Could Turkey Finally Join the EU? - TLDR News

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2022
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    Turkey has long been discussed as a potential future member state of the European Union, but how likely is that to actually happen? In this video, we discuss the history of Turkey's accession and the reasons why they're still on the periphery of the EU.
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    //////////////////////////////
    1 - www.europarl.europa.eu/delega...
    2 - eur-lex.europa.eu/resource.ht...
    3 - ec.europa.eu/neighbourhood-en...
    4 - www.europarl.europa.eu/news/e...
    5 - www.ft.com/content/c06d072a-3...
    6 - www.euractiv.com/section/poli...
    7 - www.economist.com/europe/2021...
    8 - ec.europa.eu/commission/press...
    9 - www.europarl.europa.eu/news/p...
    10 - www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/...
    11 - www.europarl.europa.eu/news/p...

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @whitedeath9
    @whitedeath9 Год назад +1674

    Not gonna happen, Cyprus dispute and Erdogan's authoritarianism will be major blockers. Plus even if Turkey did end up fulfilling all the criteria, certain EU countries would still be "uncomfortable" with a country like Turkey joining.

    • @purplehaze8557
      @purplehaze8557 Год назад +254

      And no country would be happy with dropping billions into that bottomless pit...

    • @halbrakt3457
      @halbrakt3457 Год назад +203

      Ypu forget to mention their economy is in the toilet

    • @beepboopbeepp
      @beepboopbeepp Год назад +256

      I think particularly more so now because the EU already has seen how much trouble countries like Poland and Hungary can create, Turkey especially under Erdogan would be a nightmare version of Hungary and Poland to deal with for the EU.

    • @sajeucettefoistunevaspasme
      @sajeucettefoistunevaspasme Год назад +7

      @@purplehaze8557 kind of already do

    • @themurmeli88
      @themurmeli88 Год назад

      Not to mention Sweden and Finland are not going to be supportive, as Turkey has been trying to blackmail them to surrender civilians to them, and ban their media from criticizing them.

  • @vianabdullah2837
    @vianabdullah2837 Год назад +125

    "I hear that Turkey is finally joining the EU"
    "Sure grandma, let's get you to bed"

    • @kekwonur
      @kekwonur Год назад

      Hey european, lock the door before you go to bed, russians may come.
      Hahaha.

  • @Burak-xq2fj
    @Burak-xq2fj Год назад +449

    As a Turkish citizen, I think we have much more important and urgent issues on the table right now. After 20 years of Akp government, we lost most of our democratic traditions and the rule of law is not respected. Economy is collapsing with unorthodox policies, unemployment rates are at a record high level and education system is now ruined. Personally I admire the system established by the eu but even I wouldn’t care so much if Turkey joins the eu or not. No matter what, Turkey should be a democratic, stable and secular country. In order to achieve this, eu membership is not a must but integration to the eu standards and norms is necessary.

    • @Quickshot0
      @Quickshot0 Год назад +8

      Hopefully something about the current trend can change in the near future. I think you're right that getting things more stable and in order in Turkey is definitely important. The exact relationship with the EU can always be settled on what ever turns out most convenient and preferred by Turkey after all. EU certainly has been open to consider various kind of deals with other countries over the year if they preferred those.

    • @MisterkeTube
      @MisterkeTube Год назад +22

      Burak, can you as a Turkish citizen explain how your autocratic leader could get elected? When I was young, Turkey was the example of how a country with mostly Muslims could still have a decent democratic system. The separation between state and religion was THE point which made many Europeans believe that Turkey one day could be considered a European country. But this has been completely flushed down the toilet and I guess this was even with the support of a majority of the Turkish citizens, no? So, what is the reason for this? Is the combination of Islam and democracy and freedom really so difficult to maintain? Or what other factor is there (I think there must be one, as also non-Muslim countries like Russia and Hungary ended up in similar setups)?

    • @stjohnsilver9538
      @stjohnsilver9538 Год назад +12

      We would like Turkey to join, but your military must leave Cyprus completely and permanently and all chapters must be fulfilled.

    • @ahmedalrays
      @ahmedalrays Год назад +3

      What democratic traditions? The rule of the Military? Like it or not .. the AK party is winning by the votes of the people.

    • @sultanofsultans
      @sultanofsultans Год назад +38

      @@MisterkeTube The AKP's predecessor party was very popular among Turks. Therr was also a man named Erbakan, the man behind the Refah Party (Erdoğan was also a member of it). However, due to the Turkish military having the right to intervene if the government sways too far from secularism (and believe me, Erdoğan was not and is not as islamist as Erbakan), Erbakan's government was toppled in a military coup.
      In 1970s-1980, there was huge violence between communists (mostly Kurds and Alevis) and Islamists (far right Turks) in Turkey. A military coup happened where basically anything to do with Islam and Communism was banned. Yes, this includes the headscarf, call to prayer, etc. This angered many Pious Turks out there. Kurdish language was also suppressed. So there is a misconception in Turkey's history. Atatürk never banned these things. It was the 1980 coup. Basically, everyone suffered under Kenan Evren. Although he stopped the violence, he added more fuel to the fire.
      Erdoğan came at a time when an economic crisis hit Turkey. In times of crisis, people vote for alternative parties. Erdoğan made a name for himself after he was arrested and jailed. He was a mayor of Istanbul too which meant he had experience. Erdoğan was also from a poor family so he claimed to be for the people (if his actions add up to this claim, I cannot say yes ofc).
      Erdoğan was basically voted by those who wanted a change in Turkey. He was also supported by the Conservative Muslims of Turkey. The thing is, this also includes Kurds. Kurds are in love with Erdoğan and you can look at the election maps, and you will see Erdoğan is always 1st or 2nd among the Kurdish regions. I myself have a Kurdish girlfriend, and her mother's side are pro-AKP.
      So Erdoğan remains very popular among conservatives who suffered a lot of abuse by the 1980 regime onwards. The coup of 1980 was designed to destroy islamism and communism in Turkey, but it only helped to justify the PKK's communism and forced more intense fighting with the PKK terrorist organisation and also added more fuel to the fire which caused the Islamist politics we now have in Turkey.
      In Turkey, Islam evolved to become the antidote to communism.

  • @popelgruner595
    @popelgruner595 Год назад +222

    The short answer is: No.
    The elaborate answer is: NO. The day hell freezes we will invite an open authoritarian state in our midst. Or to say it in the words of the EU bureaucracy: They don't meet the requirements.
    You don't mess with three members of a club you want to join, insult the board and chair of said club and then demand preferential treatment. Who do you think you are? The UK?

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Год назад +13

      More like hungary
      Orban did most of this and more

    • @popelgruner595
      @popelgruner595 Год назад +34

      @@maddogbasil Orban became a populist leader with a authoritarian attitude after Hungary joined.

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Год назад +7

      @@popelgruner595 so you can only become authoritative after joining eu not before
      I see

    • @sypherthe297th2
      @sypherthe297th2 Год назад +30

      @@maddogbasil It wasn't really anticipated that countries would backslide. It probably should have been because humans are really good at being jackasses. The solution certainly isn't to just allow countries like Turkey in because Hungary and Poland are going more authoritarian. That would be stupid no matter how many times you keep making the same garbage argument in multiple threads.

    • @markdowding5737
      @markdowding5737 Год назад +5

      @@maddogbasil Orban has not gone no where near the scale of Erdogan's actions

  • @petelosuaniu
    @petelosuaniu Год назад +551

    You’ve got to be joking! The amount of trouble they’d cause inside the EU will be Orban x10

    • @CahitbeyAdiAlinmis
      @CahitbeyAdiAlinmis Год назад +45

      kick orban out, take us, i promise erdoğan is going away next year lol

    • @koragrobot
      @koragrobot Год назад +32

      @@CahitbeyAdiAlinmis In all seriousness, do you think that you will vote hit out?

    • @c3phs
      @c3phs Год назад +16

      @@koragrobot The Opposition is already more popular by a far distance

    • @halbrakt3457
      @halbrakt3457 Год назад +40

      Let's hope he goes next election, he has been a complete disaster for Turkiye.

    • @Bambim8
      @Bambim8 Год назад

      @@CahitbeyAdiAlinmis Kurds aren't

  • @NikoBellic04
    @NikoBellic04 Год назад +318

    Absolutely not. We don't need another semi autocrat in the union!

    • @cravingtuna1561
      @cravingtuna1561 Год назад +96

      Not only that. Can you imagine the nerve Turkey must have to veto two EU members from joining NATO and then asking them to join the EU?

    • @____-pb1lg
      @____-pb1lg Год назад +3

      Facts

    • @jefflarin3774
      @jefflarin3774 Год назад

      Agree with you
      But what is the first one?

    • @CahitbeyAdiAlinmis
      @CahitbeyAdiAlinmis Год назад +2

      @@cravingtuna1561 Erdogan vetoed them, majority of turkish people would support them joining nato

    • @cravingtuna1561
      @cravingtuna1561 Год назад +27

      @@CahitbeyAdiAlinmis don't really care though. I refuse to believe that the last thirty years of Turkish foreign policy happened against the will of the Turkish people. Unless they also didn't want to invade Cyprus, didn't want to violate Greek airforce 30 times a day, didn't want to not recognise the UN law of the sea, didn't want to purchase Russian military equipment, didn't want to make aggressive actions against France, didn't want to intervene in Libya nor invade Syria. If that's the case then all the more reason of Turkey to not join the EU since what I am describing is a rogue state. So either the Turkish people have non of the EU's value or they don't care if their government violates them. Not sure which one is worse

  • @lomborg4876
    @lomborg4876 Год назад +241

    No, Turkey will not be able to join EU.
    A country must meet three criteria in order to join EU:
    - EU's political requirement (Stable institutions which secure democracy, freedom of speech, rule of law, human rights and protection of minorities). Turkey meets none of these.
    - EU economical requirement (Must have a functioning market economy and be able to compete with other EU-members) Turkey does not meet this.
    - Must adapt to EU rules (Adopt various EU-rules, policies and obligations). I doubt Erdogan will do this.

    • @christopherwilson88
      @christopherwilson88 Год назад +21

      To be fair to Turkey, there are EU countries that fail to meet one or more of those requirements (Hungary, Poland). That said, they'll never get the approval of Greece and Cyprus anyway, even if they did, without some extraordinarily unlikely policy and public opinion shifts

    • @TheGrace020
      @TheGrace020 Год назад +10

      @@christopherwilson88 Well both countries met these before that they dont want to accept middle eastern "refugees" and have some rightwing politics and refuse some EU policies are things now.

