EuroNews (English)

As Sweden and Finland seek to join NATO, just 4 EU states could be left out of the alliance

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Spurred by Russia's aggression on Ukraine, Sweden and Finland have both formally requested to join NATO and if accepted would leave to just four the number of European Union member states not in the trans-Atlantic military alliance.

These are Austria, Cyprus, Ire-land, and Malta.

All four are either militarily neu-tral, which means they cannot join a military alliance or take sides in military conflicts, or non-aligned, meaning they do not officially favour one major power bloc.

In the case of Cyprus and Ire-land, neutrality was historical­ly based on the fact that the two islands are split into two separate territorie­s.

In the case of the island of Ire-land, it is divided between the Republic of Ireland and the British province of Northern Ireland with an open border between the two polities that resulted from the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement that ended decades of sectarian violence.

Cyprus, however, is divided be-tween the Republic of Cyprus in the south and the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus which is not recognised by the internatio­nal community.

Yet all have ties to NATO. Aus-tria, Ireland and Malta take part in the alliance's Partnershi­p for Peace Programme which provides a framework for enhanced political and military cooperatio­n for joint multilater­al activities, such as humanitari­an assistance, peacekeepi­ng, and crisis management.

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Cyprus, meanwhile, has two British military bases on its soil with the UK being a NATO member.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine on 24 February has ignited debates in most of Europe's neutral countries over whether such a status is still warranted.

Sweden and Finland, for in-stance, were both traditiona­lly neutral, but public opinion shifted swiftly in favour of NATO membership when Moscow sent its tanks into Ukraine.

Several other European coun-tries have also not joined the alliance. These include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Kosovo, Moldova and Serbia as well as Switzerlan­d.

The latter is perhaps the world's most famous neutral country with the first mention of the status dating back to 1515 although it was formally establishe­d in 1815 following the defeat of Napoléon Bonaparte in Waterloo.

It then signed The Hague Con-ventions of 1907 which codified neutrality as part of internatio­nal law, stipulatin­g that neutral countries must refrain from engaging in war, ensure equal treatment for belligeren­t states in respect of the exportatio­n of war material, not supply mercenary troops to belligeren­t states, and not allow belligeren­t states to use its territory.

 ?? ?? Soldiers from the Lithuania's Army take part in a NATO military exercise in Lithuania on May 12, 2022.
Soldiers from the Lithuania's Army take part in a NATO military exercise in Lithuania on May 12, 2022.

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