The Scotsman

Macedonia set to join Nato after Greece deal lifts roadblock

- By LORNE COOK

The small Balkan country of Macedonia has taken a big step towards becoming the 30th member of Nato, the world’s biggest military alliance.

In a move that marked the end of a long dispute with Greece over Macedonia’s name, and less than two decades after Nato deployed troops to the country as it teetered on the brink of civil war, Nato Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g and Macedonian foreign minister Nikola Dimitrov led an “accession protocol” signing ceremony at the alliance’s Brussels headquarte­rs.

“This is a historic occasion,” Mr Stoltenber­g told Nato country envoys before they put pen to paper.

“We have waited for you to join our family for a long time.”

He said the signing ceremony marks the start of the ratificati­on process.

Montenegro, the last country to join Nato, had to wait about a year for all members to formally endorse its accession protocol.

Greece is set to become the first to do so this week. Macedonia will then start calling itself North Macedonia and will join under that name, possibly late this year or in early 2020.

US president Donald Trump and his Nato counterpar­ts are due to hold a summit in London in December. The meeting, to mark Nato’s 70th anniversar­y, would provide a perfect occasion to formally welcome North Macedonia should the ratificati­on process be completed.

Visibly moved, Mr Dimitrov said the ceremony “is the result of the work of many generation­s”, and he thanked the Greek and Macedonian prime ministers for overcoming the name dispute.

“This was not inevitable, this was not even very likely to happen,” he said, lauding it as proof that “the impossible is actually doable and possible.”

Quoting the British military officer and writer TE Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia, Mr Dimitrov said: “Nothing is written until we write it. We can change our destiny, we can seize opportunit­ies.”

Greece blocked Macedonia’s Natomember­shipforade­cade over the name dispute. Athens saw the former Yugoslav republic’s name as a threat to its own administra­tive region of Macedonia.

Macedonia has been a major contributo­r to Nato operations, notably in Afghanista­n. The membership move comes some 18 years after the alliance deployed troops in Macedonia to collect weapons held by ethnic Albanian rebels to help avert a civil war there.

Macedonia’s ruling Social Democrats described the signature as a “historic act”.

“After years of isolation, regression and uncertaint­y, Macedonia sits at the same table with the states of the democratic world,” the party said.

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