NATO does not plan nuclear arms or bases in Finland, PM tells paper
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[May 19, 2022] HELSINKI
(Reuters) - The NATO alliance has not expressed any interest in placing
nuclear weapons or permanent bases in Finland, Finnish Prime Minister
Sanna Marin told an Italian newspaper in an interview published on
Thursday during a visit to Rome.
"There isn't even interest (within NATO) to put nuclear weapons or bases
in Finland," Marin told daily Corriere della Sera, her office said.
Finland and Sweden formally applied to join the NATO alliance on
Wednesday, a decision spurred by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, but face
objections from Turkey to an accession process that was originally
expected to be relatively rapid.
Marin, on a visit in Rome to meet with her Italian counterpart Mario
Draghi, said she believed the matter could be solved through dialogue.
"I think at this stage it is important to stay calm, to have discussions
with Turkey and all other member countries, answering questions that may
exist and correcting any misunderstandings," Marin told the newspaper.
Marin also said the question of NATO deploying nuclear weapons or
opening bases in Finland was not part of Helsinki's membership
negotiations with the Western military alliance.
Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson of neighbouring Sweden, which like
Finland is applying for NATO membership, has said her country did not
want permanent NATO bases or nuclear weapons on its territory.
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Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin speaks at a joint news conference
with Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi (not pictured) during her
visit in Rome, Italy, May 18, 2022. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
Turkey, a NATO member since 1952, has expressed
unexpected opposition to Finnish and Swedish memberships, accusing
the Nordic neighbours of harbouring individuals linked to groups it
considers terrorist. Ankara also cited the countries' arms export
embargoes on Turkey after its Syria incursion in 2019.
Finland's President Sauli Niinisto and the Swedish Prime Minister
Andersson are expected to meet the U.S. President Joe Biden in
Washington later on Thursday.
Italy strongly supports Finland's and Sweden's application to join
NATO and is willing to speed up any internal procedures for the two
countries to join the alliance as soon as possible, Draghi said on
Wednesday after meeting with Marin.
(This story corrects throughout to make clear that Finnish PM said
NATO - rather than Finland itself - had no interest in placing
nuclear weapons or bases in Finland)
(Reporting by Anne Kauranen in Helsinki and Maria Pia Quaglia
Regondi in Milan,; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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