    • @hendrikdependrik1891
      @hendrikdependrik1891 Год назад +8

      There's a fourth criteria: Thinking PKK is less of a threat than ISIS.

    • @mierdamexicanadotexe3455
      @mierdamexicanadotexe3455 Год назад +5

      @@christopherwilson88 i think greece and cyprus would accept only if the agean and cyprus disputes are cleared

    • @cavidsalahov7308
      @cavidsalahov7308 Год назад +5

      Turkiey doesnt need to join EU

  • @bele13
    @bele13 Год назад +191

    Part of what a EU member regards as its territory has been effectively occupied by Turkey for almost 50 years. Another has been in conflict at least as long. Turkey is currently blocking membership of two EU members in NATO. How would EU accession work in this situation?

    • @uranuuss
      @uranuuss Год назад +22

      One has to ask why the EU even let Cyprus join as they have a territory dispute

    • @AD-yq8rl
      @AD-yq8rl Год назад +17

      Not exactly. According to the EU, a country with border disputes cannot be part of the EU. So Turkey intervened Cyprus back in 1974 but Cyprus joint the EU in 2004 even though it had border conflicts. Why did the EU breach its own rule?

    • @naitruan
      @naitruan Год назад +37

      @@uranuuss EU does not have this rule. NATO does. The EU, as it happens, is not NATO.

    • @uranuuss
      @uranuuss Год назад +6

      @@naitruan EU also has this rule

    • @naitruan
      @naitruan Год назад +11

      @@uranuuss Nope. It says that the nation should make all attempts to peacefully resolve the territorial dispute ahead of an acension into the EU, not that they have the manage it.
      If one side fundamentally blocks a resolution in order to prevent EU accession, the EU can decide that the nation in question DID try everything possible to resolve the dispute but failed due to reasons not under their control and not of their making.
      If you disagree, link the article of the EU that's relevant as evidence.

  • @dennismorgan3701
    @dennismorgan3701 Год назад +44

    Short answer: no
    Long answer: nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

  • @Majickcharm
    @Majickcharm Год назад +261

    Turkey has a long way to go to becoming a democracy

    • @t.4999
      @t.4999 Год назад

      Even longer way to go before it gives up cave man extremist ideology like Islam

    • @rutessian
      @rutessian Год назад +6

      Why would that bother the EU? Since when did it start caring about democracy?

    • @objectdefiance4027
      @objectdefiance4027 Год назад +45

      @@rutessian That's a Rhetorical Question. Your not expecting a response are you? Start acting in good faith Mate.

    • @MANODISNIPER
      @MANODISNIPER Год назад +37

      ​@@rutessian lol, we have a few problematic countries like hungary and romania but turkey is on another level

    • @TheVanpablo79
      @TheVanpablo79 Год назад +6

      @@MANODISNIPER Romania isn’t a problem country.

  • @jameschambers9969
    @jameschambers9969 Год назад +43

    Turkey: joins the eu
    Every eu member: ight imma head out

    • @f-35lightningii6
      @f-35lightningii6 Год назад +5

      no.. Turkey part of Mideast.. Turkey don't part of Europe.

    • @issith7340
      @issith7340 Год назад +2

      @yur28 istabul, not having nothing to do with balcans anymore. Totally alienated and hostile piece of the area. All balcans show their back to turkey and istabul, sorry.

    • @bilge.seyyah.
      @bilge.seyyah. Год назад

      Avrupa'da sürekli savaş var. Hristiyanlar birbirlerini öldürmekten zevk alıyor olmalılar. Yakında Rusya, orta Avrupayı işgal etmeye başlayacak. Ayrıca Balkanlar en karmaşık ve en fakir bölgedir. Balkan ülkeleri birbirlerinden nefret ederler. Her zaman savaş çıkma ihtimali çok yüksektir.

    • @nickohira1397
      @nickohira1397 Год назад

      @@f-35lightningii6 what?
      It's mixed

  • @fb150185
    @fb150185 Год назад +183

    I don't think this will happen. It would have happened already. Plus the EU is already going through internal crises for expanding to countries that maybe didn't share the "values" as much. I understand that Turkey is a strategic country goepolitically but in my opinion the EU should focus on solving the problems they already have and the lack of action for rogue nations as well as the increasing opposition to EU identity. Adding a country like Turkey that is different in many ways would only add to the problems. And the block can't afford that as it is.

    • @Quickshot0
      @Quickshot0 Год назад +2

      Well you have a fair chance of being right, though I think there are still futures possible where the two manage to grow closer over time. Still, it won't all be resolved in just a few years, like North Macedonia it would be something that probably would take time, 'if' it happened.

    • @ax.f-1256
      @ax.f-1256 Год назад +7

      Turkey isn't that different as you may think. Yes there a muslim Country but thats it. The turkish goverment is what makes turkey so different.
      You could also have a dictatorship in a central european christian country. (nazi germany, hungary, etc.) so turkey could get in the EU.
      All in has to do, is to return to it's former more open policies and get its economy under control. Turkey could be the bridge between the christian central european world and the muslim, middle east world.
      You just have to differentiate the Country and it's people from the goverment.

    • @ax.f-1256
      @ax.f-1256 Год назад +2

      Turkey isn't that different as you may think. Yes there a muslim Country but thats it. The turkish goverment is what makes turkey so different.
      You could also have a dictatorship in a central european christian country. (nazi germany, hungary, etc.) so turkey could get in the EU.
      All in has to do, is to return to it's former more open policies and get its economy under control. Turkey could be the bridge between the christian central european world and the muslim, middle east world.
      You just have to differentiate the Country and it's people from the goverment.

    • @ax.f-1256
      @ax.f-1256 Год назад +1

      Turkey isn't that different as you may think. Yes there a muslim Country but thats it. The turkish goverment is what makes turkey so different.
      You could also have a dictatorship in a central european christian country. (nazi germany, hungary, etc.) so turkey could get in the EU.
      All in has to do, is to return to it's former more open policies and get its economy under control. Turkey could be the bridge between the christian central european world and the muslim, middle east world.
      You just have to differentiate the Country and it's people from the goverment.

    • @Quickshot0
      @Quickshot0 Год назад +2

      @@ax.f-1256 I was thinking that part of issue would be for instance resolving the Cyprus issue, things like that can at times drag on a surprisingly long time. And even countries at the stage Turkey is further with no particular outstanding issues, can often times take a fair few years to complete all the chapters. It's basically quite a few things to go through after all.
      I think that things being resolved would be a pretty nice world though. At the least it would be a lot less border tensions and more economic prospects for everyone.

  • @TheDestillers
    @TheDestillers Год назад +204

    What's the purpose of accepting a member in to the union that will likely just be opposed to everything. It's a loss for Turkey and the EU to be in that kind of constant struggle.

    • @paulohagan3309
      @paulohagan3309 Год назад +26

      Right. Remember Britain's time in the EU? Some countries were born to never join it

    • @zjeee
      @zjeee Год назад +39

      Turkey wants in for the economic benefits, the EU does not want Turkey because Erdogan will start all kinds of trouble and the overall economic benefit for the EU won't change by adding a weak Turkish economy.

    • @berkaysulek7058
      @berkaysulek7058 Год назад +4

      Uhmmm, bad news for you? It's called democracy. So technically one can oppose to everything and it can be discussed.

    • @TheDestillers
      @TheDestillers Год назад +16

      I recognize that in a democratic system it's a good thing to discuss and compromise. I am from Denmark we certainly often push back and question EU decisions and when britain left it was regrettable for us, to say the least, to lose someone that often protested with us. My point is just that for every troublesome member that are in the EU it becomes more impotent and it will ultimately lose relevance and legitimacy.

    • @animatorofanimation128
      @animatorofanimation128 Год назад +33

      @@berkaysulek7058 Disagreement is fine, but you typically only have members in these sorts of union who have similar ideals as you. For example, Americans disagree all the time on how the country should be run, but pretty much everyone agrees on the fundamental ideals of the Constitution and Declaration of Independence, as well as general freedom and democracy. Turkey is an authoritarian state that many in Europe still dislike for historical reasons, adding them is just a recipe for trouble to the democratic and western minded EU countries

  • @YaMumsSpecialFriend
    @YaMumsSpecialFriend Год назад +218

    Why, in all things not insane, allow Turkey in? It’s democratic diminution to authoritarianism is antithetical to EU ethos and it’s behaviour as a NATO member in cynically exercising powers of veto is hardly inspiring as a potential EU member where it also can utilise powers of veto. Not. A. Chance.

    • @amarhadjimurad2363
      @amarhadjimurad2363 Год назад +3

      What about orban in Hungary

    • @outsiderkk
      @outsiderkk Год назад

      NATO is a MILITARY ALLIANCE. If a member candidate has a terrrorist organization's bureau and has politicans supporting the organization that has been massacring the people of the a member they have all the right to veto. Stop being so ignorant. NATO was founded to fight communism. Do you expect supporters of Commie PKK to be allowed to run rampart within NATO borders?

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Год назад +1

      We should stop democratically electing the president of the European Commission, we can't leave the important power of making laws up to commoners

    • @NAYRUthunder99
      @NAYRUthunder99 Год назад +6

      @@Embassy_of_Jupiter - the Tsar, probably

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Год назад

      @@NAYRUthunder99 Just kidding it's already like this

  • @DanielGalimidi
    @DanielGalimidi Год назад +179

    Question posed by the video: Could Turkey Finally Join the EU?
    My opinion beforehand: Of course they won't.
    My opinion when seeing the thumbnail for the video: Of course they won't, has something changed that TLDR is making this video? Let's see.
    My opinion after watching the video: Of course they won't, and I just wasted 7 minutes of my life watching a video about something I already knew.

