with Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 23 September 2004 with Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in
Erzurum, on 7 January 2011 with Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 11 February 2014 with Turkey's EU Minister
Ömer Çelik, July 2017 with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 7 December 2017 , French President
Emmanuel Macron, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Russian President
Vladimir Putin when giving a press conference as part of the Syria summit in Istanbul, Turkey. with European Commissioner for Jobs, Growth, Investment and Competitiveness
Jyrki Katainen on 28 February 2019 with European Commissioner for Trade
Phil Hogan on 19 December 2019 with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on
South-East European Cooperation Process (SEECP) Summit in
Antalya, Turkey 17 June 2021 with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on
2021 G20 Rome summit in
Rome, Italy 30 October 2021 with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 30 June 2022 with European Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement
Olivér Várhelyi on 26 January 2023 with Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 12 July 2023 with Turkish Trade Minister Ömer Bolat on 6 September 2023 EU–Turkey relations deteriorated significantly after the
2016–17 Turkish purges, including the suppression of
its media freedom and
the arrests of journalists, as well as the country's turn to
authoritarianism under the
AKP and Erdoğan.
Developing the customs union The 1996
Customs Union between the EU and Turkey in the view of both sides needs an upgrade to accommodate developments since its conclusion; however, as of 2017, technical negotiations to upgrade the customs union agreement to the advantage of both sides are complicated by ongoing tension between Ankara and Brussels. On 26 June 2018, reacting to the
Turkish general election two days earlier, the EU's
General Affairs Council stated that "the Council notes that Turkey has been moving further away from the European Union" and thus "no further work towards the modernisation of the EU-Turkey Customs Union is foreseen." currently 4.5 billion allocated for the 2014–2020 period (about 740 million Euros per year). The
European Parliament's resolution in November 2016 to suspend accession negotiations with Turkey over human rights and rule of law concerns called for the Commission to "reflect on the latest developments in Turkey" in its review of the funding program, The
ALDE faction has called for a freezing of pre-accession funding. The EP's rapporteur on Turkey,
Kati Piri, in April 2017 suggested the funds should be converted and concentrated to support those of the losing "No" side in the
constitutional referendum, who share European values and are now under "tremendous pressure". In June 2017, the EU's financial watchdog, the European Court of Auditors, announced that it would investigate the effectiveness of the pre-accessions funds which Turkey has received since 2007 to support rule of law, civil society, fundamental rights, democracy and governance reforms. Turkish media commented that "perhaps it can explain why this money apparently failed to have the slightest effect on efforts to prevent the deterioration of democracy in this country." The European Commission's long-term budget proposal for the 2021–2027 period released in May 2018 included pre-accession funding for a Western Balkan Strategy for further enlargement, but omitted Turkey. creates political tension between the EU and Turkey in both ways: while the EU criticises the abuse of "anti-terror" rhetoric and legislation to curb freedom of speech, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan frequently accuses the
27 EU member states and the EU of "harboring terrorists" for providing safe haven to Turkish citizens persecuted for their political views. Turkey called on the 27 EU member states and the EU to end support for the
Gülen movement and the
PKK, not to host them, to stop the activities of the two organizations, and to extradite the members of the two organizations to Turkey. In April 2017, the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) voted to reopen its monitoring procedure against Turkey. This vote is widely understood to deal a major blow to Turkey's goal of eventual EU membership, as exiting that process was made a precondition of
EU accession negotiations back in 2004.
