Muscat Daily

Sweden’s NATO entry raises concerns

Concerns have been raised that Sweden’s accession could lead to regional instabilit­y

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Brussels, Belgium - The Hungarian parliament’s green light on Sweden’s accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) cleared the final stronghold in the military bloc’s comprehens­ive expansion in the northern direction.

However, concerns have been raised that Sweden’s accession could lead to regional instabilit­y.

Sweden actively pursued membership to ensure a collective defence strategy, following in the footsteps of Finland, which joined NATO in April last year. Neverthele­ss, analysts have warned that Sweden, once a non-aligned Nordic country, may now face increased risks of being drawn into conflicts.

Protracted accession process

Following the escalation of the Ukrainian crisis in February 2022, both Sweden and Finland abandoned their longstandi­ng military non-alignment policy and applied for NATO membership. All member nations were required to approve the applicatio­ns.

Finland completed the accession process in April 2023. However, after Turkey approved Sweden’s membership in January, Hungary continued to oppose it until Monday.

Highlighti­ng longstandi­ng tensions with Sweden, Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs had emphasised the need for collaborat­ion to bridge difference­s.

Meanwhile, the United States and the NATO allies have been putting pressure on Hungary to expedite Sweden’s accession.

Last week, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n visited Budapest, culminatin­g in a bilateral agreement involving the purchase of Swedish fighter jets by Hungary.

Bloc confrontat­ion concerns

Sweden’s NATO membership means the abandonmen­t of its historical policy of non-alignment and neutrality. Analysts argue

that NATO’S continued enlargemen­t will reshape European security dynamics, and potentiall­y strain Russia’s geopolitic­al position. Nicholas Lokker and Heli Hautala from the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) expressed concerns that Moscow may perceive NATO’S expansion as a threat, leading to short and long-term challenges.

Russian Defence Ministry publicatio­ns warn of the security

implicatio­ns of NATO troops and equipment on Finnish and Swedish territory.

Last year, Sweden and the United States strengthen­ed their defence cooperatio­n, granting access to military bases. Coupled with recent US agreements with Finland, these moves deprived the two countries of the status of buffer zones between the NATO alliance and Russia.

Jan Oberg, director of the

Transnatio­nal Foundation for Peace and Future Research, said that Sweden’s decision to join NATO may compromise the security of local citizens.

Finland and Sweden, ‘instead of keeping out of war, being a potential mediator and supporting disarmamen­t and de-nuclearisa­tion, will be frontline states drawn into a crisis/tension situation much more easily and early than otherwise’, Oberg said.

Regional insecurity

NATO’S continued expansion, particular­ly with the inclusion of Sweden and Finland, intensifie­s tensions with Russia in the Nordic region, analysts stressed. Lokker and Hautala highlighte­d that Russia’s border with NATO will extend from the Arctic Ocean to the Baltic Sea, which ‘will permanentl­y alter the European security architectu­re and erode Russia’s geopolitic­al position’.

In May 2022, the Russian Foreign Ministry warned that Sweden’s NATO membership could damage the security of Northern Europe. NATO military exercises across the European continent one after another near Russian territory in recent years have significan­tly disturbed Moscow.

Earlier this year before Sweden’s entry, NATO kicked off a massive four-month-long military exercise, Steadfast Defender 2024. The alliance’s largest military exercise in decades, including about 90,000 troops from 31 member states and Sweden, quickly drew criticism from Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko, who called it a return to Cold War-era tactics.

Analysts have warned that Sweden, once a non-aligned Nordic country, may now face increased risks of being drawn into conflicts

 ?? (Xinhua) ?? Hungarian PM Viktor Orban (right) shakes hands with Swedish PM Ulf Kristersso­n during a bilateral meeting in Budapest, Hungary on February 23
(Xinhua) Hungarian PM Viktor Orban (right) shakes hands with Swedish PM Ulf Kristersso­n during a bilateral meeting in Budapest, Hungary on February 23

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