Oman Daily Observer

Sweden enters ‘new era’ with Nato bid

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STOCKHOLM: Sweden on Monday officially announced it will apply for Nato membership as a deterrent against Russian aggression, entering a “new era” as it reverses two centuries of military non-alignment.

“The government has decided to inform Nato that Sweden wants to become a member of the alliance,” Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson told reporters a day after neighbouri­ng Finland made a similar announceme­nt.

“We are leaving one era and beginning another,” Andersson said of the dramatic turnaround of her country’s position less than three months after Russia’s attack of Ukraine.

Sweden’s Nato ambassador would “shortly” inform Nato, she said.

Sweden and Finland have both expressed a desire to act in lockstep on Nato membership. They are expected to submit their applicatio­ns jointly this week.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday warned that Nato’s expansion may trigger a response from Moscow.

The expansion poses “no direct threat for us... but the expansion of military infrastruc­ture to these territorie­s will certainly provoke our response,” Putin said during a televised summit meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organisati­on, a Moscow-led military alliance. Andersson acknowledg­ed Sweden would be “vulnerable” in the interim period before its applicatio­n is ratified.

“We can’t exclude that Sweden will be subjected for example to disinforma­tion and attempts to scare and divide us”, she said.

However, Stockholm has received security assurances from several key partners, including the United States, Britain, Germany, France and the Nordic countries, she added.

She expected “it shouldn’t take more than a year” for the alliance’s 30 members to unanimousl­y ratify Sweden’s membership applicatio­n.

Sweden’s announceme­nt was expected after Andersson’s Social Democratic party on Sunday backed membership, in a dramatic U-turn after having opposed the idea since the birth of the Western military alliance.

The premier had earlier in the day consulted parliament on the issue by convening a debate, though lawmakers did not vote on the issue. Six of eight parties in parliament, constituti­ng a very broad majority, are in favour of membership. Swedish public support has also risen dramatical­ly to around 50 per cent — with about 20 per cent against.

In Helsinki, support for joining the alliance has surged even more dramatical­ly, with more than three-quarters of Finns in favour

Prime Minister Andersson acknowledg­ed Sweden would be ‘vulnerable’ in the interim period before its applicatio­n is ratified

of joining, almost triple the level seen before the war in Ukraine began on February 24.

Finnish lawmakers on Monday launched a marathon debate on the issue with over 150 of 200 MPS asking to speak, following a Nato membership proposal presented on Sunday by President Sauli Niinisto and Prime Minister Sanna Marin.

“Our security environmen­t has fundamenta­lly changed,” Marin told parliament.

“The only country that threatens European security, and is now openly waging a war of aggression, is Russia”, she said.

 ?? AFP ?? Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson gives a news conference in Stockholm. —
AFP Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson gives a news conference in Stockholm. —

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