    • @hkchan1339
      @hkchan1339 Год назад +19

      TLDR would like to thank you for the watch time and ad money

    • @Ryan_Alwi
      @Ryan_Alwi Год назад +7

      Well I didn't even know Turkey wanted to join the EU (geographically, they are clearly not a part of Europe to the West as we know it), so I appreciated the thoughtful insights the team at TLDR News gave me today 😊

    • @hkchan1339
      @hkchan1339 Год назад +15

      @@Ryan_Alwi yes they do, they use to whine about EU being slow and discriminating against them , until they went into a dictatorship a few years ago. Now they pretend they don’t care because they no longer meet the requirements of being a democracy

    • @stephenbeyer4315
      @stephenbeyer4315 Год назад +3

      I didn't even realise that weren't already a member, so the fact you wasted your time watching a video about something you already knew is totally on you mate. Other people from other parts of the world get the opportunity to learn from videos such as this

    • @aksaleskikaya7848
      @aksaleskikaya7848 Год назад

      HUW KILS SWIDEN PRESIDENT OLAF PALMER KILLER IS PKK STOKHOLM SENDROM

  • @dm4859
    @dm4859 Год назад +4

    very informative in a short summary of the process....brilliant

  • @mikahamari6420
    @mikahamari6420 Год назад +137

    In Corruption Index 2021 Turkey is 96th. So, simple answer: No!

    • @blakedake19
      @blakedake19 Год назад +14

      @Zaydan Naufal Neither of them are in the EU

    • @Juho221
      @Juho221 Год назад

      @Zaydan Naufal Doesn't Montenegro already use the euro?

    • @Juho221
      @Juho221 Год назад

      @Zaydan Naufal They do use the euro. I'm not sure why they adapted it, but it would make membership easier

    • @mattgummerson8370
      @mattgummerson8370 Год назад +5

      @@Juho221 any country can opt to use another countries currency. A lot of countries use dollars and they didn’t need US approval

    • @mathwgames5484
      @mathwgames5484 Год назад

      EU itself is corrupt organisation

  • @Roof007
    @Roof007 Год назад +54

    If you mean under Erdogan then the answer is a big fat NO.

    • @purplehaze8557
      @purplehaze8557 Год назад +7

      Under Erdogan or any other mug, the answer should always be NO!

    • @bar1644
      @bar1644 Год назад

      @@purplehaze8557 I disagree, if someone who is Pro-Europe and Democratic leads Turkey it should be allowed in

    • @purplehaze8557
      @purplehaze8557 Год назад

      @@bar1644 Why? What's the rationale or what would be the advantages to Europe to have a massive and poor muslim country join the union?

    • @universalspaceexpeditioner8259
      @universalspaceexpeditioner8259 Год назад

      Turks should go back to Mongolia regardless

    • @bar1644
      @bar1644 Год назад +5

      @@purplehaze8557 Pointing out its Muslim is kinda racist ngl
      also you guys have Greece..? theyre also poor hello?

  • @TheFunnyhouston
    @TheFunnyhouston Год назад +6

    The TLDR nebula advert 😂 I have never enjoyed an advert before, kudos!

  • @1337Stream
    @1337Stream Год назад +109

    The answer is no. Many countries and groups are deadset against it. It would also be a disaster for eu economic integration. Turkey as even less suitable then some of the east european countries that are in it and some hoping to join.
    Ontop of that Turkeys democracy is almost entirely gone.
    Theres simply no benefits large enough to allowing turkey to join vs the many severe downsides.
    If turkey was allowed to join, 1/3 of the eu would probably leave.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven Год назад +8

      The benefit is to provide incentive to Turkey to change direction & improve itself instead of perpetually backsliding. If we shut it out completely, that incentive is gone. It's not just the Russian invasion of Ukraine that shows that Turkey is an important ally due to its location and power. It's also things like the management of the migrant crisis. And it's generally better to have allies rather than not. Of course, that would either require Erdogan to change his mind, or to turn from Erdogan into Erdogone (countries are forever, politicians are not).
      All I'm saying is, leaving the door open is more beneficial than categorically denying them even the prospect of joining.

    • @TheRadPlayer
      @TheRadPlayer Год назад +9

      @@Yutani_Crayven The door should indeed be open. If they get out of Cyprus, solve their territorial disputes with their neighbours and generally stop being a dictatorship, they'd be good a candidate for membership. But, I gotta be honest I don't think there's much of a chance of that happening.

    • @alexander-wj9vj
      @alexander-wj9vj Год назад

      Turkey economy is larger than most estern European countries

    • @spugelo359
      @spugelo359 Год назад +2

      @@TheRadPlayer Fixing all the damage the big boy did to their economy with his bright ideas would be great idea too.

    • @inso80
      @inso80 Год назад +3

      Turkey is further from joining today than it was in 1999 when it was given the candidate status in Finland.

  • @crw45able
    @crw45able Год назад +128

    Turkey shouldn't be allowed in the EU unless the government and population align with EU values.

    • @clivesmith9377
      @clivesmith9377 Год назад +20

      That'll never happen : D

    • @purplehaze8557
      @purplehaze8557 Год назад +15

      There's no unless. It shouldn't join. Period.

    • @esanahka9284
      @esanahka9284 Год назад +11

      @@clivesmith9377 thank god

    • @rutessian
      @rutessian Год назад

      Don't they have censorship, high inflation and a love of "democracy"?

    • @sadeksama5057
      @sadeksama5057 Год назад +3

      Does Poland and hungry population align with EU values ?

  • @cristiandumitrescu1744
    @cristiandumitrescu1744 Год назад +100

    Finland and Sweden should veto it😁

    • @Hoboukko
      @Hoboukko Год назад +23

      We will, though it won't really matter because so many other countries will veto it as well😅

    • @marcusfranconium3392
      @marcusfranconium3392 Год назад +5

      Netherlands , Germany are among those that veto it even before the vote. is cast.

    • @NoNeedForLungs
      @NoNeedForLungs Год назад +8

      @@marcusfranconium3392 Don't forget Greece and Cyprus. We'll probably start laughing if that ever happens (and then we will veto it while still laughing)

    • @marcusfranconium3392
      @marcusfranconium3392 Год назад +4

      @@NoNeedForLungs I think entire EU will be laughing.

    • @jackholler3572
      @jackholler3572 Год назад

      @@Hoboukko Enjoy with the terrorists in parlament and in the country. They made you the country with worst crime rate in eu.

  • @KillRicha
    @KillRicha Год назад +34

    The amount of EU MPs countries can have depends on the population of these countries.Even if all other problems would resolved us joining EU would make us the country with most voting rights in the EU.I think this is even bigger problem than cyprus , nobody would want that in EU.
    I don't even think majorty in EU and Turkey wants membership anyway.
    Erdogan used to get more than %50 of the votes yet his party is arround %28 - 32 right now and economy keeps getting worse and worse.We still have 1 year until the election so i don't see anyway for him to win the election.
    More secular CHP will win the election and there will be a coalition , talks with EU will improve but EU membership won't go anywhere.
    I do think new custom union agreement , freedom of movement and possible future EU army talks possible but there is no way EU will give Turkey voting rights in EU parliment with it's population.

    • @inso80
      @inso80 Год назад +8

      It should be at least a generation before they should be considered again. EU army with turkey? Some strong weed you got there mate. Freedom of movement? no fucking way. Customs union? Fuck no. Is there something that can be cooperated on, yes, but none of the things you mentioned.

    • @dronur6194
      @dronur6194 Год назад

      Chp nah gelir başa. Çok beklersin daha.

    • @aytekbalci5522
      @aytekbalci5522 Год назад

      ​@@inso80 there is already a customs union in place between Turkiye and EU.

  • @rasmusjp
    @rasmusjp Год назад +64

    Based on how Turkey has acted in NATO, we should count ourselves incredibly lucky that we don’t have them in the union. And as a Swede, with regards to current mob boss behaviour from Erdogan regarding Sweden and Finland joining NATO, I say what goes around comes around; Turkey can forget about joining anything in which Finland or Sweden have a say as long as they behave like a spoiled brat.

    • @G_Kchrst
      @G_Kchrst Год назад

      True, though regardless of Turkey playing the empire it will benefit your countries not joining NATO in the long run. NATO is bullshit and Sweden has some very good humanitarian and politcal views that they would have to abandon (and sellout) to enter NATO. I think neutrality is better if you have good external politics, you won't become a puppet of US or Russia interests. Neutrallity has been very good for Sweden, Finland and Austria, even not full commiting in the EU monetary Union was great for Sweden, German economy would have cripples yours like it does to every other weaker economy, it is even damaging France which has a massive economy. As for NATO, trust me you don't want to enter a military union that dooms wars against it's interests and then looks the other way when it's in it's interests (cough* Palestine cough*)

    • @jupiterbirlesikgezegenleri9884
      @jupiterbirlesikgezegenleri9884 Год назад

      as a turk i can say that more than half of the ppl dont want eu. so yeah pls dont accept us and we will eat popcorn while russians eating sweden

    • @Cloud-rk7if
      @Cloud-rk7if Год назад +2

      So sweden and finland can forget to join NATO

    • @thetraveller1612
      @thetraveller1612 Год назад

      Greece halted Macedonian Nato membership for 11 years all over a name! Typical hypocrisy the Turks are used to!

    • @Cloud-rk7if
      @Cloud-rk7if Год назад +1

      @@bakiozturk2112 agree EU membership is not even mentioned in Turkey anymore, I suggest you worry about your own country's problems.Because we can fight against Russia alone, but your country cannot.That's all you have to worry about right now :)

  • @krombopulos_michael
    @krombopulos_michael Год назад +190

    A big issue that wasn't mentioned at all in this video is Turkey's population, which is larger than any EU country, and is growing much faster than other big EU countries. If Turkey joined, they would have the most voting power of any member state, unseating Germany.
    Even if Turkish social and economic values were much more aligned with the existing EU powers, that would still be a major cause for concern for the likes of France, Germany, Spain, and Italy.

    • @OHOE1
      @OHOE1 Год назад +39

      Yeah and Turkey would cost the EU a lot of money as there economy is crashing.

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Год назад +14

      Voting power in the EU has nothing to do with population or economic strength.

    • @impact0r
      @impact0r Год назад +6

      @@OHOE1 "as there economy is crashing" this sentence makes no sense.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 Год назад +2

      @@OHOE1 pretty sure a stable economy is one of the rules you need to get in, thats what greece lied about to tank the euro. turkey has some real cheap labour right now, and erdogan has seemingly started manufacturing in turkey, like what china and india did to amass their current wealth. if the eu had control over its own manufacturing in turkey, as well as fossil fuels from the east and highly skilled professionals from the west and north, they would easily dominate everywhere else on the world, including any other possible union that i can think of. itd just take time.

