Turkey has blocked NATO’s initial decision to process requests by Finland and Sweden to join the military alliance, throwing into doubt the hopes for a quick accession of the two Nordic countries, The Financial Times reports.
NATO ambassadors met on Wednesday with the aim of opening accession talks on the same day that Finland and Sweden submitted their applications but Ankara’s opposition stopped any vote, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. The postponement raises doubt that NATO will be able to approve the first stage of Finland’s and Sweden’s applications within one or two weeks, as secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg indicated. It also sets the stage for several days of intense diplomacy between the US, Turkey, Finland and Sweden over the issue.
A Turkish official confirmed that Ankara had put the brakes on the process, but insisted that Turkey was not ruling out the prospect of Sweden and Finland joining.
“We’re not saying they can’t be NATO members,” the official said. “Just that we need to be on the same wavelength, the same page, about the threat that we’re facing.”
The official added: “We want to reach an agreement . . . The sooner we can reach an agreement, the sooner the membership discussions can start.” All 30 existing members of NATO have to ratify Finland’s and Sweden’s applications but that process only starts once the defence alliance issues an accession protocol and formally invites the two countries to join.
NATO declined to comment, other than to repeat Stoltenberg’s remarks that “the security interest of all allies have to be taken into account [and] we are determined to work through all issues and reach a rapid conclusion”.
Speaking in parliament on Wednesday, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan attacked western allies for failing to respect Ankara’s “sensitivity” on terrorism and accused the latest NATO applicants of refusing to extradite 30 people accused of terrorism-related charges in his country.
“We asked for 30 terrorists. They said: ‘we are not giving them’,” he said in a speech to parliament. “You won’t hand over terrorists but you want to join NATO. We cannot say yes to a security organisation that is devoid of security.” Erdoğan, who has the power to veto the Nordic countries’ admission to NATO, said that NATO members should “understand, respect and support” Turkey’s sensitivities about these groups, but added: “None of our allies has shown the respect that we expected to our sensitivity.”
The momentous decision by Helsinki and Stockholm to pursue membership of the alliance comes after Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, a non-NATO member that shares a border with Russia, upturned decades of security thinking.
But Erdoğan’s opposition to their admission cast a shadow over what NATO leaders sought to cast as a historic moment for the alliance.
“This is a good day at a critical moment for our security,” Stoltenberg said on Wednesday as the Finnish and Swedish ambassadors handed in their requests at a ceremony at NATO’s headquarters in Brussels.
Stoltenberg pledged that NATO was “determined to work through all issues and reach rapid conclusions”, adding: “All allies agree on the importance of NATO enlargement. We all agree that we must stand together, and we all agree that this is a historic moment that we all must seize.”
Finland’s president Sauli Niinistö and Sweden’s prime minister Magdalena Andersson will visit US president Joe Biden on Thursday in an attempt to win his backing for rapid ratification and attempt to overcome the Turkish opposition.
Turkey’s foreign minister, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, will meet US secretary of state Antony Blinken in New York on Wednesday. Niinistö said: “If we have a quick process there, it helps the whole process and timetable.”