The Fiji Times

Sweden joins NATO

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WASHINGTON/STOCKHOLM - Sweden joined NATO in Washington on Thursday, two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced it to rethink its national security policy and conclude that support for the alliance was the Scandinavi­an nation’s best guarantee of safety.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n handed over the final documentat­ion to the US government on Thursday, the last step in a drawn-out process to secure the backing of all members to join the military alliance.

“Good things come to those who wait,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said as he received Sweden’s accession documents from Mr Kristersso­n.

Mr Blinken said “everything changed” after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, citing polls showing a massive shift in Swedish public opinion on joining NATO.

“Swedes realised something very profound: that if Putin was willing to try to erase one neighbour from the map, then he might well not stop there.”

For NATO, the accessions of Sweden and Finland - which shares a 1,340km (830-mile) border with Russia - are the most significan­t additions in decades.

It is also a blow for Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has sought to prevent any further strengthen­ing of the alliance.

Sweden will benefit from the alliance’s common defence guarantee under which an attack on one member is regarded as an attack on all.

“Sweden is a safer country today than we were yesterday. We have allies. We have backing,” Mr Kristersso­n said in an address to the Swedish nation from Washington. “We have taken out an insurance in the Western defence alliance.”

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? A Swedish ceremonial cannon in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Stockholm, Sweden, March 7, 2024.
Picture: REUTERS A Swedish ceremonial cannon in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Stockholm, Sweden, March 7, 2024.

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