EU-Turkey deal on migrant crisis The 2015 refugee crisis had a great impact on relations. They became functional, based on interdependence as well as the EU's relative retreat from political membership conditionality. The March 2016 EU-Turkey 'refugee deal' made for deeper functional cooperation with material and normative concessions made by the EU. In February 2016, Erdoğan threatened to
send the millions of refugees in Turkey to EU member states, saying: "We can open the doors to Greece and Bulgaria anytime and we can put the refugees on buses ... So how will you deal with refugees if you don't get a deal? Kill the refugees?" On 20 March 2016, a deal between the EU and Turkey to tackle the
migrant crisis formally came into effect. The agreement was intended to limit the influx of irregular migrants entering the EU through Turkey. A central aspect of the deal is the return to the Turkish capital of Ankara any irregular migrant who is found to have entered the EU through Turkey without having already undergone a formal asylum application process. Those that had bypassed the asylum process in Turkey would be returned and placed at the end of the application line. Greece is often the first EU member-state entered by irregular migrants who have passed through Turkey. Greek islands such as Lesbos are hosting increasing numbers of irregular migrants who must now wait for the determination of asylum status before moving to their ultimate destinations elsewhere in Europe. Some 2,300 experts, including security and migration officials and translators, were set to arrive in Greece to help enforce the deal. "A plan like this cannot be put in place in only 24 hours," said government migration spokesman Giorgos Kyritsis, quoted by AFP. Additional administrative help will be necessary to process the increasing backlogs of migrants detained in Greece as a result of the EU-Turkey deal. In exchange for Turkey's willingness to secure its borders and host irregular migrants, the EU agreed to resettle, on a 1:1 basis, Syrian migrants living in Turkey who had qualified for asylum and resettlement within the EU. The EU further incentivised Turkey to agree to the deal with a promise of lessening visa restrictions for Turkish citizens and by offering the Turkish government a payment of roughly six billion euros. Of these funds, roughly three billion euros were earmarked to support Syrian refugee communities living in Turkey. By the end of 2017, the EU-Turkey deal had been successful in limiting irregular migration into Europe through Turkey. However, there are still many doubts about the implementation of the agreement, including how the deal may violate human rights protections outlined in the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees. Critics have argued that the deal is essentially a deterrence strategy that seeks to encourage irregular migrants to file their asylum applications in Turkey rather than face being apprehended and sent back to Ankara, ultimately prolonging their application process. In December 2020, the contract finished •
Emergency Relocation: Refugees waiting for asylum in Greece and Italy will be relocated to Turkey first, to reduce the strain on these states and improve living conditions for those seeking asylum.
Criticism Critics have said the deal could force migrants determined to reach Europe to start using other and potentially more dangerous routes, such as the journey between North Africa and Italy. Human rights groups have strongly criticised the deal, with Amnesty International accusing the EU of turning "its back on a global refugee crisis". A
Chatham House paper argued that the deal, by excessively accommodating Erdoğan's demands, is encouraging Turkey to extract "more unilateral concessions in the future." One of the main issues many human rights organizations have with the deal is Turkey fails to meet the standards for hosting refugees. Specifically, many refugees are unable to apply for asylum while in Turkey and while there, they have low-quality living standards. Moreover, in Turkey, refugees are limited to specific areas, which are often lacking in critical infrastructure such as hospitals. However, the portion of the deal that dictated asylum seekers who landed in Greece would be returned to Turkey has been difficult to implement. A small percentage of these people were returned, amounting to 2,130 people. The risk of violating both European and international law has made this key portion of the deal far less successful than it was intended to be.
Turkey's dispute with Cyprus and Greece There is a long-standing dispute over Turkey's maritime boundaries with
Greece and
Cyprus and drilling rights in the
eastern Mediterranean. Turkey does not recognise a legal
continental shelf and
exclusive economic zones around the Greek islands and Cyprus. Turkey is the only member state of the
United Nations that does not recognise Cyprus, and is one of the few not signatory to the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which Cyprus has signed and ratified. In October 2022, Cypriot President
Nicos Anastasiades condemned the European Union's "double standards" and "tolerance" toward Turkey under
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, arguing that "Interests cannot take precedence over principles and values. We cannot say that we are currently making sacrifices to help
Ukraine – and rightly so – to cope with the illegal invasion and violation of its territorial integrity and, at the same time, we put our interests first in our relations with Turkey." In August 2023, Turkish-Cypriot security forces (police and military) attacked U.N. peacekeepers inside the
United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus at the
Pyla. The clashes started over unauthorised construction work in an area under U.N. control. Three peacekeepers were seriously injured and required hospitalisation and U.N. property has been damaged. The
U.N. Security Council condemned the incident and the
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said that "threats to the safety of U.N. peacekeepers and damage to U.N. property are unacceptable and may constitute serious crimes under international law." The
European Union also condemned it, but the Turkish president accused the UN force of bias against Turkish Cypriots and added that Turkey will not allow any "unlawful" behavior toward Turks on Cyprus.
