STOCKHOLM, Sept. 27 (Xinhuanet) -- The fate of the EU's constitutional treaty is unknown and further expansion of the union to include Turkey is unlikely, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen wrote in a column published Tuesday in Politiken, one of Denmark's biggest newspapers.
Denmark was scheduled to go to the polls on Tuesday to vote on the EU treaty. After the Netherlands and France rejected the treaty over the summer, however, the process for ratifying the treaty remains unknown, said the prime minister.
"I think we have to accept that the constitutional treaty will not go into effect in the coming years," said Rasmussen. "I won't say that the treaty is completely dead. But we have to acknowledge that two countries have rejected the treaty in their referenda. That's why we should concentrate on the EU's true purpose."
At the same time, Rasmussen hedged on giving a clear timeline for Turkey's acceptance into the EU, even though Turkey begins negotiations for membership next week.
The country's ability to live up to EU's requirements was no longer sufficient, it was also necessary to ask whether the EU could absorb Turkey, according to Rasmussen.
"It is absolutely crucial that the expansion does not dilute EU co-operation. That's why I say that if we want a cohesive EU, we have to discuss how far the expansion can continue," wrote Rasmussen.
The leader of the opposition's Social Liberals, Marianne Jelved, considered Rasmussen's position problematic, because it changed the criteria for Turkey's membership, undermining the EU's credibility.
"And a strike against the EU's credibility rubs off on the prime minister," she said. Enditem |