaty of Nice seemed to limit the EU to 27 members. In order for any other new country to be
admitted to the Union, the Nice Treaty would have had to be amended or a new treaty ratified to
allow further expansion of the Union. The proposed Treaty for a European Constitution would
have facilitated further enlargement, but that Treaty was rejected by France and the Netherlands
in the spring of 2005. The successor attempt, the Lisbon Treaty,4 was agreed to in 2007 by the EU
leadership and placed on a ratification schedule in all 27 member states. The Lisbon Treaty,
however, was rejected in 2008 by Ireland, halting the ratification process. A second national
referendum on the Treaty was held in Ireland on October 2, 2009, and this time the Treaty was
overwhelmingly approved. On October 10, 2009, the president of Poland signed the Treaty
followed on November 3 by the signature of the president of the Czech Republic allowing the
provisions of the Treaty to take effect on December 1, 2009. A second barrier to the current
accession structure involves any candidate country whose accession could have substantial
financial consequences on the Union as a whole. Under this provision, admission of such a
candidate can only be concluded after 2014, the scheduled date for the beginning of the EU’s next
budget framework.5 Currently, only Turkey’s candidacy would fall under this restriction.
The Cyprus Dilemma6
In December 2002, in advance of the conclusion of the EU’s accession negotiations with Cyprus,
then-U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan presented a comprehensive plan to resolve the political
division on Cyprus and to reunite the island. Although the decision to admit Cyprus into the
Union was taken several years before, the EU had hoped to admit a unified Cyprus by May 2004
and quickly endorsed the Annan Plan. Over the next 18 months, the U.N. worked to negotiate the
Annan Plan so that both the Greek and Turkish Cypriots could accept a final settlement. On
March 29, 2004, Annan presented his final revised plan. Neither side was fully satisfied with the
proposal but agreed to put it to referenda in the North and the South on April 24. The Plan was
accepted by the Turkish Cypriots but rejected by the Greek Cypriots.
The EU expressed regret over the Greek Cypriots’ rejection of the Annan Plan and congratulated
the Turkish Cypriots for their “yes” vote in the referenda. Nevertheless, the EU, in part under
pressure from Greece, agreed in May 2004 to include the divided island as one of 10 new EU
members. EU leaders indicated that they were determined to put an end to the isolation of the
Turkish Cypriot community and facilitate the reunification of Cyprus by encouraging the
economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community even as the Greek Cypriot part of the
island began to enjoy the benefits of membership in the Union, including the ability to approve or
veto future applicant states.

4 For additional information on the Lisbon Treaty and EU reform see, CRS Report RS21618, The European Union’s
Reform Process: The Lisbon Treaty
, by Kristin Archick and Derek E. Mix.
5 “The Process of Joining the EU,” Op. Cit.
6 For more information on Cyprus, see CRS Report RL33497, Cyprus: Status of U.N. Negotiations and Related Issues,
by Carol Migdalovitz, and CRS Report R41136, Cyprus: Reunification Proving Elusive , by Vincent Morelli.
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On July 7, 2004, the EU Commission proposed several measures to end the Turkish Cypriots’
isolation and to help eliminate the economic disparities between the two communities on the
island. In addition to a package of financial assistance, the EU proposed to allow direct trade
between northern Cyprus and the EU member states. The Greek Cypriot government agreed to
the aid if it were to be administered by the government of Cyprus but rejected the trade measure
as something close to international recognition of a Turkish Cypriot state. The Greek Cypriots
also insisted that all trade between the north and Europe be conducted via the south. The EU has
since opened an aid office in the North and has provided some Euro 250 million in economic
assistance to the Turkish Cypriots. Turkey and the Turkish Cypriots, however, have sought
additional measures to end what they consider the continued “isolation” of northern Cyprus.
After the Greek Cypriots rejected the Annan Plan, four years followed during which the U.N.
appeared to distance itself from the settlement process as the Secretary General chose not to name
a new Special Advisor on Cyprus to oversee it and the two sides on the island did not engage in
substantive negotiations. In February 2008, Dimitris Christofias, a Greek Cypriot, was elected
President of the Republic of Cyprus on a campaign pledge of renewing serious negotiations for a
settlement, saying that he hoped to achieve a “just, viable, and functional solution” to the Cyprus
issue. In March 2008, Christofias met Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat, and they agreed
to establish working groups and technical committees to lay the foundation for resuming
negotiations. On May 23, the two leaders reaffirmed their commitment to the U.N. Security
Council’s principles for a settlement: a bizonal, bicommunal federation characterized by the
political equality of Greek and Turkish Cypriots. In July, the Secretary General named former
Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer as his Special Advisor on Cyprus, and the two
leaders agreed to start “full-fledged” negotiations in September 2008. At the same time, the two
sides undertook confidence-building measures intended to improve cooperation in areas such as
criminal justice, environmental protection, crisis management, and the like.