Visa liberalisation process The
EU Commissioner of Interior Affairs Cecilia Malmström indicated on 29 September 2011 that the visa requirement for Turkish citizens will eventually be discontinued. Visa liberalisation will be ushered in several phases. Initial changes were expected in the autumn of 2011, which would include the reduction of visa paperwork, more multi-entry visas, and extended stay periods. In June 2012, the EU authorised the beginning of negotiations with Turkey on visa exemptions for its citizens. Turkish EU Minister
Egemen Bağış stated that he expected the process to take 3–4 years. The current visa policy of the EU is a cause of much concern for Turkish businessmen, politicians and Turks with family members in the EU.
Egemen Bağış described the situation as: "Even non-candidate countries such as
Russia,
Ukraine,
Moldova and
Georgia are currently negotiating for visa-free travel." In September 2012, Turkish Economy Minister
Zafer Çağlayan, during a meeting at the
WKÖ, said: "We have had a Customs Union for 17 years, and half of our (Turkey's) external trade is with Europe. Our goods can move freely, but a visa is required for the owner of the goods. This is a violation of
human rights." After the November 2015
2015 G20 Antalya summit held in
Antalya,
Turkey, there was a new push forward in Turkey's EU accession negotiations, including a goal of lifting the visa requirement for Turkish citizens. The EU welcomed the Turkey's commitment to accelerate the fulfilment of the Visa Roadmap benchmarks set forth by participating EU member states. A joint action plan was drafted with the
European Commission which developed a roadmap with certain benchmarks for the elimination of the visa requirement. The agreement called for abolishing visas for Turkish citizens within a year if certain conditions are satisfied. On 18 March 2016, EU reached a migration agreement with Turkey, aiming at discouraging refugees from entering the EU. Under this deal, Turkey agreed to take back migrants who enter Greece and send legal refugees to EU. In exchange, EU agreed to give Turkey six billion euros, and to allow visa-free travel for Turkish citizens by the end of June 2016 if Turkey meets 72 conditions. In March 2016, the EU assessed that Turkey at the time met 35 of the necessary 72 requirements for visa-free travel throughout Europe. In May 2016, this number had risen to 65 out of 72. On 19 April 2016,
Jean-Claude Juncker said that Turkey must meet the remaining criteria to win visa-free access to the Schengen area. But Turkish prime minister
Ahmet Davutoğlu argued that Turkey would not support the EU-Turkey deal if EU did not weaken the visa conditions by June 2016. In May 2016, the
European Commission said that Turkey had met most of the 72 criteria needed for a visa waiver, and it invited EU legislative institutions of the bloc to endorse the move for visa-free travel by Turkish citizens within the
Schengen Area by 30 June 2016. The
European Parliament would have to approve the visa waiver for it to enter into force and Turkey must fulfil the final five criteria. The five remaining benchmarks still to be met by Turkey include: • Turkey must pass measures to prevent corruption, in line with EU recommendations. • Turkey must align national legislation on personal data protection with EU standards. • Turkey needs to conclude an agreement with
Europol. • Turkey needs to work with all EU members on criminal matters. • Turkey must bring its terror laws in line with European standards. As of August 26, 2021, these conditions had yet to be fulfilled. On 25 June 2021, the EU approved plans to pay Turkey a further three billion euros to update this agreement. In August 2021, however, with President Erdoğan's
Justice and Development party polling at historic lows, and with the withdrawal of NATO forces from Afghanistan triggering fears of a new wave of migration to Europe through Turkey, Erdoğan cast doubt on the viability of this arrangement. While EU member states and the EU promised full support and solidarity to the Netherlands, full support and solidarity were not promised to Turkey.