    • @seb7271
      @seb7271 Год назад +23

      It wasn’t mentioned because it isn’t a problem. The European Union doesn’t function that way. More population doesn’t automatically equal higher voting power.
      Firstly, the most powerful body of the European Union, The Commission is represented by 1 person from each member country. Meaning that it currently has 27 members. Population doesn’t matter.
      Secondly, The European Council is composed of heads of state or government of the EU member states, the President of the European Council, and the President of the European Commission. Population doesn’t matter.
      Thirdly, Council of the European Union. Under the Lisbon Treaty, seats are allocated to each state according to population and the maximum number of members is set at 751.
      Representation is currently limited to a maximum of 96 seats and a minimum of 6 seats per state and the seats are distributed according to "degressive proportionality", i.e., the larger the state, the more citizens are represented per MEP. As a result, Maltese and Luxembourgish voters have roughly 10x more influence per voter than citizens of the six largest countries.
      As of 2014, Germany (80.9 million inhabitants) has 96 seats (previously 99 seats), i.e. one seat for 843,000 inhabitants. Malta (0.4 million inhabitants) has 6 seats, i.e. one seat for 70,000 inhabitants.
      While Turkey would have the highest population and thus would have the most votes, It wouldn’t be a cause for concern. Because, as previously mentioned it isn’t strictly proportional to your population. And there is limits on the amount of votes in the council as well as the maximum number of votes allowed per country. Furthermore, the council of the European Union is only 1 of 7 ruling bodies of the European Union, and 1 out of 2 legislative bodies. Meaning that it has very limited power and influence.

  • @fabiocavaleri
    @fabiocavaleri Год назад +135

    I hope nope, they clearly doesn't fit in the EU standard, we did a lot of mistakes with Eastern Europe, and we are too loose with other countries like mine, Italy

    • @kupieckorzenny5093
      @kupieckorzenny5093 Год назад

      These mistakes with Eastern Europe you mean you got some modern slave labour? Or that you want make us your colonies?

    • @fabiocavaleri
      @fabiocavaleri Год назад

      @@kupieckorzenny5093 wow are you talking about Polish people working in Germany? Fuck off I want too to go in EU country in which aviation technicians are payed more, I am talking about Hungary and in other case Poland, Slovakia and similar which oppose and make more difficult integration, fiscally and political
      You can clean your ass with this nationalist sentiment
      Ps: other mistakes was allowing country to not adopt the single currency, like we did for Denmark and Sweden

    • @idraote
      @idraote Год назад +39

      @Zaydan Naufal religious interests should have NO place in government. Religion must pertain to the private sphere only.
      This key difference is what makes European and Muslim states politics incompatible.

    • @TheShowdown16
      @TheShowdown16 Год назад +23

      @Zaydan Naufal Why would the EU have to represent the intrests of muslim states? There are no muslim states in the EU and there is no obligitation for them to be there! And perhaps more importantly, the idea of a muslim state is a strong contradiction of the seperation of church and state, which is a fundamental building block for any good democracy.
      There isnt any reason not to have a state with a muslim population in the EU, but its goverment and society has to fullfill the EUs standards for freedom and democracy. So if Turkey stays the way it is, thats a hard no.

    • @annurissimo1082
      @annurissimo1082 Год назад +11

      @Zaydan Naufal Nobody wants to establish a sharia state in Bosnia either. The religious makeup is far too diverse for that to work. As for Turkey, I dont think they are making an exactly "Muslim" country in the same way Arabic countries are, but Turkey is by no means secular. They still discriminate against a lot of groups needlessly.

  • @mariosathens1
    @mariosathens1 Год назад +60

    Having in mind that Turkey accuse Finland and Sweden of terrorism, two countries champions of Human Rights JUST imagine what will happen inside the EU with Turkey as a full member state, HAVOC.

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Год назад +3

      Yh
      They would never let a majority Muslim country in

    • @ykalon
      @ykalon Год назад +10

      @@maddogbasil It has nothing to do with their religion.

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Год назад

      @@ykalon so somehow hungary and poland get a pass because the hate the Russians
      But Turkey is evil because they're president is no secular

    • @uranuuss
      @uranuuss Год назад +1

      Sweden which supports a internationally recognised terrorist organisation by weapons and money against a nato "ally". Lol tottaly not letting them join nato

    • @ykalon
      @ykalon Год назад +5

      @@uranuuss WRONG. Sweden was the FIRST country after Turkey to declare pkk as terrorists. And if you meant YPG, USA and ALL of NATO cooperated with them in Syria.

  • @vonbrownYT
    @vonbrownYT Год назад +11

    The ad buy and the cutoff when talking about Brexit was comedic genius lol

  • @dreckman69
    @dreckman69 Год назад +15

    I wouldn't want turkey to join the eu with erdogan in power. Or the lira in the single market.

  • @thelaststylebender01
    @thelaststylebender01 Год назад +11

    TLDR: Unlikely anytime soon.

  • @guzzirider701
    @guzzirider701 Год назад +19

    Greece would block accession anyway, since Turkey has territorial claims on Greek islands.

    • @thesoundinyourhead1782
      @thesoundinyourhead1782 Год назад +6

      Unbased claims onunatic theories like "militarization of islands disputes their sovereignty" or "islands are not entitled to EEZ".

    • @Ptolemy336VV
      @Ptolemy336VV Год назад +1

      Unbased claims on Greek islands with a developing rethoric based on zero claims and facts from the 70s onwards. 50 years ago there were literally zero claims from Turkey, then progressively Turkey came with one fantasy map worse than the other when years would pass. It comes to show the origin of lies from the beginning and its imperialist motives.

    • @rhythmicmusicswap4173
      @rhythmicmusicswap4173 Год назад +3

      not only greece for sure

    • @williamdavis9562
      @williamdavis9562 Год назад

      @Guzzirider, they have problems with the militarization of those islands, they don't have any "territorial claims"

  • @KhaalixD
    @KhaalixD Год назад +1

    Great video!

  • @David-qp9bq
    @David-qp9bq Год назад +24

    Why would the EU want turkey in it?

    • @FlorianMorata
      @FlorianMorata Год назад +5

      Turkey is a mini-China, in many senses. Both EU and Turkey would have economic advantages to unite. But values and culture gap prevent it.

  • @umutneo
    @umutneo Год назад +36

    As a Turkish citizen first Erdogan needs to leave, corruption needs to be removed and same laws have to be changed. Then we need to stable economy. Then most likely bargaining cyprus issue. Then most likely still we will be rejected.

    • @Sami-gi1ld
      @Sami-gi1ld Год назад +7

      Bro don't even think about joining the EU that will never happen

    • @zjeee
      @zjeee Год назад +18

      @@Sami-gi1ld To be honest if Erdogan leaves and Turkey takes steps going for a more secular type of government and sorts out it's territorial issues I can see it happening. Sure it will take time maybe 10+ years but I don't see it being impossible.

    • @Sami-gi1ld
      @Sami-gi1ld Год назад +5

      @@zjeee nah even if that happens no way in hell will France and Germany and other eastern Europeans will let turkey in

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +5

      @@zjeee 10+ years? Lol, Montenegro is trying to join for almost 2 decades now, if Turkey ever joins it will be in the 2080s. And these problems you mentioned are not the only ones. There are far too many cultural, economic and geopolitical obstacles.

    • @pendejisimojuasjuasj
      @pendejisimojuasjuasj Год назад +2

      Spain was a military dictatorship not very long before joining the EU so it can be posible. You'll have to watch out for Erdogan "nostalgics" for decades tho.

  • @remenir97
    @remenir97 Год назад +25

    From a Turk: with Erdogan in power? Never gonna happen.

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +3

      Never gonna happen in general. Either Erdogan is in power or not.

    • @_Anatolian_
      @_Anatolian_ Год назад

      @@zedero8 lol why so much hate? Such a racist you are, shame.

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +6

      @@Dr-Ekmek how old are you? What does that have to do with my comment?
      And FYI European culture has its roots in Greek culture, it’s just that Greeks were the native population of Anatolia as well back then.

    • @rasgeleisim
      @rasgeleisim Год назад

      Don't talk this easily. With those stupid opposition parties we have anything can happen.

    • @askosefamerve
      @askosefamerve Год назад +1

      @@rasgeleisim Opposition is going to work at least into some degree.

  • @pedrapgwilym1341
    @pedrapgwilym1341 Год назад +31

    The problem is that Turkiye is in reality 2 very different countries: 20-30m Westernised Turks living in the 3% of Turkiye that is in Europe and along the Aegean coast and 50-60m impoverished strict Muslims in Eastern Anatolia. The EU wants one but not the other.

    • @popelgruner595
      @popelgruner595 Год назад +1

      The EU wants neither.
      They threat Greece and Cyprus militarily, they block Sweden and Finland from NATO, they insult the EU as a whole and demand preferential treatment? Erm...

    • @dominationsrebellion6433
      @dominationsrebellion6433 Год назад

      Turkish will never be considered as westerners , they are asians

    • @pedrapgwilym1341
      @pedrapgwilym1341 Год назад +1

      @Zaydan Naufal Except that it should be Western Turkiye and Eastern Turkiye!

    • @esatdemirci2119
      @esatdemirci2119 Год назад

      Turkey will be divided into 3 pieces.Turks /islamic Turks +Arab refugees /Kurds .This will Happen in 5 Years. Then Turks will join EU with its 35-40 Million population.

  • @MrEoinkeane
    @MrEoinkeane Год назад +64

    The biggest issue with Turkey joining the EU is the way the EU is set up. The moment they join they'll have the biggest population in the EU and thus the largest amount of MPs in the EU Parliament.... a powermove France and Germany will not like.

    • @tahatetikcan8922
      @tahatetikcan8922 Год назад +13

      Even if Turkey solves all its problems, it cannot join the European Union because of this. If Turkey is accepted to the EU, the status quo will be threatened.

    • @TheGrace020
      @TheGrace020 Год назад

      When the outbreeding is sus

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Год назад

      Consider the amount of expat turkeys and they will be even more influential. Most of the expats vote for Erdogan.

    • @BoBo-bq2os
      @BoBo-bq2os Год назад

      True

    • @calasalos
      @calasalos Год назад

      Is not only that.. since 1453, culturally and historically, Turkey has always been perceived as an extra-european entity.. it would be unnatural for both Europe and Turkey to stay together.. Europe would be perceived as driven only by geopolitical opportunism and economic strategy while we are trying to create a new kind of political Confederation built on a shared historical and cultural common ground

  • @kuritech
    @kuritech Год назад +6

    I have never seen a channel but their own ad space before and that was pretty damn interesting

  • @dimitrismichail7435
    @dimitrismichail7435 Год назад +2

    I still don't understand why on 6:50 there's a greek flag showing on the southern part of Cyprus. Why isn't Cyprus' flag being illustrated?

