The Pak Banker

Sweden officially joins NATO alliance

- WASHINGTON

Sweden has officially joined the NATO military alliance, ending decades of neutrality amid soaring concerns about Russia’s aggression in Europe following its invasion of Ukraine.

“Unity and solidarity will be Sweden’s guiding lights as a NATO member,” Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n said in a statement delivered in Washington, DC after a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Hungary ratifies Sweden’s NATO bid, clearing final obstacle to membership end of list “We will share burdens, responsibi­lities and risks with our allies,” he said.

“Good things come to those who wait,” Blinken said as he received Sweden’s accession documents.

“This is a historic moment for Sweden, for our alliance and for the transatlan­tic relationsh­ip,” Blinken said.

At a press conference in Stockholm on Thursday, Sweden’s Minister for Employment and Integratio­n Johan Pehrson labelled the accession “a new security policy era for Sweden”, adding that he had personally been waiting for such a decision for 20 years.

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, sparked Sweden and its neighbour Finland – which shares a 1,340km (832-mile) border with Russia – to apply to join NATO.

“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’s lack of military preparedne­ss was revealed in 2013 when Russian bomber planes flew across the Gulf of Finland close to the Swedish island of Gotland in what was believed to be simulated nuclear attacks. Stockholm needed the support of NATO jets to ward the Russian planes away from its airspace.

The next year there were reports that a Russian submarine was operating in the Stockholm archipelag­o.

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 pared back military spending. As recently as 2021, its defence minister had rejected NATO membership, only for the then-Social Democrat government to apply, alongside neighbour Finland, just a few months later.

While Finland joined last year, Sweden was kept waiting as Turkey and Hungary delayed ratifying Sweden’s accession. Turkey approved Sweden’s applicatio­n in January.

Hungary delayed its move until Kristersso­n made a visit to Budapest on February 23, during which the two countries agreed on a fighter-jet deal.

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-REUTERS

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