2018 Turkish military intervention in Syria On 22 January 2018, the
High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini said she was "extremely worried" and would seek talks with Turkish officials. She expressed her concerns for two reasons: "One side is the humanitarian one – we need to make sure that humanitarian access is guaranteed and that civilian population and people are not suffering from military activities on the ground." The second issue was the offensive "can undermine seriously the resumption of talks in Geneva, which is what we believe could really bring sustainable peace and security for Syria". On 8 February 2018, the European Parliament condemned the mass arrest of critics in Turkey of the Afrin operation, and criticized the military intervention as raising serious humanitarian concerns. "[MEPs] are seriously concerned about the humanitarian consequences of the Turkish assault and warn against continuing with these disproportionate actions," the parliament's statement said. On 19 March 2018, Federica Mogherini criticized Turkey, saying that international efforts in Syria are supposed to be "aiming at de-escalating the military activities and not escalating them."
2018 EU–Turkey summit On March 26, 2018, the European Union–Turkey Summit was held in
Varna, Bulgaria. The EU term chairman, former Bulgarian Prime Minister
Boyko Borisov, former EU Council President
Donald Tusk, former EU Commission President
Jean-Claude Juncker, and Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan also attended the summit.
2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria High Representative
Federica Mogherini issued a declaration on behalf of the EU on 9 October 2019 stating that "In light of the Turkish military operation in north-east Syria, the EU reaffirms that a sustainable solution to the Syrian conflict cannot be achieved militarily." On 14 October 2019, following Turkey's offensive the
Council of the European Union released a press statement condemning Turkey's military action and called for Turkey to cease its "unilateral" military action in north-eastern Syria. It again recalled previous made statements by member states to halt arms exports licensing to Turkey and also recalled that it would not provide "stabilisation or development assistance where the rights of local populations are ignored or violated." Finland and Sweden, the two European Union members that want to become
NATO members, stopped arms sales to Turkey due to Turkey's military operation in Syria. In 2022, in negotiations with Turkey over Finland and Sweden's bid to join NATO, two EU member states Finland and Sweden pledged to not provide support to the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK),
People's Defense Units (YPG) or to the
Democratic Union Party (Syria) (PYD) along with pledges to lift the
arms embargo they had placed on Turkey over their incursion in Northern Syria, and to co-operate with Turkey in the
extradition of Kurdish refugees suspected to have links to the PKK, PYD and YPG. EU member Sweden lifted the arms embargo it imposed on Turkey in September 2022, and another EU member Finland lifted the arms embargo on Turkey in January 2023.
Turkish espionage In 2016, Bundestag
Parliamentary Oversight Panel members demanded an answer from the German government regarding the reports that
Germans of Turkish origin are being pressured in Germany by informers and officers of Turkey's
MIT spy agency. According to reports Turkey had 6,000 informants plus MIT officers in Germany who were putting pressure on "German Turks".
