This particular chicken was always goint to come home to roost.
Germany
Furious After Turkey Issues Ultimatum, Threatens With Refugee Exodus
1
August, 2016
Ever
since a shocked Europe rushed to sign
a "refugee" deal with Turkey's
Erdogan in March of this year, according to which it would pay the
Turkish ruler €6 billion and offered Turks visa-free travel across
the customs union just to contain the 2 million Syrian refugees
inside its borders and prevent another mass migration exodus toward
Germany, Erdogan knew he has
the upper hand in all future negotiations with Europe.
This
was confirmed yesterday when Turkey announced it would not fulfill
its part of the refugee deal with the EU if the bloc does not lift
its visa requirements for Turkish citizens by October, Turkey’s
foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, told a German daily.
Turkey’s
fulfillment of its commitments under the refugee deal with the EU
“depends
on the lifting of visa requirements for our citizens that is also a
subject of the agreement,” Cavusoglu
said during an exclusive interview with Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung. The minister also stressed that the Turkish government is
waiting for a “specific deadline” to be set for the lifting of
visa requirements. “It can be early or mid-October but we wait for
an exact date,” he said.
Diplomatically, Cavusoglu
emphasized that his words are “not a threat,” but added that “if
there is no visa abolition, we will be forced to abandon the
agreement struck on March 18 concerning taking back [refugees].”
So
yes, it was a threat, if only one which reacts to Europe's
realization that it had made a bargain with the devil, and was trying
to pull out however while hoping Turkey would keep its end of the
bargain. Turkey, however, has refused, and now the 2 month countdown
to October and another refugee flood may have begun.
Cavusoglu
also said that the deal is working only because Turkey is taking
“very serious measures” to stop the refugee inflow, particularly
in fighting people smugglers. Under the agreement signed in March,
Brussels pledged to pay Turkey €6 billion, grant visa-free travel
to Turkish nationals, and speed up EU accession talks with Ankara. In
exchange, Turkey agreed to take back all illegal migrants and
refugees that reach Greece via Turkey, while allowing a certain
number of asylum seekers to travel to the EU legally.
The
deal came into force on March 20. The visa-free pass was initially to
be introduced by July, however, Europe came up with a loophole
according to which Turkey had failed to comply with all of the EU’s
72 criteria for lifting the visa requirement, including relaxing its
stringent anti-terror legislation, which has become a sticking point
in negotiations. The situation was further complicated,
as RT adds,
by the failed coup attempt in Turkey on July 15, as many EU officials
and politicians have voiced concern over the Turkish government’s
crackdown on fundamental rights. Some have stressed that the foiled
rebellion must not be used as a “carte
blanche for arbitrariness.”
New
concerns emerged after the possible reintroduction of the death
penalty in Turkey, which caused particular concern in Europe. EU
Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini has warned that no country
with capital punishment can become an EU member, and German
government spokesman Steffen Seibert said that bringing back the
death penalty would lead to an “immediate suspension of accession
talks.”
In
the meantime, the refugee leaks may have already started. On Sunday
Greece complained about an increasing influx of refugees from Turkey,
stressing that the number of new arrivals had grown significantly
following the foiled coup. Some people in Greece have even compared
the present situation to that which had existed before the deal with
Turkey was struck.
* *
*
Fast
forward to today when Germany's vice chancellor Sigmar Gabriel
responded to Turkey's latest ultimatum, saying It depends on Ankara
whether Turks enjoy visa-free travel to Europe, adding that it was
the right decision to ban a live broadcast by the Turkish president
to a rally in Cologne on the weekend. “It is up to Turkey if there
is or there isn't visa liberalization,” Reuters quoted German Vice
Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel as saying while on an official visit to
northern Germany.
“Germany
and Europe should under no circumstances be blackmailed,” Gabriel dded.
The
vice chancellor also welcomed the move by Germany’s highest court
to block a livestream address by Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan to a rally of Turkish nationals in Germany’s Cologne on
Sunday.
Needless
to say Germany is playing a dangerous game here as Erdogan knows he
has little to lose if he breaches the terms of the March deal, which
he can claim was already violated by Europe and thus boost his
populist image even more. After all, once Germany is flooded with
another million in potential radical jihadists, it will come crawling
to Ankara, begging to redo the deal, only this time the terms will be
that much higher. Then again, perhaps Germany and the "European
democracies" should have though of all this before they agreed
to deal with Erdogan who is now well on his way to becoming the
undisputed authoritarian leader of the Turkish nation, which
continues to undergo historic purges of all of Erdogan's political
opponents.
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