In the first round of negotiations, which began in September 2008 and continued through the
early part of 2009, Christofias and Talat held 40 meetings on core issues—governance and power-
sharing, property, European Union affairs, security and guarantees, economy, and territory—in
order to identify areas of convergence and divergence. They reported some initial progress on
governance, European Union affairs, and the economy but little on property and security
guarantees, which are particularly difficult and sensitive for Turkey. A second round of
negotiations began in September 2009, and Christofias and Talat agreed to expedite the schedule
by holding at least two meetings a week instead of one. Turkish officials have supported Talat
since the talks began. Both they and Talat have insisted, however, that the Turkish security
guarantee continue in any settlement, which the Greek Cypriots oppose.
While there had been no official deadline for reaching a settlement on Cyprus and holding new
referenda, two events in particular had served to influence the negotiation process with respect to
Turkey. The first involved the 2009 EU Commission and Council’s progress reports on Turkey,
which were released in October and December, respectively. Had either conclusions taken a very
hard line against Turkey, Ankara’s support for the settlement negotiations could have shifted to
the negative, thus raising doubts about a Cyprus settlement altogether. As it turned out, neither the
Commission’s nor Council’s conclusions did anything to impede Turkey’s membership prospects
as both choose to take the constructive approach of urging the parties onward. The second issue,
that of “Presidential” elections in northern Cyprus scheduled for April 18, 2010, did present a
form of deadline. Turkish Cypriot leader Talat, a champion of the Annan Plan and of the
settlement process, faces a challenge from his “Prime Minister” Dervis Eroglu, an opponent of
the Annan Plan and critic of Talat’s negotiating positions. Eroglu’s party won an overwhelming
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victory in April 2009 parliamentary elections in northern Cyprus and threatened Talat’s
continuation as president in the 2010 election. Talat had attributed the victory of Eroglu’s party in
2009 in part to lingering Turkish Cypriot dejection after they had voted for the Annan Plan and
the failure of the European Union and others in the international community to end their isolation.
An election victory by the opposition in April 2010 could certainly slow the negotiation process
until the new government settles in but it could also represent a shift in the Turkish Cypriot
negotiating position. Throughout 2009, Turkey’s role in the negotiating process was watched very
closely to determine whether they were being helpful or not. Aware of the implications that a
change in the leadership in the north could have on its own status in EU accession negotiations,
Ankara appeared to lend its support to Talat and issued several statements suggesting their
support for Talat’s negotiating strategy and that no matter who won the next elections in the north,
the negotiations for a political settlement on the island had to continue.
On March 30, 2010, in advance of the elections in the north, Cypriot leaders Christofias and Talat
concluded their direct negotiations after 18 months and over 60 meetings without achieving a
settlement agreement.
Turkey’s Initial Path to European Union Accession
Immediately after the EU’s decision in May 2004 to admit 10 new members, including Cyprus,
the EU turned its attention to future candidates for Union membership, especially Turkey.
Turkey and the European Commission first concluded an Association Agreement (Ankara
Agreement) aimed at developing closer economic ties in 1963. A key provision of that agreement
was the commitment by Turkey to establish a customs union that would be applied to each EU
member state. In 1987, Turkey’s first application for full EU membership was deferred until 1993
on the grounds that the European Commission was not considering new members at the time.
Although not technically a rejection of Turkey, the decision did add Turkey to a list, along with
the United Kingdom, of nations to have been initially turned down for membership in the Union.
In 1995, a Customs Union agreement between the EU and Turkey entered into force, setting a
path for deeper integration of Turkey’s economy with that of Europe’s. In 1997, the Luxembourg
EU summit confirmed Turkey’s eligibility for accession to the EU but failed to put Turkey on a
clear track to membership. The EU recognized Turkey formally as a candidate at the 1999
Helsinki Council summit but asserted that Turkey still needed to comply sufficiently with the
EU’s political and economic criteria before accession talks could begin.7
In February 2001, the EU formally adopted an “Accession Partnership” with Turkey, which set
out the priorities Turkey needed to address in order to adopt and implement EU standards and
legislation. Although Ankara had hoped the EU would set a firm date for initiating negotiations at
the December 2002 Copenhagen Summit, no agreement was reached. As mentioned, two years
later, 10 new member states, including a divided Cyprus, were admitted into the Union. In
December 2004, and despite the fact that Turkey had still not met its obligations regarding its
customs union, the European Council stated unanimously that Turkey had made enough progress
in legislative process, economic stability, and judicial reform to proceed with accession talks
within a year. In the aftermath of the Council’s decision, the European Parliament voted
overwhelmingly to support the Council’s decision to move forward with Turkey.

7 Op cit., CRS Report RS21344, European Union Enlargement.
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Under a compromise formula agreed to by the Council, Turkey, before October 2005, would have
to sign a protocol that would adapt the 1963 Ankara Agreement, including the customs union, to
the 10 new member states of the Union, including the Republic of Cyprus. Turkey signed the
Protocol in July 2005 but made the point that, by signing the Protocol, it was not granting
diplomatic recognition to the Republic of Cyprus. Turkey insisted that recognition would only
come when both the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities on the island were reunited. The
decision by Turkey to make such a declaration regarding Cyprus immediately served to sour
attitudes of many within the EU. In September 2005, the EU Council issued a rebuttal to Turkey.