  • @rumeysaongul4765
    @rumeysaongul4765 Год назад +11

    As a Turk, I honestly see the "Turkey's accession into EU" as nothing more than an almost literal joke. It's kind of hilarious that some people still believe it's possible even though it has been decades and the member states happen to always find an excuse.

    • @Retr0GamerGR
      @Retr0GamerGR Год назад

      Members find what bullshit your politics do....look in the mirror first and then blame others.

    • @rumeysaongul4765
      @rumeysaongul4765 Год назад

      @@Retr0GamerGR
      Of course it's ONLY because of that.
      No story, no reasoning, nothing is one-sided dear. In fact, if it was just about the current politics (which I don't understand why the member states and Western world in general care even more about than the politics of countries they have the closest ties with), then why would they discuss Turkey's Europeanness (rather non-Europeanness) of Turkey to begin with?
      But who am I, right? Probably someone only following the undoubtably flawed media in Turkey, and missing out on the "perfection" of the "free" Western media and politics, even though as I said, nothing is one-sided. No country (including the EU members) would want something that won't benefit them, whether politically, ecomically, or in any other way. The thing is, both Turkey and the EU member states are obvious about the fact that they won't get any benefit from being, in such a union with eachother.
      An example of this would be the open border policy of the EU. Having open borders with a country like Turkey (which has millions of refugees, many of whom want to pass to Europe) would cause yet another migration crisis in Europe, while European countries has protected some people that Turkish goverment (and many of the residents whether they support the goverment or not) outwardly considers to be terrorists.
      As I said, this is just one example of how Turkey joining the EU will be a problem for both sides. Of course there are more, so please, do a little more research before you comment with only the information you get from "perfect and pious" Western media, that "always" tells the truth "even if it damages the Western countries' reputations, since they NEVER do anything wrong, so there's nothing they fear about the truth, am I right?
      Finally, as I said, the EU's acceptence process for Turkey feels like a literal joke. Just like this video said, even when Turkey applied for ECC in 1959, the organization suggested an "association agreement" instead of "associate membership agreement". Basically, they didn't even want Turkey to be a member before a long and tiring intergration process even back then. Ever since, so many other countries have applied and were accepted without needing this initial process.
      Thank you for reading, and I hope you got a glimpse of what I've been trying to say. :)

    • @rumeysaongul4765
      @rumeysaongul4765 Год назад

      @Reader Stuff
      Why have you deleted your comment then? Please read my response to the other person who for some reason deleted their response too, if you need any clarifications.

    • @Retr0GamerGR
      @Retr0GamerGR Год назад

      @@rumeysaongul4765 well where do I start.....let's talk about human rights that I believe it's the No1 reason that eu don't want turkey. Second it's that turkey its aggressive to all his neighbors. This is something that western perfect media like u say don't even mention. It's eu politics that see that. To be honest I can type all day about turkey and how they took out there own eyes.what about libia?? What about Mavi vatan? Is it all legal? It's turkey right to expend towards neighbors because like erdogan say we are to big for our country?? How do u expect to be European when u don't even respect your people.

    • @rumeysaongul4765
      @rumeysaongul4765 Год назад

      @@Retr0GamerGR
      Okay. I see what you mean. Can you please be more specific about "human right violations" though? I've seen so many people mention it and leave it at that.
      As for the second part, "mavi vatan" means "blue homeland", refering to the Turkey's claimed territorries in the seas. I know what you mean, but considering the fact that both Turkey and Greece are being aggressive about it mutually and Europe strongly opposes one while being totally fine with the other.
      Libya isn't a neighbouring country. One of the sides in the civil conflict asked for military support and Turkey did respond by helping militarily. Other countries also provide military support and aid to the civil wars (even EU members like France are doing this with the civil wars in the Middle East and Africa). In fact, the biggest example of this kind of "help" is provided by the US, a fellow Western country albeit not a European one.
      Lastly, we don't intend on expanding. I don!t know about the politicians. Most politicians in all countries are pretty incompetent people, including all of the Turkish political party leaders whether goverment or opposition. The case feels similar in plenty of Western countries as well. And I honestly don't care what they "see", because all of them "see" the world through a narrow lens of whatever proves them right.
      As I said, I don't support Turkey joining the EU. What else do you want to hear?
      Also please, use some correct grammar. Even though it hurts my eyes (due to a severe condition), I still try to double-check my replies out of respect.
      Thanks. :)

  • @cazwalt9013
    @cazwalt9013 Год назад +6

    They don't even recognize Cyprus whose a member state

    • @thetraveller1612
      @thetraveller1612 Год назад +1

      Why should they. They ROC government has no representation from legal co owning Turkish Cypriots as prescribed by the Cypriots constitution. Are you ignorant on these matters?

  • @nathanlillie5262
    @nathanlillie5262 Год назад +56

    Sweden and finland are definitely a hard "no" on Turkish accession.

    • @massimobernardo-
      @massimobernardo- Год назад +8

      not just two, but also 25 other nations.

    • @falx2803
      @falx2803 Год назад +6

      who said we wanted to enter We don't cry in the tails of others EU or we don't need it.

    • @memoli1524
      @memoli1524 Год назад +9

      Turkey is a hard “no” on Sweden and Finland joining NATO lol

    • @nathanlillie5262
      @nathanlillie5262 Год назад +2

      @@memoli1524 countries that want to be respected and taken seriously don't do things for lols

    • @nathanlillie5262
      @nathanlillie5262 Год назад +4

      @@falx2803 Turkey says. Since 1959.

  • @netabt
    @netabt Год назад +23

    I didn't watch the video. I saw the title and came here to laugh as loud as possible :D :D :D

  • @DeadManRising36
    @DeadManRising36 Год назад +5

    I think that the main problem is Turkeys geographic position and the size, because its at the center of everything it also acts as a buffer for the west. If Turkey joined the EU, The EU would directly collide with eastern countries and their values. So this buffer which Turkey acts as, would be no more.

    • @lllllMlllll
      @lllllMlllll 10 месяцев назад

      values eh? just say it .. repeat after me .. RELIGION

  • @Whyoakdbi
    @Whyoakdbi Год назад +3

    Hell no! No authoritarian country should be allowed in EU. What a stupid question..

    • @aldindurakovic8828
      @aldindurakovic8828 Год назад

      Stoyanov , back to the Gospel !!
      No alcohol , no pork for Stoyanov !!!
      😊😊😊😊😊🤔🤔🤔😑😑😑
      Dear God .

  • @ellied.violet7372
    @ellied.violet7372 Год назад +9

    Short answer: NO.
    Long answer: NOOOOOOO.
    Greetings from Bavaria

  • @Joshnaks
    @Joshnaks Год назад

    Super cool how Nebula actually bought an add for this video.

  • @Rainforestdelight
    @Rainforestdelight Год назад +4

    Let’s be honest, another major reason why Turkey’s accession into the EU has been sceptical and stalled is because it’s a Muslim country.

    • @annas4843
      @annas4843 Год назад

      Hmm.. yea? Do you want laws in EU forcing Muslim notions on you?
      We have managed in Europe to get at a point where we accept certain freedoms, where you want be jailed or even killed for a cartoon if it doesn’t fit your own beliefs. Do we really want to change that?

  • @tobiwan001
    @tobiwan001 Год назад +22

    If Britain tried to join now it would not even meet the criteria, Turkey is far away from joining, even if they wante to. I am more worried they attack Greece or Cyprus.

    • @kaanboztepe
      @kaanboztepe Год назад +4

      considering that greece at this very moment has armed soldiers on turkish soil with th epuepose of annexing territory would suggest that your fears are totally wrong

    • @tobiwan001
      @tobiwan001 Год назад +14

      @@kaanboztepe so which „Turkish“ territory is Greece trying to annex?

    • @kaanboztepe
      @kaanboztepe Год назад

      @@tobiwan001 a dozen or so islands in the aegean sea that Greece had agreed to let Turkey have after ww1

    • @tobiwan001
      @tobiwan001 Год назад +15

      @@kaanboztepe I think they only ever agreed to not militarize them. But the reasons they are being militarized now is because Turkey has refused to sign the Convention on the Law of the Seas and claim Greek territorial waters. Same with Cyprus.

    • @kaanboztepe
      @kaanboztepe Год назад +2

      @@tobiwan001 interesting argument, you do not sign this treaty so i will use military power to enforce it and you will still be the aggresor.

  • @cassibessa
    @cassibessa Год назад +5

    Turkey is an islamic country, with different objetives than EU and christian civilization...

  • @Arcaryon
    @Arcaryon Год назад +68

    Here is my take: Turkey could certainly get some improved special agreements and new treaties with the EU. It will however not join the EU due to its current state of affairs.

    • @lilo7741
      @lilo7741 Год назад +9

      The eu hosts the pkk and funds them. France is a stronghold for the pkk for example. They let them do as they wish. What state of affairs are you talking about. Turkey is in a very risky situation because of thr EU. all refugees who the eu sends back are returned to turkey. Turkeys hosts close to 10 million refugees inside and on its Syrian border region. The pretentiousness with which you talk down on Turkey is astonishing and I’m
      Not a fan of Erdogan.

    • @abadairshi
      @abadairshi Год назад +8

      When Germany the biggest EU country with the most seats in Parliament has a population of 83 million, a country of 85 million like Turkey is too much to swallow. No European country would want us get the most seats in the European Parliament. South Cyprus didn't meet the Copenhagen criteria at all. Due to Greece's blackmail to block the accession of Central and Eastern European countries, the Greek part of Cyprus was accepted as a member state despite it being unable to meet the Copenhagen requirements. You're not the brightest if you think that this is just a matter of meeting the EU criteria.

    • @Arcaryon
      @Arcaryon Год назад +3

      @@abadairshi You seem to ignore how parliaments work - you need a majority members. Even Russia could join someday in a distant future. There are after all 60 million people in France as well, or 10 million in Austria, 20 million in the Netherlands etc.
      Where there’s a will, there’s a way.
      And with Ukraine being approved for beginning the process, the Eastern European bloc has also just gained some 40 million voices. Having a big swing state such as Turkey would be interesting in that regard as well.

