The Jerusalem Post

Sweden becomes 32nd member of NATO

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WASHINGTON/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – Sweden formally joined NATO in Washington on Thursday, two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced a complete rethink of its national security policy and the realizatio­n that the alliance offered the best guarantee of safety.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n came to Washington to hand over the final documentat­ion, with the White House saying in a statement ahead of President Joe Biden’s State of the Union Address that Sweden would join on Thursday.

“Having Sweden as a NATO Ally will make the United States and our Allies even safer,” the statement said.

Kristersso­n said NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g had informed him that Sweden had been formally invited to join after all member states accepted the country’s accession protocol.

“Sweden will soon be NATO’s 32nd member,” he said on X.

The Swedish government said separately it would take the formal decision for the country to join NATO on Thursday.

For NATO, the accession of Sweden and Finland – which shares a 1,340 km. border with Russia – is the most significan­t expansion for 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 defense guarantee under which an attack on one member is regarded as an attack on all.

“We have to face the world as it is, not how we sometimes wish it were,” Kristersso­n said after Hungary became the last NATO member to ratify Sweden’s accession last week.

Sweden adds cutting-edge submarines and a sizable fleet of domestical­ly produced Gripen fighter jets to NATO forces and would be a crucial link between the Atlantic and Baltic.

Russia has threatened to take unspecifie­d “political and military-technical counter-measures” in response to Sweden’s move.

While Stockholm has been drawing ever closer to NATO over the last two decades, membership marks a clear break with the past, when for more than 200 years, Sweden avoided military alliances and adopted a neutral stance in times of war.

After World War II, it built an internatio­nal reputation as a champion of human rights, and when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, successive government­s have pared back military spending.

As recently as 2021, its defense minister had rejected NATO membership, only for the then-Social Democrat government to apply for it, alongside neighbor Finland, just a few months later.

While Finland joined last year, Sweden was kept waiting as Turkey and Hungary, which both maintain cordial relations with Russia, delayed ratifying Sweden’s accession.

Turkey approved Sweden’s applicatio­n in January. Hungary delayed its move until Kristersso­n made a goodwill visit to Budapest on February 23, where the two countries agreed to a fighter jet deal.

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