Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu poured cold water over Sweden and Finland’s aspirations to rapidly join NATO on Thursday, saying that, despite some progress, the countries had not met all the conditions of the three-way deal struck to allow them to enter the military alliance, DW reports.
"Both countries are expressing that they are committed to the memorandum, but what matters is the execution," Cavusoglu said at a press conference with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg in Istanbul, according to a translation by Turkish broadcaster TRT.
Finland and Sweden applied to join NATO in May, in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but has faced opposition from Ankara, which accused the countries of supporting "terrorism" by harboring Kurdish militants wanted by the Turkish state.
The three countries struck a deal in June in which the Nordic states pledged to "address Turkey's pending deportation or extradition requests of terror suspects expeditiously" and lift an alleged arms embargo on Ankara. The agreement cleared the only major obstacle for the countries to join the military alliance. Unanimous consent from the 30 NATO members is necessary.
Cavusoglu said the countries had made positive steps, such as with export rules. "But, he added, "right now we cannot say that all those commitments have been lived up [to] by those countries."
Stoltenberg, who met with leaders from Sweden and Finland in recent days, said the countries were doing their bit to implement the joint memorandum. Sweden is in the process of banning membership in terrorist organizations, which will help with the number of people who can be extradited, he noted.
"Sweden and Finland have delivered," Stoltenberg said. "It is time to welcome Finland and Sweden as full members of NATO," he said.
Having the two already close partners join NATO's ranks was crucial "to prevent any misunderstanding or miscalculation in Moscow" and to send a clear sign that the alliances door remains open, Stoltenberg stressed.