In that declaration, the EU reminded Turkey that Cyprus was a full member of the EU, that
recognition of all member states was a necessary component of the accession process, and that the
EU and its member states “expect full, non-discriminatory implementation of the Additional
Protocol to all EU member states ... and that failure to implement its obligations in full will affect
the overall progress in the negotiations.”8
On October 3, 2005, after a prolonged debate over the status of Cyprus and expressions of
concern by some European member states over admitting Turkey altogether, the EU Council
agreed to a “Negotiating Framework,” and opened formal accession talks with Turkey. However,
the language of the Framework included an understanding that the negotiations would be open-
ended, meaning an outcome (eventual full membership) could not be guaranteed. This language
was to become a significant rallying point for some European governments which support a
relationship with Turkey that falls short of full membership in the Union.
Current Status of Turkey’s Accession
The relationship between Turkey and the European Union has vacillated between support for and
doubt over future membership. In general, concerns regarding immigration, jobs, and
uncertainties over its Muslim population have continued to cloud European attitudes about
Turkey. Although projected by many to require 10 or more years to accomplish, the question of
Turkey’s membership in the Union became a debating point during consideration of the Treaty for
a European Constitution in the spring of 2005. Many observers suggested that one of the factors
contributing to the defeat of the Treaty in France and the Netherlands was voter concern over
continued EU enlargement and specifically over the potential admission of Turkey, which was
considered by many as too large and too culturally different to be admitted into the Union.
The controversy over Turkey’s accession continued until the decision in October 2005 to begin
accession negotiations. Expressions of concern by Germany, France, and Austria, which proposed
that Turkey be given a “privileged partnership” instead of full membership, forced the Council to
go to the 11th hour before agreeing to open accession talks.
For Turkey, 2006 became a more difficult year in its relations with the EU even as formal
negotiations between Brussels and Ankara began. The membership of Cyprus in the Union,
despite the Greek Cypriot rejection of the U.N. unification plan, and Turkey’s public stance on
not dealing with the Greek Cypriot government, served to aggravate relations further and, in the
opinion of some observers, may have contributed to a changing attitude within Turkey towards
the EU. At the outset, Cyprus expressed its opposition to formally opening and closing the first of

8 Enlargement: Turkey, Declaration by the European Community and Its Member States, Council of the European
Union, September 21, 2005.
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35 negotiation chapters unless Ankara met its obligations to recognize all 10 new EU member
states, including Cyprus. Despite the Cypriot position, the Science and Research Chapter,
considered one of the least controversial of the acquis, was opened on June 12, 2006. However,
on June 16 the EU Presidency issued a statement that referred implicitly to Turkey’s continued
refusal to open its ports to Greek Cyprus as required by Turkey’s customs union with the EU. The
EU again asserted that Turkey’s failure to “implement its obligations fully will have an impact on
the negotiating process.”9
Ankara responded that Turkey would not open its seaports or airspace to Greek Cypriot vessels
until the EU ended the “isolation” of the Turkish Cypriots by providing promised financial aid
and direct trade between the EU and the north, aid that at the time was being blocked by Cyprus.
EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn warned Ankara that the resolution of the Cyprus issue
was a central stumbling block in the accession talks and that a “train crash” was coming later in
the year if Turkey did not resume implementing reforms and honoring its commitments in the
Accession Agreement and the additional Protocol.10
In July 2006, Finland assumed the rotating Presidency of the EU, and the Finnish Prime Minister
urged Turkey to resolve the contentious issue with Cyprus over access to ports and airports by the
end of 2006. In Turkey, advocates for closer relations with the EU began to believe that European
interest in Turkey was changing and that what should have been EU incentives to promote and
encourage necessary reforms in Turkey had become conditions that many Turks felt were
designed to discourage Turkey. As a consequence, many observers believe that the reform process
in Turkey began to slow as a reassessment of the relationship began to take hold.11 In September,
both EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and then-Finnish Foreign Affairs Minister
Erkki Tuomioja warned Turkey over the pace of reforms and the issue of Cyprus.
In September 2006, the European Parliament joined in the criticism of Turkey when the
Committee on Foreign Affairs issued a progress report on Turkey’s accession. The Parliament’s
finding suggested that reforms in Turkey had slowed, especially in the implementation of freedom
of expression, religious and minority rights, law enforcement, and the independence of the
judiciary, and urged Turkey to move forward. During a visit to Paris in September, Turkey’s then-
Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul promised additional reforms and noted that the Turkish
Parliament had reconvened a week earlier than normal in September in order to discuss a new
reform package. The EU Parliament also stated that “recognition of all member states, including
Cyprus, is a necessary component of the accession process and urged Turkey to fulfill the
provisions of the Association Agreement and Additional Protocol.”12 On September 14, 2006,
then-Cyprus Foreign Minister George Lillikas suggested that without Turkey’s compliance with
its obligations, Cyprus would likely object to opening any further chapters of the acquis.13

9 See Council of the European Union - 15/16 June (2006), Presidency Conclusions, at http://www.consilium.europa.eu.
10 Interview with Olli Rehn on EU Enlargement, Reuters, March 28, 2006.
11 A public opinion poll conducted by the German Marshall Fund in 2004 indicated that 75% of those Turks
interviewed responded that being in the EU would be a good thing for Turkey. A similar poll in 2006 indicated that that
number had declined to 54%. See Transatlantic Trends, German Marshall Fund, 2006.
