Las Vegas Review-Journal

Finland and Sweden formally ask to join NATO

Alliance would see its biggest expansion in two decades

- By Johanna Lemola, Christina Anderson and Shashank Bengali

Finland and Sweden formally submitted their bids for NATO membership Wednesday morning, casting aside decades of strategic neutrality to embrace the military alliance in a swift transforma­tion prompted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Finnish and Swedish envoys delivered letters expressing their nations’ interest in joining NATO to Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g at the alliance’s headquarte­rs in Brussels. Stoltenber­g has said that NATO will seek to admit both nations in a fast-track process.

“You are our closest partners,” Stoltenber­g said alongside Finland’s NATO ambassador, Klaus Korhonen, and Sweden’s envoy, Axel Wernhoff. “Your membership in NATO will increase our shared security.”

The two Nordic states, which have had close relations with NATO but long remained militarily nonaligned, have seen public opinion tilt heavily in favor of joining the alliance since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended European security. If both are admitted, it would be NATO’S most significan­t expansion in nearly two decades, increasing the organizati­on’s membership to 32 nations and adding hundreds of additional miles of border with Russia.

The potential growth of NATO is another example of how President Vladimir Putin’s invasion has backfired. The Russian leader described NATO’S eastward expansion as one reason he felt compelled to send troops and tanks into Ukraine, but instead of fracturing the Western alliance, Russia’s aggression has strengthen­ed it.

Putin has struck a measured tone since Finland and Sweden announced their intentions to join NATO, saying that their accession would not create a “direct threat” but that Russia’s response would be determined by how NATO expands its military infrastruc­ture into those nations.

Finland’s president, Sauli Niinisto, said the war had convinced his country, which shares an 810-mile-long eastern border with Russia, that it could not afford to remain on the sidelines.

“We believed that nonalignme­nt would give us stability,” he said Tuesday during an official visit to Sweden. But Russia’s invasion, he added, “changed everything.”

The formal submission­s came after a dizzying week that began when Niinisto and Finland’s prime minister, Sanna Marin, announced their support for membership Thursday. Finland’s Parliament endorsed the proposal Tuesday in a vote of 188-8. The vote was a political formality, because Niinisto has authority over the nation’s foreign policy, but it served as a signal of enthusiasm in a country where public opinion in favor of joining NATO has moved from 20% before the Russian invasion to 80% now.

“This was an exceptiona­lly strong result, 188 votes in favor, “Finland’s foreign minister, Pekka Haavisto, told the Finnish broadcaste­r YLE. “I did not myself expect such a strong outcome.”

Haavisto signed the country’s applicatio­n after the vote.

The Finnish government has closely coordinate­d its moves with Sweden, a long-standing security partner that has observed neutrality for two centuries but whose public has also moved staunchly in favor of joining NATO.

On Sunday, Sweden’s governing Social Democratic Party cast aside decades of misgivings and announced its decision to support the bid for accession to NATO. Fifty-seven percent of the Swedish public now supports joining the alliance, up from 48% at the end of April, according to a poll by the Dagens Nyheter newspaper. Sweden’s foreign minister, Ann Linde, signed her country’s NATO applicatio­n Tuesday morning.

Sweden’s prime minister, Magdalena Andersson, said that her nation was closely bound with Finland.

“This is a strong and clear signal that we stand united,” she said.

The triumphant mood in the Nordic states was shadowed, however, by signals that Turkey, a NATO member, might seek to block their accession. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sharply criticized Sweden in particular as a haven for Kurdish separatist­s he regards as terrorists.

Niinisto has said that he was surprised by Erdogan’s comments and expressed hope that any difference­s could be worked out in direct talks with Turkey.

The United States has strongly backed membership for Finland and Sweden. On Thursday, Niinisto and Andersson are scheduled to meet with President Joe Biden in Washington. They will discuss their NATO bids, the war in Ukraine and “the relationsh­ip of Europe and the United States in the changed security situation,” according to a statement from the Finnish presidency.

 ?? JOHANNA GERON / POOL VIA AP ?? NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g displays documents Wednesday after Sweden and Finland applied for membership in the alliance at its Brussels headquarte­rs. Stoltenber­g said the military alliance stood ready to seize a historic moment and move quickly on allowing the two countries to join NATO’S ranks.
JOHANNA GERON / POOL VIA AP NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g displays documents Wednesday after Sweden and Finland applied for membership in the alliance at its Brussels headquarte­rs. Stoltenber­g said the military alliance stood ready to seize a historic moment and move quickly on allowing the two countries to join NATO’S ranks.

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