The Role of the European Union as a Third Party in Resolution of
External Conflicts: The Case of the Cyprus Problem" BY: AHMET SOZEN
University of Bahcesehir
Department of Political Science and International Relations
Document: Available from the SSRN Electronic Paper Collection:
http://papers.ssrn.com/paper.taf?abstract_id=314822
Paper ID: IACM 15th Annual Conference
Contact: AHMET SOZEN
Email: Mailto:sozen@bahcesehir.edu.tr
Postal: University of Bahcesehir
Department of Political Science and
International Relations
34900 Bahcesehir-Istanbul, TURKEY
Phone: +90-212-669-7735
Fax: +90-212-669-4398
ABSTRACT:
As a candidate for European Union (EU) membership Cyprus represents a unique
challenge for the Union. Unlike the other five Central and Eastern European
countries (CEEC) that are striving for EU membership in the next phase of
expansion (the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Poland, and Slovenia), Cyprus
carries with it a serious problem of the unsolved political conflict between the
Greek and Turkish Cypriots. The status quo of division on the Island raises the
question: Is the EU really determined to inherit the Cyprus problem by granting
membership to the Greek part of the Island? Almost all signs coming from the EU
institutions show that a solution is not a pre-condition for the EU membership
of the Island. However, the EU emphasizes that it prefers a solution before the
final membership accession of Cyprus. Although the EU is not an active and
direct actor of the Cyprus negotiations, it changed the arithmetic of the Cyprus
negotiations as a third party by offering a huge side payment - namely the EU
membership for the Island. The EU, therefore, became an indirect mediator in
Cyprus negotiations. In this paper, the author analyzes the potential that the
EU has in contributing to the resolution of the Cyprus conflict as a third
party. In that regard, what mediating role (if ever) should the EU play to
facilitate a solution in the Island before the final accession? is the main
question of this paper. First, the author provides a short background on the
Cyprus conflict and the involvement of the EU in Cyprus conflict and
negotiations. Second, the author analyses the track record of the EU as a third
party in resolving external conflicts. Finally, the author evaluates the
potential of the EU and the other third parties in playing the role of a
mediator in Cyprus conflict.
The analysis regarding the Cyprus conflict and negotiations in the paper is
predominantly based on survey data conducted by the author on elites obtained
from field research in Cyprus, Greece, Turkey, Belgium and the UK (1997-98) and
updated data of similar interviews (2001). Here, the author utilizes game theory
in explaining the strategic decisions of the disputed actors and the possible
outcomes of the Cyprus negotiations. In addition, the author uses archival date
regarding the EU involvement in external conflicts.