12 See “Turkey’s Progress Towards Accession,” Committee on Foreign Affairs, European Parliament, September 2006
at http://www.europarl.europa.eu.
13 See “Cyprus FM: No More EU Chapters for Turkey Before Progress Report,” Cyprus Embassy, September 2006.
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With Commissioner Rehn’s warning of a “train crash” fast approaching in the Fall of 2006, the
Finnish Presidency, committed to the accession process, worked with all parties to try to reach a
compromise that would avoid any serious disruption in Turkey’s candidacy for membership. On
November 29, 2006, the EU Commission issued its assessment of Turkey’s accession
negotiations. Although acknowledging that negotiations should move forward, the Commission
noted that Turkey had not met its obligations toward Cyprus and recommended that the Council
take actions regarding the opening of any new chapters in the acquis. At the EU Summit in
December a compromise was reached that averted the worst possible outcome but clearly
enunciated a strong opinion against Turkey. Based on the recommendations of the EU
Commission,14 the Council again noted that Turkey had not fully implemented the additional
Protocol to the Ankara Agreement and, more importantly, decided not to open negotiations on
eight chapters of the acquis covering policies relevant to Turkey’s position on Cyprus, or to
provisionally close any chapters until the Commission had confirmed that Turkey had fully
implemented its commitments under the Additional Protocol.15 The Council further required the
Commission to report on Turkey’s progress “in its forthcoming annual reports, in particular 2007,
2008, and 2009.”16 While the compromise decision prevented the feared “train crash,” it did
portend a slowing of the accession negotiations and, in the eyes of some Turkey skeptics,
presented a deadline of sorts for Turkey to implement the Additional Protocol by December 2009,
which is now fast approaching. Others, however, point out that 2009 was identified simply
because it was the final year of the current Commission’s term.
The accession process entered 2007 with a mixed sense of direction. Turkey apparently felt its EU
aspirations had been dealt a serious blow with the EU decision to condition negotiations on
certain key chapters until the Cyprus issue was resolved. Matters were further complicated within
Turkey as the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) began to come under fire from a
determined opposition. In addition, presidential elections were scheduled in Turkey which would
necessarily complicate the timing of the accession negotiations. Finally, the issue of Turkey’s
membership entered France’s 2007 presidential election campaign, during which conservative
candidate and then-Interior Minister Nicholas Sarkozy, in a campaign speech, stated that he felt
Turkey should never become a member of the Union.17
Turkey’s 2007 presidential election became mired in controversy. The Turkish Grand National
Assembly (parliament) had the responsibility to make the selection and the ruling AKP then held
a comfortable majority in the legislature, but its numbers fell short of the two-thirds majority
needed to elect a president on the first or second ballot. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
named his close associate, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, to be AKP’s candidate for president.
Because AKP has Islamist roots, the prospect of its controlling the presidency as well as the
parliament threatened secularists in the military and the political opposition. The main opposition
party, the Republican People’s Party (CHP), boycotted the first round of the voting, in which Gul
won a majority but less than two-thirds of the vote. CHP then argued that the vote was invalid
because a quorum was lacking and petitioned the Constitutional Court to nullify it. At the same

14 See “Commission presents its recommendations on the continuation of Turkey’s accession negotiations,” European
Commission, November 29, 2006.
15 This freeze on negotiations included chapters on the free movement of goods, right of establishment and freedom to
provide services, financial services, agriculture and rural development, transport policy, and external relations, among
others.
16 Conclusions of the European Council, December 11, 2006.
17 “News Analysis: Sarkozy May Cause Global Ripple,” International Herald Tribune, September 11, 2006.
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time, the Office of the Chief of the General Staff posted a warning on its website as a reminder
that the Turkish Armed Forces are the “sure and certain defenders of secularism”—an ineptly
veiled threat of possible military interference in the political process, which has occurred several
times in Turkey’s past.18 Shortly thereafter, the Constitutional Court nullified the first round of the
presidential election on the grounds that a quorum had not been present.
Prime Minister Erdogan then called early national elections for July 22. AKP won with almost
47% of the vote, a larger plurality than in 2002, and 341 seats in the 550-seat parliament. CHP
lost 37 seats, and the far-right Nationalist Action Party (MHP) returned to the legislature after
having failed to cross the threshold in 2002. Although AKP supports Turkey’s EU aspirations and
both the CHP and MHP criticize (but do not outright oppose) it, the EU was not an issue in the
campaign nor did EU statements exert much influence over domestic political developments
leading to the election. Instead, the parties competed on parochial Turkish-based issues. With its
parliamentary majority secure, AKP was able to elect Gul president in August in a first round of
voting with the support of MHP.