    • @strife2746
      @strife2746 Год назад

      @@lilo7741 And Turkey discriminates against Kurds, Jews and Christians within their own borders and the government tolerates the extremist group known as the Grey Wolves. Yes, they do. You shouldn't be throwing stones around when you're living in a glass house.

    • @strife2746
      @strife2746 Год назад +3

      ​@@lilo7741 The UNHCR put the number of refugees in Turkey at 4+ million, still a lot but that's half of the number you gave. Internal documents with the Turkish military show that it maintains profiles of officers based on their religious beliefs and ethnic background. Non-Muslims and ethnic minorities receive negative endorsements and are much less likely to be promoted. The documents came to light through Nordic Monitor, a project of a journalist who fled Turkey, Abdullah Bozkurt. They prove that Turkey, a NATO country, discriminates systematically and illegally. According to Bozkurt, there were already few non-Muslims or officers from an ethnic minority in the Turkish army anyway. They are already being refused application and screening, he claims. Those who do get past that often hide their background for fear of discrimination.
      In the run-up to the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on April 24, the week before a door of an Armenian school in Istanbul was defaced with a swastika. Around this period, there are often such provocations in the country, but also in other places in the world where migrants from both groups live.
      Also during the corona pandemic and the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, hatred against Armenian Christians in Turkey increased. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in a speech called the Armenians in his country "leftover remnants of the sword". He was referring to the relatives of Armenians who survived the genocide.
      Also, the transformation of Istanbul's beautiful Chora Church of the Holy Saviour, merged into a swelling stream of Turkish Christian churches being confiscated, shuttered, torn down, or converted into mosques.
      You are a liar and you know it.

  • @ameyas7726
    @ameyas7726 Год назад +8

    EU is currently changing it's internal mechanisms to ensure that bad EU members don't get much (or any) benefits of being an EU member...So Turkey should join EU only and only if it genuinely wants to be a co-operative EU partner....otherwise EU membership will only be a huge waste of time and money for Turkey, who likely want in for the sweet Veto powers or aid benefits etc..

    • @calasalos
      @calasalos Год назад

      I think is not only that.. Since Roman time European countries have shared mostly a common history! For example every European country lived the so called "Middle-Age" period, which makes no sense outside of Europe. The same with the Renaissance, the "Age of Discoveries" etc..
      We had a common giudeo-christian background in which there are the roots of the "western" understanding of the human person and of its dignity. Even now that most European countries have developed a proper secularism. The religious wars between Protestants and Catholics that plagued Europe for centuries taught europeans the value of religious tolerance, respect and the distinction between faith and reason!

    • @briancops3798
      @briancops3798 Год назад

      @@calasalos the Ottoman empire was crucial in most of the events you mention.
      The age of discovery started partially because the Ottomans controlled the silk route into Central Asia.
      In general the Ottomans were considered to be European, an empire just as France, Russia, or Great Britain.
      So there is a long shared history, the Judeo Cristian argument is completly ignorant. It forgets that the Balkan, Baltics, and Nordic regions existed as they had different mechanisms and or religions in place for much of their history, JC is an American invention not European.
      Turkey is in general still rather secular as it followed General European trends.
      (Addition of last few lines)
      With the current mechanisms Turkey would become the major player in the EU. France and Germany would lose a lotta of power neither of them wants to lose the power they have today.

    • @Corny80
      @Corny80 Год назад

      @@briancops3798 What does rather secular even mean? You either have a secular govt or you don't. Erdogan gets financial advice on handling inflation from the quran and can persecute political opponents with impunity. So who cares about rather?

  • @theanglo-lithuanian1768
    @theanglo-lithuanian1768 Год назад +31

    Turkey: "Finland and Sweden can't join NATO!"
    The EU: "Turkey can't join the EU"
    Turkey: 😲

    • @noobaction7720
      @noobaction7720 Год назад +8

      is the other way around? sweden and finland were vetoing turkey for years. and now turkey starts vetoing them thats it.

    • @boarfaceswinejaw4516
      @boarfaceswinejaw4516 Год назад +11

      @@noobaction7720
      no one is vetoing Turkey. Turkey hasnt fulfilled any of the criteria for joining the EU.
      Sweden and Finland meanwhile have cooperated with NATO for decades.

    • @elicier4123
      @elicier4123 Год назад

      @@boarfaceswinejaw4516 Turkey is a country, I guess that's one criteria fulfilled XD

    • @koiruus2170
      @koiruus2170 Год назад +1

      @@noobaction7720 afaik only France vetoed them even though there were more countries that didn't like the idea of them joining.

    • @zjeee
      @zjeee Год назад +4

      @@noobaction7720 Sweden and Finland never voted against Turkey's EU ascension, you are spreading misinformation.

  • @Kwippy
    @Kwippy Год назад +55

    Many years ago I heard an EU politician say that Turkey is just too culturally different from Western Europe that they could not be a part of the EU. I thought this sounded a bit racist at the time. Time, has proven that Turkey is too different, irreconcilably so at this time. This is such a great pity as the economic, cultural, security benefits to both Turkey and EU could be huge if Turkey could join.

    • @Noctem_pasa
      @Noctem_pasa Год назад +11

      Turkey is hardly homogenous, the CHP and HDP have a lot in common with the EU values, and erdogan has largely been an exception rather than the rule, not too different from what happened in Hungary with Orban except on a larger scale

    • @AD-yq8rl
      @AD-yq8rl Год назад

      To some extent, those racist attitutes you of Europe ,you mentioned, pushed Turkey into the edge. Poland and Hungary are about to become a dictatorial states even though they are in the EU, I cannot even imagine how would haven been they if they had been rejected by the EU.

    • @muratopozturk5211
      @muratopozturk5211 Год назад

      @@Noctem_pasa Orban is a reflection of Erdogan imo. both are greed to staying in power and do whatever they can do to solidify their hegemony. I hope hungary gets rid of Orban ASAP.

    • @SwordQuake2
      @SwordQuake2 Год назад +6

      How is being different racist? It's the EUROPEAN union for a reason. The turkeys are not European.

    • @ems7623
      @ems7623 Год назад +1

      I think if Turkey had been broken up into smaller territories at the fall of the Ottoman Empire, they would be in a very different position now. There had been, for instance, Greek claims to Istanbul which might have led to Istanbul and the surrounding region being a seperate national entity. Then, of course, there are the Armenian and Kurdish claims on almost a third of Anatolia in the East.
      Instead, Turkey was left as a rather large population nation with control over Black Sea access and the ability to do things like boss Cyprus around. And now, we have a man like Erdogan who knows he can get away with being an authoritarian who Europe and the West must tolerate - instead of a nation that is a more natural EU ally.

  • @zedero8
    @zedero8 Год назад +30

    Turkey will never join the EU, there are far too many obstacles. Mainly cultural and geopolitical ones, as well as economical. We don’t really want more members, especially a country like Turkey who is not only big but has also a worse economy than our poorest states.

    • @_Anatolian_
      @_Anatolian_ Год назад +4

      like greece? lol

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +6

      @@_Anatolian_ Nope, I don’t know where you’ve gathered that from. Turkey is not a European country and its economy is in shambles, poorer than Bulgaria (the EU’s poorest state). I don’t know what you’re trying to say.

    • @_Anatolian_
      @_Anatolian_ Год назад +6

      @@zedero8 but still 21st biggest economy in the world )))))

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +11

      @@_Anatolian_ this literally means nothing, Switzerland has 8 million people (10+ times less than Turkey) and still has the same economic size.
      By your logic, even Indonesia is rich. Well no, having a big GDP doesn’t mean anything. People are still impoverished and society far too underdeveloped.

    • @mehmetsahsert3284
      @mehmetsahsert3284 Год назад +4

      Your last sentence is false as fuq btw. At least make the myths up please

  • @RockerFinland
    @RockerFinland Год назад +19

    Finland has always been one of the biggest supporter of Turkey to join EU. Turkey didn't show the same manner with Finland joining NATO so I think the Finnish support ain't there anymore for Turkey either

    • @eren6362
      @eren6362 Год назад

      Finland never supported Turkey more like they were always against since they're supporting Terrorists group that are attacking Turkey

    • @bakiozturk2112
      @bakiozturk2112 Год назад

      We are not fan of yours either.

    • @RockerFinland
      @RockerFinland Год назад +3

      @@bakiozturk2112 I don't think Finland asked to be a fan. Finland just was one of the first EU-members supporting Turkey to become a member of EU and in 1999, Turkey became a candidate country for the EU (it was decided in Finnish city Tampere, during the Finnish presidency of the EU). Like I said, nobody asked to be a fan but I can imagine how those Finns feels backstabbed when they believed in Turkey while many others countries didn't).
      Turkey is just in the Putin's backpocket

    • @bakiozturk2112
      @bakiozturk2112 Год назад

      @@RockerFinland no one is putin's pocket in Turkish goverment. I recommend you what happened Russian aircraft who violate Turkish airspace for two minutes in 2015. You were doing fair analysis but in the packet line you lost me. This issue have its own dynamics other than Russia.

    • @metacan5609
      @metacan5609 Год назад

      @@RockerFinland Actually we dont have any problems with Finland. We have problems with Sweden but they both applied for NATO. So i can say that Finland get lost in the shuffle :D

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Год назад +48

    The EU should really just concentrate consolidating all of Europe than going forward with accession for Turkey.

    • @becnal
      @becnal Год назад +3

      I don’t even think that all of Europe belongs in the EU at the moment. Serbia for example.

    • @ellied.violet7372
      @ellied.violet7372 Год назад +3

      Europe doesn't in the least think about letting Turkey join. This British YT channel does 😁.
      Greetings from the EU🇪🇺

    • @timokohler6631
      @timokohler6631 Год назад +1

      @@becnal Turkey would be a much more valuable and contrary to popular belive culturally better fitting member then Serbia. So Turkey will probably join before Serbia.

    • @timokohler6631
      @timokohler6631 Год назад +1

      I agree, with Brexit Europe has gained enormous potential to further Integration. Traditionally of the "big 3" France, Germany and the UK, it was always the UK vs France and Germany in this matter.

    • @ellied.violet7372
      @ellied.violet7372 Год назад +6

      @@timokohler6631 Neither is a suitable candidate. Although it could be Turkey in 50 years and Serbia in 55 years .... or so.
      Plus: who really needs Serbia? 7m inhabitants - that's a bit more than half of the city of Paris.

