The Columbus Dispatch

NATO chief: Finland, Sweden ‘top priority’

Turkey, Hungary yet to OK nations’ membership

- Lorne Cook

BRUSSELS – NATO Secretary-general Jens Stoltenber­g is spearheadi­ng a new drive this week to see Finland and Sweden become members of the world’s biggest military organizati­on by the time President Joe Biden and his counterpar­ts meet for their next summit in July.

Fearing that they might be targeted next after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year, the Nordic neighbors abandoned their traditiona­l positions of military nonalignme­nt to seek protection under NATO’S security umbrella.

All 30 allies signed Finland’s and Sweden’s accession protocols. Almost all have since ratified those texts, but Turkey and, more recently, Hungary have sought guarantees and assurances from the two. NATO must agree unanimousl­y for them to join.

Representa­tives from the Nordic neighbors and Turkey are meeting on Thursday at NATO headquarte­rs in Brussels. Stoltenber­g isn’t directly involved in the talks, but he organized them after convincing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last month to come back to the table.

“This is a process, and I don’t expect the process to be concluded” with one round of talks, Stoltenber­g told reporters in Stockholm on the eve of the meeting, “but I am confident that Finland and Sweden will become NATO allies. This is a top priority.”

Turkey accuses Sweden’s government of being too soft on groups it believes are terror organizati­ons or existentia­l threats, including Kurdish groups, and has been angered by protesters burning the Muslim holy book, the Quran. It has fewer problems with Finland joining.

Sweden’s government has been acting, though. In a new move on Thursday,

it presented a draft law to parliament aimed at making it illegal to support or participat­e in terrorist organizati­ons. No date for the vote was immediatel­y announced.

Thursday’s meeting in Brussels marks the start of a second round of “trilateral” talks. After the first round, Stoltenber­g told Turkey that he believed its concerns had been addressed and that both countries should be allowed to join immediatel­y.

But Erdogan, whose popularity has been hit over the government’s handling of the Feb. 6 earthquake, faces an election in two months, and the issue of Swedish membership in NATO – the insistence that it must crack down on extremism – could be a vote winner.

To take the political sting out of events, Stoltenber­g has tried to keep the talks low-key.

In a recent about-face, the former Norwegian prime minister also played down the importance of both countries joining NATO at the same time. He underlined that Finland and Sweden have received assurances from some allies, led by the U.S., that they will be protected should Russia target them.

“It is inconceiva­ble that there will be any military threat against Finland and Sweden without NATO reacting. So, Finland and Sweden are in a much safer, much better position now than before they applied,” Stoltenber­g said.

Hungary’s position on their membership is murkier. For months it raised no public objections at all to the two joining, but a date for the Hungarian parliament to ratify their accession protocols was constantly pushed back and it’s unclear precisely when a vote will take place.

Two parliament­ary delegation­s visited Helsinki and Stockholm this week and made reasonably positive noises in support of both countries. But some lawmakers have accused Finland and Sweden of telling “blatant lies” about the state of democracy in Hungary.

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Stoltenber­g

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