Despite the internal political events in Turkey which slowed the reform process, the EU agreed to
open three additional chapters of the acquis and identify the benchmarks necessary to open 14
additional chapters should Turkey meet the requirements for doing so. By the end of the year, the
EU Commission, in its annual recommendations to the Council, noted some progress in the
political reform process but also pointed out areas where additional progress was needed. These
areas included freedom of expression, the fight against corruption, cultural rights, and civilian
oversight of the security forces. In its December 2007 conclusions, the EU Council praised
Turkey for the resolution of the political and constitutional crisis earlier in the year and the
conduct of the presidential and parliamentary elections as signs that democratic standards and
rule of law were sufficiently implemented and supported in Turkey. However, the Council also
expressed regret that overall political reform had achieved limited progress and once again
warned Turkey that it had not made any acceptable progress in establishing relations with
Cyprus.19
Throughout 2008, the Turkish government continued to deal with multiple political challenges,
including the call for the dissolution of the AKP and for the banning of several prominent
politicians, and an investigation into an alleged conspiracy involving several retired military
officers and others, to create chaos throughout Turkey and provoke the military to overthrow the
government. In July 2008, the Constitutional Court found that the AKP was indeed a focus of
“anti-secularist activity,” but the vote fell one short of the 7 out of 11 justices required to close the
party. The conspiracy investigation has led to numerous arrests and continues.
These internal political affairs polarized the political atmosphere in Turkey, and the global
economic crisis also began to consume the government’s attention. Despite these problems, which
virtually ground the accession negotiations to a halt, six additional chapters of the acquis were
formally opened by the EU. However, key chapters relating to energy, external relations, and
security and defense matters had been held up by several EU member states, including France,
although in the case of energy, some have suggested that France did propose to open this chapter
during its 2008 Presidency of the Council.

18 Text of General Staff Statement “On Reactionary Activities, Army’s Duty,” Open Source Center Document
GMP20070428016005.
19 Conclusions of the European Council, December 11, 2007.
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Averting another constitutional and political crisis was seen as sign that democracy in Turkey was
strong. Nevertheless, Turkey again came in for EU Council criticism when it reviewed the
Commission’s annual progress report. Although upbeat about the internal political situation in
Turkey, the Council again stated that “Turkey has not yet fulfilled its obligations of full non-
discriminatory implementation of the Additional Protocol to the Association Agreement and has
not made progress towards normalization of its relations with the Republic of Cyprus.”20 Perhaps
recognizing that the future of the accession negotiations faced a 2009 decision it set in 2006, the
Council, in its conclusions, stated that “progress is now urgently awaited.”
In early 2009, Turkey, in a sign of a renewed commitment to the accession process, announced
the appointment of its first full-time EU accession negotiator, State Minister Egemen Bagis, a
decision noted as a positive step by the EU Council’s December 2009 conclusions. Turkey also
has moved forward on a number of reform fronts also noted by both the Commission and the
Council. In June, the 11th chapter of the acquis was opened.
In March 2009, Turkey’s accession process hit a political bump in the European Parliament,
which adopted three resolutions based on enlargement reports issued by special rapporteurs. In
the resolution on Turkey, the Members of Parliament noted with concern the “continuous
slowdown of the reform process” and called on Turkey “to prove its political will to continue the
reform process.” The resolution also stressed the need to reach a solution to the Cyprus question
and called for Turkey to remove its military forces from the island. Finally, the Parliament noted
that the customs union agreement, specifically with Cyprus, had not been fully implemented, and
pointed out that “the non-fulfillment of Turkey’s commitments by December 2009 will further
seriously affect the process of negotiations.”21
On October 15, 2009, the European Commission issued its annual “Progress Report on Turkey”
along with its report on “Enlargement Strategy and Main Challenges 2009-2010.” As expected,
the Report on Turkey did not include anything new or dramatic and did not refer to any deadline
for Turkey’s accession process. The report did note progress Turkey had made in judicial reform,
relations with both the Kurds and Armenia, and its positive role in the Nabucco pipeline issue that
will serve to provide an alternative source for natural gas for Europe. However, the report was
also littered with phrases ranging from “some progress” to “little progress” to “no progress” and
stated that significant efforts were still needed in areas such as freedom of expression and
freedom of the press. The report also noted that while Turkey has expressed public support for
negotiations regarding a Cyprus solution, the Commission expected Turkey to actively support
the ongoing negotiations. Finally, as with its other assessments since 2006, the Commission again
noted that Turkey had made no progress toward fully implementing the additional protocol
regarding the use of its ports by Cyprus or in normalizing relations with the Republic of Cyprus.22
The Commission, referencing the 2008 Council conclusions, stated that “it was urgent that
Turkey fulfills its obligations.”
While the reaction to the Commission’s report by Turkey’s EU accession negotiator, Egemen
Bagis, seemed to be that the report was at least balanced, some believe the Commission’s

20 Conclusions of the European Council, December 2008.
21 2008 progress reports on Croatia, Turkey, and FYROM: EP sets out its views on enlargement. European Parliament
Press Release, March 12, 2009.
