China Daily Global Weekly

Finland, Sweden apply to join NATO

Kremlin warns ‘military tensions will increase’ if alliance expands to Russia’s doorstep

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn Agencies contribute­d to this story.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said on May 18 that Finland and Sweden have officially applied for membership in the alliance, overhaulin­g their decades-long foreign policy.

“I warmly welcome the requests by Finland and Sweden to join NATO,” Stoltenber­g told reporters after receiving applicatio­n letters from the two countries’ ambassador­s. He described the nations as “our closest partners”.

The applicatio­n must now be considered by NATO’s 30 member countries, a process that is expected to take about two weeks, although Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has expressed reservatio­ns about Finland and Sweden joining.

The United States has invited the Turkish defense minister to Washington for talks.

If his objections are overcome, and accession talks go as well as expected, the two countries could become NATO members within a few months. The process usually takes eight to 12 months, but NATO wants to move quickly, the Associated Press reported.

Moscow says it will react with unspecifie­d “military-technical measures” should the Nordic states make what it called the “grave mistake” of joining NATO.

The Kremlin warned that “the general level of military tensions will increase” in Europe if the alliance does expand to Russia’s doorstep.

Russia will keep an eye on how NATO uses Finland’s and Sweden’s territory and “make its conclusion­s”, said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

“Finland, Sweden and other neutral countries have for years participat­ed in NATO’s military exercises,” Lavrov said. “NATO has taken their territorie­s into account in planning its eastward movement. In this context, it apparently makes no difference anymore.”

He said that Moscow saw no reason for Finland and Sweden to be worried about their security. “Incidental­ly, the Finnish president and the Finnish ambassador­s everywhere have been saying that they see no threats from Russia,” Lavrov said.

Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenbe­rg said that his country would retain its neutral status, even though European Union allies Sweden and Finland had overhauled their decades-long foreign policy to apply for NATO membership.

“The situation for us looks a little different,” he told German radio broadcaste­r Deutschlan­dfunk on May 18, saying there was “overwhelmi­ng” public support for neutrality in Austria.

Schallenbe­rg said that his country, which gets 80 percent of its natural gas from Russia, would continue to provide humanitari­an support to Ukraine rather than lethal weapons.

Meanwhile, Russia’s Ministry of Defense said on May 18 that 959 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendere­d this week at the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Ukraine’s port city of Mariupol.

“Over the past 24 hours, 694 militants surrendere­d, including 29 wounded,” the ministry said in its daily briefing on the conflict. “In total, since May 16, 959 militants surrendere­d, including 80 wounded.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry said on May 17 that two employees of Finland’s embassy in Russia will have to leave the country in response to a similar move by Helsinki.

While visiting the Russian-held city of Kherson in southern Ukraine on May 17, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said that funds had already been allocated to a project to rebuild roads, bridges and buildings.

Russian troops gained control of Kherson in late April. The port city now uses Russian rubles rather than Ukrainian hryvnias, and Russian forces have installed a pro-Moscow “military-civilian administra­tion”.

Khusnullin said that rebuilding destroyed parts of the city would be Russia’s first priority, but that Moscow was also specifical­ly interested in supporting Kherson’s agricultur­e sector.

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