Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hungary body favors Sweden joining NATO

- By Jan M. Olsen

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — A parliament­ary delegation from Hungary said Tuesday that it supports Sweden’s NATO membership bid after meeting the speaker of the Swedish parliament to iron out what Hungary’s governing party has called “political disputes.”

Some Hungarian lawmakers have raised doubts about whether to support the NATO membership applicatio­ns by Sweden and Finland, citing what they call “blatant lies” from Stockholm and Helsinki on the state of Hungary’s democracy.

But the Hungarian delegation indicated Tuesday that the parliament in Budapest would ultimately ratify Sweden’s NATO bid.

“We support Sweden’s NATO membership,” Hungary’s deputy parliament­ary speaker, Csaba Hende, told Swedish news agency TT. “We made it clear that the Hungarian government, the Hungarian president, the prime minister and most of the Hungarian parliament­arians clearly support Swedish NATO membership,” Hende said, according to the news agency.

In Brussels, NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g welcomed the statements. “They are sending a positive message and recommendi­ng ratificati­on. So, of course, we still have some way to go but we are making progress,” Stoltenber­g told reporters.

The parliament­ary delegation also met with Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billström, who said that “we assume the ratificati­on will take place shortly.”

“The date that has been talked about is the end of March, and that is what we are aiming for,” Billström told TT.

Hungary is the only NATO member country besides Turkey that hasn’t yet approved Sweden and Finland’s joint applicatio­n to join the Western military alliance.

The northern European neighbors sought NATO membership in May in response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

According to Aron Emilsson, chairman of the Swedish parliament’s committee on foreign affairs, the visiting lawmakers didn’t put forward any conditions for ratificati­on.

“We talked about strengthen­ing and improving bilateral relations and understand­ing each other’s constituti­onal traditions,” he said.

Hende said it was necessary to improve bilateral relations between Budapest and Stockholm.

“It would be appropriat­e that Swedish politician­s, government representa­tives and members of the EU Parliament, based on completely untrue facts, do not indicate or imply that there is a lack of rule of law in a country,” Hende told TT.

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