Cato the Elder
King
Fine, but the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey, did have a big influence in Europe and to be frank, they were somewhere halfway between a European, Middle Eastern, and Central Asian nation, that being the territory they encompassed. However, today Turkey is growing progessively more European. Everyone I know who's been to Turkey, particularily to the big cities like Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir, have told me that the most surprising thing was that there were barely any differences between those cities and Brussels, Munich or Zaragoza.
So long as Turkey fullfills the criteria for EU membership and the Cyprus question is solved fairly and balanced, I don't see why they can't join us.
edit: Both have a lot in common with old Semitic monotheistic religions (see Judaism, Zoroastrianism), have many of the same prophets, and hell, the Bible and the Koran use different stories, but it comes down to the same thing. Imo the difference between Christianity and Islam is like the difference between old Germanic and old Norse mythology. Visible, but not so noticeable at its core.
So long as Turkey fullfills the criteria for EU membership and the Cyprus question is solved fairly and balanced, I don't see why they can't join us.
edit: Both have a lot in common with old Semitic monotheistic religions (see Judaism, Zoroastrianism), have many of the same prophets, and hell, the Bible and the Koran use different stories, but it comes down to the same thing. Imo the difference between Christianity and Islam is like the difference between old Germanic and old Norse mythology. Visible, but not so noticeable at its core.