Oman Daily Observer

Biden rallies behind Nato bids as Finland and Sweden say to address Turkey

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WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden on Thursday strongly backed Nato membership bids by Finland and Sweden in the face of Russia’s attack on Ukraine as the two leaders promised to address concerns raised by Turkey.

With the red-carpet pomp of a White House visit, Biden welcomed Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish President Sauli Niinisto days after they formally announced their Nato aspiration­s and said he was submitting their applicatio­ns to the US Congress, where there is bipartisan support for ratificati­on.

“The bottom line is simple. Quite straightfo­rward: Finland and Sweden make Nato stronger,” Biden said, offering the “full, total, complete backing of the United States of America.”

“Sweden and Finland have strong democratic institutio­ns, strong militaries and strong and transparen­t economies, and a strong moral sense of what is right,” Biden said with the two leaders at his side in the White House Rose Garden.

“They meet every Nato requiremen­t, and then some,” Biden told assembled reporters without taking any questions.

Sweden and Finland, while solidly Western, have historical­ly kept a distance from Nato as part of longstandi­ng policies aimed at avoiding angering Russia.

But the two nations both moved ahead amid shock over their giant neighbour’s attack on Ukraine, which had unsuccessf­ully sought to join Nato.

With Russia voicing anger over the Nato bids, Biden said he told the two leaders that the United States would “remain vigilant against the threats to our shared security.”

The United States will work to “deter and confront any aggression while Finland and Sweden are in this accession process,” Biden said.

Drawing an implicit contrast to his predecesso­r Donald Trump, Biden called NATO’S mutual defense promise a “sacred commitment.”

“We will never fail in our pledge to defend every single inch of Nato territory,” Biden said.

But membership requires consent of all 30 existing members and Turkey has voiced misgivings.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused the two nations of backing “terrorism,” a reference to the presence in Finland and especially Sweden of Kurdish militants from the separatist PKK.

Addressing Turkey, Niinisto said Finland was “open to discussing all the concerns that you may have concerning our membership in an open and tractive manner.”

NO SHORTCUTS: SCHOLZ

Meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Thursday that Ukraine’s bid to join the EU cannot be sped up despite the country’s attack by Russia. The bloc must find a “fast and pragmatic” way to help Kyiv, he added.

“There are no shortcuts on the way to the EU,” Scholz said, adding that an exception for Ukraine would be unfair to the Western Balkan countries also seeking membership. “The accession process is not a matter of a few months or years,” he said..—

 ?? — AFP ?? US President Joe Biden, flanked by Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finland’s President Sauli Niinist,ⱦ speaks in the Rose Garden following a meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, on Thursday.
— AFP US President Joe Biden, flanked by Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finland’s President Sauli Niinist,ⱦ speaks in the Rose Garden following a meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

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