Hans-Christian Ströbele stated that there was an "unbelievable" level of "secret activities" in Germany by Turkey's MIT agency. According to Erich Schmidt-Eenboom, not even the former communist
East German Stasi secret police had managed to run such a large "army of agents" in the former
West Germany: "Here, it's not just about intelligence gathering, but increasingly about intelligence service repression." In 2017, the
Flemish interior minister,
Liesbeth Homans, started the process of withdrawing recognition of the Turkish-sponsored and second largest mosque in the country, Fatih mosque in
Beringen, accusing the mosque of spying in favor of Turkey. In 2017,
Austrian politician
Peter Pilz released a report on the activities of Turkish agents operating through ATIB (Avusturya Türkiye İslam Birliği – Austria Turkey Islamic Foundation), the Diyanet's arm responsible for administering religious affairs across 63 mosques in the country, and other Turkish organisations. Pilz's website faced a
DDoS attack by Turkish hacktivists and heavy security was provided when he presented the report publicly. Per the report, Turkey operates a clandestine network of 200 informants targeting opposition as well as Gülen supporters inside Austria.
Murders of Kurdish activists was assassinated in Paris in 2013. In 1994, Mehmet Kaygisiz, a
Kurdish man with links to the
PKK (which is
designated as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and the EU), was shot dead at a café in
Islington, London. His murder remained unsolved and at the time his murder was thought to be drug-related, but in 2016 new documents suggest that Turkey's
National Intelligence Organization (MIT) ordered his murder.
United Nations arms embargo to Libya The
European Union launched
Operation Irini with the primary task of enforcing the
United Nations arms embargo to
Libya because of the
Second Libyan Civil War. During this period there were several incidents between the Irini forces and the Turkish forces.
Armenia–Turkey normalisation process On 14 January 2022, the European Union welcomed the normalisation of
Armenia–Turkey relations.
Russian invasion of Ukraine The European Union welcomed Turkey's diplomatic efforts to end the
Russia-Ukraine war.
Turkey's opposition to NATO membership of two EU member states In May 2022, Turkey opposed two EU member states, Finland and Sweden, joining
NATO because according to Turkey, they host terrorist organisations which act against Turkey (including the
PKK,
KCK,
PYD,
YPG and
Gulen movement). Turkey urged the countries to lift their arms embargo on Turkey, not to support the organizations, and to extradite members of the
Gülen movement and
PKK from the two member states. In May 2022, Turkey requested the extradition of members of the Gülen movement and PKK from the two EU member states, but this was rejected. In May 2022, Turkey quickly blocked two EU members Finland and Sweden from starting their NATO membership applications. On 18 May 2022, Turkey asked the two member states to end their support for PKK, PYD, YPG and the Gülen movement and to stop their activities. In June 2022, the
European Parliament urged Turkey to approve Finland and Sweden's bids to join NATO as soon as possible. On 28 June 2022, Turkey signed the tripartite memorandum with Finland and Sweden at the
Madrid summit in
Madrid, Spain. In July 2022, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced that if the two EU member states (Finland and Sweden) do not extradite alleged members of the Gülen movement and the PKK, they will not approve the NATO membership of the two countries. Turkey called on two EU members, Finland and Sweden, to fulfill their commitments in the tripartite memorandum. Turkey asked the two member states to end the Kurdish demonstrations. Turkey asked the two member countries to end what it said was
Islamophobia and to stop the burning of the
Quran. However, the
Gülen movement is not on the EU's list of terrorist organizations, while the
PKK is on the EU's list of terrorist organizations. While Finland was given NATO approval by Turkey in March 2023, the
Turkish parliament did not accept Sweden's application to join NATO until 23 January 2024.
2023 Turkey–Syria earthquake The European Union expressed its condolences to those who lost their lives due to the
earthquake in Turkey and Syria, and wished the injured a speedy recovery. The EU has announced that they are ready to help Turkey and Syria.
2025 Turkish protests In the wake of the
arrest of Ekrem İmamoğlu and subsequent protests, President of the European Commission
Ursula von der Leyen said that Turkey would need to maintain its democratic values to avoid potentially losing its European Union
candidate country status, stating that the EU wished to stay closely tied to Turkey. A joint statement released by the European Union's High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
Kaja Kallas and Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement
Marta Kos remarked that the European Union held Turkey to a higher standard in implementing democratic values due to its candidate status and
Council of Europe membership. == Comparison ==