Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Macedonian leaders move NATO bid forward

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SKOPJE, Macedonia — Macedonia’s parliament on Thursday adopted a declaratio­n supporting the country’s bid to join NATO, after the alliance formally invited it to join once it fully implements a deal recently signed with neighborin­g Greece changing its name to North Macedonia.

All 76 lawmakers present in the 120-member parliament voted in favor of the declaratio­n, including the conservati­ve opposition VMRO-DPMNE party, which has strongly objected to the name deal.

Conservati­ve lawmaker Dragan Danev said his party would make a “strong contributi­on” to the country’s efforts to join NATO, while governing Social Democrats lawmaker Hari Lokvenec noted that NATO membership would strengthen Macedonia’s security and stability.

NATO leaders formally invited Macedonia last week to start membership talks, on the condition that membership won’t be completed until the name deal is fully implemente­d.

The deal with Macedonia’s southern neighbor was crucial in lifting Greek objections to the country’s being invited to join NATO and the EU. The dispute dates from after the country declared independen­ce from Yugoslavia in 1991. Greece argued the term “Macedonia” implied territoria­l claims on its own northern province of the same name — birthplace of the ancient warrior king Alexander the Great — and usurped ancient Greek history.

The name deal has met with strong opposition in both Macedonia and Greece, with critics saying it concedes too much to the other side.

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