22 For more information see “Turkey: 2009 Progress Report,” prepared by the European Commission, October 14,
2009.
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assessment was too mild and written to avoid creating possible problems while the negotiations
involving Cyprus were under way.
On November 23, 2009 the European Parliament, after concluding its debate on the
Commission’s 2009 enlargement report (which also included comments on Croatia and Iceland),
adopted its own resolution regarding enlargement.23 With respect to Turkey, the resolution noted
positive progress in judicial reform, internal dealings with the Kurdish minority, relations with
Armenia, and Turkey’s support for the Nabucco gas pipeline project. The resolution, however,
was more negative towards Turkey’s lack of progress on freedom of expression, freedom of the
press, and religious freedom. The Parliament also “deplored” the continued refusal of Turkey to
implement the provisions of the Additional Protocol with Cyprus. In what was viewed as an
interesting comment by some, the Parliament expressed “regret” that NATO-EU strategic
cooperation continued to be blocked by Turkey. The Parliament then indicated that it would issue
its own assessment of Turkey’s accession progress in early 2010.
On December 8, the EU Council, after reviewing the Commission’s assessment and adding its
own review, issued its annual “Council conclusions on enlargement.”24 The report, like the
Commission’s October progress report, was viewed as balanced, emphasizing the positive aspects
of the negotiation process and lacking any particularly critical assessment of Turkey’s
shortcomings. The Council welcomed Turkey’s continued commitment to the negotiation process
and, along with the Commission and Parliament, noted positive developments in judicial reform,
civil-military relations, and cultural rights. The report also noted successful steps taken by Turkey
toward the Kurds, Armenia, and the Nabucco pipeline project. And, like its partner institutions,
the Council noted Turkey’s shortcomings in the areas of freedom of expression and freedom of
the press, respect for property rights, and in other areas. In what was considered its toughest
assessment of Turkey’s actions, the Council “noted with deep regret that Turkey, despite reported
calls, continues refusing to fulfill its obligations regarding the Additional Protocol and
normalization of its relations with the Republic of Cyprus.”25 The Council concluded its
assessment of Turkey by stating that “progress is now expected [on the above issue] without
further delay.”26
Some observers believed that the 2009 Commission and Council decisions could have been the
subject of very difficult internal debate due to a lack of consensus among the member states on
how to respond to Turkey’s shortcomings in the reform process and its failure to meet its customs
union obligations toward Cyprus after four years.27 However, it did not appear that the debate in
either institution was very difficult after all and both the Commission and Council, perhaps for
the sake of the ongoing negotiations on Cyprus, were able to issue a balanced report giving credit
to the Turks for some positive developments and offering criticisms where there were noted
shortcomings, deferring any negative actions on the negotiation process until a later point in time.

23 European Parliament resolution on the Commission’s 2009 enlargement strategy paper concerning the Western
Balkan countries, Iceland, and Turkey, B7-0185/2009, November 23, 2009.
24 See “Council conclusions on Enlargement/stabilization and association process,” General Affairs Council meeting,
December 8, 2009.
25 ibid. EU Council, December 8, 2009.
26 op. cit.
27 Observations made by the author during discussions with EU and other officials.
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Under the accession process, discussion of an EU response to a candidate country’s failure to
meet its accession requirements can only take place when the Commission releases its Progress
Report and before the Council issues its conclusions. Since the 2006 Council conclusions
specifically listed 2009 as a possible deadline for certain progress to be made as part of the
accession talks, many Turkey skeptics in Europe had begun to suggest that the accession process
for Turkey may have to be significantly altered. For instance, in an interview with Spanish news
media, French Secretary of State for European Matters Pierre Lellouche again reiterated his
government’s position that if Turkey failed to satisfy the requirements for membership or if the
European Union’s capacity for absorption did not permit it, alternatives should be considered.
Although not specifically stating that the EU needed to prepare such alternatives by the end of
2009, Lellouche did state that “we wonder whether it is not the time to begin reflecting on
alternative paths [for Turkey] without interrupting the negotiations.”28 This statement reflected
France’s (and perhaps others’) continued opposition to full membership in the Union for Turkey
and support for a yet-to-be defined “special relationship” or “privileged partnership,” which
Turkey would reject. Similarly, on September 11, 2009, Cypriot Foreign Minister Markos
Kyprianou stated that while Cyprus was “a genuine supporter of Turkey’s EU course,” Cyprus
was “one of the strictest supporters who are not prepared to compromise the principles and values
that the EU is founded upon just for the sake of a speedier accession of our neighbor.”29
On February 10, 2010, in a follow-up to earlier actions on the accession process, the European
Parliament issued its report on Turkey’s accession progress, which differed little with the 2009
reports of the Commission and Council. However, in what was considered its strongest statement
to date, the Parliament adopted a resolution “deploring” Turkey’s non-compliance with the
additional protocol for the fourth consecutive year and warned that failure to implement it without
delay could seriously affect future accession negotiations. The resolution also called on Ankara to
begin the immediate withdrawal of all Turkish troops from Cyprus. The Parliament did, however,
acknowledge Turkey’s progress with its Kurdish population and with Armenia, and in response to
Turkey’s energy role in support of the EU’s Nabucco pipeline initiative, suggested that the EU
open the Energy Chapter of the acquis.