  • @David-qp9bq
    @David-qp9bq Год назад +74

    You do realise the prospect of Turkey joining the EU was one of the main arguments for BREXIT

    • @Sami-gi1ld
      @Sami-gi1ld Год назад +2

      Really?

    • @krombopulos_michael
      @krombopulos_michael Год назад +23

      Yes, since they literally said that in the video

    • @rathandevlish2787
      @rathandevlish2787 Год назад +1

      It was the main thing that caused brexit

    • @blakedake19
      @blakedake19 Год назад

      @@rathandevlish2787 The main thing was that Brussels was ruled by evil technocrat that do evil things. And the other major one was to spend the money to be in the common market into healthcare. Both of them were bollocks.

    • @dedomraz1265
      @dedomraz1265 Год назад +22

      Actually Brexit was best for eu… less American influence over europe

  • @FarnhamJ07
    @FarnhamJ07 Год назад +12

    Perhaps it could happen in the longer term, but between Cyprus and Erdoğanism, I think they have to completely reverse course and keep the appropriate heading for at least a decade before it can even be seriously discussed. Hopefully Erdoğan driving the lira into the ground will have a silver lining in helping get them on track next year, but I'm not holding my breath.

    • @williamdavis9562
      @williamdavis9562 Год назад

      If Erdogan and the Cyprus problem vanished overnight, this situation still wouldn't be any different.

    • @navylaks2
      @navylaks2 Год назад

      Erdoğan or not Türks are from Central Asia not Europe.

  • @officialpymical3966
    @officialpymical3966 Год назад +1

    Don’t skip the ad guys

  • @malcaniscsm5184
    @malcaniscsm5184 Год назад +19

    Exceedingly unlikely. Turkiye has drifted ever further away from accession during the Erdogan regime. Erdogan would hacksaw his feet off before he'd accept the changes required.

    • @Noctem_pasa
      @Noctem_pasa Год назад

      Hence why the entirety of the video hinged on erdogan losing next year

    • @williamdavis9562
      @williamdavis9562 Год назад

      @Malcanis CSM, Turkey was far away from accession before Erdogan and Turkey is far away from EU accession today. They will be far away from EU accession long after he is gone.
      In fact it was under this dude 15 years ago when they were closest to accession (which isn't saying much as they were still very far.)
      Please, less cheap/false rhetoric and more fact based comments. Thanks.

  • @paologat
    @paologat Год назад +15

    Is today April 1st? Turkey doesn’t come anywhere near the admission criteria.
    - Democratic government with constitutional safeguards and separation of powers: nope. Turkey has been eroding that for years if not decades.
    - Stable, mature economy: nope. Turkish economy has been mismanaged into the ground.
    - Unanimous support by current EU members: nope. Cyprus would certainly veto and so would most others, if not all.

  • @frankjeppsson9166
    @frankjeppsson9166 Год назад +2

    The short answer is NO, the long answer is NO

  • @b6983832
    @b6983832 Год назад +14

    If Turkish president is blocking the NATO membership of two EU members, it will be remembered in the future. Swedish and Finnish approval for Turkish membership in EU might get severely delayed.

    • @BoBo-bq2os
      @BoBo-bq2os Год назад +3

      Thats why he should never let these countries in NATO.

    • @sypherthe297th2
      @sypherthe297th2 Год назад

      @@BoBo-bq2os Probably more to be gained by NATO figuring out how to remove Turkey than allowing Turkey a veto. Turkey used to be a country making real progress. Now its just a backward theocratic hellscape with absurd levels of inflation because your leader is incompetent.
      Go ahead and join with Russia as your other comment indicates you think is a good idea. Have fun being two economic backwaters impoverishing their people. That'll work brilliantly.

    • @tuomastt
      @tuomastt Год назад

      @@BoBo-bq2os what? 😂

    • @thetraveller1612
      @thetraveller1612 Год назад +5

      You mean similar to Greece delaying Macedonian Nato membership for 11 years all over a name?

    • @sypherthe297th2
      @sypherthe297th2 Год назад +1

      @@thetraveller1612 Yeah. That was absurd as well.

  • @dionisismavrokefalos6837
    @dionisismavrokefalos6837 Год назад +5

    Imagine wanting to join a union that you dont recognize one of its member states.

  • @pabloagusti5104
    @pabloagusti5104 Год назад +44

    Turkey when looking for a better economic future: We're European, obviously.
    Turkey when being problematic in fields like the judiciary, democracy, disputes with Greece and the recent "islamic economic policy": But we're also obviously asian and you don't tell us what to do.

    • @FRODIII
      @FRODIII Год назад +1

      Turkey is not european just like cyprus azerbaijan armenia georgia! They like to call themselfs european for many reasons but they're asian!

    • @annas4843
      @annas4843 Год назад +7

      @@FRODIII Cypriots are Greeks lol 😂 I think you forget that… calling Cypriots not Europeans is like calling Greeks not Europeans, and Europe is a Greek word, it has meaning in Greek language and is part of Greek mythology how this continent got its name

    • @thesoundinyourhead1782
      @thesoundinyourhead1782 Год назад

      There are not disputes with Greece. In order to have disputes, you should have a legal base and a framework to support it.
      Turkey has only absurd expansionist claims based on TONS of propaganda by its media and even Turkish yt trolls accounts that spread all day misinformations.

    • @FRODIII
      @FRODIII Год назад +1

      @@annas4843 I meant because of the location! But being called europe means nothing! If we called it venus wouldn't mean the population came from venus! Plus greeks are HEAVILY mixed! 2000 years ago or so europeans were all nordic looking with blonde/blue eyed etc

  • @msma9264
    @msma9264 Год назад

    Smoothest sponsor segue

  • @Mattattaxk
    @Mattattaxk Год назад +2

    Unlikely but after the last 10 years I wouldn’t entirely rule it out.

  • @duprog
    @duprog Год назад +5

    I would rather see the fact that Turkey '' remains vastly distant from the EU's values and normative framework... '' as a positive point considering the overall mismanagement and corruption prevalent in most western countries.
    As a famous actor said '' I wouldn't join a club that would accept me as a member because they would have to be as bad as I am to consider such a foolish thing. '' Turkey should consider it twice before joining an organization like the EU and even more for one such as NATO.

    • @2dradon2
      @2dradon2 Год назад

      Turkey already is part of NATO.
      Secondly, you speak as if Turkey is immune to any corruption. Turkeys political history is not any better than most countries plus economic mismanagement such as the leaders issues with currency shows turkey has just as many problems, if not more

    • @bafattvahetere
      @bafattvahetere Год назад

      Ha,ha Turkey is a NATO member since long. They should not be there if they applied today.

    • @williamdavis9562
      @williamdavis9562 Год назад

      @@2dradon2 I don't think the OP was claiming Turkey isn't corrupt or immune to it.
      I think he is referring to the slow collapse of many EU nations. If you look at the EU nations in the past 20 years and look at Turkey in the past 20 years.
      I think it's fair to say they're on completely different trajectories.

  • @VictorECaplon
    @VictorECaplon Год назад +6

    I got your advert…loved it and watched it all. But seriously that cut off at the end was just mean! What was your position on brexit?!

    • @littlerage4u799
      @littlerage4u799 Год назад +1

      wtf was mean about that?

    • @VictorECaplon
      @VictorECaplon Год назад +1

      @@littlerage4u799 dont take it seriously. It was such a tease I wanted to say something. This was all in good humour.

  • @dearaneta
    @dearaneta Год назад +2

    Turkey and Cyprus in an Asian Country but they managed to apply for EU membership. Asia must create a Union also, its time for Asian Union.

  • @modmaker7617
    @modmaker7617 Год назад

    Lol. I had a TLDR News ad on a TLDR Video.

  • @gediminaskucinskas6952
    @gediminaskucinskas6952 Год назад +38

    Erdogan is too much of an authoritarian for this. Sure you can make an argument that Orban isnt all that different but when you take into account whole Cyprus dispute... yeah dont think we will see Turkey in EU anytime soon.

    • @turkishspermgod
      @turkishspermgod Год назад +1

      Erdogan will go

    • @suicidalbanananana
      @suicidalbanananana Год назад

      @@turkishspermgod Fingers crossed that the next guy is a bit nicer to all sides (both the Turkish people and the rest of the world)

    • @asalways1504
      @asalways1504 Год назад +1

      And Hungary was already in the EU before Orban showed up

  • @helgaioannidis9365
    @helgaioannidis9365 Год назад +67

    As long as Turkiye threatens Greece with war (casus belli over the 12 sea miles according to UNCLOS since 1995), it's impossible for Turkiye to join EU. As Turkiye doesn't recognize their border with EU, how could they join?
    And things are getting worse recently, as Turkiye now started to claim inhabited Greek islands as Rhodes as Turkish territory.

    • @joeyjojojrshabadoo7462
      @joeyjojojrshabadoo7462 Год назад +11

      I wouldn't be surprised if they tried claiming Crimea next.

    • @Juho221
      @Juho221 Год назад +6

      @@joeyjojojrshabadoo7462 They have historical right to Crimea, of course they need it back

    • @oerthling
      @oerthling Год назад +8

      Resolving such issues would be part of an accession treaty.
      Border issues with Greece, while potentially dangerous, are one of the smaller problems IMHO.
      Türkyes relationship with Kurds look far more intractable to me.
      Recent more authoritarian trends clearly go in the wrong direction.
      I have nothing against Türkye joining the EU - as soon as the conditions are right. But currently it doesn't look like that's achievable soon.
      But countries and cultures can change. We had plenty of fascism, homophobia and suppression of women's rights in Europe in the not so distant past.
      People talk as if women have enjoyed all the freedoms for a couple of miillenia in Europe, while actuality it's been some decades and cultures were quite chauvinistic before.
      And while legal discrimination is mostly overcome now, I'm sure we can find some cases of homophobia and misogeny still.
      Yes, Türkye has problems that need resolving and I don't see them fixed in a couple of years. But there is no fundamental reason it can't reform.
      Change is quite normal throughout history.

    • @helgaioannidis9365
      @helgaioannidis9365 Год назад

      @@muratopozturk5211 I live on one of those islands and I'll not eat popcorn, I'll find myself in the middle of a useless, stupid war.
      But it's highly unlikely that Turkiye will try to invade, that would most likely end the existence of NATO as we know it and leave Turkiye exposed towards Russia.

