Finland, Sweden sign to join NATO but need ratification
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[July 05, 2022]
By Robin Emmott and Sabine Siebold
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -NATO's 30 allies signed
an accession protocol for Finland and Sweden on Tuesday, allowing them
to join the nuclear-armed alliance once parliaments ratify the decision,
the most significant expansion of the alliance since the 1990s.
The signing at NATO headquarters follows a deal with Turkey at last
week's NATO summit in Madrid, where Ankara lifted its veto on the Nordic
membership bids following assurances that both countries would do more
to fight terrorism.
"This is truly an historic moment," NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg said alongside the foreign ministers of the two countries.
"With 32 nations around the table, we will be even stronger."
The protocol means Helsinki and Stockholm can participate in NATO
meetings and have greater access to intelligence but will not be
protected by the NATO defence clause - that an attack on one ally is an
attack against all - until ratification. That is likely to take up to a
year.
It was at an allied summit in Madrid in 1997 that Hungary, Poland and
the Czech Republic were invited to join, in the first of several waves
of NATO's eastern expansion - seen as an achievement for the West but
which has angered Russia.
Moscow has repeatedly warned both countries against joining NATO. On
March 12, the Russian foreign ministry said "there will be serious
military and political consequences".
Stoltenberg urged allies to swiftly ratify and assured the two Nordic
countries of NATO's support in the meantime.
"The security of Finland and Sweden is important for
our alliance, including during the ratification process," he said.
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Sweden's Foreign Minister Ann Linde and Finland's Foreign Minister
Pekka Haavisto attend a news conference with NATO Secretary General
Jens Stoltenberg, after signing their countries' accession protocols
at the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, Belgium July 5, 2022.
REUTERS/Yves Herman
"Many allies have already made clear commitments to Finland's and
Sweden's security, and NATO has increased our presence in the
region, including with more exercises."
TURKISH WARNING
NATO's ambassadors and Stoltenberg stood together for a photo in
which the foreign ministers of Sweden and Finland held up their
signed protocols, before breaking out into applause.
"Thank you for your support! Now the process of ratification by each
of the allies begins," Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde said on
Twitter.
However, Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan warned last Thursday at
the NATO summit that Finland and Sweden must first keep promises
made to Turkey in a deal or ratification will not be sent to the
Turkish parliament.
After weeks of diplomacy, Erdogan and his Finnish and Swedish
counterparts agreed measures to allow the two Nordic countries to
overcome a Turkish veto that Ankara imposed in May due to its
concerns about terrorism.
According to a signed memorandum, Finland and Sweden pledged not to
support the Kurdish militant PKK and YPG groups or the network of
U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, which Ankara labels a terrorist
organisation.
(Reporting by Robin Emmott and Sabine Siebold, Editing by William
Maclean)
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