Since 2009 ended with little change in the EU’s accession approach toward Turkey, attention will
now turn to June 2010, when a six-month report on the talks will be issued, and then again in the
fall, when both the Commission and Council will again issue their annual assessments.
Possible Scenarios
All three institutions of the European Union have expressed concern that Turkey’s efforts to enact
and implement critical political reforms have been slow and, worse, insufficient even while
acknowledging that some advances, such as restricting the jurisdiction of military courts, other
judicial reforms, and the granting of more rights to Turkish Kurds have been made. However,
Turkey’s failure to open its ports and airspace to the Republic of Cyprus, in accordance with its
Protocol agreement, continues to increase the risk that accession negotiations between Turkey and
the EU could come under new pressures throughout 2010 thus keeping alive several possible
scenarios.

28 “France Seeks alternative to Turkey’s EU membership,” TurkishNY.com, September 3, 2009.
29 “Cyprus, one of a few genuine supporters of Turkey’s EU Course,” Cyprus News Agency, September 11, 2009.
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For most observers, a “best-case” scenario for moving forward would be if a political settlement
on Cyprus could be reached and Turkey opened its ports to Greek Cypriot ships and aircraft. In
return, the Council would unfreeze the eight chapters of the acquis, allowing the accession
process to continue on a normal course. Although leaders on both sides in Cyprus seem to have
been genuinely committed to reaching a fair settlement of the political stalemate throughout 2009,
a comprehensive agreement remained illusive and depending on the outcome of the April 2010
elections in north Cyprus, could be set back significantly. If this were the case, actions by Turkey
to implement the Additional Protocol would not be anticipated, again raising serious concerns
within the EU.
A variation of this scenario that could be pursued by the EU in 2010 might include a compromise
in which Turkey would open a few of its ports, perhaps without formally recognizing the
government of Cyprus, if negotiations over the status of Cyprus started up soon after the April
elections and appeared to be making progress. In return, although more problematic, the EU
could permit direct trade between North Cyprus and the EU, perhaps by shifting the decision to
permit such trade to the EU Parliament under the new powers Parliament gained with the
implementation of the Lisbon Treaty. Enhanced EU economic assistance would also be provided
to the North. Complicating this option is the perception of limited flexibility on the part of both
Ankara and Nicosia. Domestic politics have already made it difficult for Ankara to compromise
on the Cyprus issue without winning concessions for the Turkish Cypriots. Greek Cypriots
contend that recognition of the Republic is a legal condition set by the Union that cannot be
compromised indefinitely. Nicosia also has the added issue of just how much compromise can be
accepted. Talk of a possible agreement between Christofias and Talat on governance issues
involving a rotating presidency and on Turkish settlers led one of the political parties in the
governing coalition to quit the coalition and resulted in a difficult vote within the other coalition
partner whether to remain in the coalition, which it voted to do. Thus far, the Turks do not appear
to be open to this idea, and the Greek Cypriots continue to reject any linkage between Turkey’s
customs union obligations and EU assistance or other outreach to the Turkish Cypriots.
A “worse-case” scenario for Turkey would be if the Cyprus talks collapsed as a result of the
outcome of the April 2010 elections in the north followed by a decision by the Council in the
summer of 2010 to call a temporary suspension of all accession negotiations on those chapters of
the acquis already in progress and a veto of any proposals to open additional chapters until
Turkey complies with the Protocol. It has been suggested that other EU member states may
sympathize with such a suggested course of action if requested by the Greek Cypriots. This
scenario, however, is complicated by what may be a Greece–Greek Cypriot agreement that
Cyprus cannot be the one that would ultimately sabotage Turkey’s EU prospects.
U.S. Perspectives
Although the United States does not have a direct role in the EU accession process, successive
U.S. Administrations and Congresses have continued to support EU enlargement, believing that it
serves U.S. interests by spreading stability and economic opportunities throughout the continent.
During the Bush Administration, the United States had been a strong and vocal proponent of
Turkish membership in the European Union, apparently much to the displeasure of many EU
member states who felt that the United States did not fully understand the long and detailed
process involved in accession negotiations, did not appreciate the long-term impact the admission
of Turkey could have on Europe, and defined the importance of Turkey in too-narrow terms,
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generally related to geopolitical and security issues of the region. This latter view seems to be one
held by countries such as France, and perhaps Germany and Austria.
Most European member states believe that the Obama Administration and the 111th Congress will
continue to support Turkey’s EU membership aspirations. President Obama’s statements in
support of Turkey during his April 2009 visit to Ankara and his assertion that Turkey’s accession
would send an important signal to the Muslim world affirmed this but also caused anxiety among
some Europeans who felt that putting Turkey’s accession in those terms suggests that anything
short of full EU membership for Turkey would represent a rejection of Turkey by the West, and
by association, a rejection of the Muslim world. Many in Europe hope that the United States will
scale back its rhetoric and use U.S. relations with Turkey in more constructive ways for the EU.