    • @TheGrace020
      @TheGrace020 Год назад +1

      @@Juho221 So does Greece and the romans and cossacks and the... you get the point

  • @siyacer
    @siyacer Год назад

    About time

  • @whitescar2
    @whitescar2 Год назад +2

    Short answer? No. Not as long as Turkey is keeping Finland and Sweden from joining NATO.

    • @inso80
      @inso80 Год назад

      There is a dozen other reasons too. And about their stance on Fin/Swe, it was basically a designed trap, so they are not even acting in good faith which makes it a Nato internal matter instead of a negotiation.

  • @esakoivuniemi
    @esakoivuniemi Год назад +3

    I think Finland and Sweden might have a thing or two to say about that.

    • @thetraveller1612
      @thetraveller1612 Год назад

      Does not matter. Even if Sweden and Finland were favorable the rest would still object. Therefore Sweden and Finland have no leverage in this matter.

  • @BatmanTheDarkKnight3
    @BatmanTheDarkKnight3 Год назад +30

    Im surprised that most videos made about Turkey and its EU accession process don't even mention that there is an active casus belli (!!!) against Greece, a country which is not only a member of the EU but also a NATO "ally" of Turkey. Not to mention the daily scrambles between greek and turkish fighter jets over the Aegean sea, but also the recent hostile rhetoric by the turkish president that his country might invade greek islands "at nighttime when greeks will be sleeping" .... It's quite shocking that really few channels have covered these series of events over the past years!

    • @timokohler6631
      @timokohler6631 Год назад

      Greece is not considered a "proper" EU member by most nowadays. So there propably is little consideration for their objections, but in the end it's still right of coure, countries with border disputes can not join. However this is actually not that big of an obstacle, Greece does not have the military or economic power to have it their way, unlike Turkey and the EU, in other words, Greece can be "made" to resolve these issues by Nato and the EU if Turkeys negotiating position was strong enough, which it is not at the time.

    • @zedero8
      @zedero8 Год назад +9

      @@timokohler6631 You got it all wrong. There’s nothing to categorize the country as a “non-proper EU state”. Greece is a frontrunner in integration matters. The reason these issues are not being paid attention to is because the US has the EU by its balls. Turkey for the Americans is a geostrategically important country due to the straits, so there’s no reason to do anything “big” regarding their authoritarianism against Greece and Cyprus because, frankly, they’re just barking. The moment those dictators decided to escalate the situation, though, would be the end of Turkey as we know it. Nobody would “force” Greece to do anything, they’ve got a veto, and will always have one when the general veto system is scrambled, since the accession veto will be the only one to stay. But that’s not to say that Greece would theoretically be against Turkey’s prospects of joining (not that it all ever happen). Greece was actually one of the few countries who supported their membership bid, in an attempt to resolve the problems Turkey has caused. But it doesn’t matter anymore, literally every country in the EU would be against Turkey joining, like, ever.

    • @SwordQuake2
      @SwordQuake2 Год назад +2

      They have a casus belli as much as russia does in invading Ukraine: none at all. They're essentially the same imperialist dictatorships

    • @bodom2005
      @bodom2005 Год назад +1

      @@timokohler6631 define proper mr Kohler. Also, you d be surprised but Greece has the upper hand in a military conflict with Turkey right now in terms of air and sea superiority.

    • @Cloud-rk7if
      @Cloud-rk7if Год назад

      @@bodom2005 AHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAAHHAHAHHAHAHASHSHSHHAHAHAAHAHAHAHHAAHAAH

  • @23merlino
    @23merlino Год назад +2

    no chance, there are still way too many open issues...

  • @fredjohnson9426
    @fredjohnson9426 Год назад

    "Nebula have bought this ad so you don't have to watch an advert" + Curiosity Stream. Skip ad. Immediately followed by Brilliant. Nice

  • @pepponi
    @pepponi Год назад +6

    Not with its current corrupt regime

  • @Ricardo-zt3nc
    @Ricardo-zt3nc Год назад +16

    imagine the refugee chaos and illegal border crossings into Turkiye from the Middle East if it joined.. truly a ridiculous proposition... also Erdogan seems to be getting more sus and authoritarian by the year so we need to seriously be weary of that in general

  • @matthewlee6967
    @matthewlee6967 Год назад

    okay.... hold on.... I actually watched the advert you bought. Ended a bit early don't you think????

  • @Ava-wu4qp
    @Ava-wu4qp Год назад

    Tldr ad before a TLDR video. Meta.

  • @halbrakt3457
    @halbrakt3457 Год назад +11

    As a Swedish person its a hard no... you all know why.

    • @sadeksama5057
      @sadeksama5057 Год назад

      Because they didn't let you in nato ? Loool
      It's amazing how u guys want to be cucks for nato

    • @sadeksama5057
      @sadeksama5057 Год назад

      Because they didn't let you in nato ? Loool
      It's amazing how u guys want to be cucks for nato

    • @jupiterbirlesikgezegenleri9884
      @jupiterbirlesikgezegenleri9884 Год назад

      thats why you cant join to nato

  • @NajiaAnsari628
    @NajiaAnsari628 Год назад +3

    I like how the EU doesn’t have the biggest city in Europe

  • @cemdursun
    @cemdursun Год назад +4

    Turkey needs to "rebuild" it's democratic structure first

    • @aldindurakovic8828
      @aldindurakovic8828 Год назад

      No. They don't need the CIA and feto and MI 6 anymore....democratic structure right ???!!!!😊😊😊😊😊

  • @hardcore476
    @hardcore476 Год назад +1

    Yes you finally made an ad I can skip

  • @shabirwaziri6563
    @shabirwaziri6563 Год назад +3

    Turkey should go it's own way. EU would never let them in.

  • @Ptolemy336VV
    @Ptolemy336VV Год назад +22

    With the unaccountability, the aggression towards Greece and Cyprus, the opportunist mentality it always exerts everywhere even on Finland and Sweden, Turkey will never enter the EU. Its literally the one nation that simply has a too undeveloped mentality and maturity to join the EU. Under any other condition would it be a good idea to let Turkey join, but like this, never

  • @coverthestone
    @coverthestone Год назад +1

    Lol awesome ad!

  • @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237
    @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237 Год назад +1

    You cannot make beautiful butterfly out of earthworm.

  • @orhanemiratlgan9478
    @orhanemiratlgan9478 Год назад +5

    In Turkey, we don't even talk about it anymore. It has been very very long time since I have heard the EU membership debates in our news.
    It is an issue which is not taken seriously in Turkey. So, do not ask the same silly question " Can Turkey join ? " again and again.

    • @aldindurakovic8828
      @aldindurakovic8828 Год назад

      They are accting like they have some influence , they don't have.
      The Turks are a Muslim Civillisational State..... this is their
      destany.... 🌘🌘🌘🌘🌘🌘🌘🌘

    • @juliansteffen5197
      @juliansteffen5197 Год назад

      Thank God I hope you guys will never join the EU !!!!

  • @mrt4282
    @mrt4282 Год назад +7

    Wont happen in the forseable future. Just the fact alone that they currently commit war-crimes in Cyprus makes any discussion moot.

    • @Kozkayn
      @Kozkayn Год назад

      turkey isnt committing war crimes currently in cyprus they used to commit it but now there is no on going war crimes in cyprus the whole cyprus conflict started because greek cypriots were committing war crimes against turkish cypriots of course responding to war crimes with war crimes isnt an excuse to well commit war crimes the real issue avoiding them joining the union is that the turkish government is oppressing kurds but some speculate that the more important reason doesnt lie in turkey but in the EU as they dont want a muslim majority country with 97% of their land in asia to be involved in their business this theory is supported by the fact that the political map of europe usually goes around turkey adding armenia and georgia but not turkey which is surrounded by 4 countries usually considered to be fully european but it itself isnt but again this isnt confirmed

    • @Ulas_Aldag
      @Ulas_Aldag Год назад

      War-crimes? What are you talking about lol. It's laughable how people nowadays through around serious allegations so easily. If we keep doing this, there won't be any gradient left to distinguish between actual evil. Just like comparing Putin to Hitler. It's nonsense and sacrificing credibility for a short-term benefit.

  • @marcusfranconium3392
    @marcusfranconium3392 Год назад +2

    Not a chance they pissed of every core member and founding nation of the EU . The EU i smore inclined to terminate all treaties than ad them to the EU .

  • @autarchprinceps
    @autarchprinceps Год назад +4

    No. They are further away than ever.

  • @thepigeonhqhq
    @thepigeonhqhq Год назад +8

    Could you possibly write something about the current political situation in Bulgaria? It is a very interesting what is happening there right now and the politics are almost like some reality show. Finally, a government has formed that wants to reduce corruption and the mafia's presence in the country, but the status quo is resisting really hard.

    • @Ryan_Alwi
      @Ryan_Alwi Год назад

      What is happening in Bulgaria?

    • @thepigeonhqhq
      @thepigeonhqhq Год назад +2

      @@Ryan_Alwi it is really hard to explain in a comment. Basically we have a government finally that wants to get the mafia out but the opposition from them is strong and we might not have a government soon.

    • @Ryan_Alwi
      @Ryan_Alwi Год назад

      @@thepigeonhqhq mafia has influence in government like in Italy?

    • @thepigeonhqhq
      @thepigeonhqhq Год назад +1

      @@Ryan_Alwi yes, just like in many "democracies" actually, in Bulgaria the mafia pretends to be the three separate powers

    • @Ryan_Alwi
      @Ryan_Alwi Год назад

      @@thepigeonhqhq so u are saying that every single branch of government in Bulgaria is controlled by the mob at the end of the day... Bone chilling

  • @marconeves4341
    @marconeves4341 Год назад +3

    Bad idea...

  • @camm8642
    @camm8642 Год назад +1

    I doubt greece would go for it but turkey is not a good fit culturally or politically not to mention ever more diverging interests....I think the best to hope for is a partnership of some sort but the fit isn't good.

  • @hakimboxing6672
    @hakimboxing6672 Год назад +1

    Turkey and the EU should agree on letting them join the single market, but not be a member. This would offer both parties the flexibility they would like. Switzerland is a great example of being in the middle, plus Turkey position in the area makes it better suited to not join one side of any party, plus they're already in NATO. So NATO, already in the customs union, and they can be in the Single Market now as well. Also, maybe offer more opportunities for Turkish students to access more universities and jobs in the EU.

    • @inso80
      @inso80 Год назад

      Something like that would have been the road back in the day when it was still possible. As it stands, no fucking way.