Europe 1 with AFP
modified to
09:11, May 18, 2022
Will the war in Ukraine get the better of their neutrality? Finland and Sweden have just submitted their applications to join NATO. “This is a historic moment at a critical time for our security,” said NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. And to add: “We hope to quickly conclude” the process.
Finland and Sweden submitted their applications for NATO membership on Wednesday and consultations were underway between the Allies to lift Turkey’s opposition to the integration of the two Nordic countries into the Alliance. “This is a historic moment at a critical moment for our security,” said NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, who received the membership applications submitted by the ambassadors of two countries. “We hope to quickly conclude” the process, he added.
“Everything is possible”
Consultations were underway on Wednesday within the Atlantic Council to try to overcome Turkey’s opposition to the launch of the accession process, we learned from a diplomatic source. Ankara can slow it down by refusing to open discussions within the Atlantic Council, the first stage of the procedure. Turkey can then block by refusing to sign the accession protocols and finally refuse to ratify the accession. The unanimity of the 30 members of the Alliance is imperative for membership.
“Anything is possible,” said a European diplomat. “But at NATO we always find solutions,” he added. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may want to bring the subject to the NATO summit organized in Madrid on June 29 and 30.
Turkish blocking
Ankara “will not give in”, he assured Monday. Ankara accuses Sweden of being “the nursery of terrorist organizations” like the Kurdish PKK and criticizes the two Nordic countries for not approving requests for the extradition of people accused of being terrorists as well as of having frozen exports arms to Turkey. Turkey blocked earlier this week a NATO statement favorable to the accessions of the two countries, we learned from a diplomatic source.
The Turkish blockade deprives Finland and Sweden of the protection provided by NATO to all its members in the event of aggression. “The security interests of all allies must be taken into account and we are determined to examine all issues and reach conclusions quickly,” Jens Stoltenberg assured the two ambassadors on Wednesday.