For instance, some Europeans seem to feel that when the United States interjects itself into the
EU’s business of who can join the Union by promoting Turkey’s EU membership, the United
States should also be more helpful in encouraging Turkey to move more rapidly on reforms and to
comply, at least in part, with the Additional Protocol regarding Turkey’s customs union. When
asked in an interview in June 2009 whether the United States could be more helpful on this point,
Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasia Philip Gordon demurred, saying that
“ultimately, this is an EU issue; we’re not directly involved in it.... This is between the EU and
Turkey.” 30 Other Europeans believe that Turkey’s membership in NATO is the appropriate venue
to demonstrate that Turkey can interact constructively with an organization dominated by most of
the same European countries that belong to the EU and play a positive role in foreign policy
matters that impact Europe, whether it is the Europe of the EU or the Europe of NATO. The
Europeans would like to see the United States use its influence to help shape a more constructive
NATO-EU relationship, which is strained in a large part by actions taken or not taken by Turkey
because of the Cyprus issue. Afghanistan is another area where Europeans would like to see more
cooperation from Turkey and help from the U.S. Turkey, with one of the largest standing armies
in NATO, deploys over 30,000 troops to Cyprus, an EU member state, while deploying fewer
troops to the NATO ISAF mission in Afghanistan than many other NATO allies believe they
could deploy even though Turkey did augment its contribution to ISAF by deploying additional
troops to Kabul in mid-November 2009.
Assessment
Supporters and opponents of Turkey’s EU membership will continue to argue from two different
sets of talking points. While Turkey and its supporters, such as the United States, argue in support
of Turkey’s role as an important regional energy and foreign policy actor, many in Europe express
concern regarding Turkey’s political, economic, social, and religious orientation. Turkey and its
supporters argue that Turkey, through the EU plan to build the Nabucco gas pipeline in part
through Turkey, will play an even more important energy role and could play an important role
with respect to Iraq, Iran, Russia, and the Black Sea region. These advocates sometimes seem
miffed that the EU does not appear to appreciate that role or place a greater importance on those
issues when considering Turkey. Europeans, on the other hand, point out that while energy
security and foreign policy are important elements in the operations of the EU, those issues
comprise only two or three of 35 chapters in the acquis, and Turkey must come into compliance
with the requirements of the entire acquis. In addition, many Europeans argue that Turkey is
already playing an important role on defense and foreign policy matters with Europe through its

30 See Assistant Secretary Gordon’s interview with Tom Ellis of Kathimerini, June 27, 2009, Corfu, Greece.
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membership in NATO. Further, many Europeans point to public opinion attitudes in both Europe
and Turkey with respect to membership in the EU. In the latest publication of the German
Marshal Fund’s Transatlantic Trends, [only] 32% of Turks polled held a favorable opinion of the
EU. According to the poll, [only] 34% of Turks believed Turkey shared the same values as the
West and Turkish support for EU membership since 2004 has fallen from 73% to 48%.31 In that
same study, [only] 20% of the Europeans polled thought Turkey joining the EU was a good thing.
Finally, while many Turks believe the change in atmospherics between Europe and the Obama
Administration could make U.S. support for Turkey’s accession more effective with the
Europeans, this era of goodwill appears unlikely to persuade the Europeans to be more open-
minded about Turkey’s membership in the EU.
For many European experts, however, the EU-Turkey accession talks are likely to take ten or
more years to complete and that the issue is receiving far more attention now than is necessary.
They anticipate that different governments will come and go in both Ankara and throughout
Europe before this process reaches a decisive point, that attitudes will vacillate, and that new
problems will continue to arise along the way.
Now that the EU Commission, Council, and Parliament have offered their assessments of the
2009 accession process, attention should shift to both the current negotiations in Cyprus and any
comments the government in Ankara may make regarding its commitment to the Additional
Protocol. If it becomes less likely that a settlement between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot
communities will be reached as a result of the April elections in the north and thus unlikely that
Turkey will comply with the requirements of the Protocol, the EU will have a major debate on its
hands yet again in the forth quarter of 2010. In this case, it is possible that the Republic of Cyprus
and a few other EU member states may dig in their heels and push for some type of “sanctions”
on Turkey or at least sufficiently critical remarks on Turkey’s lack of commitment in meeting its
obligations at forthcoming meeting of the Commission or Council. On the other hand, a majority
in the EU seem determined not to allow Turkey’s accession talks to come to a halt especially if
the talks involving Cyprus give the appearance of progressing. The EU will likely continue to
engage in intensive talks with Turkey regarding its Protocol obligations in order to find a way to
once again avoid a possible “train crash” in 2010.

Author Contact Information

Vincent Morelli

Section Research Manager
vmorelli@crs.loc.gov, 7-8051



31 See Transatlantic Trends: Key Findings 2009, published by the German Marshall Fund, September 2009, at
http://www.transatlantictrends.org
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