Turkey approves Finland’s NATO membership

(Ankara) Turkey approved Thursday, after ten months of suspense, the adhesion of Finland to NATO, the last country of the Alliance to give the green light after that of Hungary.


At the end of a brief debate, during which they recognized the “legitimate security concerns of Finland”, the Turkish deputies voted unanimously by the 276 deputies present for the entry of this small Nordic country into the Atlantic Alliance, while Sweden still remains at the door.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced the lifting of his veto on March 17 when he received Finnish President Sauli Niinistö in Ankara, a decision immediately welcomed by the Atlantic Alliance.

The Turkish parliamentary foreign affairs committee had approved this membership last week.

Finland now only has to send its “instruments of ratification” to Washington, where the Alliance treaty is kept.

The Hungarian parliament also approved, on Monday, the accession of Finland, but also blocks that of Sweden.

The applications for membership of the two Nordic countries had however been submitted together last year after the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, and required the unanimity of the member countries of NATO to be approved.

The Finnish president had expressed his “hope” for a ratification before the Turkish presidential and legislative elections scheduled for May 14, the Parliament having to interrupt its work about a month before the holding of the double ballot.

Finland, subject to forced neutrality by Moscow after its war with the Soviet Union during the Second World War, shares the longest European border (1340 km) with Russia, behind Ukraine.

“The most important thing is that Finland and Sweden quickly become full members of NATO, and not that they join exactly at the same time,” said NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.

Mr. Erdogan is still blocking the enlargement of NATO to Sweden by reproaching it for its passivity in the face of the presence of Kurdish “terrorists” welcomed on its soil and is calling for extraditions on which the government does not have the last word.

A deputy of the pro-Kurdish HDP party, the third political force in the country, Hisyar Ozsoy, moreover denounced during the debate before the vote the “horrible blackmail” of the Turkish government on the two candidate countries.

Kremlin threats

The Kremlin, which at first seemed to play down the importance of the candidacies of Finland and Sweden, has hardened its tone in recent weeks, estimating on Tuesday that the two countries would, once admitted to NATO, become “legitimate targets” of “retaliation from Moscow”, including “military”.

Sweden had, in the wake of Wednesday, announced the summons of the Russian ambassador to Stockholm.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also said last week that Moscow was going to deploy “tactical” nuclear weapons on the territory of its ally, Belarus, located at the gates of the European Union.

The situation remains delicate for Sweden, which continues to face objections from Ankara.

“There has been no positive action taken by Sweden with regard to the list of terrorists,” Mr. Erdogan lamented, referring to more than 120 extradition requests made by Ankara.

The burning of a copy of the Koran by an extremist in the Swedish capital in January led to the suspension of talks between Ankara, Helsinki and Stockholm.

The Turkish president then hinted that Turkey was ready to separately approve Finland’s membership, although the two countries originally wanted to move forward “hand in hand”.

However, Stockholm hopes to complete its country’s entry into the Alliance before the next NATO summit scheduled for July in Vilnius, Lithuania.


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